Wyoming...A Daddy-Daughter Adventure

mph

Expedition Leader
Oh Wyoming...A state with some much area to roam. My wife and I used to live in Jackson Hole and as many know; it is gorgeous! Some would say that it's the prettiest place in the US. The one draw back to living in JH is that we didn't spend a lot of free time exploring the other parts of Wyoming. That was about to change...

My wife had to work, so it was a great excuse for my daughter and I to get out of town and explore some of the grandeur of Wyoming.

We stopped at Fossil Butte National Monument on our way north. Lilly was captivated by the large fossils. Large fish, plants, and other animals that called the area home millions of years ago. It was once a larger sea, ocean area. Now, high desert...

asset.php.jpeg

Next stop was to find some place to camp and fish. The meadows were so nice!

asset.php 2.jpeg

Lilly on the look out for the moose that were visiting the area.

asset.php 3.jpeg

Lilly loves to fish. Whether catching fish or not...She was determined!

asset.php 4.jpeg

asset.php 5.jpeg

We loaded up and moved onto the next fishing spot. The flowers in the high country were popping all over the place!

asset.php 6.jpeg

We decided to pack up or things and hike up into the high country. We found a gorgeous lake. With not a lot of fish in it:(

asset.php 7.jpeg

Onto a place to camp for the night...The road had a few hazards.

asset.php 9.jpeg

Lilly looking for the next camping spot. There were meadows, rivers, and gorgeous country all around us!

asset.php 8.jpeg

Lilly had fun playing with the deer that were feeding in the grasses that evening. They literally "played" hide and seek with each other until Lilly had to get some sleep.

asset.php 10.jpeg
 

mph

Expedition Leader
Wyoming has so many places to roam. Lilly and I were off to another...

asset.php 2.jpeg

The national forest had so many places to pull over and camp! So nice!

asset.php.jpeg

We found historic trail markers that provided travelers of the past to head west. The passed through this amazing country. There might be a few that got off the trail and called the place home. Can't blame them...

asset.php 5.jpeg

The country not only had big views but tons of sheep!

asset.php 4.jpeg

Lilly trying to spot more sheep!

asset.php 3.jpeg

We threw the line in a few more times before we headed home. The streams were running high and fast! Not much fishing luck but what a trip.

asset.php 6.jpeg

Our truck pointed south and back to Utah. Until next time!

asset.php 7.jpeg
 

ttora4runner

Expedition Leader
Nice. I've used the Wyoming Backroads book when I was living in Wyoming. Lots of trails in the book for all over the state.
 

Foy

Explorer
And another home run is over the fence

Thanks again for sharing your trips. Miss Lilly is one fortunate little girl whose folks always show her a good time. While I'm definitely with you on Wyoming, don't overlook Montana for a "Lilly Trip" in the future.

We just spent a week at the beach with our 16-month old grandson, and I'm already daydreaming about getting him out on the trail and the stream with me, and starting in just 3-4 years.

Foy
 

mph

Expedition Leader
Thanks again for sharing your trips. Miss Lilly is one fortunate little girl whose folks always show her a good time. While I'm definitely with you on Wyoming, don't overlook Montana for a "Lilly Trip" in the future.

We just spent a week at the beach with our 16-month old grandson, and I'm already daydreaming about getting him out on the trail and the stream with me, and starting in just 3-4 years.

Foy

Thanks for the kind words! Tell me more about montana....we r headed somewhere next week!
 

Foy

Explorer
You betcha

Thanks for the kind words! Tell me more about montana....we r headed somewhere next week!

Sure thing: Closest to you in PC is the Centennial Valley, just across the divide/state line on the east side of I-15. It runs 50-60 miles along graded gravel roads to Red Rock Pass, where you drop back into ID at Henry Lake. There are two large lakes in the valley and the lakes and surrounding swamps are a National Wildlife Refuge.

A little further in is Dell, MT, where the Big Sheep Creek Backcountry Byway strings together 55 miles of graded gravel and two-track terminating at MT 324 (paved) west of Clark Canyon Reservoir. The Big Sheep Creek corridor is around as remote as you'll get in MT.

