Grand Teton National Park, Wyoming, USA in 4K (Ultra HD)
Witness the stunning beauty of Grand Teton National Park! Views from multiple viewpoints along the scenic roads in the area and from the trails.
Locations: Sunrise at Schwabachers Landing (0:05), Blacktails Ponds Overlook (0:32), Bisons at Antelope Flats(0:45), Mormon Row (0:54), Snake River Overlook (1:16), Elk Ranch (1:31), Oxbow bend (1:42), Colter Bay (2:13), Jackson Lake (2:26), Jackson Lodge (2:55), Signal Mountain lodge area (3:02), viewpoints along Teton Park Road (3:09), views from Amphitheater Lake trail (3:41), Surprise Lake (3:51), Amphitheater Lake (4:27), Paintbrush Divide (4:50), Lake Solitude (5:05), Chapel of the Transfiguration (5:33), Jenny Lake (5:45), Sunset (5:57).
Recorded September 2014 in 4K (Ultra HD) with Sony AX100.
Music:
Unicorn Heads - Dreaming in 432Hz
--------------------------------------
About Amazing Places on Our Planet:
Immerse yourself in scenic beautiful places on our planet without the distraction of words.
New 4K video every Friday or every second Friday.
Subscribe:
Facebook:
Twitter:
Google+:
Website:
Movies On Map:
Watch More Amazing Places on Our Planet: All 4K Ultra HD Videos:
US National Parks in 4K:
Canada in 4K:
China in 4K:
Southern Africa in 4K:
Amazing Trails:
Indonesia in 4K:
Iceland in 4K:
Best selection by year:
7 BEST DAY HIKES IN GRAND TETON NATIONAL PARK | USA's Most Stunning National Park [ALL YOU NEED!]
The Grand Tetons was our favorite place to hike in the entire United States, and we have been to quite a few hiking destinations! The combination of huge mountain, gorgeous likes, prosperous wildlife, and great trails makes for a cocktail of epic hiking proportions! Oh, and that doesn't even take into account camping! The Grand Tetons area has some INCREDIBLE and FREE camping options that will absolutely blow you away.
VIDEO TIME STAMPS:
0:00 - Introduction
1:52 - Day 1 - Jackson Lake to Hermitage Point (#5 Favorite Hike)
2:30 - We spotted a bear!
3:43 - Day 2 - Grand View Point to Two Ocean Lake and Emma Matilda Lake (#2 Favorite Hike)
5:50 - Day 3 - Signal Mountain Hike (#4 Favorite Hike)
8:25 - Day 4 - Jenny Lake Loop to Hidden Falls & Inspiration Point (#3 Favorite Hike)
11:10 - Day 5 - String Lake Loop & Taggart Lake Loop with Bradley Lake (#1 Favorite Hike!)
13:08 - Julie Wipes Out in the Snow!
14:08 - Day 6 - Bradley Lake to Garnet Canyon (#6 Favorite Hike)
16:33 - Day 7 - Death Canyon to Patrol Cabin (#7 Favorite Hike)
18:31 - Free Camping outside Grand Teton National Park in Bridger-Teton National Forest!
20:08 - Thank You for Watching & Please Subscribe for More Content!
20:28 - Outtakes and BLOOPERS
20:49 - Storytime - There was a Bear at our Van!
Our Itinerary:
Day 1 - #hermitagepoint
The hike to Hermitage Point is a wonderful start to your Grand Tetons experience! The hike itself is pretty long - just under 10 miles - but it is along the lake for pretty much the entire time, so there is not much in terms of elevation change. It feels like an easy walk, only the walk has some of the best views this planet has to offer! And Hermitage Point itself is...WOW! The point sticks out into Jackson Lake in a way that gives an absolutely wonderful panorama view of the Teton Mountain range.
Day 2 - #grandviewpoint to #twooceanlake and #emmamatildalake
This hike is a bit more challenging, but also more rewarding than the hike to Hermitage Point. The hike we describe is not one single named trail in Grand Tetons, but is the combination of parts of 3 separate trails. However, when you combine the trails as we did, the reward is 3 separate STUNNING sites all achieved by hiking less than 10 miles! If you did all 3 trails separately, you could do 20 miles EASILY! Our way is much better, in our opinion...
