Yellowstone Falls, Old Faithful Geyser & Grand Prismatic Spring in Yellowstone National Park, Wyoming (8-12-12)

Day 5 of Lupe’s 2012 Dingo Vacation to the West Coast.

Yellowstone National Park was close to where Lupe was staying on the Clarks Fork of the Yellowstone River.  After a wonderful long day spent out in the Beartooth Mountains going to Beauty and Becker Lakes the day before, Lupe was going to get to tour Yellowstone, the first National Park in the whole world!

Lupe entered Yellowstone National Park at the NE entrance W of Cooke City, MT.  The highway followed Soda Butte Creek downstream to its confluence with the Lamar River.  As frequently happens in Yellowstone, suddenly there were vehicles stopped ahead on the highway.  The cause was soon clear.  A herd of buffalo was using the highway, too!

Buffalo approach along the highway unaware that the Honda Element is protected by a ferocious predator.
Buffalo approach along the highway unaware that the Honda Element is protected by a ferocious predator.

Lupe was astonished to see the herd of huge buffalo coming right for the Element.  This alarming situation demanded immediate action!  Lupe’s hackles rose up from her head to her tail.  She sprang to the defense of the Honda Element, as it became completely engulfed by the buffalo herd.  She leaped wildly from one window to the next barking like a Dingo possessed.

Lupe loves to bark at cows.  She may have thought the buffalo were cows.  If so, these cows weren’t acting right.  None of them ran away.  In fact, none of them seemed to pay the least bit of attention to the frenzied Carolina Dog just a few feet away as they ambled by the Element.Buffalo in Yellowstone NP, WY 8-12-12Buffalo in Yellowstone NP, WY 8-12-12Buffalo in Yellowstone NP, WY 8-12-12Buffalo in Yellowstone NP, WY 8-12-12Buffalo in Yellowstone NP, WY 8-12-12Buffalo in Yellowstone NP, WY 8-12-12Lupe was undeterred.  She gave it everything she had.  She bounded back and forth.  She scrunched herself up on the dashboard in front of the steering wheel, barking till she foamed at the mouth.  The only real result was that Lanis got battered by a wildly swinging Dingo tail.Buffalo in Yellowstone NP, WY 8-12-12The buffalo herd passed on by.  The proud American Dingo could finally rest.  Her barker was totally dry.  She needed a drink!  Who knew Yellowstone would be so exciting?  The place was just swarming with gigantic, dangerous wild beasts!

The proud American Dingo that chased away an entire herd of buffalo and saved Lanis, SPHP and the Honda Element rests satisfied with a job bravely performed.
The proud American Dingo that chased (well, ambled) away an entire herd of buffalo thereby saving Lanis, SPHP and the Honda Element rests satisfied with a job bravely performed.

Lanis turned S at the Tower-Roosevelt junction.  Lupe, Lanis and SPHP soon stopped at Tower Falls.  Regulations in Yellowstone don’t allow dogs on any trails, or in the back country.  Unfortunately, that meant that Lupe wasn’t going to get to see all the glories of Yellowstone up close.  The entire time Lupe was in Yellowstone, Lanis and SPHP were going to have to take turns staying with Lupe while the other checked out Yellowstone’s scenic wonders.

SPHP stayed with Lupe, while Lanis checked out Tower Falls.

Tower Fall
Tower Falls

Tower Falls was nothing to sneeze at, but it wasn’t anything to compare to what was soon coming up a short drive to the S – Lower Yellowstone Falls and the Grand Canyon of the Yellowstone.

Looking down on Lower Yellowstone Falls from the N rim of the Grand Canyon of the Yellowstone.
The Yellowstone River just above Lower Yellowstone Falls rushes toward a clearly (final) class VI whitewater rafting experience! NOT recommended for ages 0-120.
The Yellowstone River just above Lower Yellowstone Falls rushes toward a clearly (final) class VI whitewater rafting experience! NOT recommended for ages 0-120.
Lower Yellowstone Falls plunges 308 feet into the Grand Canyon of the Yellowstone.
Lower Yellowstone Falls plunges 308 feet into the Grand Canyon of the Yellowstone.

Lower Yellowstone Falls, Yellowstone NP, WY 8-12-12Lower Yellowstone Falls, Yellowstone NP, WY

Grand Canyon of the Yellowstone River.
Grand Canyon of the Yellowstone River.
Don't let a disastrous failure of a poorly conceived and executed erosion control program turn your farm or ranch into this! (Unless you want to be able to sell tickets.)
Don’t let a disastrous failure of a poorly conceived and executed erosion control program turn your farm or ranch into this! (Unless you want to be able to sell tickets.)

