Sunday, June 5, 2015
It's time to go home. It's time to start working on the next adventure:
Africa
I'm leaving Monday morning and will get home Tuesday evening.
Yellowstone 2016
Sunday, June 5, 2016
Wednesday, June 1, 2016
Today was either driving or waiting for
a bear or watching a bear.
I left at 6:00 am to get to Gibbon
Meadow to see what was going on with the bison carcass from
yesterday. As I was leaving the campground, this was next to the
road:
This photo is from so close, I could
almost touch her.
Then it was out to Gibbon Meadow and 5
hours of waiting to see.... 2 coyotes! That was it. Around noon, I
drove out and did the blog update and drove back for another 90
minutes of waiting for this:
Finally! The bear was there for about
an hour and then left. I left soon after.
Wednesday, June 1, 2016
Monday, May 31, 2016
Up early today. I had people to find.
I needed to find Josh to give him back
some camera gear he loaned me. I needed to find Laurie to tell her
about the actions of 755 I saw yesterday. And, I needed to find Doug
to get more cards from him.
I was sort of successful on all fronts.
I found Josh, but just in passing each other on the road. We talked
over the radio and I'll meet up with him later.
Laurie was at Slough Creek watching the
den. I watched for a while and a pronghorn came very close by and
posed for us
I found Doug also at Slough Creek and
got cards. I also learned of a large bison carcass on the west side
near Norris Geyser Basin. That's the home of the Canyon Pack. There
maybe a chance to see the alpha female – she's a white wolf.
So, I went in search of that. My first
attempt failed because I had bad information. Later, I met up with
Ray and Lynn and got better info and found it.
Lots of driving around later, it was
time to go back to camp. Along the way I saw some geese with 4
goslings near the road at Rainy Lake:
Monday, May 30, 2016
Moving day, Part 2. I spent the
morning waiting for a family to leave so I could move to their
campsite. It is a sunny space so my solar panel works much better.
Later, went back down to the Hayden
valley to see what was happening there. After watching the wolf,
#755, the alpha male of the Wapiti Lake pack - that's the wolf in yesterday's picture, he got a large chunk
and left the carcass. Instead of heading north, downstream on the
river, to their den, he went east and across the valley to their
rendezvous site. This is where they move to when the pups are big
enough. I hadn't heard that they had moved, so this may be new
information, or at least evidence for the wolf project people.
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