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Old Faithful Inn - 1916 |
In 1916, Bee Boedefeld and her friends working for Wylie Camping Company in Yellowstone National Park walked from their home camp, Geysers, to Old Faithful Inn and back. They spoke of “crossing the formation”—meaning the fragile ground between thermal features—and this past summer I found that the old path they used is the same as the one where the boardwalk is now. I took the paved Continental Divide path, which is the old road that in 1916 the horse-drawn wagons and the few automobiles used, and where the bridge crosses the Firehole River next to Castle Geyser, I joined the path my grandmother traversed.
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The Continental Divide path, which was the old road |
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Castle Geyser (right) and little Tortoise Shell Geyser (left)
The path across the river and along the base of the hills goes off to the left. |
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The boardwalk follows the same path as was here in 1916. |
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Crossing the Firehole River, looking back toward Geyser Hill |
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Crossing the Firehole River, looking forward toward the road |
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Looking to the left over my shoulder, there's South Scalloped Spring |
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The path loops around some thermal features next to the forest.
This is Spasmodic Geyser, delightful in its washing-machine rhythm. |
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Liberty Pool |
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Across the way and down the path, heading toward Turban Geyser,
right next to Grand Geyser. Turban is erupting. |
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Belgian Pool. I wonder how it got its name? |
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Heading toward more geysers. |
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Turban Geyser |
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Grand Geyser is very large |
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Turban slows down |
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Some brand-new thermal features are forming next to the path in this area |
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Economic Geyser on the right of the trail |
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Wave Pool, just beyond Economic Geyser |
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Beauty Pool |
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Explanations, naturally, would not have been here in 1916! |
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Chromatic Pool |
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Looking toward the location of the Wylie Geysers camp next to Giant |
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Coming back to the Firehole River on the way toward Geysers |
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Crossing the Firehole again |
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Looking upstream |
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Looking downstream |
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Oblong Geyser |
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The path to Giant Geyser |
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Giant Geyser in the distance |
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The view toward the hill where Geysers dance pavilion sat, and the
grounds where Daisy, Splendid, Comet, etc. are |
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That hill is where some of the tents of Geysers Camp sat |
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Giant Geyser, with Mastiff steaming to our left |
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I notice Riverside erupting just down the river from Giant |
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Grotto Geyser, which was just to the side of Geysers Camp |
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Grotto Geyser and its indicator geyser |
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Riverside, still erupting |
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Grotto Fountain, next to Grotto Geyser |
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A Golden Mantel Ground Squirrel decides to race |
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Full speed ahead! |
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Squirrel wins the race! |
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Spa Geyser, next to Grotto |
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Riverside Geyser |
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Riverside, said in 1916 to be very
romantic by moonlight! |
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View toward Biscuit Basin from Riverside |
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Back to Grotto Geyser |
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One of the clearings that used to house the Geysers Camp in 1916 |
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The woods next to Grotto where the Geysers Camp buildings sat in 1916 |
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The view of the path going around Grotto |
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The path toward Giant from Grotto |
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A hot pool between Grotto and Giant, looking toward the Firehole River |
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The field and woods where the Camp would have been |
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View to the south and west |
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In 1916, Bee Boedefeld and her friends called their tent the “Deaux Drop Inn” |
This is a three-part post. Click
here for the first half day that we were able to spend in the Park. Click
here for the final part, after we left Old Faithful Inn the second time.
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