Day 3 - #signalmountain
The Signal Mountain hike is basically a 'must' for anyone visiting Grand Teton National Park. The hike offers an absolutely beautiful panorama view at the apex, but along the way is so much wildlife activity on a beautiful forest trail. The hike is moderately challenging, but is more than worth it at the top. Note that you can drive to the top of Signal Mountain if you'd like, however the hike is MUCH more rewarding if you are asking us...
Day 4 - #jennylake Loop
Jenny Lake is a stunning lake that is basically shaped like an ablong circle, making it perfect for a walk around the lake. The hike itself is over 7 miles, however there is not much in terms of elevation gain - after all, you are just taking a lap around the lake! On the opposite side of the lake, you'll be able to see Hidden Falls and Inspiration Point, two incredible sites that are 'musts' on your visit to the Grand Tetons!
Day 5 - #stringlake Loop & #taggartlake Loop with a #bradleylake Detour!
This day was our ABSOLUTE FAVORITE day hiking in Grand Teton National Park (and maybe ever!). The day started out with String Lake, which has a perfectly reflective stillness that DOUBLED the view of the mountains. After that, we went to explore Taggart Lake and Bradley Lake, each absolutely STUNNING in their own right. The 3 lakes we hiked to on Day 5 will always stick out as a special day for us, and one of the most beautiful days we've ever experienced while hiking National Parks.
Day 6 - Bradley Lake and #garnetcanyon
Garnet Canyon is a wonderful hike, and is often used by hikers that are doing multiple days in the Tetons backcountry. The Garnet Canyon hike itself is wonderfully gorgeous, and offers a great view of the same Bradley Lake we hiked to the previous day!
Day 7 - #deathcanyon to Patrol Cabin
The Patrol Cabin is SUPER cool, and very interesting to think about when it was in use. A person was living in this cabin, patrolling the surrounding area, with essentially no contact with the outside world for DAYS at a time. What a TRIPPY experience that is for us to think about in present day!
If you want to read more about hiking and camping in National Parks and SO MANY more adventures we've taken, check out the Wanderful Destinations page on our website!
Please subscribe to our YouTube channel and follow along with our adventures on:
Instagram:
Facebook:
Pinterest:
Our Blog:
Grand Teton National Park, Wyoming, USA
Support - If you find value in the material that I offer, let’s have a mutually beneficial exchange! Your support is essential to this website, as well as my freelance documentary projects, which are 100% funded by viewers like you. Sign up for a monthly contribution, or send a check or money order to: Charles Jines P.O. Box 3384 Moriarty, New Mexico, 87035
******
Donate/Subscribe -
My Blurb Books:
Photo Prints:
Amazon Camera and Photo:
My Website:
Black Bear on Amphitheater Lake Trail, Grand Teton National Park, 8.18.15
Trail Running Jenny Lake, Grand Teton National Park, Wyoming
Trail running around Jenny Lake in Grand Teton National Park. 7.5 miles, 600 feet of elevation gain. Easy trail to run with low elevation gain. We saw elk, moose, antelope, and other wildlife on a beautiful summer day. Check out my blog for more information on this trail run:
Grand Teton National Park - Full Tour (2018)
Grand Teton National Park is an American national park in northwestern Wyoming. At approximately 310,000 acres (480 sq mi; 130,000 ha; 1,300 km2), the park includes the major peaks of the 40-mile-long (64 km) Teton Range as well as most of the northern sections of the valley known as Jackson Hole. Grand Teton National Park is only 10 miles (16 km) south of Yellowstone National Park, to which it is connected by the National Park Service-managed John D. Rockefeller, Jr. Memorial Parkway. Along with surrounding national forests, these three protected areas constitute the almost 18,000,000-acre (7,300,000 ha) Greater Yellowstone Ecosystem, one of the world's largest intact mid-latitude temperate ecosystems.
