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Immediately following the Leisure Travel Van Caravan Tour of Idaho 2022, we started part three of our summer road trip with two other LTV couples.
On this part of our summer adventure, we head to the Grand Teton National Park and then to Yellowstone. Along the way, we have the privilege of seeing more wildlife than I think we saw on our entire caravan through the Maritimes in 2019, a 7-month journey from our home in southern Arizona.
A much smaller caravan this time with plans to explore as many of the national parks as we can on our way to scout out the Upper Peninsula of Michigan for our next caravan tour in 2023.
Since we purchased our LTV in September 2017, we set a goal for ourselves to visit every state in the Union with our LTV. In four and a half years of ownership and over 80,000 miles, we have only seven states to visit: Hawaii (of course), Minnesota, Iowa, Wisconsin, Michigan, Indiana, and Ohio. We intend to fulfill this goal on this trip through the mid-west. Obviously, we won’t be taking our LTV to Hawaii–we’d have to get on a plane to check that off the list.
Grand Teton National Park
The Grand Teton National Park is one of our favorite national parks. We were here last year and back again this year; looking at these majestic giants never gets old for us.
I recommend making reservations six months in advance if you plan to camp inside the park. Last year, we managed to get two nights inside the park. This year, we were just outside the main gate about a mile at Gros Ventre Campground.
Grand Teton Mountain Range
While visiting the Grand Teton National Park, it isn’t easy to take your eyes off the mountains, even while driving. Fortunately, MaryAnn was driving, so I could take pictures.
Jenny Lake and Hidden Falls are must-sees while visiting the Grand Teton National Park. Get there early in the morning to get a parking spot for your LTV because the parking lot fills up fast. Jenny Lake is probably the most popular place in the park.
There’s a ferry across the lake to the Hidden Falls (a must-see), or you can hike around the lake to the falls, but bring your hiking boots. It’s not an easy hike. If you’re not athletic, I suggest taking the ferry across the lake but be prepared to wait in long lines.
The trail continues after Hidden Falls practically straight up the side of a mountain to an overlook of Jenny Lake and the surrounding area. I watched many people attempt to climb up the trail to the overlook, but few could finish. That part of the trail is for the young collegian athlete, well beyond my level of athleticism.
From the Road Between Grand Tetons and Yellowstone
Yellowstone
From the Road in Yellowstone
We didn’t spend a lot of time in Yellowstone this year. We did stop to watch Old Faithful again, of course. After leaving Yellowstone National Park, a huge deluge of rain and thunderstorms swept through the Yellowstone area, washing out many roads that we had been traveling on, forcing the park to close temporarily. We continued east from the national forest in Montana to Cody, Wyoming, and then to Devil’s Tower.
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