Discover the best top things to do in Yellowstone Country, Yellowstone Country including Artist Point, Specimen Ridge, Big Sky Chapel, Bleu Horses, Emerson Cultural Center, Union Falls, Palette Spring, Roosevelt Arch, The 45th Parallel, Clepsydra Geyser.
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5.0 based on 1,292 reviews
We crossed Chittenden bridge across the Yellowstone river; stopping first at Uncle Toms to view the smaller upper Falls, then on to Artist Point to view the MAGNIFICENT lower falls and the unbelievable colors of the canyon. It is IMPOSSIBLE to describe the majesty of this waterfall and canyon colors, so we will not even try,
5.0 based on 31 reviews
A non-denominational log framed chapel, very welcoming and comfortable with an incredible view of Lone Mountain through a huge window behind the altar. Very peaceful and meditational.
5.0 based on 5 reviews
Beautifully crafted and highly detailed herd of horses displayed in a stunning landscape. Certainly hope there's a breeze while you visit. It will animate the rope manes and tails on these ponies. Look carefully as you approach and you'll find a small pull-off area, and a bit of exploration will reveal a fairly well worn pathway up the hill. A bit steep, but nothing very strenuous to get up among the herd. We found it very well worthwhile to trek up to admire the work and the views.
4.5 based on 64 reviews
An awesome community art center for the local residents. Several artists utilize this building as a creative, from photographers, painters, dance, theater, youth/adult classes, etc. Additionally they have a wonderful & creative restaurant, the Emerson Grill.
4.5 based on 16 reviews
The Palette Spring area of Mammoth Hot Springs is easily accessible from the lower parking lots and includes the 37 FT tall Liberty Cap (imagine an erupting Geyser frozen in time), Devil’s Thumb (a smaller cone), Palette Spring and Terraces. It’s one of the more striking and active areas within Mammoth Hot Springs. Water soaks into the limestone, meets the liquid magma, evaporates, reacts with the limestone and forms calcium carbonate deposits as it cools... it’s a fascinating example of the wonders of our Earth.
4.0 based on 417 reviews
This is at the North Entrance at Gardiner, MT. Great place to enter the park, as it is close to Mammoth Hot Springs.
4.0 based on 11 reviews
For decades it was said that the exact midpoint between the North Pole and the equator was the Wyoming/Montana state line, where parking is for the Boiling River. Then, twelve years ago, it was recalculated to be ~1 kilometre north of the state line, though the current sign is .33 km. further north than the actual gps located spot for the sake of safety at a turnout. Oops.
4.0 based on 5 reviews
If you walk around the fountain paint pots trail in a clockwise direction, Clepsydra is on your right just after Fountain Geyser. If you go clockwise it will be on your left after you crest a hill, immediately after the now unmarked Jelly geyser. You will read it’s become erratic. In fact, new behavior is just that: it is still very reliable. Instead of a common shutdown period of five or so minutes about 15-30 minutes Fountain ends, now it have several breaks but as the energy in the multigeyser system builds, it erupts steadily and dependably until after the next fountain cycle ends. On Saturday, 12 May, there were three off periods lasting from 5-7 minutes which is similar to what I recorded last October and a year ago on 15 May, the day before Sidekick Geyser, just to the right and slightly closer, is reputed to have begun erupting, but I saw sidekick’s pool level rising and falling, modifying Clepsydras behavior the day before. Please read of how it changed dramatically in the past 58 years ago in the $1 self guided booklet at the trailhead. Outside of the pamphlet, there is a lot of information out there that doesn’t hold water. One tour guide who was born and raised in the region told his guests before the change last year that “Clepsydra never shuts down.” By definition a geyser is periodic, even if shutdowns are short. He’d just never taken the time to see for himself. Other guides pronounce it Clep-sigh-druh which makes sense if you consider hydra means water. But Ckepsydra (water clock) is a Greek word, not Latin: it is pronounced Clep-See-Druh. Funny thing, “Clep” is Greek for thief not clock but the meaning has taken hold and is accepted: it “steals” water so predictably, you could almost set your clock by it, before 17 August, 1959. In the Gugong, the “Forbidden City” in Beijing, China, imagine my surprise when I came upon a large brass ball full of holes labeled clearly as a “Clepsydra!” But the beauty of this place is you can see this for yourself if you take the time. Clepsydra is an eminently dependable geyser, for now. If it’s not erupting as you approach it just wait a few minutes. Until the next big change, I expect it will start up again in five or slightly more minutes, as it has been doing for decades.
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