Moose Falls, Yellowstone National Park, WY.
Moose Falls, Yellowstone National Park, WY. Shot 9/13/17
Moose Falls, Yellowstone National Park
Just past the Southern Entrance to Yellowstone National Park lies a pretty little waterfall that's right along the roadside.
Moose Falls, Yellowstone National Park
Moose Falls is within a very short distance of the South entrance to Yellowstone National Park. This was taken on September 21, 2011.
Moose Falls in Yellowstone NP
-winter wonderland-
Moose Falls In Yellowstone!
Check out foodwanderer.com for more info of my Yellowstone trip!
This was my trip to Yellowstone in June 2014 and here is just a recording of the Moose Falls. This fall is a must see and somewhat difficult to find but drive slow enough you will surely be able to locate it.
Moose - Yellowstone National Park
Moose at play in a small pond in Yellowstone National Park
Lewis Falls, Yellowstone National Park, United States
Lewis Falls is located on the road heading towards the south entrance of Yellowstone National Park.
Gibbon Falls ... Waterfalls of Yellowstone Gibbon Falls 20110626 Views in HD.
Yellowstone National Parks Gibbon Falls in Wy Views in HD
[360] Lewis Falls, Yellowstone NPS
Camera: GoPro Fusion
Grand Canyon of the Yellowstone - Yellowstone National Park, Wyoming, United States
- Created at TripWow by TravelPod Attractions (a TripAdvisor™ company)
Grand Canyon Of The Yellowstone Yellowstone National Park
Read more at:
Travel blogs from Grand Canyon of the Yellowstone:
- ... Everybody loves a grizzly We then turned back from the beautiful Lamarr Valley, and headed towards the Grand Canyon of the Yellowstone, which I had been desperate to see ...
- ... Next stop was the Tower Falls, a waterfall where the water of the Yellowstone river falls 132 ft into the Grand Canyon of The Yellowstone ...
- ... However the view is spectacular, beyond words The Lower Falls in The Grand Canyon of the Yellowstone is overwhelming ...
- ... We will visit the Lamar Valley, Old Faithful, and the Grand Canyon of the Yellowstone ...
- ... The Grand Canyon of the Yellowstone was my second day's activity ...
Read these blogs and more at:
Photos from:
- Yellowstone National Park, Wyoming, United States
- Silver Gate, Montana, United States
Photos in this video:
- Lower Falls at the Grand Canyon of the Yellowstone by Cusan from a blog titled Day 7; Grizzlies, Bison, Moose, Elk and a Canyon!
- Grand Canyon of the Yellowstone, Lower Falls by Shavonne-brian from a blog titled A Place Strange and Wonderful
- The Grand Canyon of the Yellowstone by Cusan from a blog titled Day 7; Grizzlies, Bison, Moose, Elk and a Canyon!
- The Grand Canyon of the Yellowstone by Scoonpooh from a blog titled Canyon & West Tumb
- The Grand Canyon of the Yellowstone by Astre from a blog titled Beautifully Carved Canyon by Our Creator
- Grand Canyon of the Yellowstone 2 by Exploreamerica from a blog titled Yellowstone National Park : 2002 US Roadtrip
- Grand Canyon of the Yellowstone by Dhjv62a from a blog titled Thar she blows!
- Grand Canyon of the Yellowstone by Exploreamerica from a blog titled Yellowstone National Park : 2002 US Roadtrip
- Grand Canyon of the Yellowstone by Leonardgrill from a blog titled Yellowstone
- Grand Canyon of the Yellowstone by Rogerkarr from a blog titled Yellowstone, Day 1
- Grand Canyon of the Yellowstone by Spoonball from a blog titled Falling down
- Grand Canyon of the Yellowstone by Shavonne-brian from a blog titled A Place Strange and Wonderful
- Grand Canyon of the Yellowstone by Agentjake from a blog titled Arrival in Yellowstone
Grand Teton National Park Jackson Hole Moose. Bear Witness Safari Company.
Bull Moose near Ditch Creek in Grand Teton National Park Jackson Hole, Wyoming. Join us on a magnificent wildlife safari. Bear Witness Safari Company.
Bull Moose, Yellowstone National Park, Virginia Cascade drive, 2013
Yellowstone 2013. Virginia Cascades. We stopped to take some pictures of the creek area and out popped this Bull Moose. Very cool experience. Have not seen one in this area since!
