Results 26 to 50 of 194
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06-18-2021, 08:49 PM #26
The roads in Yellowstone are always crowded in the summer but the hiking trails are lightly used, even in the busiest of times. There are many off the main roads where you may not see another person. Do some research, maybe check with the Rangers, bring bear/bug spray and you'll see a park that relatively few ever see.
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06-18-2021, 09:47 PM #27
My advice for what it’s worth. 20 years ago you would totally want to stay around Jackson and the Tetons - now fuck that shit! It takes 30 minutes to get through town. The park is a cool magical place and in my 50 some years of growing up there and visiting it still is one of my favorite places on earth. That being said it is a gigantic shitshow. I would recommend staying in either Cooke City (if you can find a spot) or Wapiti/Cody and day tripping. The wildlife viewing from Cooke City into the Lamar Valley is all time. Early morning as the sun comes up is by far the best time to see wolfs, bears and bison in the Lamar. If you want I can check and see if anyone is at my families cabin in Cooke City - it’s super rustic but close to the park.
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06-18-2021, 11:28 PM #28Registered User
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That would be dope^
Don’t skip the park, motivate and get there early to see some of the main tourist spots, have a picnic or go for a hike during the day, and then see more later in the evening. It’s absolutely more than doable.
If everything else falls through keep in mind it’s only a 20 minute drive from some free, non-reservation camping in north Island Park to West Yellowstone. Could easily set up camp there and shoot into the park in the morning. If you’re interested let me know and I can share more deets
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06-19-2021, 01:24 AM #29
the obvious alternative is don't go in july, go in september (although that was in 2012 so september may be too crowded now as well). it makes everything better. Took my kids in mid September 2012. it was awesome. another option if you climb is city of rocks. as long as they can belay and you can lead cause there's not a lot of top rope options. Otherwise there's tons of other options for camping in the jellystone region and you can do one or two overnights near the entrance to do a park day. We saw more wildlife near Gardiner toward mammoth springs than anywhere else but we didn't make it to cooke city. bummed about that. lucky or maybe the time of year. we didn't see a whole lot of wildlife on our hikes, but it's true the people don't go.
yellowstone starts halfway down the page but city of rocks is before that after the tahoe stuff.
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06-19-2021, 05:56 AM #30
I am prepared for epic shitshow-ness this summer. Mom coming in from east coast next week. GTNP, Bryce, and Arches all in the same week. Yes, you read that correctly.
Dad/bro/sis coming on a second trip in August and we will attempt Yellowstone at least one day from Bozeman.
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06-19-2021, 08:47 AM #31
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06-19-2021, 09:38 AM #32
Sometimes you just have to embrace the shit show and enjoy time with family from out of town. Not every trip can be a rad bro tgr trip
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06-19-2021, 09:59 AM #33
When I was working/living in the park, I would always remind the crews that yeah, it was frustrating to get caught in the critter jams when you were trying to get home after a long week of shitty work, but to try to remember that for a lot of these tourists, it was a once in a lifetime experience. Try to enjoy the experience of seeing people excited and blown away by things we live around on a daily basis and have begun to take for granted.
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06-19-2021, 11:34 AM #34
No it isn't. We pulled in early last year and found a great site and just after sunset some jackass's came and set up two tents a stones throw away right on top of our water source. But I expected it and my wife really wanted to stay there one night. This was the only time in the Winds we've had to deal with someone camping too close.
Tons of good places to camp nearby with nobody around though. It would be a big in and out with a family. Two night minimum to make it worth it imo. Also was part of the massive blow down last year the week after we left.
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06-19-2021, 02:59 PM #35Registered User
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06-19-2021, 04:17 PM #36Registered User
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Skip it for sure, it's not worth the stress and frustration. Reschedule for a fall trip, take the kids out of school for it, and experience it on your own terms. Otherwise you are just biting your lip, putting a smile on your face, and checking it off your list along with tens of thousands of strangers.
