We sucked it up and went to Yellowstone to camp in July. We drove up Tuesday evening and stayed the night in Rexburg after a 4 hour drive. We convoyed with the Neuberts, a lovely family who have a little girl, Clara, in Sophia's PreSchool class. I got up at 6am to hit the park hard and secure a campsite since we'd been unable to make advance reservations, this being the busy season. But with two 3 year olds to contend with, we didn't even get into the cars until 8:15 am. The road construction was heavy into West Yellowstone and we were just barely getting into the park by 10am. Since the guidebook says all the campsites are full by 11 we were kind of SOL. So we drove around all day Wednesday trying to find accomodations. We went up to Mammoth and stopped there,
and then went out to Slough Creek and had a little picnic, and then down to Tower Junction were we gassed up and got some snacks before stopping at Roosevelt Ranch and making some calls at the pay phones to see if we could get reservations any where. Yellowstone has ZERO reception for AT&T users, and a little for those with Verizon, which is a chancy proposition. Basically the only place you can hope to make calls is in and around Old Faithful. After much tooth gnashing we decided to stay outside the park in Soda Butte campsite, beyond the North-East entrance. So we made the long drive out there... and it was closed. Every campsite in Wyoming and Montana was closed because they'd had a triple bear "incident". Two folks injured, one dead. So we asked the Ranger for recommendations and they said to stay at Hoosiers, which we did. A little pricey at $145, which I guess was the "Every Campsite is closed" rate, but clean and comfortable.
Here's the office
Bubbles!
Here we are making Marshmallows on my nostalgia-purchased Dual Fuel Stove:
We went and got pricey pizza at the bar across the street, and then went off to read bed time stories and go to sleep. Rob and I got up at 5:30am the next morning and drove back in to the park to secure ourselves a site at the "first come first served" campsite at Norris. Here's the massive Bison herd we say just after 6am coming into eastern Yellowstone:
Baby Bison-
I like this one's beard
Lots of fog still in the valley still at 6:30 am, just past Tower Falls:
It was so foggy we had trouble reading road signs
Here we are approaching Mammoth Hot Springs after securing our campsite and driving back out to get everyone.
What everyone takes a picture of:
The family unit
Hot day
I'm the Queen of Mammoth Hill!
Sleeping Monster cannot stop us from enjoy the Norris Geyser Basin!
Blorble Blorble!
KerSplash!
Finally awake, with Clara
We barely caught this geyser erupting in the Fire Hole area
Close up, after all the excitement
Yellowstone Post Office
Sleepy Sophia in front of the new yet-to-be-completed Visitor Center
Cute girls at the Old Faithful lodge
I can stand on my own Momma!
Old Faithful Erupting:
Then we drove out to Yellowstone Lake. Yellowstone Lake is the largest freshwater lake above 7,000 feet in North America. In winter, ice nearly 3 feet thick covers much of the lake, except where shallow water covers hot springs. The lake freezes over by early December and can remain frozen until late May or early June. The water, even at the height of summer is rarely over 40 degrees, which explains why we didn't say any water skiers.
Here we are at Bridge Bay
Finally we stopped at the waterfalls near Canyon Village campsite
Then took the hike down down down to the big waterfall on Uncle Tom's Trail
It was so cold the night before that I wore my flannel lined pants to go hiking in. Wrong decision
The girls at the camp site with Clara's dolls
Night #3 was much less chilly than night #2, so the Sophia and Mommy slept good
We had to sit and wait for them to open the road between Norris and Madison at 8am, so Abbey and Sophia got out to look at the long line of cars
And then we drove back!
Movin On, Movin Up, Movin Out!
12 years ago
2 comments:
i love the picture of me and my most precious baby girl! We do like to look at things!
Cute pictures, thanks for sharing. Reminds me of all the times we went to Yellowstone as kids.
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