A little north of there, accessible from either MT 324 or MT 278 out of Dillon, is Bannack, Montana's first territorial capital. It's now a state park and a very well-preserved ghost town, including a great and well-preserved hardrock gold mining mill. On July 19 and 20 this year, the annual Bannack Days "fair" will be held, with a lengthy list of exhibits, demonstrations of frontier life, and events. Be sure to arrive early and purchase a strawberry-rhubarb pie from the ladies of the Dillon Methodist Church before they're all gone. The sourdough pancake feed at the Hotel Meade is fine eating, too. Oh, and kids of all ages are invited to dress up in Frontier garb and stroll about the town (outfits available for rent/borrowing (?) right there on Main Street). Bannack SP has a small campground, but shade is at a premium and all of the daytrip traffic makes is miserably hot and dusty. If I were to go on a camping trip, I'd shoot for a disbursed site a few miles up the Pioneer Mountains Scenic Parkway around 15 miles north, where there is also a normal NF campground is between the Grasshopper Inn and the entrance to Elkhorn Hot Springs (Grasshopper CG?, Elkhorn CG?).

A great hike, and accessing a lake I've found to be full of voracious trout, is the Sawtooth Lake trail, trailhead off of the Parkway across the road from the Grasshopper Inn. It's about a 4 mile hike w/ 1,600' of elevation gain on a trail substantially improved in 2010-2011. Sawtooth Lake is maybe 30 acres and is a tarn (glacial lake at the foot of a cirque--a huge headwall leading up to the jagged peak of Sawtooth Mountain). Fairly easy hike, and with so much in the way of easily accessible trout water elsewhere, I've never seen anybody else up there on the 3 July weekdays I've hiked up. Sawtooth Lake has some stocked (?) California Golden trout and some incredibly aggressive brookies. We had a ball with ultralite spinning gear (and of course Lilly's pink spincast combo would be equally ideal). The one time we took flyrods up, our arrival coincided with the arrival of a squall line which brought hail, sleet, snow, and fearsome lightning, so we headed straight back down while enjoying the development of stage 1 and 2 hypothermia. In July.

Near the top of the Grasshopper Creek-Wise River divide along the parkway, a two-track trail system cuts away to the east to reach Comet Mountain. There you can drive up to 9,600' to a mining exploration adit (with incredible views right there), then boulder-hop 600' elevation to the summit, where a world of glacial geology awaits you. Hang on tight to the kiddo--the east side of the summit is shorn off to a nearly vertical 1,400' drop to two tarns below. Caveat: the last few switchbacks are shelf road with some steep north-facing segments. I've been stopped by snowbanks at around 9,000' twice. In 2011, on July 12, we were the first to sign the summit log that year, and in 2010 we were the first full-sized rig to reach the adit/drill pad at 9,600'.

Near the headwaters of the Wise River, right on the Parkway, is Little Joe campground. No great shakes about the CG, but it's along a very nice stretch of the Wise River, there only 10-20' across, with meandering loops and cutbanks sheltering voracious brookies. Last few times I was there, there were a number of families camping streamside in the mile or so downstream from Little Joe CG.

Elkhorn HS is commercially developed but is quite rustic, with rustic sometimes being a gracious term. The spring waters are piped into an outdoor concrete swimming pool, though, and the surrounding lodgepole forest is a nice backdrop for a soak.

West of Grant, just a few miles further out MT 324, is the road leading up to Lemhi Pass, where Lewis & Clark first reached the Great Divide. The BLM built a nice kiosk with exhibits up there and the Sacagawea Spring allows even little girls to stand with one foot on each side of the mighty Missouri River's source. (caveat: it's long been known the source of the Missouri is at Red Rock Pass at the head of the Centennial Valley, but we needn't tell the kids just yet).

Just over the Divide on the ID side of Lemhi Pass, a few miles descent along the easier of the two routes (Agency Creek Rd = steep and twisty, Warm Springs Rd = easy), lies Sharkey's Hot Spring. There the BLM has developed a nice pair of concrete pools, concrete aprons around them, changing houses, and bathrooms. They charge a modest self-served fee of $1 or $2/day, I recall, but it's a nice little spot for kids. You can drop on down to ID 28 a few miles south of Salmon, ID from there (or access Sharkey's or Lemhi from there).

If I recall correctly, it took us around 6 hours at 70 mph average to get from Dillon down to our friends place at Pinebrook outside of PC. Not exactly next door, but I-15 is scenic enough and provides for quick travel.

Enjoy and post more "Lilly Trip" reports, please.

Foy
 

Forum statistics

Threads
189,824
Messages
2,921,321
Members
232,931
Latest member
Northandfree
Top