Tuesday, August 30, 2011

Saturday, August 27th

Tuesday, August 30, 2011

Greetings once again from Yellowstone.  Spent this past Saturday in Bozeman, Mt. getting much needed haircuts, an oil change and most importantly, replenished our junk food stores. 
Large sections of the  2-1/2 hour drive to Bozeman follows the Gallitan River where, now that the river is flowing at more manageable levels, we encountered numerous float trips.  On our nearby Yellowstone, Snake and Gallitan Rivers you can book float trips ranging from 2 hours to several days.  Judging from the lack of packed supplies and gear this particular float appeared to be a day trip. 


We arrived back in the Park around dusk and took a few pictures of the Madison River looking northwest just inside the west gate at West Yellowstone, Mt. (I enjoy telling Park visitors from foreign countries that  the Madison River is named for Dolly Madison, our 4th president).  










In 1988, the driest year on record in Yellowstone's history, about 30 percent of the park burned from over 50 different wildfires. The moisture content of the trees at that time was around 7%, lower than that of kiln dried lumber. Over 22,000  firefighters and military personnel fought the fires for more than 60 days and what finally extinguished the fires was a mid-September snowstorm. Anyway, in this shot you can see sections of Lodgepole regrowth from 1988....not a single tree was planted by man.

Along the Madison we spied an American Bald Eagle's nest, about 8-10 feet in diameter, high in a dead Lodgepole Pine. It's not far from the eagles we pictured in an earlier blog and we think this may have been their nest. It's amazing the size of the tree limbs and sticks they use!






After we turned off from the Madison and headed south along the Firehole we encountered a pair of  Osprey that sat still just long enough for us to take a couple of pictures. Osprey are also called "fish hawks" and as their nickname implies they primarily live on a diet of fish. The 1988 fires were actually a benefit for the Osprey as they prefer to nest in tall, dead trees and their numbers are at an all time high.












On the road just a half mile from our dorm and the Old Faithful complex we came upon a huge "bear jam".  A young grizzly had just "ambushed" a gang of elk grazing just feet off of the road and was lucky enough to bring one down. Passersbys told us they witnessed the attack from their cars minutes before we arrived.  The griz dragged the elk down a small ravine and took it across the Firehole River.  It didn't take long for a large viewing crowd to form along with several park rangers.  We watched in awe as the bear sat/reclined next to its kill taking in a few gallons of water between meals!  We heard the next day this was actually an "orphaned" bear (the mother was lost a year ago when hit by a car) and the rangers were happy it appeared to have mastered the necessary hunting skills to survive on its own.  Life is brutal out here...something is always looking to eat something else!























During our bear/elk watch the rangers formed an imaginary line of safety that no one was allowed to cross. I asked the ranger closest to us if I could move forward about three more feet to catch a shot of some of the assembled crowd telling her I would be sure and include her in the photo. She responded to my request saying "I'll give you just one picture and ten seconds".  She was kind of testy but I guess none of them (the rangers) want it on their park service record that they allowed a tourist to be killed by a grizzly while they were posing for a picture. :)

A shot of Old Faithful which we are fortunate to see several times a day from our work.  Every 92 minutes 24 hours a day.

Finally, we're hearing more details about another grizzly bear attack and person's death this past Friday....the second this season. It happened just about 15 miles from us on the Mary Mountain trail and a couple of miles from the Mud Volcano area we showed in our last blog. Initial communications were that the 59 year old male might have died from natural causes and that a bear happened upon his body partially consuming it and then burying it to conceal it from other competing predators ....ugh. Two other hikers found the remains. Yesterday's autopsy report however showed the victim actually died from "massive trauma and blood loss from a bear attack".  Now rangers and other park service personnel have cordoned off several square miles along Mary Mountain trail and have set live traps in hopes of catching and identifying, through DNA tests, the suspect bear....which will then be euthanized as he/she now associates humans as an easy food source.
It's truly unfortunate this happened... the fellow was hiking and camping alone (which you should never do up here) and was not carrying any bear spray nor had bear bells. As we saw on Saturday, if a young bear can bring down a 400-500lb elk a person doesn't stand a chance.


