Showing posts with label Idaho. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Idaho. Show all posts

Tuesday, July 23, 2019

Salt Lake City & First Day in Yellowstone

Over Memorial Day weekend we took a trip to visit one of the world's greatest natural wonders, Yellowstone National Park. Paul visited Yellowstone back in 2006 and loved it, and has wanted to return ever since. David's Dad hates to fly, but has always wanted to visit Yellowstone, so was willing to take a flight for this special trip. We booked our Yellowstone accommodations 6 months in advance, and most of the hotels were already full - make sure you plan early if you want to sleep in the park!

Our trip started in Salt Lake City. There's not a major city near Yellowstone, and flights to closer airports (like Jackson Hole) were insanely expensive on this holiday weekend. Salt Lake City is about a five hour drive from the west entrance of Yellowstone. David had never visited Salt Lake City before, and fortuitously there happened to be an Atlanta United game vs Real Salt Lake, so it worked out to add a little city flavor and bonus soccer match to our National Park vacation.

Flying over the Great Salt Lake.
We had a great view of Denver and the front range of the Rocky Mountains on the flight in.

Our first stop was the state capitol building. We love to visit these, and have seen quite a few together, including capitols in Phoenix, Honolulu, and Des Moines. Utah's capitol did not disappoint. It's a classic, styled similarly to the US capitol. The interior has impressive paintings and a nice little temporary exhibit on the completion of the first trans-continental railroad, which connected the east and west coast with the final golden spike in Utah. From there we went to the nearby Mormon Square. You can't enter the church, but we looked at the outside and walked through the City Center shopping area next door before having an early dinner at Taqueria 27. We made a quick stop at Harmon's grocery store to stock up on food and snacks for the week, before driving south of town to Rio Tinto stadium for the Atlanta United game. ATL lost in stoppage time, but it's always great to go to an away game (we go to at least one every year).

Utah's impressive capitol sits on top of a hill north of downtown.
Jumping picture!
Pioneer painting.
The impressive soaring interior.
Looking downtown from the capitol.
The Mormon Temple.
Salt Lake has a light rail system.
Dinner at Taqueria 27. Mole enchiladas!
Us at the stadium, in the Atlanta supporters section.
David and his Dad.
At one point it started raining - while it was still sunny...
...which resulted in a rainbow!
Night in the stadium. It was a nice stadium with good views.

That night we made the almost 4 hour drive to our hotel near Rexburg, Idaho. It was a long late drive in the dark, but good to get some of the driving out of the way since we'd be on the road a lot the next few days. On the way we saw a monster run across the road. It may have just been a large skunk, but it was probably a monster.

Saturday morning we drove the remaining hour and 20 minutes to the west entrance of Yellowstone. It was a rainy day, but we had some nice views of the Tetons in the distance, and Caribou-Targhee National Forest. We made a quick stop in the visitor's center in the town of West Yellowstone to buy a new annual national park pass and get info on road closures, then drove in to the park. We saw a small herd of bison alongside the Madison River, and continued along a one-way loop next to the Firehole river where we saw our first elk. Our first major stop was the Lower Geyser Basin (AKA Fountain Paint Pot), where we saw a number of geothermal features. Since it was late spring, there was a lot of snowmelt and rain that made the mudpots extra splattery.

First bison sighting.
Firehole Falls.
Best illustration ever?
"Bobby socks trees" that were killed by hydrothermal activity.
David with the geyser field.
Don't be fooled by the other pictures, it was crowded.
A big splashing mud pot.
A hot spring next to the boardwalk.

We continued on to Midway Geyser Basin, which contains one of Yellowstone's most famous sites: Grand Prismatic Spring. After walking around the boardwalk, we took the 1.2 mile round trip overlook trail, which gives astounding views of Grand Prismatic Spring. Don't miss it!

Next came lunch at the very crowded Old Faithful Inn before watching Old Faithful erupt. Hundreds of people lined the boardwalk to watch.

Hot water from the springs flows into the river.
Excelsior geyser has a huge pool with big clouds of steam.
The warm water in the geyser basin is full of organisms.
David and his Dad at the Grand Prismatic Springs overlook.
Grand Prismatic Springs money shot (instagram filtered to hell!)
The Old Faithful Inn interior was really cool.
The food was just OK, but there aren't many lunch options in the area.
You can see the geyser getting ready to do its thing in the background.
So many people!
After seeing Old Faithful, we took a quick look around the visitor center's exhibits and then it started to rain. Instead of wandering around the geyser fields in the wet weather, we decided to head towards our hotel to check in. The ride to the hotel by Yellowstone Lake was around 45 minutes. During the trip we climbed up in elevation over the continental divide, where there was still tons of snow.

At the divide signage pointed us to the small, but unique, Lake Isa. This lake sits exactly on the divide and water runs off it in both directions - so the lake drains into both the Atlantic and Pacific Oceans!

