Yellowstone & Jackson Hole Adventure

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Yellowstone & Jackson Hole Adventure Yellowstone & Jackson Hole Adventure Date Activity Accommodations Day 1 Arrive in Jackson Hole Four Seasons Jackson Explore Jackson Hole Hole or Amangani or similar Day 2 Explore Grand Teton National Park Four Seasons Jackson & Jenny Lake Boat Ride Hole or Amangani or similar Day 3 Jackson Hole Aerial Tram Ride Four Seasons Jackson Private 14 Mile Smooth Water Float Hole or Amangani or Trip on the Snake River similar Day 4 Private Jet Transfer to Yellowstone Four Seasons Jackson Explore Yellowstone National Park Hole or Amangani or similar Day 5 Private Airport Transfers Departure Detailed Itinerary: Day 1: Arrive in Jackson Hole. Transfer to your hotel, The Four Seasons or Amangani Resorts. After you check in and get comfortable, your guide will transfer you into downtown historic Jackson Hole and show you around some of the wonderful historic areas. There are many art galleries, craft stores, pubs and other things to see and do. We can arrange to catch a play at one of the play houses or just enjoy dinner at one of the many fine restaurants. This will be a fitting end to your first day in the valley! Overnight Four Seasons Jackson Hole or Amangani or similar Overnight Four Seasons Jackson Hole or Amangani or similar Day 2: Today you will explore and enjoy the wonders of Grand Teton National Park. First stop will be a visit to the National Elk Refuge and a visit the museum there. After, you will travel up to Jenny Lake for a boat ride and a hike to Hidden Falls, and for those interested, Inspiration Point. Once finished you return across the lake and head to Signal Mountain. This mountain offers stunning vistas of the Grand Teton with reflections of off Jackson Lake and Spalding Bay. Lunch will be enjoyed at Signal Mountain Lodge. The afternoon will be spent exploring the rest of Jackson Lake, including some hiking up near Coulter Bay. Late afternoon, we will return to your Lodge for the evening where you can relax and enjoy the vistas from your hotel. An option for the evening would be to pay a visit to the Jackson Hole Rodeo. (B,L) Four Seasons Jackson Hole or Amangani or similar Day 3: Breakfast at the hotel. 8:00 am hotel pickup. Jackson Hole Aerial Tram ride with hiking/sightseeing. Spend the day enjoying a 360 degree view of the Snake River Valley on top of the Teton Range. Multiple Trails lace this mountain top, offering adventure and beautiful vistas to all who make it to the top of Rendezvous Mountain. Your guide will take you on a wonderful nature walk and show you all the areas you will be visiting for over the next few days along with the wildflowers and other geological aspects of this area. Lunch will be served at the Corbet’s Cabin. Their fresh waffles are something you won’t soon forget! Once finished, you will return to your hotel for a refreshing break. For the evening you will be picked up at your hotel in the late afternoon and will have a private 14 mile smooth water float trip down the Snake River. Along the way, you will stop for a classic western Dutch Oven Dinner prepared on the banks of the river. Not a bad way to end the day as you watch the sun slide behind the Grand Teton Peaks from this private retreat! (B,L,D) Four Seasons Jackson Hole or Amangani or similar Day 4: 7:30 am hotel pickup and transfer to Jackson Hole Airport for a private jet transfer to West Yellowstone Airport. Here you will meet your guide for your private tour of Yellowstone National Park. Yellowstone National Park is America's first National Park, established in 1872. Among its many treasures are the famous Old Faithful Geyser and inspiring Grand Canyon of Yellowstone. The park is also known for its world class fly fishing, active geologic features and abundance of large mammals. This natural wonder will be our classroom for the day as we explore its many waterfalls, geyser basins, and other unique geological features. This will be a full day with lunch provided at the Canyon Lodge & Restaurant. When we are finished, you will board a scenic flight in a private jet from West Yellowstone Airport to Jackson Hole. This private flight will provide you with a scenic fly over of the area plus a quick return to Jackson Hole. You will be transferred back to your Lodge for the evening. (B,L) Four Seasons Jackson Hole or Amangani or similar Day 5: Time to say goodbye to this fun filled adventure. If time allows for one last activity, we recommend a morning hike or a private horseback ride in the Teton Range before leaving. Transfers back to the airport are included. (B) Four Seasons Jackson Hole or Amangani or similar Inclusions: Tour Guide Transportation 4 Breakfasts 3 Lunches 2 Dinners Float Trip Tram Ride Park Entrance Fees Jenny Lake Boat Ride Taxes, Fees, Gratuities (Excluding Tour Guide Gratuity) .