Human history of the Grand Teton region dates back at least 11,000 years, when the first nomadic hunter-gatherer Paleo-Indians began migrating into the region during warmer months pursuing food and supplies. In the early 19th century, the first white explorers encountered the eastern Shoshone natives. Between 1810 and 1840, the region attracted fur trading companies that vied for control of the lucrative beaver pelt trade. U.S. Government expeditions to the region commenced in the mid-19th century as an offshoot of exploration in Yellowstone, with the first permanent white settlers in Jackson Hole arriving in the 1880s.
Efforts to preserve the region as a national park began in the late 19th century, and in 1929 Grand Teton National Park was established, protecting the Teton Range's major peaks. The valley of Jackson Hole remained in private ownership until the 1930s, when conservationists led by John D. Rockefeller, Jr. began purchasing land in Jackson Hole to be added to the existing national park. Against public opinion and with repeated Congressional efforts to repeal the measures, much of Jackson Hole was set aside for protection as Jackson Hole National Monument in 1943. The monument was abolished in 1950 and most of the monument land was added to Grand Teton National Park.
Grand Teton National Park is named for Grand Teton, the tallest mountain in the Teton Range. The naming of the mountains is attributed to early 19th-century French-speaking trappers—les trois tétons (the three teats) was later anglicized and shortened to Tetons. At 13,775 feet (4,199 m), Grand Teton abruptly rises more than 7,000 feet (2,100 m) above Jackson Hole, almost 850 feet (260 m) higher than Mount Owen, the second-highest summit in the range. The park has numerous lakes, including 15-mile-long (24 km) Jackson Lake as well as streams of varying length and the upper main stem of the Snake River. Though in a state of recession, a dozen small glaciers persist at the higher elevations near the highest peaks in the range. Some of the rocks in the park are the oldest found in any American national park and have been dated at nearly 2.7 billion years.
Grand Teton National Park is an almost pristine ecosystem and the same species of flora and fauna that have existed since prehistoric times can still be found there. More than 1,000 species of vascular plants, dozens of species of mammals, 300 species of birds, more than a dozen fish species and a few species of reptiles and amphibians inhabit the park. Due to various changes in the ecosystem, some of them human-induced, efforts have been made to provide enhanced protection to some species of native fish and the increasingly threatened whitebark pine.
Grand Teton National Park is a popular destination for mountaineering, hiking, fishing and other forms of recreation. There are more than 1,000 drive-in campsites and over 200 miles (320 km) of hiking trails that provide access to backcountry camping areas. Noted for world-renowned trout fishing, the park is one of the few places to catch Snake River fine-spotted cutthroat trout. Grand Teton has several National Park Service-run visitor centers, and privately operated concessions for motels, lodges, gas stations and marinas.
HIKE WITH ME to Grand Tetons Taggart Lake, Jenny Lake | Fulltime RV Travel
Hike with us!! Hiking in Grand Teton National Park | Taggart Lake vs. Jenny Lake | Full Time RV Family
Join us on our National Adventure as we explore easy to moderate hikes in the Grand Teton National Park. Jenny Lake is on of the most popular Lakes in the Tetons, but have you been to Taggart Lake? We share some of the most beautiful landscape photography and images of the #GrandTetons as we explore Jenny Lake and Taggart Lake as a family in these two great hikes at the Tetons.
SHARE the love and SUBSCRIBE for more????
We are a full time RV family of five touring the United States in our 5th wheel on #OurNationalAdventure. We share small towns, national parks and places that have caught our eye on this adventure. #travelfamily
Check out recent videos:
Yellowstone National Park:
Theodore Roosevelt National Park:
RV Moving Day:
Needles Highway Driving:
Rushmore Helicopter:
Badlands Bombs:
Indiana Dunes
Mammoth Caves:
Connect with us!
Facebook
Instagram
Website
All content is not authorized to be duplicated without written consent from Our National Adventure.
This video is created for mature audiences. Parental Supervision Suggested.
Grand Teton National Park: Delta Lake Trail Start
Hiking in Grand Teton National Park
During a road trip north through the Rocky Mountains, we stayed a few nights in Grand Teton National Park. We managed to fit in a couple hikes, and the views were nothing short of spectacular! This short video cannot do them justice - if you ever have a chance to visit here, you simply must do so.
