SNAP*Shot: Mammoth’s Palette Spring Season After Season

Mammoth Terraces, including beautiful Palette Spring, is not the only reason to visit this area. Coming through Yellowstone’s North Entrance, we drive up almost 1,000 feet along five miles to Mammoth Hot Springs. This is the home of historic Fort Yellowstone, still the park’s administrative headquarters. The significant conservation policies developed here lead to establishing the National Park Service in 1916. From 1886 to 1918 the US Army administered the park, turning those duties over to the fledgling Park Service in 1918. Enjoy Yellowstone’s fascinating history by taking the virtual tour. Delight in the stories that gave us the world’s first National Park.

Today, though, we are driving by the Visitor’s Center, hotel, dining areas, gas station, and the only heated restroom along the Norther Tier road–you have no idea how welcomed that is in winter! Our destination is the massive rock mound call Mammoth Terraces. Palette Spring is the colorful introduction to Yellowstone’s unique hydrothermal area called Mammoth.

Wait a minute . . .

Reawakening on Mammoth’s Lower Terraces

We have walked Mammoth’s Upper Terraces a few times, most recently about six weeks ago. The Upper Terraces is one of my favorite places. The rapid change of the hot springs and travertine formations they create, the peaceful nature of Upper Terraces Drive, and the views! However, I realized we have never walked the Lower Terraces. It is 6:30am and the sun has yet to rise above Mount Everts. Let’s enjoy the reawakening of Mound Spring in the cool of the morning and explore the ever-changing nature of Mammoth’s travertine terraces. It was only about four years ago that this spring came back to life reawakening beautiful Mound Terrace.

Mound Spring

Great views ahead . . .

Five-Geyser Day

What an absolutely gorgeous day in the Old Faithful area. The sky is so blue it looks like God Photoshopped it! There is no wind making 50° feel much warmer. Most everything except the Visitor’s Center is closed for the season which translates into very few people and bring your own lunch. I want to check if the rangers are still noting eruption times for the most predictable geysers at the Information Desk in the VC. I’ve yet to see Castle Geyser erupt and I’m hoping today is the day. WOW, we are in luck. Old Faithful is due to erupt in two minutes give or take ten minutes. Castle Geyser is expected to erupt in 45 minutes . A beautiful day and very few people make for a quiet, relaxing stroll around Upper Geyser Basin. Thar she blows!

old-faithful-9166

Continue our geyser walk . . .

Artist Paintpots Sojourn

Along the Gibbon River, between Norris and Madison Junctions in Yellowstone, is the often ignored Gibbon Geyser Basin. Unless there are bison, elk, other ungulates (hoofed animals), or the occasional coyote feeding in Gibbon Meadows, people pass by this area on the way to Old Faithful or Norris Geyser Basin. The most popular and most beautiful collection of thermal features in the Gibbon Geyser Basin are found along the 1.1 mile loop trail called Artist Paintpots. We walk about 1/3 of a mile through a young lodgepole pine forest which is reestablishing itself after the 1988 fires. So let’s head out and take our time in this colorful collection of thermal features.

trailhead

Onward to beautiful colors . . .