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Entries in Wyoming (7)

Sunday
Oct162011

We Bearly Knew Ya’ – 10 Surprising Facts About Yellowstone

By Bennett Owen

As part of the My-West fall road trip, we took an early October swing through snow-capped Yellowstone Park…no lines, no traffic jams…and no lollygagging either, because it was freakin’ COLD! The kids will most likely remember one very photogenic chipmunk, a few snowball fights and the view of Yellowstone Falls from Artist’s Point, which suitably blew away the CGI saturated munchkins. 

Credit: My-West.com

In an effort to entertain and enlighten the kids en route, I uncovered some things about Yellowstone that entertained and enlightened me more than anyone else and since they didn’t impress the kids I’m trying ten of them out on you:

10 – Tiny little Isa Lake is the only body of water that empties into both sides of the Continental Divide…feeding both the Missouri and mighty Columbia rivers.

Credit: aj_jones_IV

9 – Redwoods once grew in Yellowstone. Geologists say the Petrified Tree near Tower Junction is “anatomically indistinguishable from modern Redwoods growing today along the California coast.”

Credit: RaShi

8 – Gardner, Montana at the north entrance of Yellowstone is located directly on the 45th parallel…halfway between the Equator and the North Pole.

Credit: jpc.raleigh

7 – There is an appropriately named ‘Mae West’ curve on the Grand Loop Road near the Antelope Creek overlook.

Mae West Curve. Credit: mccormacka

6 - You can tell the temperature of the water by the color of the algae. Bright yellow survives at 160 F, while the green stuff means the water temperature is a mere 120 F.

Morning Glory Pool. Credit: jpc.raleigh

5 – That thing hanging from a Moose’s neck is called a Dewlap.

Credit: Jvstin

4 – Bill Clinton was the last of eight presidents who visited Yellowstone Park while in office.

Credit: Washington Post

3 - Steamboat Geyser is the highest erupting geyser in the world, shooting water as high as 400 feet.

Credit: Joe Shlabotnik

2 – The fastest animal found in Yellowstone is the Pronghorn Antelope, with top speeds of 50 MPH…slightly slower than ME after spotting a Grizzly Bear.

Credit: Talking Tree

1-    Yellowstone Park is not only the first US national park but the world’s first as well, and sparked a global effort to preserve and maintain places of rare natural beauty.

Credit: SeattleRay

Sunday
Oct092011

Post Script

Credit: My-West.com archives

We're just back from our road trip through Idaho, Montana and Wyoming. Along the way we passed through about a hundred small towns. And one thing they all have in common is a one-room post office. Here are a few more to add to our prior post, Post Modern Mails.

Credit: My-West.com ©

Credit: My-West.com ©

Credit: My-West.com ©

Credit: My-West.com ©

Credit: My-West.com ©

Credit: My-West.com ©

Credit: My-West.com ©

Credit: My-West.com ©

Credit: My-West.com ©

Credit: My-West.com ©

Thursday
Sep012011

Last Weekend – Labor Day the My-West Way 

By Bennett Owen

Summer going to the mountains…Summer going to the lake…Summer going to the Rodeo…Summer staying right home.  Any way you look at it, summer’s almost over. Here are our 10 favorite Labor Day detours…

10 – Climbing Mount Whitney – At nearly 15-thousand feet it’s the highest mountain in the lower 48…and some say it’s the highest walk-up summit on the planet.

Lightning Shelter/Hut on Summit of Mt. Whitney. Credit: peretzp

09 – Ellensburg, Washington – The Ellensburg Labor Day Rodeo is one of the ‘old rodeos’ and is also ranked among America’s top 10 – celebrating its 75th year.

Credit: fxp

08 – Ketchum/Sun Valley, Idaho – Wagon Days - Commemorating the region’s mining past, the Big Hitch Parade is one of the largest non-motorized parades in the west, featuring an authentic, 20-draft mule jerkline.

Ore Wagons. Credit: Mountain Mike.com

07 – Grants Pass, Oregon – Rafting the Rogue River, one of the most gorgeous and exhilarating rides in the west.

Sunset on the Rogue River. Credit: Derek Severson

06 - Bandera, Texas – It’s a weekend southwest Texas spectacle in the ‘Cowboy Capital of the World’, but the thriller is the Running R Ranch Cattle Drive…with a herd of real Texas Longhorns.  (There’s also an event called ‘Cow Patty Bingo’ but we didn’t really want to know about that!)

Credit: Running R Ranch Facebook page

05 - Meeteetse, Wyoming – There’s a band playing at the Cowboy Bar, that’s a good enough excuse.  But the town has also celebrated a three-day barbecue on the same weekend for 99 years now. As one cowboy says, “The hay is in, and it it’s not yet branding and sorting time. Time to see friends and catch up.”   Sounds good to us.

Rodeo Queen from nearby Cody, Wyoming. Credit: newrambler

04 - Take the “High Road” route from Taos to Santa Fe, New Mexico - Start with breakfast at the Taos Diner on the north end of town.  – Santa Fe, by the way, is the oldest capital city in the US, founded in 1610.