Recommended publications
  • Systematic Variation of Late Pleistocene Fault Scarp Height in the Teton Range, Wyoming, USA: Variable Fault Slip Rates Or Variable GEOSPHERE; V
    Research Paper THEMED ISSUE: Cenozoic Tectonics, Magmatism, and Stratigraphy of the Snake River Plain–Yellowstone Region and Adjacent Areas GEOSPHERE Systematic variation of Late Pleistocene fault scarp height in the Teton Range, Wyoming, USA: Variable fault slip rates or variable GEOSPHERE; v. 13, no. 2 landform ages? doi:10.1130/GES01320.1 Glenn D. Thackray and Amie E. Staley* 8 figures; 1 supplemental file Department of Geosciences, Idaho State University, 921 South 8th Avenue, Pocatello, Idaho 83209, USA CORRESPONDENCE: thacglen@ isu .edu ABSTRACT ously and repeatedly to climate shifts in multiple valleys, they create multi­ CITATION: Thackray, G.D., and Staley, A.E., 2017, ple isochronous markers for evaluation of spatial and temporal variation of Systematic variation of Late Pleistocene fault scarp height in the Teton Range, Wyoming, USA: Variable Fault scarps of strongly varying height cut glacial and alluvial sequences fault motion (Gillespie and Molnar, 1995; McCalpin, 1996; Howle et al., 2012; fault slip rates or variable landform ages?: Geosphere, mantling the faulted front of the Teton Range (western USA). Scarp heights Thackray et al., 2013). v. 13, no. 2, p. 287–300, doi:10.1130/GES01320.1. vary from 11.2 to 37.6 m and are systematically higher on geomorphically older In some cases, faults of known slip rate can also be used to evaluate ages landforms. Fault scarps cutting a deglacial surface, known from cosmogenic of glacial and alluvial sequences. However, this process is hampered by spatial Received 26 January 2016 Revision received 22 November 2016 radionuclide exposure dating to immediately postdate 14.7 ± 1.1 ka, average and temporal variability of offset along individual faults and fault segments Accepted 13 January 2017 12.0 m in height, and yield an average postglacial offset rate of 0.82 ± 0.13 (e.g., Z.
    [Show full text]
  • Community Foundation of Jackson Hole Annual
    COMMUNITY FOUNDATION OF JACKSON HOLE ANNUAL REPORT / 2018 TA B L E Welcome Letter 3 OF CONTENTS About Us 4 Donor Story 6 Professional Development & Resources 8 Competitive Grants 10 Youth Philanthropy 12 Micro Grants 16 Opportunities Fund 18 Collective Impact 20 Legacy Society 24 1 Fund Highlights 24-25 Key Financial Indicators 26 Donor Story 28 The Foundation Circle 30 Community Foundation Funds 34 Old Bill’s Fun Run 36 Co-Challengers 38 Friends of the Match 42 Gifts to Funds 44 Community Foundation of Teton Valley 46 Behind the Scenes 48 In Memoriam 50 Community Foundation of Jackson Hole / Annual Report 2018 2 Fund & Program Highlight HELLO, Mr. and Mrs. Old Bill say it best. They have always led with the question, “How can we help?” Their initial vision was to inspire “we” to become “all of us.” And it has. In 2018, you raised an astonishing amount, bringing Old Bill’s Fun Run’s 22-year total to more than $159 million for local nonprofits. Inside these pages, you will see the impact of our remarkable community’s generosity. In fact, one out of every three families in Teton County takes part in Old Bill’s—an event that has become a national model for collaborative fundraising. Old Bill’s lasts only a morning, but because of your support, we are touching lives and working for the community 3 every day. Nonprofits rely on us for professional workshops and resources and receive critical funding through our Competitive and Capacity Building grant opportunities. We convene Community Conversations to find collaborative solutions to local problems.