An American Dingo wasn’t the only dangerous canine in Yellowstone National Park on this day.  Right beside the highway, not far from Lower Yellowstone Falls, a black wolf was non-chalantly sniffing around.  At least, it looked like a black wolf to Lupe, Lanis and SPHP.  If it was really someone’s lost Fifi, it sure was doing a convincing impression of a black wolf.

Black Wolf or Fifi in disguise?
Black Wolf or Fifi in disguise?

Black Wolf, Yellowstone NP, WY 8-12-12

Say, there's an idea! Lupe wonders if she might be an even scarier stealth predator as a black Dingo? Think of the possibilities!
Say, there’s an idea! Lupe wonders if she might be an even scarier stealth predator as a black Dingo? Think of the possibilities!

From Yellowstone Falls, Lupe, Lanis and SPHP headed S toward Yellowstone Lake.  SPHP stayed with Lupe at several stops along the way, so Lanis could get a look at some geothermal features.  Lupe got to see the ones that were close to the highway and visible from parking areas.Sulphur Cauldron, Yellowstone NP, WY 8-12-12Yellowstone NP, WY 8-12-12Yellowstone NP, WY 8-12-12There were warnings signs for those who thought ideas like whitewater rafting above Yellowstone Falls would be a great experience.  Despite the graphic depictions, a buffalo wasn’t too worried about it.Yellowstone NP, WY 8-12-12Yellowstone NP, WY 8-12-12Lupe got to visit Yellowstone Lake, a huge natural lake at 7,733 feet elevation.  Yellowstone Lake, which has a very interesting shape and would be great fun to explore, is the largest body of water above 7,000 feet in North America.  Lupe, Lanis and SPHP waded out to some rocks near the shore for a good look.Lupe at Yellowstone Lake, Yellowstone NP, WY 8-12-12

Lupe & Lanis at Yellowstone Lake. Lupe tasted the lake. It seemed to be constructed entirely of water.
Lupe & Lanis at Yellowstone Lake. Lupe tasted the lake. It seemed to be constructed entirely of water.

No trip to Yellowstone is complete without stopping by Old Faithful geyser.  Lupe got to see it, too, from a distance.

Old Faithful doesn't disappoint.
Old Faithful doesn’t disappoint.

Old Faithful Geyser, Yellowstone NP, WY 8-12-12

Old Faithful Inn. Despite being called an Inn, Lupe stayed Outt.
Old Faithful Inn. Despite being called an Inn, Lupe stayed Outt.

From Old Faithful, Lupe, Lanis and SPHP headed N toward some other geyser basins along the Firehole River.  Poor Lupe was kind of left out, since many of the geysers weren’t close enough to the parking lots or the highway where she could see them.  A few were, though.  Lupe did get to sniff around near the Element some, and she seemed happy enough with the situation.  Lanis and SPHP took turns staying with her.

Yellowstone NP, WY 8-12-12Excelsior Geyser in the Midway Geyser Basin was a highlight of the geyser basin tour.  The Excelsior Geyser was once the largest geyser in the world, but its last known major eruptions occurred in the 1880’s.  Back then it spouted boiling water 300 feet into the air.  Now it is a large blue pool of water which boils up vigorously at frequent intervals, and then dies down again without really erupting.

The Excelsior Geyser in the Midway Geyser Basin is a steaming hot spring these days.
The Excelsior Geyser in the Midway Geyser Basin is a steaming hot spring these days.

Excelsior Hot Spring, Midway Geyser Basin, WY 8-12-12

Water near the boiling point flows at 4,050 gallons per minute from the Excelsior Geyser into the Firehole River.
Water near the boiling point flows at 4,050 gallons per minute from the Excelsior Geyser into the Firehole River.
Lupe didn't get to see the Excelsior Geyser, but she did see the hot water from it entering the Firehole River.
Lupe didn’t get to see the Excelsior Geyser, but she did see the hot water from it entering the Firehole River.

Near the Excelsior Geyser in the Midway Geyser Basin was another very impressive hot spring.  Grand Prismatic Spring is best viewed from above, from which vantage point it appears as a large steamy blue sun rimmed with greens and yellows.  Orange flames radiate outward wherever water overflows the pool’s edges.

The different colors are caused by different types of algae and organisms that thrive in different temperature bands.  It’s hard to get a good impression of the whole from the ground, since Grand Prismatic Spring is so large.

A fiery colored arm of the Grand Prismatic Spring.
A fiery colored arm of the Grand Prismatic Spring.

Grand Prismatic Spring, Midway Geyser Basin, WY 8-12-12Grand Prismatic Spring, Midway Geyser Basin, WY 8-12-12

Near the Firehole River, Lupe waits for the return of SPHP from the Midway Geyser Basin.
Near the Firehole River, Lupe waits for the return of SPHP from the Midway Geyser Basin.

