Yellowstone Wildlife
If you can believe it, the last four posts, West Thumb Geyser Basin, Old Faithful, Beyond Old Faithful, and The Grand Prismatic Spring, as well as this one, all took place within a single day, Wednesday, June 17th, of our week-long road trip.
At some point in the middle of it all, we figured we’d try to see if there was any chance we could stay in the park that night. So we called the central reservations line, and lo and behold, they had a cabin with communal bathrooms available in Mammoth Hot Springs, at the very north end of the park. So with that destination in mind, we made a big 130 mile reverse-S through the park to see as much as we could.
That is indeed a bull elk, though it seems late in the season for him to still have velvet on his antlers.
Hi Justin – do you think a trip to yellowstone in the early october will be to cold ? – I’ve got 2 weeks vacation – but the earliest date will be end of september – perhaps one week stayin in yellowstone – after this flying to west-florida to have some warm weather ?? Good Idea ? –
Josh, thanks for confirmation. Yeah. I learned all about elk/deer/moose velvet thanks to Google Images. Who knew!?
Geli, October might be too late. A lot of signs I saw said that their primary season is May 1 through September 30. But who knows. If it’s not snowing yet, it might be perfect. Do check out the Yellowstone Weather to get an idea of the average temperatures.
Thanks you !
I thought about this, because it was also cool in end of september, as we visit yosemite. Perhaps next summer ;-)
I stayed in one of those cabins in 1990. I remember the fragrant wild roses growing about. I hope you’re having a great time, and I’m envious about your trip to Glacier… I haven’t been there yet.
Hey Craig! Actually in real life, we’ve been back for nearly 2 weeks. I took so many photos and had very little access to internet while we were away (let alone the time or inclination to blog), that I’ve been stretching out the posts from our one week road trip (June 14-21) across the last two weeks.
But yeah, those Mammoth cabins were pretty special. It was like a four-star bed and breakfast, without breakfast or showers! Would have been nice to spend more time. Yellowstone is so massive that we were literally racing through the park to see as much as we could while there was still light and good weather. This was one of those trips where the journey was as important to us as the destinations along the way.
There is something very satisfying, if not meditative, about covering so much ground, moving through landscape like that.