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06-19-2021, 04:28 PM #37
Fall is no longer quiet at Yellowstone. Quieter maybe. I think 'not going' is bad advice if you have kids. We went again a few years ago and I pledge never to go back unless it is for backpacking but I don't regret going at all. My daughter was deeply moved by the all the buffalo on the road, the wolf sighting, the bears.
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06-19-2021, 06:34 PM #38
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06-20-2021, 10:08 AM #39
Turns out when you go May not matter
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06-20-2021, 10:19 AM #40
Holy shit.
I just did Bryce and Arches last month. Do not attempt to get into Arches after 10am, until maybe 3-4pm. They just close the gates after the morning rush. Maybe even earlier once the families arrive this summer. Once you're in, you're in, so, get up at dawn or earlier. It's also free if you arrive early or late. Nobody checking passes. Canyonlands was fine, though.
Bryce wasn't bad. If you want to avoid crowds and even paying to get into the park and enjoy a lot of it, do The Fairyland hike which starts off a side road that is a left turn before the official park entrance. It's an awesome hike, but, a bit grueling. 8 miles, a lot of climbing. No shade.
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06-20-2021, 10:25 AM #41
Yeah, but, Zion was ridiculous. We scheduled it as a drive thru from the east entrance and exiting out the main west entrance, and the place was ridiculous on a Monday. One big traffic jam, zero parking anywhere, including the main lot, and they were still letting THREE rows of cars into the west entrance when we left! That place is beautiful, but drowning from the love.
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06-20-2021, 10:38 AM #42Banned
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I agree with those that say go to natl parks during "off seasons" I did Bryce and Zion in like October and both were nearly empty. Bryce was cold, but Zion was not. We did a VRBO in some random town kinda between the 2 parks. Was a bit rough getting daily essential stuff as most places cater to the busy season.
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06-20-2021, 10:46 AM #43Registered User
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If you really want to have a mind blowing experience, go to Bryce in the winter!! Nobody there! You can rent xc skis at the Ruby's Lodge and the place is your own personal National Park. Snow on the ground makes the place ever more stunning!! You can't ski down below the rim, but the views are to die for! There is no problem with crowds, which makes the experience truly stellar. You can also ski at Red Rock State Park which is close by. Red Rock and snow are a unique way to see this place.
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06-20-2021, 11:26 AM #44
Arches is absolutely amazing in the winter as well. Campground is open. Nobody around. Perfect weather.
Black Canyon of the Gunnison is relatively uncrowded year round. Camping is completely free in the winter.
Pic Arches campground in January
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06-20-2021, 12:42 PM #45
Great photos. We are both amateur photogs and will be bringing the big cameras and tripods. I told my mom in advance we would be getting up very early everyday to beat some crowds and heat.
She's 67 and in decent shape for a lady that lives at literally 3ft above sea level and plays a lot of pickleball. 8 mile hikes probably not in the cards. 3-5 mile loops max most likely.
Also would take some good reccos for BLM roads around bryce/zion/moab areas to get some photo opps without super long hikes. She wants to take some sunset and star photos.
Thanks all.
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06-20-2021, 01:10 PM #46
Yeah, that's a long hike, but, try the portion that starts from behind the general store in the park down to the Tower Bridge and back. That's only about 3-4 miles, and still pretty cool.
Try Kodachrome Basin State park east of Bryce for lack of crowds and probably pretty damn dark night skies. I was in there a few years ago and encountered like three people.
I just watched this the other day, and you may want to get it to Mom before she leaves. Lots of good advice, especially those apps that tell you where the Milky Way will be at wherever and whenever you are. Bring a lot of warm clothes for that. Christ, it can get cold in these hot places.
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06-20-2021, 01:57 PM #47Registered User
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Not true if you put two and two together. Of course they have a record May. Every month is a record number these days. It’s still less crowded in May than summer months. And October.
Rough number for July’s in the park almost 1 million with a quick google search, record May this year was 483,000.
Edit for July's number being way offLast edited by muted reborn; 06-21-2021 at 08:52 AM.
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06-20-2021, 02:31 PM #48
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06-20-2021, 03:43 PM #49
I have a July 9-11 campsite at Madison that I will not be using. If interested let me know
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06-21-2021, 06:28 AM #50
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