Grand Teton National Park Wyoming August 1983
In 1965, the Eastman Kodak Company introduced a new film format: Super 8. This format was based on a drop-in cassette with 50 ft. (12m) of film, that gave about three and a half minutes of filming at 18 frames per second. Thereafter, until the early 1980’s, the Super 8 film format was extremely popular for shooting home-movies, and keen enthusiasts still have many 50ft. reels of Super 8 film stored away.
In recent years, many small businesses offer conversion of Super 8 movies frame-by-frame to a digital format (telecine), but typically to a DVD disk without any image adjustments such as contrast, color saturation, etc. For keen hobbyists, most telecine equipment is extremely expensive; however, a less expensive option is now being offered by Wolverine Data, and I’ve used the Wolverine film2digital MovieMaker frame-by-frame product to convert my old Super 8 movies into MP4 digital files, that I then edit using ROXIO Creator. In particular, I use the editing software to convert the 30 fps MP4 files to the original 18 fps of the Super 8 movies (i.e., I reduce the frame rate by a factor of 0.6). I also slightly reduce the image contrast, and if necessary the brightness, saturation and even the component red, green and blue colors. I then save the final edited digital file in a WMV 9 1280x720 format. (The original Super 8 movies, of course, were in a 4:3 format, but I’ve saved the edited digital file as a 16:9 format, with black bars to each side, so as to match the present-day LCD TV picture format).
This video, originally filmed as a Super 8 home-movie, was taken in August 1983 on a family trip to Jackson Hole and the Grand Teton National Park in northwestern Wyoming. Taking a shuttle boat across Jenny Lake, we hiked back along the Cascade Trail, for a 9 mile round-trip hike. On other days we hiked in the String Lake area, and also took a rented canoe out onto the lake.
Delta Lake - Grand Tetons National Park
Short clip I put together from day hiking through the Tetons in Wyoming. Found the awe inspiring and frigid Delta Lake on unmaintained ridgeline trails off the Amphitheater Lake Trail.
Grand Teton National Park: Delta Lake Trail
Grand Teton National Park Adventure Vlog (part 1)
Grand Teton National Park Wyoming, United States 1
Grand Teton National Park, Wyoming, USA 2005
Another video Grand Teton, part 2
Grand Teton National Park is a United States National Park in northwestern Wyoming. At approximately 310,000 acres (480 sq mi; 130,000 ha; 1,300 km2), the park includes the major peaks of the 40-mile-long (64 km) Teton Range as well as most of the northern sections of the valley known as Jackson Hole. It is only 10 miles (16 km) south of Yellowstone National Park, to which it is connected by the National Park Service-managed John D. Rockefeller, Jr. Memorial Parkway. Along with surrounding National Forests, these three protected areas constitute the almost 18,000,000-acre (7,300,000 ha) Greater Yellowstone Ecosystem, one of the largest intact mid-latitude temperate ecosystems in the world.
Human history of the Grand Teton region dates back at least 11,000 years, when the first nomadic hunter-gatherer Paleo-Indians began migrating into the region during warmer months pursuing food and supplies. In the early 19th century, the first White explorers encountered the eastern Shoshone natives. Between 1810 and 1840, the region attracted fur trading companies that vied for control of the lucrative beaver pelt trade. U.S. Government expeditions to the region commenced in the mid-19th century as an offshoot of exploration in Yellowstone, with the first permanent white settlers in Jackson Hole arriving in the 1880s. Efforts to preserve the region as a national park commenced in the late 19th century, and in 1929 Grand Teton National Park was established, protecting the major peaks of the Teton Range. The valley of Jackson Hole remained in private ownership until the 1930s, when conservationists led by John D. Rockefeller, Jr. began purchasing land in Jackson Hole to be added to the existing national park. Against public opinion and with repeated Congressional efforts to repeal the measures, much of Jackson Hole was set aside for protection as Jackson Hole National Monument in 1943. The monument was abolished in 1950 and most of the monument land was added to Grand Teton National Park.