    [Show full text]
  • Washakie Wilderness Ranch DUBOIS, WYOMING
    Washakie Wilderness Ranch DUBOIS, WYOMING Hunting | Ranching | Fly Fishing | Conservation Washakie Wilderness Ranch DUBOIS, WYOMING Introduction: A stunning 160-acre parcel located just outside of Dubois, Wyoming, the Washakie Wilderness Ranch is tucked away in its own private valley. This acreage offers alpine seclusion and fantastic mountain views of mountain peaks, forested slopes, and dramatic open meadows. The ranch is bordered on three sides by the Shoshone National Forest, providing ideal habitat for elk, deer, moose and the occasional bighorn sheep. The southern boundary of the 700,000-acre Washakie Wilderness Area is just a few miles from the ranch. An 1,845 sqft cabin has been strategically placed to take advantage of the sweeping views. Located in the heart of western history, culture, and wilderness, this is a spectacular alpine ranch with direct access to vast areas of public land. From Washakie Wilderness Ranch, one can count on plenty of wildlife and adventures, especially when combined with proximity to Grand Teton and Yellowstone National Parks, where the backcountry system offers millions of acres and limitless recreational opportunities. Andrew Coulter, Associate Broker Cell: 307.349.7510 John Turner, Associate Broker Cell: 307.699.3415 Toll Free: 866.734.6100 www.LiveWaterProperties.com Location: Located in Fremont County, Wyoming, Washakie Wilderness Ranch is situated at the end of a seven-mile road off U.S. Highway 26 at the base of Ramshorn Peak in the Wind River Mountains. Its location adjacent to the Shoshone National Forest gives this property a backyard of 2.4 million acres of contiguous national forest land available for recreation.
    [Show full text]
  • 2016 Annual Report
    2016 TABLE OF CONTENTS 2016 Welcome Letter . 1 In Memoriam . 2-3 Carol & Peter Coxhead . 4-5 Competitive Grants . 6-9 Jeanine & Peter Karns . 10-11 Community Foundation Funds . 12-17 Pamela & Scott Gibson . 18-19 Stewardship . 20-21 Old Bill’s Fun Run for Charities . 22-29 Youth Philanthropy . 30-31 Nonprofit Workshops . 32 Board & Staff . 33 Legacy Society . 34 Community Foundation of Teton Valley . 35 Key Financial Indicators . 36-37 COVER PHOTO: ROGER HAYDEN Animal Adoption Center Henry Ford famously said, “If I had asked people what they wanted, they would have said a faster horse .” Visionaries start with the fundamental problem, not with current answers . Twenty years ago, Mr . and Mrs . Old Bill created a new vehicle for fundraising that inspired all of us to enrich the community by investing in local nonprofits . In spite of its name, Old Bill’s Fun Run is full of youthful energy, and its 20th anniversary broke all WELCOME previous records . Combined with matching funds donated by Mr . and Mrs . Old Bill and 62 other Co-Challengers, Old Bill’s 2016 raised over $12 .1 million . Participating nonprofits received matching grants equating to 55% of the first $30,000 they raised themselves . Over the past 20 years, Old Bill's Fun Run has raised more than $133 million because of one couple’s visionary initiative . In 2016, one out of every three households participated in this grassroots fundraiser where the median gift size is $250 . At the Community Foundation, we help donors fulfill their visions by simplifying their giving and providing guidance about critical issues in our community .
