Day 7
We’re up really really early this morning as I’m keen to join a Ranger lead tour around an area of the park called Geyser Hill that starts at 8.15 and we have an hour drive to get there.
We actually arrive early and are able to watch Old Faithful erupt before heading out on the tour.
Old Faithful has been erupting to an approximate schedule for the last hundred plus years and has been one of the biggest draws in the park for the majority of that time….. it’s an impressive sight to see and we’re lucky enough to see it twice as the tour ends just as another eruption happens.
Nipping back to the car to drop off my jacket I spy a Netherlands plated RV… a quick chat with the owner reveals that he shipped the truck to Baltimore 3 years ago and he and his wife have been driving around North America ever since...... I can see my retirement beckoning!!!
Next we head out for a walk around the porcelain basin area of geysers before driving to the trailhead for the upper and lower falls…. the trail here is 328 steps down into the canyon, bringing you alongside the mighty upper falls, called Uncle Tom’s trail it’s definitely not for those of a nervous disposition, the walkway seeming to hang on to the side of the cliff by nothing more than a few steel beams!
Having hiked back up the trail, we drive around the canyon to the top of the lower falls… there’s a trail here too, a mere 120 or so steps this time but we decide to give it a miss and take a drive around the park stopping at various pullouts to admire the views.
We don’t get too far though before we have to slow to match the pace of our unofficial convoy leader…. plodding down the center of the road without a care in the world, he’s a big fella and I give him a wide berth as I pass, stopping further up the road to take some photos.
Ever since we arrived at the park we’ve been hearing stories of the mamma bear and her cubs who have been seen often around the Dunraven Pass area, so we decide to head to our overnight stop outside the park by that route.
I’d just about given up hope when Mum yells out “bear”
She’d been scanning the side of the road for about 15 miles by this point and I have no idea how she spotted him, so camouflaged was he when we first came across him.
Patience paid off though, and a few minutes later he walked out of the trees and I was able to take a series of photos of an animal that I never expected to see in my lifetime…. truly a magical moment.
Onwards to our hotel cabin in Mammoth hot springs…. not one of my finest bookings this, there’s no bathrooms in the cabins, they share communal facilities…. a touch rough and ready for Mum but we make the best of it…. the beds are great at least!