Grand Teton National Park is named for Grand Teton, the tallest mountain in the Teton Range. The naming of the mountains is attributed to early 19th-century French-speaking trappers—les trois tétons (the three teats) was later anglicized and shortened to Tetons. At 13,775 feet (4,199 m), Grand Teton abruptly rises more than 7,000 feet (2,100 m) above Jackson Hole, almost 850 feet (260 m) higher than Mount Owen, the second-highest summit in the range. The park has numerous lakes, including 15-mile-long (24 km) Jackson Lake as well as streams of varying length and the upper main stem of the Snake River. Though in a state of recession, a dozen small glaciers persist at the higher elevations near the highest peaks in the range. Some of the rocks in the park are the oldest found in any U.S. National Park and have been dated at nearly 2.7 billion years.
Grand Teton National Park is an almost pristine ecosystem and the same species of flora and fauna that have existed since prehistoric times can still be found there. More than 1,000 species of vascular plants, dozens of species of mammals, 300 species of birds, more than a dozen fish species and a few species of reptiles and amphibians exist. Due to various changes in the ecosystem, some of them human-induced, efforts have been made to provide enhanced protection to some species of native fish and the increasingly threatened whitebark pine.
Grand Teton National Park is a popular destination for mountaineering, hiking, fishing and other forms of recreation. There are more than 1,000 drive-in campsites and over 200 miles (320 km) of hiking trails that provide access to backcountry camping areas. Noted for world-renowned trout fishing, the park is one of the few places to catch Snake River fine-spotted cutthroat trout. Grand Teton has several National Park Service-run visitor centers, and privately operated concessions for motels, lodges, gas stations and marinas.
Grand Teton National Park Wyoming
Grand Tetons - String and Leigh Lake Hikes
We go on a really cool hike that takes us through String and Leigh Lakes. The mountains in this beautiful National Park never fail to amaze!
Living the retirement dream now!
Check out our website at johnandkatiesrvhoneymoon.com
Nature: Grand Teton National Park
We leave you this Sunday in Nature's winter wonderland, amid a display of snow-capped mountains at Grand Teton National Park in Wyoming. Videographer: Scot Miller.
Bear by Jenny Lake in Grand Teton National Park
We were hiking down from Cascade Canyon and Inspiration Point in Grand Teton National Park when suddenly a bear crossed the trail in front of us...
Backpacking Grand Teton National Park: Paintbrush Divide, Grizzly Bear Lake, and Littles Peak
This is a 5 day backpacking trip in Grand Teton National Park. My route is here: . The first afternoon we hike up into Paintbrush Canyon, setting up after dark in the lower zone. The second night we hike up past Holly Lake, and then drop down to Grizzly Bear Lake. On the third day, we hike up to Paintbrush Divide, drop down to Lake Solitude, and camp in the North Fork camping zone of Cascade Canyon. Day 4, I split off from my friends, and climb up behind Lake Solitude. I walk the ridge and climb Littles Peak. I attempted to climb up to Cirque Lake, but ran into iced over snowfields. I camped in the saddle between Leigh Canyon and Moran Canyon, overlooking Mink Lake. A beautiful spot. I finished the trip by hiking back down Cascade Canyon the 5th day. Middle of August, 2014.
Hike down from Paintbrush Divide to Solitude Lake/Cascade Canyon, Grand Teton National Park, 8/25/16
The second part of the 20 mile loop hike from the String Lake/Leigh Lake parking lot of Grand Teton National Park, up Paintbrush Canyon to the Paintbrush Divide and then down to Solitude Lake and past it to Cascade Canyon which to takes you to Jenny Lake and back to our starting point. One of the coolest hikes I have ever done. Probably Top 3.
One Day in Grand Teton National Park - Travel Channel
ThreadBanger's Corinne and Rob bring their bear spray and their binoculars for a day in Grand Teton National Park. Check out some of their favorite spots and start planning your national park trip.
Discover more must-see national parks:
Watch more videos from ThreadBanger:
Find more great content from Travel Channel:
Travel Channel YouTube Channel:
Subscribe to Travel Channel on YouTube:
Follow Travel Channel on Twitter:
Like Travel Channel on Facebook: