Thursday, November 13, 2025
Flying home from Bozeman via Las Vegas (September 9, 2025)
Our VRBO hosts provided bear spray for us. We left it behind in Montana and Wyoming.Las Vegas airport is the last chance to hit the jackpot, right? We opted to buy coffee instead.
You can only gamble if you aren't getting high at the same time. Ah, our last look at the American buffalo.
Bozeman's Museum of the Rockies (September 8, 2025)
Montana is rich with dinosaur fossils, with more than 75 species discovered there, more than any other U.S. state. Significant finds include the world's first T. rex and the first baby dinosaur bones discovered in North America. The museum houses the largest collection of dinosaur fossils in the world, including this reconstructed T. Rex skeleton. In another part of the museum, you can watch paleontologists cleaning and preserving dinosaur fossils.
More grizzlies (September 8, 2025)
We visited the Montana Grizzly Encounter and Rescue near Bozeman and were alarmed to see a pen of goats outside. Were they bear food? I had to ask and ended up paying the fine.
In the wild, bears are typically solitary creatures, except during mother-cub relationships or when food is plentiful. Three bears of varying ages and sizes, each with their own unique personality, are at the center. When not outside, they enjoy comfortable indoor dens equipped with climate control, running water, toys, and other enrichment activities.
Before being rescued, two bears lived in this 4' x 4' x 6' cage for years. Their captor fed them only bread and dog food. The captor was never prosecuted for his cruelty.Wednesday, November 12, 2025
Old Faithful and the Upper Geyser Basin (September 7, 2025)
Bison and fumaroles on the road to Old Faithful. Fumaroles are steam vents that release volcanic gases and vapors from the Earth's interior. The escaping gases hiss and roar.
Waiting for Old Faithful, the geyser that erupts every 60-110 minutes, reaching heights of 106-184 feet, expelling thousands of gallons of boiling water.
Tuesday, November 11, 2025
Yellowstone elk (September 6, 2025)
Elk are the park's most abundant large mammal, with an estimated 10,000-20,000 in the summer. All but about 2,000 migrate north out of the park in the winter. We were there during rutting season but didn't hear any bugling (their mating calls) or see any bulls fight to gather females into their harems. Only the bulls have antlers so this must be a female who's sharing the road with us.
Yellowstone Lake (September 6, 2025)
In June and July, Yellowstone cutthroat trout spawn up the Yellowstone River. From the Fishing Bridge, you can watch the spawning frenzy in the water and the feeding frenzy in the air, as the trout are an easy catch for eagles, osprey, and pelicans. The bridge has been permanently closed to fishermen since 1973 due to overfishing and habitat impact.
Yellowstone Lake is the largest high elevation lake in North America. It's 20 miles long and 14 miles wide, with a maximum depth of 430 feet. The Fishing Cone is a hot spring along the lake where fishermen traditionally cooked their freshly caught fish. The practice was banned in 1912.
The orange color is caused by heat-loving microorganisms that thrive in the cooler, outflowing water from the hotter Black Pool in the background.Black Pool, next to the lake, was inky black until 1991, when an energy transfer increased the pool's temperature killing the microbes that made it black. The pool became a bright teal blue.
Monday, November 10, 2025
Mud volcanos (September 6, 2025)
Yellowstone mud is dangerous too!
Yellowstone is a dangerous place! (September 2025)
Stay on the boardwalks lest you fall through the crust to be boiled alive!
This isn't Yogi Bear and Booboo after your picnic basket at Jellystone! YOU will be the picnic!
Sure, the deer and the antelope play. But bison don't play around!
Monday, October 6, 2025
Day 3: Back in Gardiner (September 5, 2025)
As dusk approached, this barred owl surveyed the meadow outside our VRBO. I'm guessing rabbits and rodents might be on the menu?
Day 2 at the North Gate (September 4, 2025)
Wednesday, October 1, 2025
More of Day 2 in Yellowstone (September 4, 2025)
We decided this must be the bear tooth itself. The highway, completed in 1936, was carved through extreme terrain using methods like hand-carved rock embankments and precision blasting through granite.
Returning to Yellowstone, back through the Beartooth Pass.
The 11,699-foot Pilot Peak, visible from the Beartooth Highway, is the pointiest mountain peak we've ever seen.











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