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Wednesday, April 7, 2021

"Ultimate" Guide To Grand Teton National Park

Above, the majestic Grand Tetons. Photo by Armand Vaquer.

Well, here's another one of those "ultimate" guides to whatever.

This time it's Outside magazine's website that has the "ultimate" Grand Teton National Park travel guide. It is worth a read, even if one is not presently contemplating a trip there.

It starts out with:

My relationship with Grand Teton National Park started inauspiciously: I moved to Jackson Hole in northwest Wyoming unaware of the park or the mountains that are its heart. Of course I knew the town had mountains—I’d gone there to be a ski bum for a year, after all—but had no idea these mountains were the snaggled, serrated, rising-7,000-feet-straight-from-the-valley-floor Tetons, part of one of the world’s most intact ecosystems and home to glaciers, shimmering alpine lakes, and wild animals I knew only from photos, as well as more opportunities for adventure than I had the skills or fitness to handle. On my first hike in the park, I got my mom and myself spectacularly lost—and also contracted a case of giardia. 

While floating down the Snake River below Jackson Lake Dam two weeks later, my GI tract still suffering, I knew one year here would not be enough. I’m now on year 24 and have learned that a lifetime isn’t enough to explore this park, even if, at 310,000 acres, it’s only a fraction of the size of its 2.22-million-acre neighbor to the north, Yellowstone. 

To read more, go here

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