    [Show full text]
  • Listing Presentation
    JACKSONHOLEBROKERS.COM TETONVALLEYBROKERS.COM greetings FALL LINE REALTY GROUP We would like to introduce Fall Line Realty Group; Paul Kelly, Andrea Loban, Chloë Pierce & Brice Nelson, with over 40 years of collective experience in Jackson Hole, WY and Teton Valley, ID real estate. Our unique team approach ensures our clients receive superior service, personalized attention and thorough communication. With four professionals working for you, there is always someone available and on task, after hours and seven days a week. Awarded for excellence 10 years running and most recently the 2017 – 2020 Teton Valley Top Producers, Fall Line Realty Group is an outstanding choice for your real estate needs. PAUL KELLY ANDREA LOBAN Associate Broker, GRI Associate Broker (307) 690-7057 (208) 201-3467 [email protected] [email protected] An area resident for 25 years, Paul came to the Tetons after Growing up in Minnesota, Andrea Loban fostered a love of the graduating from the University of Washington in 1996 to pursue great outdoors. Learning came by way of canoe trips on the a life of skiing, snowmobiling, and summers filled with golf and Boundary Waters and summers on the Mississippi. She attended white-water kayaking. Paul entered the real estate business in the University of Wisconsin, Madison, obtaining her degree in 2001 and now has 20 years of experience in the local market. Psychology and Criminal Justice. She spent time in Durango, A top producer for 2 different local real estate companies from Colorado, and Southeastern Oregon where she was guiding 2004 - 2007, treasurer for the Teton Board of Realtors from 2005 - rock climbing, mountaineering and rafting.
    [Show full text]
  • Grand Teton National Park Geologic Resource Evaluation Scoping Report
    Grand Teton National Park Geologic Resource Evaluation Scoping Report Sid Covington and Melanie V. Ransmeier Geologic Resources Division Denver, Colorado August 22, 2005 Table of Contents Executive Summary........................................................................................................ ii Introduction..................................................................................................................... 1 Geologic Setting.............................................................................................................. 2 Geologic History............................................................................................................. 4 Significant Geologic Resource Management Issues....................................................... 7 Earthquake Hazard Assessment and Planning............................................................ 7 Fluvial Geomorphology.............................................................................................. 8 Glacial and Peri-glacial Monitoring............................................................................ 9 Cave and Karst Resources ........................................................................................ 10 Hydrothermal Features.............................................................................................. 10 Wetlands ................................................................................................................... 11 Oil and Gas Development........................................................................................
    [Show full text]
  • Snake River Through Jackson Hole Snake River Management Plan
    Snake River through Jackson Hole Snake River Management Plan Prepared by Doug Whittaker, Bo Shelby, and Dan Shelby Confluence Research and Consulting Prepared for Teton County, Wyoming 2018 Revision Table of Contents 1. INTRODUCTION ............................................................................................................................................................... 1 2. PLANNING PROCESS ........................................................................................................................................................ 3 3. PLAN OBJECTIVES ............................................................................................................................................................ 6 4. RECREATION AND RESOURCE VALUES ............................................................................................................................. 7 Moose to Wilson .......................................................................................................................................................................... 7 Wilson to South Park ................................................................................................................................................................... 9 South Park to Hoback................................................................................................................................................................. 11 5. ISSUES ..........................................................................................................................................................................
