Monday afternoon we went on a 2-1/2 mile hike to Mystic
Falls, near the Old Faithful area. The walk starts out at Biscuit Basin, where
you walk along a boardwalk loop and see hot springs and small geysers.
At the top of the loop there is an off ramp that puts you on
the trail to Mystic Falls. The trail follows path to the falls travels through
fields of flowers and around interesting rock formations along the Little
Firehole River, until you get to the falls.
Once you get to where you can see and hear the falls, the
climb begins. You get to walk up rock stairs to get a better view of the falls.
Then you get to walk up a couple switch backs to get an even
better view of the falls and the work it has done over thousands of years.
At that point, you get to decide whether you will go back
the way you came, take the loop route back to your car or continue on to Imperial
Geyser. Since it was after 6 p.m., we decided to go back the way we came, so we
could get back to our car and home before dark. We were also getting eaten
alive by mosquitoes, even though we had liberally sprayed ourselves with bug
spray.
On the ride home, it was getting on towards sunset so Penny
took a picture out the windshield, while we were on Firehole Lake Drive.
It was somewhat foggy and there was a lot of dew which made
for some interesting and somewhat eerie sights.
There were an incredible number of spider webs in the bushes
and trees, where they had collected a great deal of dew, making them standout
and look particularly interesting. There were webs from Funnel Web Spiders
And others from spiders we couldn't identify.
There was also and interesting fungus growing on a dead
tree.
The hike to the falls didn't follow a river this time, it
went through heavily burned, Lodgepole pine forests. These forests were burned
during the 1988 fires that consumed over 30% of the park. Fortunately, the
forests are recovering, though it will take decades more for the trees to reach
the height of the ones that were burned. The fires left some interesting
stumps.
With the bark burned off, you could see where the bark
beetles had been doing their business before the fires.
After walking through narrow paths between trees, across
small creeks and through clouds of mosquitoes, you finally get to where you can
hear the water fall. Then, a little farther down the path, you get to where you
can finally see the 200 foot high falls.
After climbing over some fallen logs you can actually get to
the base of the falls and look up at the brink of the falls.
Here, again, you get to choose whether you walk back the way
you came or continue on. Since the continuing path would take us miles further
away from our car, we decided to go back the way we came.
As we were leaving, a friendly little chipmunk found a bite
to eat near us.
Interestingly, some of the trees killed in the 1988 fires
are not nearly as weathered as most of them.
Near the beginning of this trail is a hill that overlooks
the Grand Prismatic Spring. Since the path up the hill is very steep and
requires you to climb over a lot of dead trees, we decided to consider doing
that climb at another time, having already hiked 5 miles.
On Wednesday we took another of the company provided bus
tours. This time to the Grand Tetons. We had to catch the bus at the Old
Faithful Inn at 8 a.m. Travelling down through the geyser basins that early on
a damp morning really shows the amount of heat being generated in the area.
The bus stopped at Grant Village to pick up more employees,
on the way down to the Tetons. There were 12 of us in all. South of Grant
Village, the bus stopped at Lewis Falls, on the Lewis River.
This river drains the Lewis Lake into the Snake River.
Since we already showed photos of our earlier trip to the
Grand Tetons, we won't repeat them here. They did take us to a few places that
we hadn't seen before though.
On the southeast side of the park, next to the Snake River
is an old ferry - called Menor's Ferry, that still operates for part of the
summer. They were filling the pontoons with water to get the planks to swell,
so they could put the ferry in the water when we were there.
It operates by turning into the flow of the river to cause a
side load to be applied to the hull, which causes it to move across the river,
guided by rollers running along a cable stretched across the river.
There was also an old store there that operated in the early
1900's.
We ate lunch in the town of Moose and stopped to look at
Mormon's Row. It was a settlement of people that moved here in the 1890's,
during a drought in Utah and homesteaded this area of the Jackson Hole.
The views looking west at the Tetons, across the Snake River
were phenomonal.
At one of the stops on the way back to Yellowstone, we
picked up an extra rider. We believe it was a Pine Bark Beetle.





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