Museum of the Rockies

Getting tired of super slabbing it to put down lots of miles we decided to check out the Museum of the Rockies in Bozeman and take a break.  We followed the signs and got off at the exit they said and went through miles and miles of construction and deep gravel to get there, like riding on ball bearings ontop of sand.  It was completely on the other end of town where it would have been shorter to take a different exit.  We did get to see the biggest and nicest REI I’ve ever seen though like the size of a super Walmart, crazy.

If you are into fossils, dinosaurs or natural history at all I highly recommend going if you are going through Montana, this place was awesome and had some fairly extensive and well done exhibits.  I’ve been to several natural history museums and was very impressed with the collections displayed at this one.  On top of the impressive fossil exhibits they also had a Living History Farm and exhibits on the human history as well with a Native American section and some nice examples of the horse drawn vehicles up through early autos.

They had several of these interesting sculptures that showed artist renderings of the fleshy side and the skeletal structure of the other half.

Honey dont move!  Theres something behind you!

They had a lot of T-Rex stuff, including the full skeleton out on the front lawn.  I had forgot that several specimens had been found in Montana.

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Leaving Yellowstone

We had a wonderful week in the Grand Tetons and Yellowstone but alas it was time to move on. We had some of the worst and miserable weather of the trip along with getting our campsite robbed but the beauty and experience of seeing this place with our own eyes more than made up for that.  I wouldn’t trade the experience for anything.

It was far too short of a time to take in everything. We will have to come back again some time. Alaska and Canada is still in our future, perhaps we’ll stop here on the way.

I’ve read many travel sites, motorcycle travel blogs, and threads on ADVrider.com and picture threads elsewhere and was a bit puzzled why so many travelers proudest moments was getting a picture of this stone arch.  There was never any description or location as if the object itself was enough like the Statue of Liberty. I didn’t know what this was 4 years ago when I first saw its picture, but now I do and here I was standing before it.  It almost brought a tear to my eye, here I was standing in the footsteps of some of the most epic motorcycle adventurers I’ve ever read in a place with so much history.

This was where it all began, this simple arch made of hexagonal basalt blocks and inscribed “For the Benefit and Enjoyment of the People.”   The Roosevelt Arch is the original main entrance to the countries first National Park.  This is where the national park movement started.  Without the foresight to put aside and preserve some of our magnificent lands so our children and grand children can see what once was America the United States no doubt would have wound up like Europe where the natural beauty was destroyed and developed or held in private hands by the wealthy.

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Fort Yellowstone

Yellowstone National Park Post Office

When we first arrived at Mammoth Hot Springs I immediatly noticed that many of the buildings looked remarkably similar to ones from Fort Stanton, New Mexico where my parents worked in my childhood. It turned out that the town of Mammoth Hot Springs was indeed a former US Army fort from 1886 to 1918.

Yellowstone was the first National Park and after its founding there was still some question as to what exactly is a national park and how are they to be used?  Early entrepreneurs set up rogue tourist camps, suvenier hunters broke off pieces of the natural wonders and threw litter and rocks into the colorful hot springs which choked off the flow and killed the colorful bacterial mats and the wildlife were under serious threat from poachers.  Early visitors saw the park as a resource to take and exploit as they pleased and the civilian park staff charged with preserving and protecting the park were unequipped and unexperienced to deal with the threat.

US Army Corps of Engineers Offices

 

In response the US Army set up a temporary camp and it was quickly realized that a permanent presence would be needed. At its height 324 soldiers were stationed at Fort Yellowstone and the park outposts along with civilian staff and families.  In the winter the cavalry patrolled on skies and snow shoes.

Soldiers liked the remote rugged life in the mountains many applied to get in.  The life was hard and demanding and sometimes quite dangerous but the more relaxed discipline at Yellowstone, newer facilities and amazing scenery was unbeatable.

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Yellowstone Wildlife

Yellowstone is a wildlife photographers dream, there are all kinds of critters large and small.  Not only is there some spectacular landscapes to be shooting in but you’re also guaranteed to see something.  You’ll definitely see a few bison or hundred and most likely a lot of elk as well.

We watched a movie at one of the visitors centers on how park policy toward the animals has changed over the years.  It used to be perfectly fine to feed the bears for example and they had pictures of little bear cubs pressed against 50’s station wagons trying to get scraps of food out of the windows.

Now days they recommend staying away I think they said around 100 yards from the bears and 75 feet from the elk.  We tried our best to follow the guidelines but I don’t think the animals got the same memo.  The bears came up 3 feet away from us and the elk 3 inches, a bit too close on both counts.

The smaller guys are more numerous but faster and harder to find, just take your time along the hiking trails and you’ll be sure to spot a few.  Wildlife photography takes a lot of patience to get just the right shot, far more patience than I have with a fixed schedule to be somewhere.  It takes a lot of patience for landscape photography also to get the perfect lighting, clouds or weather and you aren’t even shooting a moving target.  Read below where we met a real wildlife photographer.

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Mammoth Hot Springs

If you are in Yellowstone another of its impressive natural formations that you have to see are the terraced pools of Mammoth Hot Springs.  The northern entrance to the park is one of the busier ones with its closer proximity to civilization and chances are this would be the first thing you would see.

Like other places in the park vehicle parking is somewhat limited and combined with the vast network of wooden walkway trails for everyone to spread out on it was not crowded at all.  Visiting by motorcycle was ideal in places like this as we could always squeeze into small spaces and find a place to park whereas most of the cars had to park at the bottom of the hill with quite a bit of walking ahead of them 😉   If you are in the park do check it out, its well worth it. Plus there’s much to do in the historic town of Mammoth Hot Springs, formerly Fort Yellowstone.