    [Show full text]
  • Jackson Elk Herd Unit (E102) Brucellosis Management Action Plan
    Jackson Elk Herd Unit (E102) Brucellosis Management Action Plan Wyoming Game & Fish Department 7 June 2007 Table of Contents Brucellosis Management Action Plan Page # A. Introduction ……………………………………….………………….……..… 4 1. BMAP Goal & Objectives ………………………………….…..……… 4 2. Jackson Elk Herd Unit Overview ………….…………………………… 4 3. Brucellosis Literature Review ………………………………………….. 7 B. Brucellosis Management Options ………….…………………………………. 9 C. Discussion of Options ………………………………………………………… 10 1. Feedground Relocation ….……………………………………………... 10 2. Feedground Elimination ….…………………………………………….. 12 3. Elk Population Reduction ….…………………………………………… 12 4. Incentives for Cattle Producer Change of Operation ….……………….. 13 5. Fencing Stackyards, Feedgrounds and Other Areas …..………………... 14 6. Habitat Enhancement …..………………………………………………. 16 7. Acquisition/Conservation Easements ……..……………………………. 16 8. Continuation of Strain 19 Vaccination …..……………………………… 16 D. Coordination Meetings & Responses to Options …...………………………… 17 1. WGFD Intra-Agency Meeting ………………………..………………... 17 2. Inter-Agency Meeting ….…………………….………………………… 19 3. Producer Meetings ……………………………………………………… 21 E. Producer Survey …………………...……………...………………………….. 23 1. Goals/Objectives of Producer Survey .…………………………………. 23 2. Producer Responses to Brucellosis Management Options ..…..……….. 24 F. WGFD Proposed Management Actions ………………...……………………. 25 G. Best Management Practices ………………………………...………………... 27 H. Additional Actions ………………………………………….………………… 27 1. Brucellosis Surveillance .……………………………………………….. 28 2. Information
    [Show full text]
  • Position Outreach Announcement
    Outreach - GS-0462-10 Supervisory Forestry Technician (Airbase/Short-haul Base Manager) Bridger-Teton National Forest (BTNF)/Grand Teton National Park (GTNP) In Jackson, Wyoming The Announcement Numbers for this position will be forthcoming in a subsequent announcement. Duty Location for this position will be Jackson, Wyoming Government housing may be available. The North Zone of the Bridger-Teton National Forest is planning to fill an Airbase/Short- haul Base Manager position in the near future. Outreach responses are expected by October 23, 2015 and the application deadline will be November 01, 2015. The referral lists will be requested on November 01, 2015. This is a permanent position, GS-0462-10, the position will be based at the Jackson Airport where the Teton Helibase is located; tour of duty will be PFT and employment will be through the Bridger-Teton Forest. Anyone interested in further information should e-mail Steve Markason, North Zone FMO, at [email protected], 307-739-5431. To apply and for more information go to: https://www.usajobs.gov THE POSITION The program is interagency in its composition and mission. In addition to suppression, the program provides search and rescue, fire use, aerial ignition, and project services directly to the BTNF and GTNP. Search and rescue missions also occur in support of area county Sheriffs Offices. Personnel and aircraft are regularly dispatched off-area when not required by local staffing requirements. The Teton Helitack program successfully implemented the Forest Service Short Haul program in 2015. The position serves as the Airbase/Shorthaul Manager supervising with a GS-09 Helitack Supervisor for a 20 person, two helicopter program located at the Teton Interagency Helibase.
    [Show full text]
  • Guide to the Willows of Shoshone National Forest
    United States Department of Agriculture Guide to the Willows Forest Service Rocky Mountain Research Station of Shoshone National General Technical Report RMRS-GTR-83 Forest October 2001 Walter Fertig Stuart Markow Natural Resources Conservation Service Cody Conservation District Abstract Fertig, Walter; Markow, Stuart. 2001. Guide to the willows of Shoshone National Forest. Gen. Tech. Rep. RMRS-GTR-83. Ogden, UT: U.S. Department of Agriculture, Forest Service, Rocky Mountain Research Station. 79 p. Correct identification of willow species is an important part of land management. This guide describes the 29 willows that are known to occur on the Shoshone National Forest, Wyoming. Keys to pistillate catkins and leaf morphology are included with illustrations and plant descriptions. Key words: Salix, willows, Shoshone National Forest, identification The Authors Walter Fertig has been Heritage Botanist with the University of Wyoming’s Natural Diversity Database (WYNDD) since 1992. He has conducted rare plant surveys and natural areas inventories throughout Wyoming, with an emphasis on the desert basins of southwest Wyoming and the montane and alpine regions of the Wind River and Absaroka ranges. Fertig is the author of the Wyoming Rare Plant Field Guide, and has written over 100 technical reports on rare plants of the State. Stuart Markow received his Masters Degree in botany from the University of Wyoming in 1993 for his floristic survey of the Targhee National Forest in Idaho and Wyoming. He is currently a Botanical Consultant with a research emphasis on the montane flora of the Greater Yellowstone area and the taxonomy of grasses. Acknowledgments Sincere thanks are extended to Kent Houston and Dave Henry of the Shoshone National Forest for providing Forest Service funding for this project.