The sun was getting low by the time Lanis and SPHP were done taking tours of the Midway Geyser Basin.  There were way more basins, trails and rare thermal features, even in just this little section of Yellowstone National Park, than could possibly be visited in a single day.

The last area Lupe, Lanis and SPHP visited before sunset was the Lower Geyser Basin.  Again, Lanis and SPHP took turns staying with Lupe while the other toured the walkways to see fantastic sights found few other places on earth.

The Fountain Paint Pots are steaming, moist mud. Where there is enough moisture, the mud gloops and blurps and bubbles continuously.
The Fountain Paint Pots are steaming, moist mud. Where there is enough moisture, the mud gloops and blurps and bubbles continuously.
Some pretty pools of water steam endlessly away, seldom or never erupting.
Some pretty pools of water steam endlessly away, seldom or never erupting.
Some vents don't have any pool of water at the surface. Steam just hisses out of the ground.
Some vents don’t have any pool of water at the surface. Steam just hisses out of the ground.

The Lower Geyser Basin featured some pretty active small geysers that erupted frequently.  The steaming, erupting, sulfuric waters against the setting sun made for a scene that might easily have been from another world.Lower Geyser Basin, Yellowstone NP, WY 8-12-12

Why, there's an alien being here right now!
Why, there’s an alien being here right now!

Lower Geyser Basin, Yellowstone NP, WY 8-12-12Back at the parking lot, while Lupe waited, the sun sank behind dead trees cooked by a change in the flow of waters heated by the giant Yellowstone caldera.  The Yellowstone caldera is the site of a supervolcano which has erupted at intervals of roughly 650,000 years three times in the last 2 million years.  The last eruption was 640,000 years ago, so on a geological time scale, the next Yellowstone supervolcano eruption is coming due soon.

So someday, Yellowstone will be even more exciting that it is now.  Too exciting even for bold-spirited Carolina Dogs.Sunset at Lower Geyser Basin, Yellowstone NP, WY 8-12-12Lupe at the Lower Geyser Basin, Yellowstone NP, WY 8-12-12Sunset at Lower Geyser Basin, Yellowstone NP, WY 8-12-12Links:

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Black Hills, SD Expedition No. 174(b) – Summits on the Air! (Boulder Hill, 7-4-16)

By the time Lupe and SPHP arrived at grandma’s house, Joe and Dusty were ready and waiting.  Joe had already entered an alert on Summits on the Air!  Joe, Dusty, Lupe and SPHP lost no time leaving for Boulder Hill (5,331 ft.).

Boulder Hill from USFS Road No. 358 (Boulder Hill Road) where Flume Trail No. 50 crosses the road. Photo looks S.

At 8:19 AM (71°F), Joe parked the G6 at the high point of the saddle on USFS Road No. 358 near the Boulder Hill access road.  A cool N breeze could be heard in the pines.  Lupe and Dusty were soon racing through the shady forest.  Joe and SPHP took the access road.

Rain had finally arrived the day before – the real deal with thunder, lightning, small hail and at least an inch of moisture.  Lupe found big tan mud puddles on the access road.  She plunked herself down in several of them.  She emerged with cool, tan mineral water streaming from her fur.

The access road was only 0.375 mile long.  It ended at the base of the big rock outcropping at the top of Boulder Hill (5,331 ft.).  A spur of Flume Trail No. 50 wound up among the rocks to a small, shallow saddle between the N and S high points at the summit of Boulder Hill.  Good!  No one was around.  Joe would have his choice of sites to set up his ham radio equipment.

Two days earlier, Joe had had such a good time with his first Summits on the Air (SOTA) experience “activating” Custer Peak (6,804 ft.), that he wanted to try activating another peak in the Black Hills before he and Dusty had to head home to Arvada, Colorado.  SOTA is “an award scheme for radio amateurs that encourages portable operation in mountainous areas”.  Naturally, Lupe, Dusty, and SPHP had all wanted to come along again, too!

Joe decided to set up the radio equipment at the N end of the N high point.  He taped a 12 foot fishing pole supporting an antenna wire as high up in a pine tree as he could.  SPHP then helped Joe set up 4 lateral wires near the base of the antenna.  Lupe and Dusty supervised, while guarding against intruders.

Joe and Dusty during setup of the portable ham radio. The 12' fishing pole supporting the antenna can be see up in the tree toward the L. Several of the lateral wires can be seen, too.
Joe and Dusty during setup of the portable ham radio. The 12′ fishing pole supporting the antenna can be see up in the tree toward the L. Several of the lateral wires can be seen, too.
Lupe supervises while Joe finishes setting the radio up. Photo looks NW.
Lupe supervises while Joe finishes setting the radio up. Photo looks NW.

Pretty soon, the radio was ready.  This time, Joe had a much better idea of what to expect once the radio was on.  Before “activating” Boulder Hill, Joe gave SPHP the log book and a pen.  SPHP received a 5 minute crash course on how to log the contact call signs, and other data Joe would call out while operating the radio.

