February 18, 2018

Day 2: Syracuse to Bryce Canyon National Park

The Mormon Temple, a couple blocks away, is the much more imposing building. Just in case you wondered where the real power lay in the Beehive State.



Headed to see something up by Fish Lake.

 No more 'up' left.


 I guess we just ran out of 'up'. This is Ludwig's new highpoint (though see Day 3).


 Why drive so high to this out-of-the way sylvan lake?


Because along its shore grows the world's oldest known living organism, an otherwise unassuming Aspen grove named 'Pando' that is estimated at 80,000-plus years old. How can you miss going to see something like that if you're gonna be anywhere near it?



The road to Bryce Canyon.


 Snug as a bug in Bryce Canyon NP. It got down to about 14F overnight. No complaints.


miles 38757.2-39128.5


February 17, 2018

Day 1: Livingston to Antelope Island State Park



Ludwig was running a little funny. Maybe he just didn't want to leave Montana.





We didn't read carefully enough: you can't enter Antelope Island State Park after dark. 

miles 38290.6-38757.2





November 21, 2017

Drive-by Shootings

These've been hanging around on my phone for a while. They were all caught in Livingston, except the last one, which was in Billings.










September 2, 2017

The Great American Eclipse of 2017

We had planned on staying put in Thermopolis for the eclipse, where we'd get 57 seconds of totality, rather than risk the expected crowds further South where it'd last longer. Our plans changed when the Bodeswells contacted us. They were in the company of the Mali Mish and Wandrly families outside of Shoshoni at a Game & Fish campground not 60 miles away, just off totality's center line, there was plenty of space, a kid-swimmable lake, it was free, and did we want to join them?

Yes, thank you. Ludwig nestled right in.

The next day eclipse preparations began in earnest.


The Bodeswell's eclipse-viewing apparatus.

Paddling in celebration of the eclipse (that's Stinkerton being towed).

Glasses, check.

The ambient light changed and we headed up a nearby hillock as the Sun was reduced to a thin crescent.

The camera started having trouble focusing as totality was an instant away.

And just like that, *blink*, the Sun disappeared. We didn't try to mess with the camera settings to get the perfect shot; all this light is from the corona. To us standing there, the Sun itself was completely covered, just like in this pictureThat's Venus at upper right. There were a few stars visible too.


Right-click, 'Open link in new tab' to see 360° of dusk.

Two minutes, nineteen-point-nine seconds later (according to NASA), the Sun blinked back on, just like that. I had to work the next morning, so as early afternoon re-brightened we said goodbye to our eclipse crew.

 Mistake. I should've taken an extra day off at work. Traffic was backed up for miles.


The hour drive to Thermopolis, where our portion of the jam mostly broke up, took over two and-a-half. Traffic didn't clear out altogether until Cody. WYDoT said later that this many people had likely never been in Wyoming before at the same time. 

Back in to smoky Montana.

The smoke made for a nice sunset though.

miles 337,547.8-338,188.7

August 31, 2017

City of Heat


We went to Thermopolis Wyoming for the eclipse. I drove.


Melissa slept.

The girls were rowdy.

There was topography.

There was desert.

Thermopolis has quite a bit going on, actually. We recommend it.
We biked everywhere:

...to the suspension bridge...

...to the rock people accidentally made...

...to this '73 Super Beetle...

...and to the Wyoming Dinosaur Center. I challenge anyone to show me a better natural history museum in a town of less than 3,500 people. Among many other things they had a trilobite mass grave...

...a fish eating a pterosaur eating a fish (yes, really)...

...and the best Archaeopteryx fossil in the world, and the only Archaeopteryx on display in the Western Hemisphere. (We also biked to two different hot spring swimming pools.)

Speaking of dinosaurs, these are our chickens' eggs, which we turned into pancakes back at the RV park.


Yes, we like Thermopolis.
Next: the Great American Eclipse