All for now and our best to everyone.

Jim and Ann






















































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Wednesday, August 24, 2011

Saturday & Sunday August 20th & 21st, 2011

August 24, 2011

Greetings once more from Yellowstone.  We're getting ever closer to the end of our
summer "assignment"  with just a few weeks remaining. Time is racing by.
The hints of the coming Fall are in the air with a couple of frosts this past week, thinning crowds with fewer school age children, the beginning of the bison rut and bull elk beginnig to assemble their "harems", and many of our student-age workers returning to school. Morning temperatures are in the mid-thirties and lately we need to wear light jackets in the mornings and evenings.

The attached pics are of a couple of cow elk we surprised at dusk and a nature hike we took with a Yellowstone ranger this past Saturday at Pelican Point.  Our original plan was to hike Storm Point on Yellowstone Lake but that area was closed with posted signs warning us of  bears and wolves feeding on an elk carcus near the trailhead.  Pelican took us thru marshy lowlands and then into mature lodgepole pine forests and ended along the shore of Yellowstone Lake ....three very disparate ecoysystems with thier own animals and plants.  In our group was a mother and daughter from Carmel and
the mom was a scientist with Lilly...quite a small world! 












Later in the day we drove North along the Yellowstone River in search of rutting bison and hiked the "Mud Volcano" area.  It's very different than the other geyser areas we've visited in that very high levels of sulfuric acid has dissolved the surrounding rock into boilng mud with a very strong odor of hydrogen sulfide gas.































Just after leaving the Mud Volcano area we entered Hayden Valley in search of bison and only saw a few.  What we did encounter was a huge traffic jam
 of about 200 vehicles and no animals in sight.  Suddenly about 50 people
and two park rangers came tearing up a hillside next to us shouting that a grizzly bear and her two cubs were right behind them coming our way!  The rangers were literally throwing people back into their cars and campers and slamming doors behind them. We were trying to make sense of all the chaos wondering just where along the huge traffic jam the bears would emerge when suddenly they came over the rise and crossed right in front of our car! We quickly fumbled around with our camera settings and lenses and caught one fair shot of the mother and one of her two cubs.  Following that chance encounter we caught an incredibly bad (but free) dinner in the Canyon Village EDR and headed home.

On Sunday we put our hiking boots back on and did a 7 mile hike to Lone Star Geyser just a 15 minute drive from our home at Old Faithful. It was a fairly easy but warm hike along an upper section of the Firehole River and very beautiful.  Lone Star was fun to see and our timing was good as it only erupts every 3 hours or so (as compared to Old Faithful which erupts every 90 minutes). Between eruptions we hiked a bit deeper into the forest and came upon a campsite with its food supply hung high in the trees. (Brings back memories doesn't it Mike, Jud, Bill and Sergio??).

In closing, a humerous note. Earlier last week a guest and his family staying in our huge Old Faithful Inn were visited by a mouse around 11:00PM. Being the protector of his family the father quickly let loose with a long blast from his canister of bear spray and within minutes about 40 guests  had to be evacuated from their rooms and checked out by our EMTs for  breathing problems!  Not sure what happened to the mouse... :)

All for now....

Jim and Ann


































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Friday, August 19, 2011

Sunday, August 14th

I am including a few pics of the alpine flowers that were at the top of the mountain at Teton Village.
They are so beautiful and
delicate. I haven't identified these yet so just enjoy. Also a picture of the finish line for the relay race mentioned in our earlier blog. Lots of teams participating and we saw lots of runners still at it on our drive into Jackson Hole.








 



We did the typical tourist activity in Jackson Hole - picture by the antler arch.  We saw some incredible art in the galleries around the town square.  The sculptures were huge and very impressive but a little out of our price range.









Caught some river rafters from the bank of the river and from the overlook over the Snake.  Looks like fun, maybe we'll give that a try before we depart.  One last shot of the Tetons.  Hope we'll be back soon to visit.

That's all for now. 
Ann & Jim
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