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Wyoming
Famous
for Horses and Cattle, Yellow Stone National park
Many Great Indian Tribes, Siox, Crow, Shoshone, Cheyenne, Arapaho
State
bird, meadowlark. State flower, Indian paint brush
State
tree, cottonwood
Pronghorn
antelope all but outnumber people in wide-open WYOMING , the ninth largest
but least
populous
state in the union, with just 460,000 residents. Above all, this is classic
cowboy country - the inspiration behind Shane, The Virginian and countless
other Western novels - where the days of the open range are evoked by rodeos,
country-and-western dance halls and ranchwear stores. The state emblem,
seen everywhere, is a hat-waving cowboy astride a bucking bronco.
Northern Wyoming is the prime tourist goal, with well over three million per year heading for the simmering geothermal landscape of Yellowstone National Park , and the craggy mountain vistas of the adjacent, and equally outstanding, Grand Teton National Park . Wedged in between Yellowstone and South Dakota to the east are the helter-skelter Bighorn Mountains , likeable Old West towns such as Buffalo , and the otherworldly outcrop of Devils Tower .
The meager supply of buffalo in early Wyoming caused fierce intertribal wars over hunting grounds and kept the Native American population down to around 10,000. However, Sioux, Cheyenne and Blackfoot combined to inflict notable defeats on the US Army before it could clear the way for pioneer settlement in the 1870s. The cattle ranchers and sheep-farming homesteaders who followed engaged in violent range wars over grazing rights to the wiry grasslands.
Unlikely
as it may seem, this rowdy, heavily male-dominated state was the first
to grant women the vote in 1869 - a full half-century before the rest of
the country, on the grounds that the enfranchisement of women would attract
settlers and increase the population, thereby hastening statehood. A year
later
Wyoming
appointed the country's first women jurors, and the "Equality State" elected
the first female US governor in 1924.
The absence of rivers to irrigate farmland has effectively put a lid on agricultural and population growth. These days, any weather-beaten, denim-clad stranger is more likely to be an oil roustabout than a genuine cowboy, fuel and mineral extraction having replaced livestock as the mainstay of the economy in the early part of the twentieth century
Classic cowboy country, the inspiration behind the Movie and Book Shane, The Virginian and countless other Western novels where the days of the open range are evoked by rodeos, country western dance halls and cowboy stores.
Grand
Teton National Park and Jackson Hole
GRAND
TETON NATIONAL PARK , which stretches for fifty miles between Yellowstone
and Jackson, are every bit as dramatic as the mountains of its congested
neighbor, and a visit should be more than an afterthought on the route
south. Though not especially high or extensive by Rocky Mountain
standards,
these sheer cliffs make a magnificent spectacle
Yellowstone
National Park
Yellowstone
amounts to an extraordinary experience, combining the colors of the Grand
Canyon of the Yellowstone, limpid Yellowstone Lake, the wild flower meadows
and the rainbow colored geyser pools, the sounds of rumblings, belching
mud pools, and steam hissing from the mountainsides; and the constant smells
of drifting sulphurous fumes, with the presence of browsing bull moose,
shambling bears, heavy bison, herds of elk and scurrying squirrels
GRAND TETON NATIONAL PARK , which stretches for fifty miles between Yellowstone and Jackson, are every bit as dramatic as the mountains of its congested neighbor, and a visit should be more than an afterthought on the route south. Though not especially high or extensive by Rocky Mountain standards, these sheer-faced cliffs make a magnificent spectacle, rising abruptly to tower 7000ft above the valley floor. A string of gem-like lakes is set tight at the foot of the mountains; beyond them lies the broad, sagebrush-covered Jackson Hole (a "hole" was the pioneers' term for a flat, mountain-ringed valley), broken by the winding Snake River.
The Shoshone people knew the mountains as the Teewinot ("many pinnacles"), but their present name, meaning large breast, was bestowed by over-imaginative French-Canadian trappers in the 1830s. After Congress set the mountains aside as a national park in 1929, it took another 21 years of legal wrangling for Grand Teton to reach its current size - local ranchers protested that the economy of Jackson Hole would be ruined if further land was surrendered to tourism. Meanwhile, John D. Rockefeller Jr bought up a large swath of Jackson Hole and presented it to the government for free (on the condition that the Grand Teton Lodge Company, which he then owned, would be the exclusive operator of park concessions).
Northern Wyoming has a lot more to offer than just a handy route between the Black Hills and Yellowstone. The surreal volcanic monument of Devils Tower , the abrupt Bighorn Mountains and the desertscape of the Bighorn Basin are the major natural attractions in a land steeped in the history of Native American wars, outlaw activity and pioneer hardships. Small towns such as unassuming Buffalo and the more commercialized Cody , developed by Buffalo Bill himself, are potential stopovers.
State capital Cheyenne is the only town of real note in the lower two-thirds of Wyoming. Set in the heart of rich prairie - a surprise after the scrubland, mountain and desert of most of the region - it has closer economic ties with Omaha or Denver than with the rest of Wyoming, a point the more northerly oil city of Casper stressed in its unsuccessful bids to become the seat of government. West of Cheyenne, smaller Laramie possesses an agreeable frontier feel, while the spectacular wilderness of the Wind River Range , accessible from Pinedale and Lander , accounts for most of the west central portion of the state.
Millions of visitors each year come to YELLOWSTONE NATIONAL PARK , America's oldest national park and the largest in the lower 48 states, to glory in its magnificent mountain scenery and abundant wildlife, and above all to witness hydrothermal phenomena on a unique scale. Measuring roughly sixty by fifty miles, and overlapping slightly from Wyoming's northwestern corner into Idaho and Montana, the park centers on a 7500ft-high plateau, the caldera of a vast volcanic eruption that occurred a mere 600,000 years ago. Into it are crammed more than half the world's geysers , in which the rain and snow that seep through the bedrock escape the pressure-cooker conditions under the surface in intermittent spectacular blasts, plus thousands of fumaroles jetting plumes of steam, mud pots gurgling with acid-dissolved muds and clays, and hot springs .
Yellowstone
amounts to an extraordinary experience, combining the colors of the
Grand Canyon of the Yellowstone, limpid Yellowstone Lake, the wild flower
meadows and the rainbow-hued geyser pools; the sounds of subterranean rumblings,
belching mud pools, and steam hissing from the mountainsides; and the constant
smells of drifting sulphurous fumes, with the presence of browsing bull
moose, shambling bears, heavy-bearded bison, herds of elk and ubiquitous
scurrying marmots . It is, however, very popular; if you
let
yourself get frustrated by the inevitable crowds and expense, you risk
missing something very special. The key to appreciating the park is to
take your time, and to plan carefully; above all, try to allow for a stay
of at least three days.
Touring
the park
All
of Yellowstone's major sights are labeled and signposted within a few hundred
yards of the 142-mile Loop Road , a figure-of-eight circuit fed by roads
from the five entrances