North to Alaska » Wyoming http://gregspurgin.net/north-to-alaska Judy and Greg's journey to Alaska and back Tue, 16 Sep 2014 12:18:16 +0000 en-US hourly 1 http://wordpress.org/?v=4.1 A Close Encounter http://gregspurgin.net/north-to-alaska/?p=361 http://gregspurgin.net/north-to-alaska/?p=361#comments Sun, 20 Jul 2014 00:33:57 +0000 http://gregspurgin.net/north-to-alaska/?p=361 Continue reading ]]> For those of you old enough to remember “Close Encounters of the Third Kind” by Steven Speilberg (1977) you may remember that the aliens were going to arrive at a prominent landmark, Devils Tower in Wyoming. This is what we went to visit. The 1970s were the days when Aliens were friendly, with Close Encounters and “ET”. Alas by the late 1970s and 1980s the Aliens had got dangerous with “Alien” and its sequels and in the 1990s “Independence Day”

The (friendly) Aliens arriving at Devils Tower

The (friendly) Aliens arriving at Devils Tower

The real Devils Tower.

The real Devils Tower.

Prairie Dogs on the way out of Devils Tower

Prairie Dogs on the way out of Devils Tower

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Sundance, Wyoming http://gregspurgin.net/north-to-alaska/?p=359 http://gregspurgin.net/north-to-alaska/?p=359#comments Sat, 19 Jul 2014 19:36:22 +0000 http://gregspurgin.net/north-to-alaska/?p=359 Continue reading ]]> …. ‘where the kid came from!’

I didn’t think we had much to say about yesterday – we just spent it driving further east through Wyoming. Quite varied landscape – a high mountain pass that reminded me of ‘Brokeback Mountain’ country, then dry, flat plains. We camped at a nice little campground in a state forest, and just after midnight the fun really began.

A huge, bright, loud thunderstorm that woke us up and had us scuttling to take shelter in the car .. twice! The first storm went for about 90 minutes, with lightning flashes that lit up the whole sky. We kept listening to, and counting for the thunder to work out how far away the storm was, and when it got close we got in the car, figuring it was safer in a large tin box than out in the open near tall trees that could get struck by lightning. It rained a bit, but that didn’t last anywhere near as long as the lightning. We headed back to bed at around 1.30am, then it all started again at 3am!

So we’re feeling pretty wiped out this morning. We visited the Devil’s Tower National Monument, which Greg will write about soon. An amazing rock formation. Heading to the Black Hills to see some things and have an afternoon sleep! The locals are delighted with the weather – high 20s, fine. We just overheard someone comment that they wait 8 months for this weather.

Powder River Pass at 9666 feet, with snow still on some of the mountains in the background

Powder River Pass at 9666 feet, with snow still on some of the mountains in the background

A small RV (caravan) at a roadside stop on the I-90 in Wyoming

A small RV (caravan) at a roadside stop on the I-90 in Wyoming

 

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Yellowstone & Grand Teton National Parks http://gregspurgin.net/north-to-alaska/?p=339 http://gregspurgin.net/north-to-alaska/?p=339#comments Fri, 18 Jul 2014 02:03:27 +0000 http://gregspurgin.net/north-to-alaska/?p=339 Continue reading ]]> We spent the best part of 2 days driving south-east from Glacier National Park to the western entrance of Yellowstone National Park. Our rental car needed an oil change, according to the car’s dashboard, and unlike other rental companies who just get the driver to get an oil change done when needed and they re-imburse costs, Avis will only swap cars because ‘they want to cause as little disruption as possible’. Huh! We went to 3 Avis offices in 3 different towns in Montana and none could provide us with a replacement vehicle and we waited around in West Yellowstone for several hours and in fact it all ended up being pretty disruptive. Finally the manager at West Yellowstone airport reassured us that it would be okay to drive it to LA without getting the oil changed, and Avis could sort it out then.

We did get to see West Yellowstone at the height of the season – last time we were there it was mid-April, there was still snow everywhere, the Park had only just opened and very little in the town was open apart from the hotel we stayed at and a pizza place where we had dinner – this time we had bison burgers for lunch, but we didn’t get to the Yellowstone entrance until 4pm, by which time all the available campsites in the park were taken.

So we went to a campground in a nearby national forest and headed to Yellowstone early the next morning.  As we’d seen Old Faithful last time, we gave it a miss this time and visited other geysers, sulphur pool, hot springs and the Grand Canyon of Yellowstone. There were a few ‘wildlife jams’ on roads because people kept slowing down to look at bison grazing in meadows, but then we saw a whole herd a bit further south. We drove south beside Yellowstone Lake to Lewis Lake campground and were lucky enough to get one of the last sites. Not so lucky this morning at Jenny Lake campground in Grand Teton National Park – we missed out by a minute, unfortunately. All the campsites were taken by 9.30am!

The Teton Range is magnificent – tall, jagged peaks still dusted with snow here and there at the top, with a dozen glaciers spread across the 5 peaks.

And now we’re heading further east, to the Black Hills in South Dakota. Motelling it tonight in Worland, Wyoming and will spend the next few days camping.

Lower falls in Grand Canyon Yellowstone. It was a 200 metre descent which is a bit harder when you are already at 2,500 metres altitude

Lower falls in Grand Canyon Yellowstone. It was a 200 metre descent which is a bit harder when you are already at 2,500 metres altitude

A fumarole in Yellowstone

A fumarole in Yellowstone

Boiling sulphur pool in Yellowstone National Park

Boiling sulphur pool in Yellowstone National Park

Camped at Lewis Lake in Yellowstone. We got there at 1pm just in time to get a campsite at one of the most remote campsites in Yellowstone

Camped at Lewis Lake in Yellowstone. We got there at 1pm just in time to get a campsite at one of the most remote campsites in Yellowstone

The Grand Tetons 12,000 ft high mountain range. In the foreground is the dry sagebrush that grows in the dry rainshadow of the Tetons.

The Grand Tetons 12,000 ft high mountain range. In the foreground is the dry sagebrush that grows in the dry rainshadow of the Tetons.

 

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