August 5 – Yellowstone! (absurdly picture heavy)
Our campground was on Yellowstone Lake, and it was mighty cold that night, but the morning was fabulously beautiful and clean and clear, and it was worth it.
The day was about a driving adventure around the main figure-eight loop of Yellowstone Park. We went first to Natural Bridge! It was a short hike, but it was mosquito-ridden, so I particularly covered myself in Deet and we all were on the look-out for mosquito landings.
Then we went on to another set of thermal features.



This one was a roiling sulfur pool. Although it was scalding hot, it was not boiling, and the huge bubbles coming up were bubbles of gas escaping from deep in the earth.
Then, as we headed towards Canyon Village (where we would have lunch), we were waylaid by a multitude of bison, both on the sides of the road, and standing in the road.
Then there was another herd.
And another.
And one incoming!
After lunch we drove on to Mammoth Hot Springs and the Terraces.

Here you can see the smoke from the wildfire by the Northeast(?) Entrance.
We arrived at the Terraces to discover that, in fact, they were dry.
They were beautiful dry, a perfect pristine snow white, with hundreds of little pools and dike walls, the deposits of limestone from underground.
There was water running in a few places.



We hiked around to the top of the hill, and behind it, to where the water was running a little more enthusiastically.
We tried to drive then south from Mammoth Springs to Norris and thenceforth on to Grant Village, but the road was closed, so we turned back and went down the east leg of the loop again. At Canyon Village, we turned West, and went around the south west side of the 8, to go past Old Faithful.
We stopped (rather abruptly) for the Artist’s Paint Pot mud pool, which I was very pleased about. It was really cool.
The last sight of the day, right as we came up to the turn off for Grant Village, was a male elk.
And then back to camp for sausages and green beans!



































