Day 55: Sunday, August 16th
I slept very poorly, so I was wide awake long before dawn; the whole notion of climbing out of my warm sleeping bag and getting dressed at that ungodly hour was another matter altogether. Temperatures were close to freezing, and I could scarcely feel my fingers when buttoning my shirt. It took a fair bit of persuasion to convince Carl that it was worth losing sleep and braving the cold just to take sunrise pictures of a couple of buffalo. “If those animals have any sense at all,” he muttered, “they won’t even be out there until after the sun comes up.”
“You’re missing the point,” I countered. “Think about how glorious it’s going to be, when the first rays of sunlight hit the tops of those mountains. Maybe there’ll be some buffalo in that field, and maybe there won’t. Either way, it’s worth getting out there, just to drink in the spectacle.”
There was a bit of grumbling, but we managed to get up and get going without any actual drama. We weren’t planning to break down our camp until later in the day, so all we really had to do was dress warmly, get in the Jeep, and drive. The field where I’d seen the bison was adjacent to Mormon Row, less than five miles from the campground, so we were there in a matter of minutes. It was still full dark when I turned down a side road, really more of a rough dirt track that took us deeper into the field. The only light came from my headlight beams, and the scene they were illuminating was not the picture I expected to see! There were obstacles up ahead, shapes moving through the grass and blocking the road. I stopped, cut the engine, and cut the lights. Those buffalo I’d seen the day before? They were out there, alright, and they were NOT alone!
For the first 20 minutes or so we just sat there, doors closed, windows down, hearing the sounds of large animals huffing and snorting mere feet away from us, and we could smell them, despite the cold; a gamey, musky aroma. Once the sun peeked above the horizon, we were finally able to see, and out came the cameras! There was a big momma cow directly in front of us, and when I pointed that big telephoto in the direction of her calf, she gave me the stink-eye.
This big Momma cow was protective of her little one. She let us know, with this single angry glance, that we were too darned close!
We slowly backed up, ten or twenty yards, and stopped again, I spotted the old bull I’d seen the day before--either him, or one of his brothers:
Wait a minute. HOW many buffalo are out there in that field?
It quickly became apparent that there were a LOT of buffalo in that field!
We were literally surrounded by buffalo, more than I’d ever seen in one place
The handful of animals I’d seen the day before had somehow morphed into an entire HERD of buffalo. In addition to the bulls with their classic beards, woolly coats, and humped backs, there were also a ton (many tons) of mothers with babies:
Mom and baby, playing a lively game of “Why does the bison cross the road?”
My telephoto lens picked out some pretty great scenes in the crowd, including this one, of a young buffalo cow who is REALLY enjoying her meal:
Now that’s good eatin’!
And this one, of a pair of young bulls sparring, literally locking horns:
The young bulls were practicing for the day when they’ll be big enough to challenge the old bulls in a real fight, for supremacy in the herd
And this one, of a mother with what I could swear must have been a newborn calf (newborn, as in just born!):
I’m no expert on the wild American Bison, but this golden calf looked to me like a newborn, whose mother is helping him (or her) stand for the first time
I repositioned the Jeep, so that I could take the picture I’d originally come out to get:
Buffalo Sunrise, Take 1
But I could see that it wasn’t really the photo I’d envisioned. First rays of sunlight hitting the peaks? Check. Buffalo in the grass? Also check—but--the grass was too tall, most of the Teton Range was still in shadow, and there were too danged many buffalo! I went back to shooting candid portraits of the animals close by me. Then I had another go at my “staged” photograph:
Buffalo Sunrise, Take 2
This time, the earliest early light on the peaks was past, but everything else was pretty perfect: three bison, all in a row, matching the three iconic peaks of Les Grand Tetons. Not bad--but far from my best photo of the day!
My friend Carl was busy this whole time taking photos of his own, and he managed to catch the rarest photo of the day: an old goat in action:
That sly smile is a dead giveaway: this old goat is having a really good morning!
