Stay At Yellowstone Motels For Quick Access To An Unforgettable Experience

By Essie Osborn


The United States has many dramatic landscapes and places that you simply have to explore. For example, the Niagara Falls and the Grand Canyon should be on everyone's travel bucket list. The cowboy country of Wyoming, Montana and Idaho is the perfect place to enjoy wide open spaces and bigger than big skies and they're also home to one of the country's other most famous attractions. The many of Yellowstone motels make it possible for you to visit the country's top national park and be right there where the action is.

Founded in 1872, Yellowstone National Park is not only the oldest of its kind in the world but is now a UNESCO World Heritage Site. It covers an area of almost 3,500 square miles. The park is located mostly in Wyoming but since it's in the northwestern corner of the state, its boundaries cross state boundaries so that Montana and Idaho have their own bits of parkland too.

A must-see attraction in the park is the geyser known as Old Faithful. It got its name from the way that it erupts at intervals so regular that you could almost set your watch to them. Every 91 minutes, hundreds of gallons of water shoot an average of 145 feet into the air, leaving a cloud of steam. If you've always wanted to see a geyser erupt, this is the one to go to since you're guaranteed an eruption.

Old Faithful and Steamboat Geyser are not the only geysers in the park. In fact, there are over a thousand. There are also many thermal pools and bubbling mud to be seen. The reason for all this geothermal activity is that the entire Yellowstone is in fact the caldera of a very, very big volcano. You'll find boardwalks all along the geothermal areas. Don't stray from these paths because if you do, there is only a very thin, very breakable crust between you and scalding hot water that will kill you.

The thermal pools and geysers great reasons to visit but the popular park also offers much, much more. The landscape here is astonishingly beautiful and a favorite among landscape photographers. You'll be able to admire and take dramatic pictures of mountains, meadows, rivers, canyons, lakes, waterfalls and a petrified forest, among others.

Most visitors get around by car but in spring there is a car free week when cycling is just heavenly. Trips on horseback or hikes are popular ways of exploring too. Many different species of wildlife live within park boundaries, among them bison, deer, moose, elk, mountain lions, bears and wolves. The park is also home to many bird species.

While there are different accommodation options within park limits, these are often fully booked weeks in advance. It's better to stay at a motel in one of the gateway towns. Your best options are the Montana towns of Gardiner and West Yellowstone. The former lies along the northern park boundary but the latter, being a larger town with an airport and a museum, has a greater selection.

The busiest time to visit is during the summer months and you'll have to book your accommodation well in advance. Fall and winter are less crowded but winter can be very cold. However, visiting during this time means that you can also try snow sports such as skiing.




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