Yellowstone & Grand Teton Falls
Hidden Falls, Undine falls, Wraith Falls, Tower Falls, Upper and Lower Yellowstone Falls
Bull Moose Sighting In The North West Area Of Yellowstone National Park- On U.S. Highway 191
A cool sighting of a bull that was trotting across the Gallatin River in Yellowstone National Park!
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Hidden Falls - Wyoming
Hidden Falls can be found just west of Jenny Lake in Grand Teton National Park. There are two ways to get to the Falls. One is by a shuttle boat from the Jenny Lake east shore boat dock at the southeast end of the lake. The second route to Hidden Falls is by hiking around the south end of Jenny Lake to the trail to Cascade Canyon (this adds four miles roundtrip to the hike).
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Roundtrip Length: 1.3 miles (via boat)
Roundtrip Length: 5.3 miles (via trail)
Trailhead Elevation: 6783 Feet
Total Elevation Gain: 230 Feet
Trail Difficulty Rating: 1.76 (easy)
Lewis Falls at Yellowstone National Park
The Lewis Falls at Yellowstone National Park in Teton County, Wyoming, USA on Aug. 13, 2013.
Copyright ©2014 Sanjib Dutta
The Lewis Falls waterfall is located on the Lewis River (Coordinates: 44.2674°N 110.6357°W). The waterfall drops about 30 feet (9.1 m) and are easily seen from the road, halfway between the south entrance to the park and Grant Village. The falls are on the Lewis River, just south of Lewis Lake.
Yellowstone is the first and oldest national park in the world and is famous for its wildlife and geothermal features, especially Old Faithful Geyser. It has many types of ecosystems, but the subalpine forest is dominant. It is part of the South Central Rockies forests ecoregion.
Yellowstone National Park is located primarily in the U.S. state of Wyoming, although it also extends into Montana and Idaho. It was established by the U.S. Congress and signed into law by President Ulysses S. Grant on March 1, 1872.
Yellowstone National Park:
Moose in Grand Teton National Park - Great Yellowstone
Moose feel perfectly at home in the swamps. There they find chewy leaves and water plants, which form their daily diet. The moose is the largest animal in the deer family. The males are solitary for most of the year, and only start looking for females when the mating season starts. The females live together with their young. During the mating season a female moose can give birth to two calves. In this period they defend their offspring fanatically. Keeping a safe distance is the motto; in this period the moose are extremely dangerous.
Yellowstone National Park is officially designated by UNESCO as World Heritage Site, and has to be safeguarded for the future as a testimony to its enduring past.
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► Sunrise Yellowstone National Park Camping | Pelican Creek | Wyoming 82190 USA (HJ3R+J3) [2 hours]
Location: Pelican Creek, Wyoming 82190 USA (Yellowstone Lake)
44°33'14.7N 110°21'35.4W (HJ3R+J3) 44.554082, -110.359843
Yellowstone was the first national park in the U.S. and is also widely held to be the first national park in the world. Approximately 96 percent of the land area of Yellowstone National Park is located within the state of Wyoming. Another three percent is within Montana, with the remaining one percent in Idaho. The park is (63 mi; 101 km) north to south, and (54 mi; 87 km) west to east by air. Yellowstone is 2,219,789 acres (898,317 ha; 3,468 sq mi; 8,983 km²), comprising canyons, lakes, rivers and mountain ranges. Forests comprise 80 percent of the land area of the park; most of the rest is grassland. Lakes rivers cover five percent of the land area, with the largest water body being Yellowstone Lake at 87,040 acres (35,224 ha; 136 sq mi; 352 km²). Yellowstone Lake is up to (400 ft; 120 m) deep and has (110 mi; 180 km) of shoreline. At an elevation of (7,733 ft; 2,357 m) above sea level, Yellowstone Lake is the largest high elevation lake in North America.
The park sits on the Yellowstone Plateau, at an average elevation of (8,000 ft; 2,400 m) above sea level. The plateau is bounded on nearly all sides by mountain ranges of the Middle Rocky Mountains, which range from (9,000 to 11,000 ft; 2,700 to 3,400 m) in elevation. The highest point in the park is atop Eagle Peak (11,358 ft; 3,462 m) and the lowest is along Reese Creek (5,282 ft; 1,610 m). The most prominent summit on the Yellowstone Plateau is Mount Washburn at (10,243 ft; 3,122 m). The park contains 290 waterfalls of at least (15 ft; 4.6 m), the highest being the Lower Falls of the Yellowstone River at (308 ft; 94 m).