    [Show full text]
  • WYOMING Jackson Hole, Brooks Lake, Grand Teton and Yellowstone National Parks
    WYOMING Jackson Hole, Brooks Lake, Grand Teton And Yellowstone National Parks Wyoming NORTH AMERICA | Jackson Hole, Brooks Lake, Grand Teton and Yellowstone National Parks Season: 2022 Standard 7 DAYS 16 MEALS 14 SITES Feel your spirits soar as you head into the Great Outdoors on the Adventures by Disney Wyoming family vacation. Bask in the rugged beauty of the West while you horseback ride, raft and hike through Yellowstone National Park and other spectacular sites on your amazing adventure. WYOMING Jackson Hole, Brooks Lake, Grand Teton And Yellowstone National Parks Trip Overview 7 DAYS / 6 NIGHTS ACCOMMODATIONS 4 LOCATIONS The Wort Hotel Jackson Hole, Brooks Lake, Yellowstone National Park Grand Teton National Park, Lodging Yellowstone National Park Brooks Lake Lodge AGES FLIGHT INFORMATION 16 MEALS Minimum Age: 4 Arrive: Jackson Hole Airport 6 Breakfasts, 5 Lunch, 5 Dinners Suggested Age: 7+ (JAC) Adult Exclusive: Ages 18+ Return: Jackson Hole Airport (JAC) WYOMING Jackson Hole, Brooks Lake, Grand Teton And Yellowstone National Parks DAY 1 JACKSON HOLE Activities Highlights: Dinner Included Arrive in Jackson, Welcome Dinner The Wort Hotel Arrive in Jackson, Wyoming Be greeted by one of your Adventure Guides at Jackson Hole Airport. Your driver helps you with your luggage and then drives you through the beautiful countryside to The Wort Hotel. Get settled as your second Adventure Guide checks you in. Welcome Dinner Meet the other families who will share your adventure. Chow down on cowboy grub, hear authentic live cowboy music and get ready for the amazing experiences ahead! WYOMING Jackson Hole, Brooks Lake, Grand Teton And Yellowstone National Parks DAY 2 JACKSON HOLE Activities Highlights: Breakfast and Lunch Snake River Whitewater Rafting Trip Included The Wort Hotel Breakfast at the Wort Hotel Start your day with a delicious breakfast.
    [Show full text]
  • CREATION of GRAND TETON NATIONAL PARK (A Thumbnail History)
    CREATION OF GRAND TETON NATIONAL PARK (A Thumbnail History) The birth of present-day Grand Teton National Park involved controversy and a struggle that lasted several decades. Animosity toward expanding governmental control and a perceived loss of individual freedoms fueled anti-park sentiments in Jackson Hole that nearly derailed establishment of the park. By contrast, Yellowstone National Park benefited from an expedient and near universal agreement for its creation in 1872. The world’s first national park took only two years from idea to reality; however Grand Teton National Park evolved through a burdensome process requiring three separate governmental acts and a series of compromises. • The original Grand Teton National Park, set aside by an act of Congress in 1929, included only the Teton Range and six glacial lakes at the base of the mountains. • The Jackson Hole National Monument, decreed by Franklin Delano Roosevelt through presidential proclamation in 1943, combined Teton National Forest acreage, other federal properties including Jackson Lake and a generous 35,000-acre donation by John D. Rockefeller, Jr. The Rockefeller lands continued to be privately held until December 16, 1949 when impasse for addition to the national park was resolved. • On September 14, 1950, the original 1929 Park and the 1943 National Monument (including Rockefeller’s donation) were united into a “new” Grand Teton National Park, creating present-day boundaries. As early as 1897, Colonel S.B.M. Young, acting Superintendent of Yellowstone, proposed to expand Yellowstone’s boundaries southward to encompass portions of northern Jackson Hole and protect migrating elk herds. In 1898 Charles D.
    [Show full text]