About 2/3 of the way to the Lake Village, we saw some cars pulled over in an area that burned in a fire not too many years ago. Here we saw a bear rummaging around! This was the first of 4 or 5 bears we would see on the trip. David's Dad was super excited and jumped out of the car for a closer look. David didn't approve.

After the bear went on his way, we continued the drive to Lake Village, where we checked in and got the keys to our cabins. The cabins here are very modest; basically they're one medium-sized room and one small bathroom. It was hard to not track mud/leaves in every time we went out so the place ended up being kinda dirty by the end of the trip. These cabins, like everything in Yellowstone, aren't cheap either. Planning accommodations here can be pretty tricky.

After a couple hour siesta, we went for an evening drive to Sulfur Cauldron before wildlife viewing at Hayden Valley, one of the two main valleys where wildlife tend to congregate. We saw bison, elk, eagles, and other random critters. Yellowstone is a great place to watch animals in the wild! We ended our day at the hotel, ready for an early start to explore more of the park.

Lake Isa - on the Continental Divide and still covered in snow/ice in late May.
Paul representing ATL United on the Continental Divide!
Our first glimpse of Lake Yellowstone, a massive alpine lake in the Yellowstone caldera.
Bear jam!
The culprit. A large black bear.
Sulphur cauldron is a smelly muddy mess.

Hayden Valley
Road Bison.
Huckleberry everything in the northwest!

Thursday, August 31, 2017

More Idaho: Volcanoes, Waterfalls, and the Oregon Trail

On our visit to Idaho, in addition to seeing the eclipse and hiking in the Sawtooth National Forest, we spent some time exploring some of the other natural sights in the state. Idaho is a huge, so we barely scratched the surface, but we saw as much as we could of the Southwest part of the state.

Arrowleaf flowers were all over the state.
A lot of our drive through Idaho looked about like this though.
A bee doing its thang.
On our way to Sawtooth National Forest, we stopped at the Shoshone Ice Cave. If you can't tell by their super awesome website, it's basically a tacky tourist attraction. But the cave itself is neat - a lava tube that has ice even in the height of summer. Worth a 20 minute stop if you happen to be in the area. Our tour guide was 18 years old, started every sentence with the word "well" and really had no idea why there was ice in the cave. So, plan ahead.

You walk on a suspended bridge over the ice.
David in the chilly (25F) cave.
Hiking back up out of the cave.
The historically accurate "caveman riding a dinosaur" statue outside the cave.
Ummm... yeah.

After spending a full day in the Sawtooth wilderness, we decided to take the scenic route to Boise to take in a few sites in southern and central Idaho. Our major stop was Craters of the Moon National Monument, formed from volcanic eruptions starting 15,000 years ago, with the most recent about 2,000 years ago. These same eruptions 2,000 years ago formed the lava tubes at the Shoshone Ice Cave.

It's backlit, the air was hazy from wildfires, and there was nobody there to take the picture for us... but here's proof we visited!
Lava Lake, on the edge of the Craters of the Moon.
Formations on the Devil's Orchard trail.
Climbing up to the top of Inferno Cone (6,181 feet).
Almost there!
Hazy views from the top of Inferno Cone.
It normally would be a great view, but visibility was poor due to wildfire smoke and dusty air.
A lonely tree at the top of Inferno Cone.
Look, it's Paul on a log!
Walking across the crunchy lava rocks.
Neat old lava flows.
The North Crater Trail.
Peering down into one of the big craters.
The trail meandered across old lava fields.
The contrast between different types of rock was interesting.

After finishing up at Craters of the Moon, we headed down to Twin Falls to grab lunch and check out Shoshone Falls, The Niagara of the West. The falls are a large drop-off of the Snake River in a deep gorge. The flow was pretty low this time of year but the falls were still pretty impressive (earlier this year it looked like this). The city of Twin Falls wasn't anything special. Boise is clearly Idaho's town with the most going on.

The Snake River from an overlook in Twin Falls.
The main part of Shoshone Falls.
During high flow it's one big waterfall.
The Snake River Canyon.

Closer to Boise, we stopped by the Hagerman Fossil Beds National Monument. It's named after an extinct North American horse species. You can't actually access the area where many of the fossils were found, but we went to the small visitor's center in downtown Hagerman and then hiked a bit of the Emigrant Trail. The original route of the Oregon Trail passed through this area, and we saw some traces of it.

The famous Oregon Trail ("Paul has died of dysentery")
These are traces of the original wagon ruts of the Oregon Trail.
It was a stark but oddly beautiful landscape.
Hiking the emigrant trail. It was hot and dry.
The trail was swarming with black ground wasps and grasshoppers.
We saw a couple of these guys along the trail. Probably a long-nosed leopard lizard.
This one was molting.
A BEAUTIFUL mural in the tiny town of Hammett.