Friday, February 26, 2010

Huckleberry Hot Springs


Today got off to a rocky start for John and me but we managed to get back on track by the early afternoon and the rest of the day was fantastic. John decided to ski in the morning and left the house around 9:00 AM only to discover once he arrived at the gate to the park that he had left his wallet at the cabin. So he went to the library and caught up on emails before driving back to the house. The Comcast guy showed up around 11:00 to install wi-fi service and after about 45 minutes the cabin was wired! Fortunately, I checked to make sure it was working before the guy left because it was not working and he had to spend another 25 minutes or so working out bugs in the system. John arrived home a few minutes before the internet guy completed the installation. We decided to drive up to Dornan's for cookies and snacks before driving out near the entrance of Yellowstone National Park. We stocked up on cookies and milk and hit the wide open highway for about a 40 minute drive. The point of the drive was to get within snowshoeing distance of a geothermal area and hike to a hot spring there: "Grand Teton National Park’s worst-kept secret is actually located just north of the park in the John D. Rockefeller Jr. Memorial Parkway area. Formerly the site of a private campground, all traces of development have been removed and the 100°-105°F springs have reverted back to their natural state. Locals soak here year-round, using cross-country skis to gain access in the winter." The drive was beautiful, clear and sunny and even a little warm with temps in the 30s. The park ranger told us that sea otters had been spotted near some open water about 3 miles into Teton National Park so we stopped hoping for a sighting but no luck. The hike to the hot spring was really nice and very easy because others had made a trail so this snowshoeing adventure was really just walking in those clumsy snowshoes, and as a matter of fact we didn't even use them on the walk back to the car. The hot spring was HOT! A jacuzzi in the middle of nowhere surrounded by snow covered mountains and evergreens. The water was very warm probably close to 100 degrees and in some spots scorching hot, but unlike a jacuzzi the natural spring is muddy, slimy, rocky, and a wee bit stinky. It was still a lot of fun and I'd definitely recommend a trip to the hot spring to visitors to the park. We got back to the house around 6:00 PM and had a really nice dinner, a fire in the fireplace (finally), and watched a western, The Outlaw Josey Wales starring Clint Eastwood. I could barely keep my eyes open 20 minutes into the movie but John enjoyed it; he loves westerns. This post is late because I really couldn't keep my eyes open long enough to blog last night.

2 comments:

  1. Okay I'm no longer in withdrawal since I've had a chance to catch up on your adventures. Love the photos...looks like you guys are posing for winter wear ads. :>)

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  2. HA! Maybe John looks like a catalog model but I look like I'm promoting low fat chocolate milk:-)

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