Credit: j.s.clark

03 – The Grand Canyon Railway – Start at the Historic depot in Williams, Arizona, built in 1908 by the Atchison, Topeka and Santa Fe Railroad…and from there embark on a two and a half hour trip through the high desert. The Grand Canyon Depot is one of three log train stations remaining in the US. 

Grand Canyon Railway. Credit: obfusciatrist

02 - Jazz at Aspen and Snowmass, Colorado - Steely Dan will be playing there. Someday when I get the bill listing hours wasted listening to rock and roll, The Dan will be edged out only by Neil Young.

Steely Dan. Credit: commercialappeal

01 – Dillon, Montana – Montana’s Biggest Weekend, the Labor Day Fair and Rodeo.  Anyone who’s been with us a while at My-West knows the special place Dillon holds in our hearts.  And this year, Uncle Jules and Aunt Bonnie are the Grand Marshals of the Labor Day parade.

Credit: My-West.com

So, have a great weekend, and drop us a post card, wherever and however you spend it!

 

Wednesday
Jul062011

BAR NONE – Round 1 – The Cowboy Bar, Meeteetse, Wyoming

By Bennett Owen

“I drank my share of whiskey…and someone else’s too…”

-    Anonymous Patron         

Credit: zampano!!!

Credit: My-West.com ©

To enter the Cowboy Bar you’ll have to pull on a rifle barrel …

Once inside, your first impression will be the Copenhagen lids lining the ceiling …… the copious collection of firearms adorning the walls

Credit: My-West.com ©

… and some well-placed warning signs … But it’s the bar that will truly capture your attention.

Credit: 3obryans

Produced by Brunswick-Balke-Collender … a 12-foot high neo-classical showcase, hand-crafted by Italian artisans for the Chicago World Columbian Exposition of 1893 and then shipped to the wildest corner of Wyoming by a couple of Canadians who opened the Cowboy Bar in Meeteetse. 

There wasn’t much to the town then ...

Credit: My-West.com ©

And still, the place attracted a veritable VIP list of misfits, castaways and luminaries of their time.  Butch Cassidy was arrested here in 1894 … having run afoul of one of the west’s biggest and blood thirstiest cattle barons, Otto Franc (More in our upcoming series, 10 Germans Who Won the West).

As prohibition took hold, the liquor was delivered in milk canisters and the Sheriff simply “picked up his mail at the bar and looked the other way.”

Credit: My-West.com ©

Legend has it that Al Capone’s personal chef served his parole in Meeteetse and took quite a liking to the place.

By the mid 1930’s high-flying Amelia Earhart was spending time here and … well, more about that in tomorrow’s post … 

Credit: My-West.com ©

The bar is indeed well stocked, in part because it also serves as a liquor store. But the bartender confides most of the clientele tend to favor the wide selection of beers and the ever-popular “Sagebrush.” 

Current owner, Jim F. Blake, is a historian and poker player who wouldn’t confirm rumors of 56 bullet holes in the bar.  But he’s full of stories including the time a howitzer was brought in to fulfill a faithful patron’s dying wish …


The place is quiet and pleasant enough on a late afternoon … fairly dripping with untold history. But one of the regulars mentioned an “incident” a few days back that bunged up our host’s prize antique piano a bit. As if to remove all doubt about the boisterous clientele, Jim then unsheathed a one million volt stun gun … the crackle of the arc alone shied us all back a few feet.  

Credit: My-West.com ©

Yes, the occasional horse still gets rode through the place and Jim says the last shooting incident involved an out of towner with a hat and a slogan that riled one of the locals who promptly used said cap as target practice.

“The funny thing” Jim says, “is that tourist is now a regular here.”

Tuesday
Jun282011

My-West Road Trip – First Impressions

By Bennett Owen

Credit: My-West.com. All rights reserved.

Let’s just say that our love for the west and awe of those who inhabit it has been doubly re-enforced by the things we’ve seen, the people we’ve met and the stories we’ve heard over the past four days and 13-hundred miles…

Credit: My-West.com. All rights reserved.

… starting in Salt Lake, straight into the high desert heart of Wyoming to Rock Springs and Lander, then upwards to the still-snow-capped Wind River Range, topping the pass at 85-hundred feet, and dropping into cow country at Thermopolis, Meeteetse and Cody.

Credit: My-West.com. All rights reserved.

Credit: My-West.com. All rights reserved.

Credit: My-West.com. All rights reserved.

Pointing northwards we crossed into Montana, passing through Red Lodge and severe ‘weather’ to Livingston, the white-capped Absarokas, dropping southwest again into the Pioneer range that we call home.

Credit: My-West.com. All rights reserved.

We will be telling you our stories in the days to come and believe me they are fascinating and compelling, including names like Amelia Earhardt, Butch Cassidy and the cattle baron Otto Frank. 

Credit: My-West.com. All rights reserved.

Buffalo Bill Cody is also on our list and his story alone would take a lifetime to chronicle.

Credit: My-West.com. All rights reserved.

If we’d had more time we would have taken longer! Here are some impressions to whet your curiosity.

Credit: My-West.com. All rights reserved.

Credit: My-West.com. All rights reserved.

Credit: My-West.com. All rights reserved.

Credit: My-West.com. All rights reserved.