Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature currently requires accessing the site using the built-in Safari browser.
You should have seen the images of the rushing water taking out the entire road for mile after mile of high water. Not much of that road from the Montana north, going south is left. It could take years to put it back or rerout the road entirely. It was like looking at the aftermath of a freak show.You might remind people that sandals, shorts and a tank top are not proper attire for a visit to the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge. As for Yellowstone, these rivers flood every year as a result of run off, add to that this year's unusual wet spring and you have------- "increased flooding."
Beautiful interior at your link. Your trekking out that way sounds adventurous to me.We go to Furnace Creek at least once a year...a nice restaurant there.....
The Last Kind Words Saloon - The Oasis at Death Valley
One of the crown jewels of the 2018 revitalization efforts at the historic Ranch at Death Valley, The Last Kind Words Saloon brings the West of old to Death Valley.www.oasisatdeathvalley.com
I adore people who prepare ahead of time then carry through with their outing or trip safely.Tragic. God rest his soul. I always carry bottled water, a candle, lighter, blanket, trail mix, stuff like that. Doesn't take up much room.
Are you triggered?Callous conservative ^^^; total lack of empathy for the deceased and any loved ones what a jerk.
I don't know if you watch the other watersheds in that area or others feeding the Mississippi, but flooding is a normal spring time occurrence. This flooding in Yellowstone is unusual to be sure, but the northern tier of the US has had drought conditions for the past few years and they are also welcoming the extra spring time precipitation. Last year at this time the inland NW was sweltering. Indeed, on July 4, the panhandle of ID and Troy, MT were experiencing unheard of high temps above 110 F. I had a bout with heat stroke that day. I grew up in southern NM and AZ and have experienced high temps before, but that heat last year took its toll on this old body. It can happen fast.You should have seen the images of the rushing water taking out the entire road for mile after mile of high water. Not much of that road from the Montana north, going south is left. It could take years to put it back or rerout the road entirely. It was like looking at the aftermath of a freak show.
Hydrating is important for sure. If your urine is yellow or dark during a heat episode, you are probably dehydrated as well. Sometimes you're not thirsty but drink anyway.I don't know if you watch the other watersheds in that area or others feeding the Mississippi, but flooding is a normal spring time occurrence. This flooding in Yellowstone is unusual to be sure, but the northern tier of the US has had drought conditions for the past few years and they are also welcoming the extra spring time precipitation. Last year at this time the inland NW was sweltering. Indeed, on July 4, the panhandle of ID and Troy, MT were experiencing unheard of high temps above 110 F. I had a bout with heat stroke that day. I grew up in southern NM and AZ and have experienced high temps before, but that heat last year took its toll on this old body. It can happen fast.
I’m NOT anyone’s SONSon. I know when I see them. You are in extreme
Quit being a
Dang. Edit Zone 1...lolol
OK missy pudding and pie.I’m NOT anyone’s SON
Play stupid games, win stupid prizes.On May 30, he told a Park Ranger who cited him for off-the-road parking. Two days before he died, another Ranger found his car
at the Zabriski Point parking lot. They found David Kelleher, 67, two days later 2 miles away and 30 feet off the road.
Prayers up for Mr. Kelleher's family and friends.
When in this remarkably heated summer, be sure you have gas enough in your car to get home. And it wouldn't hurt to fill a picnic water dispenser with ice and water when you travel far from home. In Yellowstone Park, they're having so much water from recent snows that melted fast in the heat that they closed Yellowstone Park for a while. One of the roads was shown on TV as ruined for miles and miles along the Yellowstone River down river from Montana's entrance to the Park. If a family member goes for a ride out in this weather to see desert sights, pack a water container in her or his car before takeoff.
Disgusting
Darwin is the name if a town on 190 just outside Death Valley National Park.
I rode through on a motorcycle from Ridgecrest, CA to Beatty, NV in March of 2002. We spent a couple days in Beatty and toured the park. Even in Mar. it was uncomfortably warm.Drove through Death Valley one summer with no A/C and the windows down
At 121 degrees and zero humidity it was like having a hair dryer blow in your face for a hundred miles.