The colors are caused by the same bacteria and microbial mats I mentioned earlier that are able to thrive in the extreme heat and acidic conditions.  As the precipitates build up and the water moves elsewhere the bacterias die off leaving the stark white formations seen below.

The springs were very cool, unfortunately we’d eaten lunch in town just before this and my Dagwood sandwich did not agree with me.  Of course we had to be far away from the bike when I started getting sick bad, by the time we got back Cece was practically having to carry me 😉  At least we got a few good pics before we had a man down.   She had a few bites of my sandwich and started getting sick a few hours after me.  If you’re eating lunch in Mammoth Hot Springs don’t get the Dagwood!

Above and below are good examples of the ever changing landscape of Yellowstone where geologic changes can be seen on a human time scale.  The springs have changed positions into the surrounding trees and killed off all the ones it surrounded.  Along the walkways were names of all the various springs making up the Mammoth site and several of the nameplates were overlooking springs that are no longer active while fresh new ones have sprung up in other unanticipated places like the very bottom pics.

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Falls and the Grand Canyon of Yellowstone

Another must see at Yellowstone, Upper and Lower Falls!  Both of these are magnificent waterfalls and have several good and easily accessible vantage points.   Upper falls was shorter but had one of the best views not requiring any hiking.  Lower Falls is three times higher but without an up close viewing area except Tom’s Trail which goes down into the canyon on metal walkways.

To get here there are two roads near Canyon Village.  The southern one will take you to points to see both Upper and Lower Falls and dead ends at Inspiration Point.   The other is a one way loop from Canyon Village and will take you to Inspiration Point, the only easy way to get a glimpse of the Grand Canyon of Yellowstone.

I apologize for the poor quality of some of the pics, and the ones back on Lake Yellowstone, we left both good cameras back at camp after the soggy morning. We didnt want to get them soaked and ruined. All these were taken from the cheap throwaway one I kept in my pocket.

Uh-Oh! Bears in the area!  Cece would make a nice little snack.

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Mud Volcano

Up the road from Lake Yellowstone is the Mud Volcano parking area.  Everything here is contained in a small area and doesnt take long to see, well worth stopping for just to see the Dragon’s Mouth Spring which I thought was one of the coolest things we’d seen so far in Yellowstone.

From a distance you can hear the low roars of the steam echoing through internal chambers of the Dragon’s Mouth Spring and the eruptions of steam up ahead. It does sound like you are walking up to the lair of a living fire breathing dragon. Very Awesome!

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Lake Yellowstone

We were on a mission to get to Lake Village for something to eat after the second freezing cold and wet morning and we were happy just to have sunny skies and dry roads just 5 miles from the camp.  With rain clouds just up ahead and already being wet and cold we turned off as soon as we could to wait out the coming storm.

We wound up at Bay Bridge Marina where a small crowd of people had gathered.  A boat tour of Yellowstone Lake was leaving in 5 mins, SWEET!     Funny that this exact same scenario happened to us back at the Tetons, we wound up on a boat tour of Jenny Lake while spontaneously pulling in to avoid a rain storm.

Heres our boat, captained by a tiny little woman not much taller than Cece who took her job very seriously.  The boat was fully enclosed so we could dry off, thank god! and built to withstand the severe sudden storms that develop without warning on the high alpine lake.  Our tour guide was very funny and informative with lots of stories of old Yellowstone.  I highly recommend going on the lake tour if you visit Yellowstone, it was awesome, and doesnt require any walking 😉

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Give me fuel give me fire

What a rough way to start the morning!  Dead bike, drenched with cold freezing rain, and exhausted from pushing the bike up and down hills.

Only dedicated motorcycle parking in one of the countries biggest National Parks

So far on our trip we have used our Coleman single burner lantern and our little Coleman stove almost daily, usually several times a day at morning and at night for cooking and to keep warm.  We had taken a small spare can of Coleman fuel for them and with all of the heavy usage we’d already burned through it so last night I unhooked the gas line from the bike and refilled everything.  I can already hear the bikers in the audience snickering at what happened next who’ve all experienced it themselves.  I FORGOT TO HOOK UP THE GAS!

I love these old metrics a trio was riding cross country, both guys were bike mechanics.

Arg! so embarrassing!  Sure I’ve left the gas off before and when the bike sputtered and died a few mins later after starting it up I always realized it right away.  What made it so bad this time was how hard it was raining, and how miserable we were back at camp, we wanted to get out of there right away and the bike would not fire up. What the heck?   Full choke, nothing.  The bike would just crank and crank.  I thought it had to do with being parked in a rain forest for hours of steady drizzle all night just above freezing and kept trying to start it and fussing with the choke.

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Midway Geyser Basin

The Grand Prismatic Spring at Yellowstone National Park is an otherworldly sight of vivid colors and has been featured in nearly every TV program mentioning Yellowstone that I’ve ever seen.  This was the place that I wanted to see above all others, not Old Faithful with its hordes of tourists or the bubbling paint pots or the stepped Mammoth Hot Springs. I wanted to see the amazing splash of colors that is the Midway Geyser Basin and it did not disappoint.

The Excelsior Geyser had some of the deepest blue waters I’ve ever seen.  It also put out huge amounts of steam that reflected the blues and oranges from below, very ethereal and dreamlike.   The full scope of the Grand Prismatic Spring below is hard to see from ground level, you can just make out the rainbow of colors stretching away from you when the wind is blowing just right,  this one you really need to see from the air to fully appreciate but its still worth checking out on foot.

The Midway Geyser Basin was crowded with the narrowish walkways but not too bad compared to Old Faithful.  The parking-lot is relatively small and was filled to overcapacity, times like this is when its really an advantage to be on a motorcycle where you can park anywhere.  Because of the small parking lot I don’t think it could ever get much busier than when we saw it.

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