AA0Q (Joe's radio call sign) ready to get Boulder Hill on the air!
AA0Q (Joe’s radio call sign) ready to get Boulder Hill on the air!

Set up had gone smoothly.  AA0Q was ready to go on the air 5 minutes before the alert time Joe had posted on the SOTA website.  As soon as Joe started transmitting, the same thing happened as at Custer Peak two days earlier.  Within seconds of turning the radio on, a contact “spotted” AA0Q on Boulder Hill on the SOTA website.  Moments later, Joe told SPHP that it was another “pileup”.  Joe said it sounded like 30 hams were trying to contact him at once.

It was impossible to respond to them all, but Joe was better prepared than last time.  SPHP logged the contacts, while AA0Q “worked” them using Morse Code.  Joe recognized some of the contacts as repeats from his SOTA activation of Custer Peak.  Others were new.  The most distant contact was in Great Britain, which Joe said was very good for transmitting only 4 watts.

AA0Q on the air on Boulder Hill, with Dusty looking on. Photo looks NW.
AA0Q on the air on Boulder Hill, with Dusty looking on. Photo looks NW.

Lupe and Dusty helped, too.  At one point, three hikers arrived up on Boulder Hill while AA0Q was still transmitting.  Both Lupe and Dusty barked a warning.  SPHP stopped logging long enough to point out the lateral antenna wires, so they wouldn’t trip on them.  SPHP also took a couple of group photos for the hikers using their camera.

Once again, Joe was rather amazed at the terrific response.  His Summits on the Air activation of Boulder Hill was a big success.  In roughly an hour, AA0Q worked 33 contacts by Morse Code, and one by voice.  By activating Boulder Hill, AA0Q had earned 6 more points toward the SOTA “Mountain Goat” award.  Including the 8 points earned on Custer Peak, he was now up to 14 points.  SOTA was fun and added a whole new dimension to AA0Q’s amateur radio hobby!

When Joe was done transmitting, it was time to take down the antenna and pack up all the radio gear.  When that was complete, Joe, Dusty, Lupe & SPHP went to explore a slightly lower high point a short distance to the N.

Joe and Dusty on the slightly lower high point to the N. Harney Peak (L of Center) is the highest point in the distance. Photo looks SW.
Joe and Dusty on the slightly lower high point to the N. Harney Peak (L of Center) is the highest point in the distance. Photo looks SW.
Silver Mountain's summit is in view just above Joe. Cliffs at the edge of the N summit area close to where AA0Q had been transmitting are seen on the L. Photo looks SSW.
Silver Mountain’s summit is in view just above Joe. Cliffs at the edge of the N summit area close to where AA0Q had been transmitting are seen on the L. Photo looks SSW.
Joe stands near the spot where he had been transmitting from on the N summit. Photo looks S.

Of course, the peakbagger in Lupe wasn’t about to leave Boulder Hill without a visit to the S summit area, too!

Lupe on the S summit. Silver Mountain (5,405 ft.) is the grassy peak on the L. Harney Peak (7,242 ft.) is on the horizon on the R.
Lupe on the S summit. Silver Mountain (5,405 ft.) is the grassy peak on the L. Harney Peak (7,242 ft.) is on the horizon on the R.
AA0Q and Dusty at the S summit. Photo looks SW.
AA0Q and Dusty at the S summit. Photo looks SW.
Harney Peak using the telephoto lens. Photo looks SW.
Harney Peak using the telephoto lens. Photo looks SW.
Part of Storm Hill (5,192 ft.) is seen on the L. Hwy 16 is visible on the R. Photo looks E.
Part of Storm Hill (5,192 ft.) is seen on the L. Hwy 16 is visible on the R. Photo looks E.
Joe and Dusty on the trail on the way down. Photo looks S.
Joe and Dusty on the trail on the way down. Photo looks S.

By noon, Joe, Dusty, Lupe and SPHP were back at grandma’s house.  Joe logged in all the QSO’s (contacts) he had made on the Summits on the Air website.  All the contacts earned points toward the SOTA “Shack Sloth” award.

After lunch, Joe & SPHP went with other family members off into the hills again.  SPHP wound up at Rushmore Cave, and Joe wound up at an antique shop in Keystone.

Lupe, Dusty and Maya (another dog in the family) were left behind with grandma.  SPHP had given all three dogs water and a Beggin’ Strip before leaving.  Grandma later reported that all the dogs spent the entire afternoon snoozing on the soft carpet in front of the fan.  Being a “Radio-Active” Carolina Dog can be a tough life, but someone’s got to do it!

Summits on the Air map showing AA0Q's activation of Boulder Hill.
Summits on the Air map showing AA0Q’s activation of Boulder Hill.

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