We lost track of time, but we were out there for several hours, at least, and I took hundreds of photographs. At one point, several big passenger vans showed up, Wildlife Photo Tours out of Jackson. Their well-heeled clients were paying hundreds of dollars apiece for the privilege of being driven out to the same spot where I’d parked my Jeep. Each of them took turns popping up through special roof hatches in these custom vehicles, so that they could take their wild animal photos in relative safety.
Me, I had to improvise a bit on that whole roof hatch deal (see photo, above), so I probably wasn’t as “safe” as those pampered photo safari people, but I still felt pretty darned smug. We got out there much earlier than those guided tours, so we had that whole scene all to ourselves during the golden hour after the dawn, when the light is the very best for photography. And there was another big difference: all of those people, and especially the tour guides, knew exactly what they were going to find at Antelope Flats that morning. Carl and I, on the other hand, had stumbled across that herd of buffalo completely by accident. We were NOT expecting to see all of those animals in that field, so it was a huge surprise. Finding myself smack in the middle of a completely unexpected herd of buffalo, at sunrise, in the Grand Tetons? That has to be the very best kind of surprise that there is, in this whole big beautiful world!
Eventually, the golden light was no longer golden, and we figured we probably had enough bison photographs for one day. It had been a truly magnificent morning, one of the best ever, but even the best things have to come to an end at some point. I started the Jeep and turned it around, then took one last, long look at the grand spectacle. This was as close as I’d ever been to primordial wildness, the world the way it used to be, before modern man and all his machinery screwed everything up. I suppressed a sigh (along with some very complicated emotions) as I put my vehicle in gear, and drove back to our campground.
Due to seasonal road closures (snow, mud, road construction, etc.) some of the maps displayed in this thread are not displaying properly or you might see pop-up windows reporting errors found with the route. Unfortunately, the map data used to create these maps enforces these "Time-outs" if a particular road segment is closed. In the case of the pop-up windows (alerts), please click the "OK" or "Close" button and the rest of the page will display properly. In the case on some of the maps where the route seems all jammed up -- reloading the page where the map is displaying seems to solve the issue. All of these problems go away once the winter closures of the roads end. So, everything will look fine in the North American summer months.
Click here for this RTA Library Map
Before we left the area, I stopped at the Ranger Station to ask about that buffalo herd, and the way they’d just showed up out there, literally overnight.
“This is the first day of hunting season,” the Ranger explained. “As of six o’clock this morning, bison outside the park are fair game. Those old bulls are so darned smart, they know exactly when to lead the herd down to the Flats, where they’re protected.”
“That’s insanely cool,” I replied. “We were pretty shocked to see so many of those guys in one place.”
“The area around Yellowstone, including Grand Teton, has the largest population of wild bison in the country,” the Ranger explained. “Descended from the last survivors of the big herds that used to run free on the Plains. But the main reason so many are out there together today is because this is the rut--better known as mating season. It happens every year right about this time.”
Carl and I looked at each other and grinned, as the light bulb flashed on over our heads. That actually explained quite a lot, and the scene we’d witnessed suddenly made a lot more sense. All of that head butting and running around by the young bulls? They were fighting over the cows--and how cool was THAT?
The official National Park Service map of Grand Teton, with a graphic indicating the location of the bison herd
Ultimately, we packed everything up—the tent and tarp perfectly dry for the first time in weeks, which was good, since this was likely to be the last time I’d be using that gear for a while. We drove to Jackson, wandered about the downtown area, made some phone calls, and then drove south, out of Wyoming, through a small corner of Idaho, and down into Utah, an uneventful journey that put us in Salt Lake City in the late afternoon. Carl had a flight back to San Francisco leaving the next morning, so we got a room near the airport, and tucked in for the night.
Click here for this RTA Library Map
Next up: Capital Reef National Park, and Utah Route 12 to Bryce Canyon