Yellowstone National Park is the centerpiece of the 20 million acres (8,093,712 ha; 31,250 sq mi; 80,937 km²) Greater Yellowstone Ecosystem, a region that includes Grand Teton National Park, adjacent National Forests and expansive wilderness areas in those forests. The ecosystem is the largest remaining continuous stretch of mostly undeveloped pristine land in the contiguous United States, considered the world's largest intact ecosystem in the northern temperate zone.
Over 1,700 species of trees and other vascular plants are native to the park. Another 170 species are considered to be exotic species and are non-native. Of the eight conifer tree species documented, Lodgepole Pine forests cover 80 percent of the total forested areas. Other conifers, such as Subalpine Fir, Engelmann Spruce, Rocky Mountain Douglas-fir and Whitebark Pine, are found in scattered groves throughout the park.
Hundreds of species of mammals, birds, fish, and reptiles have been documented. The vast forests and grasslands also include unique species of plants. Yellowstone Park is the largest and most finest megafauna wildlife habitat. There are almost 60 species of mammals in the park, including the timber wolf, coyote, lynx, and grizzly bears. Other large mammals include the bison, black bear, elk, moose, mule deer, white-tailed deer, mountain goat, pronghorn, bighorn sheep, and cougar live in this park.
Hundreds of species of birds have been reported, almost half of which nest in Yellowstone. In 1999, twenty-six pairs of nesting bald eagle were documented. Extremely rare sightings of whooping cranes have been recorded, however only three examples of this species are known to live in the Rocky Mountains, out of 385 known worldwide. Other birds, considered to be species of special concern because of their rarity in Yellowstone, include the common loon, harlequin duck, osprey, peregrine falcon and the trumpeter swan.
Yellowstone ranks among the most popular national parks in the United States. The National Park Service maintains 9 visitor centers and museums and is responsible for maintenance of historical structures and many of the other 2,000 buildings. An historical and educational tour is available at Fort Yellowstone which details the history of the National Park Service and the development of the park. Campfire programs, guided walks and other interpretive presentations are available at numerous locations. The park has numerous recreational opportunities, including hiking, boating, fishing and sightseeing. Paved roads provide close access to the major geothermal areas as well as some of the lakes and waterfalls. Camping is available at a dozen campgrounds with more than 2,000 campsites. Camping is also available in surrounding National Forests, as well as in Grand Teton National Park to the south. Backcountry campsites are accessible only by foot or by horseback and require a permit. There are (1,100 mi; 1,800 km) of hiking trails available.
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Yellowstone Elk Migration Trail: Amazing Camera Trap Highlights
YELLOWSTONE ELK MIGRATION TRAIL IS A WILDLIFE HIGHWAY: AMAZING TRAIL CAM VIDEO
Elk, mule deer, coyotes, wolves, grizzly bear, and a porcupine all use the same trail high in the mountains of western Wyoming in this video by the Wyoming Migration Initiative. This video captured with trail cameras shows one of the 12 major Yellowstone elk migration corridors in the Greater Yellowstone Ecosystem.
Elk migration happens during the same time as elk season, but many times there are hunting closures during the peak of the migration, depending on what area you are hunting.
These are the elk trails that big bulls navigate each fall. Some bull elk migrate with their large harems, but many migrate later in bachelor groups. If you've ever seen a large elk skull or mounted antlers from Wyoming, these are the sorts of migration trails those elk are using.
Trail cam video by Travis Zaffarano and Gregory Nickerson, University of Wyoming/WY Migration Initiative migrationinitiative.org, in collaboration with Wyoming Game and Fish Department
Funded by:
Wyoming Rocky Mountain Elk Foundation
Special thanks to:
Greg Anderson, Wyoming Game and Fish Department
Sara Domek, National Bighorn Sheep Center
Nick Dobric, Theodore Roosevelt Conservation Partnership
Matthew Kauffman, Plum Schultz, Kimmie Takaki, Wyoming Cooperative Fish and Wildlife Research Unit
Elizabeth Travers and Andrew Parsekian, University of Wyoming
Justin Hawkins and Anita Harper, Shoshone National Forest
Filmed under permit # WAP564 from Shoshone National Forest.
Learn more at migrationinitiative.org
Learn more at migrationinitiative.org or facebook.com/migrationinitiative Twitter: @WyoMigrations
See also: Wild Migrations: Atlas of Wyoming's Ungulates, 2018, Oregon State University Press.
Lewis Falls, Yellowstone National Park, WY
Lewis Falls, Yellowstone National Park, WY. Shot 9/13/17