Thursday, November 8, 2012

Thursday, November 1, 2012

Friday, October 26, 2012

Popular attractions


Popular Attractions and Activities

  • Paradise Valley – 53 miles of beautiful ranch land, flowing rivers with several hot springs, and excellent fishing spots along the way. Also home to the tall Devil's Slide Rock formation.
  • The Boiling River – Just a few miles south of the park entrance, thermal water boils up on the banks and mixes to a comfortable temperature to enjoy a soak.
  • Jardine – an old gold town 7 miles north of the hotel where you can find great hiking, berry picking and exploring in the nearby mountains.
  • Devil's slide – An unusual rock formation that can be seen heading North on Highway 89.

Tuesday, October 2, 2012

Yellowstone Facts #3

 During the fires of 1988, the park was completely closed to visitors for the first time since it opened in 1872.  The park was closed for one day on August 20, 1988.
 Smoke plumes from the Yellowstone fires could be seen from the space shuttle, and ashes fell 100 miles away in Billings, Montana.
 August 20, 1988 became known as "Black Saturday" when hurricane-force winds blasted through the park, whipping fires to a frenzy and burning 165,000 acres in one day.
 About 80% of Yellowstone Park is forested.
 About 50% of the 60 mammal species in Yellowstone Park are rodents such as voles, pocket gophers, and mice.
 60% of a coyote's diet is made up of rodents.
 A muskrat can stay underwater for up to 20 minutes.
 A single five (5) ounce pocket gopher can move up to five (5) tons of soil in a typical year.
 A moose can keep its head underwater for three (3) minutes.
 There are 100 to 200 wolves in Yellowstone Park, but there are 1,000 coyotes in the park.
 It's estimated that about 10,000 elk, 4,000 bison, 1,000 deer, and 500 pronghorn antelope live in Yellowstone National Park.
 An average porcupine has 30,000 quills.
 The trumpeter swan is North America's largest waterfowl, weighing about 30 pounds with a wingspan of eight feet.
 There are 40 species of mosquitoes and 80 species of bees living in Yellowstone Park.
 A grizzly bear will typically eat 35 pounds of food in a day, consuming 20,000 calories daily, and gain 40 pounds of weight every week.
 Bears have 42 teeth.
 The hump on a grizzly bear's back is made of muscle, which aids in digging for food and to make dens.
 A typical female grizzly bear will give birth once every three years.
 About 40 percent of grizzly cubs die in their first year of life.
 A male grizzly bear will typically lose 30 percent of its body weight during hibernation.  A female grizzly bear will lose 40 percent or more of its weight if she is nursing cubs.
 A bear cub weighs about one pound when it is born in the den in January.  Having eaten nothing other than the mother's milk since birth, the cub will weigh about 20 pounds when it exits the den.
 From a standing start, a grizzly bear can run 100 meters in just six (6) seconds.
 Cow milk is two to four percent fat, but grizzly bear milk is 50 percent fat.
 A black bear's hearing is about twice as sensitive as a human's hearing.
 Grizzly bears can live up to 30 years in the wild.
 An adult male black bear can weigh 300 to 500 pounds while an adult male grizzly bear can weigh 500 to 800 pounds.
 96 percent of Yellowstone is in Wyoming, 3 percent in Montana, and 1 percent in Idaho.
 Mammoth Hot Springs Hotel was the first lodge built in Yellowstone, opening in 1883.  It was torn down in 1936, an a new complex was built.
 Former President Gerald Ford worked as a seasonal employee in Yellowstone in 1936.
 The top causes of death in Yellowstone are car crashes, illness, drowning, and falls.
 On average in the summer, the water temperature of Yellowstone Lake is 41F.  The average survival time in water that cold is 30 minutes.

Tuesday, September 25, 2012

Yellowstone Facts #2!

In spring when snow is melting and rain is falling, 64,000 gallons of water go over the Upper and Lower Falls of the Yellowstone River every second.
Yellowstone Lake sits an elevation of 7,733 feet above sea level, making it the largest high-elevation lake in North America.
The average depth of Yellowstone Lake is about 140 feet, but the maximum depth is 390 feet.
There are 340 waterfalls in Yellowstone, including 290 that were recently discovered.
Of the approximately 200 lakes in Yellowstone, only 45 have fish in them.  The others are too small, too shallow, too hot, too alkali, too acidic, or have access blocked by waterfalls.
A sagebrush plant can live for 200 years.
The average year-round temperature of Yellowstone National Park is 35F.
The Grand Canyon of the Yellowstone is 20 miles long, 1,500 to 4,000 feet wide, and up to 1,500 feet deep.  If you hike all the way to the bottom of the canyon and all the way back up again, that would be equal to taking the stairs to the top of the Sears Tower in Chicago and back down again.
There are about 2,000 campsites in the park accessible to vehicles, and there are 300 backcountry campsites.
If you drive every road in Yellowstone National Park, you will see only two (2) percent of the park.
The only section of road that remains open year-round in Yellowstone is from the north entrance at Mammoth to the northeast entrance at Cooke City, where it dead-ends in the winter.

Tuesday, September 18, 2012

Yellowstone Facts!

At 2.2 million acres, Yellowstone National Park is larger than the states of Rhode Island and Delaware combined.  It's 54 miles east to west and 63 miles north to south.
Overall, the average elevation of Yellowstone is about 8,000 feet.
The highest temperature ever recorded in Yellowstone Park is 98F set in Lamar Valley in 1936.  The record low temperature for Yellowstone is 66 below zero, set in February 1933 at Madison.
Five (5) percent of Yellowstone's surface area is water.  This amount, totaling 177 square miles, is largely made up by Yellowstone Lake consisting of 136 square miles.

Thursday, August 2, 2012

Cultural Resources

  • 26 associated American Indian tribes
  • Approximately 1,600 archeological sites
  • More than 300 ethnographic resources (animals, plants, sites)
  • More than 24 sites, landmarks, and districts on the National Register of Historic Places
  • 1 National Historic Trail
  • More than 900 historic buildings
  • More than 379,000 cultural objects and natural science specimens
  • Thousands of books (many rare), manuscripts, periodicals
  • About 90,000 photographic prints and negatives