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Summer 2017 - Eclipse and National Parks
I realize it's been a long time since I've posted and I'm glad to see the site still going strong thanks to the work of all the great people involved.
This year I had the opportunity to take some time and explore some of my favorite places. It's been three years since my significant other started her business and the first time since 2012 that we were able to take a trip of any length together. While I've done some solo touring since then, it's always better to have a travel buddy!
This is also the first trip where we packed our camping gear for a flight. Sometimes things just align perfectly for a trip. Twenty years ago we took our first long road trip together from Massachusetts out to Yellowstone National Park and back again. I had always planned to go back there and when I realized the full solar eclipse would be viewable nearby this year, I didn't need much convincing to start all of the necessary planning.
Day 1 - We flew into Denver and picked up our rental car. Dealing with our multiple bags was difficult, especially the one with our sleeping bags. That one wanted to keep falling over. Our goal for the day was to end up at our reserved camping space near Devils Tower National Monument. This first day would require around 400 miles of travel, at an average of 50mph we would be at our site right at sunset. A quick lunch and then back on our way. Supplies were needed so our next stop was to pick up some groceries, etc. in Cheyenne, Wyoming. Time was moving quickly and we were standing still...back on the road!
A friend of ours had often mentioned the jackalope in conversations about old road trips; knowing there was one that previously claimed to be the largest nearby, I had to stop and get its picture.
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By this time the sun was getting ready for bed and we still had around 175 miles to travel. We entered Thunder Basin National Grassland just as the sun was setting.
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Needless to say, when we got to the campground - after some backtracking and looking at the map a few times - it was well past dark. It being the weekend before the new moon, and the campground having minimal lighting, setting up the tent was rather difficult. But the view of the sky was absolutely incredible. The lack of nearby street lights gave us a glimpse of the Milky Way. That made me quickly forget the fact I had almost driven into a fire pit that was dug into the ground and apparently had been used earlier in the day because it still felt quite warm.
We had been hoping to see Devils Tower at sunset but we weren't going to see it that day. After spending some time enjoying the view of the night sky, we set off to sleep.
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Summer 2017 - Eclipse and National Parks
Day 2 In the morning I was awoken with a statement "Wait until you see the view from here!" It did not disappoint:
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As luck would have it we had set our tent up in such a way we were right in the path of this excellent view. Most of the day was spent lounging around the campground pool. In the evening I went up solo into the park and took a bunch of shots of Devils Tower. At night I tried my hand at some night photography but cars in the distance were causing issues with the shots. That happens but while I was messing with the camera I did see a few shooting stars that appeared to be heading right towards the tower.
Day 3 It was already time to move on if we were to make it to see the eclipse in the path of totality on Monday. A morning hike around Devils Tower, where we could watch those more brave than I attempt - and succeed - in climbing the tower.
After a fairly long drive with significant haze caused by ongoing wildfires in neighboring states we headed over the Big Horn area on US-14A. Twenty years ago I made the mistake of not stopping for Medicine Wheel. That decision had always bothered me and I was able to correct that decision on this trip. After a drive up the dirt road, and then a hike up to the destination, we found ourselves at the medicine wheel.
US-14A was relatively calm. Not too many vehicles make the trek over those hills or down those steep grades that end in a causeway. I had forgotten about that! Our stop for the evening was a campground in Cody.
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Summer 2017 - Eclipse and National Parks
Day 4 Since Cody was a stopover evening for us we didn't do exploring in the area. Up in the morning and then on into Yellowstone National Park, through the same entrance as 20 years before. I have to say that I didn't remember a lot of the scenery leading up to the entrance and it was nice to revisit the area. Traffic was heavier than I remember but usually any memories of traffic are wiped away with time and only the good parts remain (what's that about "nostalgia is memory with the pain removed?")
Point of note: There is a "Big Boy" out in the middle of a field near the road into the park.Attachment 4594
We toured the central part of the park and made plans for what sections we wanted to focus on in the coming days. What we didn't realize was there are several areas undergoing renovation/reconstruction in the park and that was causing some of the heavier traffic we were seeing.
On the way to our campground in West Yellowstone we stopped at a local restaurant and I had my first taste of bison meat. I found it to be prepared well and tasty, too. Some friends had mentioned their experiences finding it dry but that was not the case at all.
Day 5 This was the day of the eclipse and we were up fairly early, expecting traffic to be heavy. The original plan was to head into Jackson, Wyoming for the eclipse but a check of the weather the night before mentioned partly cloudy conditions. Seeing as how almost every meteor shower is obscured by clouds back in Massachusetts, I've become accustomed to paying close attention to the weather near celestial events. The plan was altered to go into the tidy town of Rexburg, Idaho. Heading out of the campground, traffic was already heavy and I wasn't even sure I'd find a gap to get into the flow of vehicles. Finally a gap appeared and for nearly 70 miles we were part of a grand convoy of eclipse watchers heading out in the pre-sunrise hours.
By the time we arrived near Rexburg many of our convoy companions had headed off to other points - most likely Jackson - and we found ourselves at Smith Park. The town was prepared for the incoming crowds as the park had all of the appropriate facilities for an influx of people set up. We were fortunate to have arrived early enough to find excellent parking on a side street.
For the next few hours we watched the progress of the eclipse with a few hundred other people, including a soccer team from Seattle that had made a bus trip just for the occasion.
Pictures cannot do justice to what we saw that day. If you ever get the chance to experience a full solar eclipse absolutely take the time to view it. Totality was brought on with silence from the birds that had been singing - many flew back to their nests - as well as the surreal sight of stars being visible during the middle of the day.
During the eclipse I had been fiddling with my camera and I was making the mistake of using nighttime photography techniques during totality. That means I was using long exposure times...all the same the result was pretty interesting.
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The plan for afterwards was to head into the Beaverhead-Deerlodge National Forest and travel the Gravelly Range Road, but the five-hour drive back (it took an hour to get out there) from Rexburg put the kibosh on that plan for the day.