Yellowstone

Yellowstone

Yellowstone National Park was established on March 1, 1872, as the world’s first national park. For over 100 years it was the largest national park in the United States, being surpassed in 1980 by several created that year in Alaska. A rectangle carved out of the state of Wyoming, measuring 54 miles east-west and 63 … Continue reading

Old Faithful

Old Faithful

On the drive from West Thumb to Old Faithful, the road crosses the Continental Divide twice, the second crossing being Craig Pass at elevation 8,262 feet. Straddling Craig Pass is Isa Lake (more like a large pond in my opinion), one of the only natural water bodies in the world that drains into two oceans; … Continue reading

So, Sioux Me

So, Sioux Me

Leaving Yellowstone NP, our goal for the day was to drive to Little Bighorn Battlefield National Monument in Montana. But, having all day to travel the 250 miles, we stopped for a couple hours in Cody, Wyoming, to visit the Buffalo Bill Center of the West. One of the statutes in front of the Center, … Continue reading

Last Man Standing

Last Man Standing

The Little Bighorn Battlefield National Monument is located inside the Crow Indian Reservation in southeastern Montana. You probably know the Little Bighorn as the site of “Custer’s Last Stand,” referring to Lt. Col. George Armstrong Custer (1839-1876) and his final battle against the Plains Indians. We visited the Monument Monday afternoon after my trip to … Continue reading

Little Missouri

Little Missouri

The Little Missouri River is the thread that stitches together the three separate units of Theodore Roosevelt National Park. The river rises in northeastern Wyoming near the Devil’s Tower and from there snakes generally northward into the Dakotas, passing through Medora into the South Unit of Theodore Roosevelt NP. It continues north from there another … Continue reading