Geysers, Hot Springs and Bubbling Mud Pots, Oh My!
Gardiner, MT
Private Tour | Ages 5+ | 8-10 hours | May - October
Geysers, Hot Springs and Bubbling Mud Pots, Oh My!
Duration
Full Day
About
Explore the best of the Yellowstone Volcano, one of the largest active volcanoes in the world, with a local expert guide. Yellowstone has more than 200 active geysers and over 10,000 thermal features; there is so much to explore! We will show you our favorite geysers, colorful springs and bubbling mud pots, and some local secrets along the way. This tour will be crafted around your interests and abilities and can include a longer hike to some off-the-beaten-path features as well! You will see all of these amazing features and begin to understand how and why Yellowstone is such a hotspot for them.
Highlights may include:
- Old Faithful - Yellowstone’s most iconic feature and the world's most famous geyser!
- Grand Prismatic - A dramatic rainbow of colors that make up the world’s 3rd largest hot spring, and perhaps a short hike to a scenic overview allowing for an aerial view of this thermal jewel.
- Artist Paint Pots - Fascinating pools of bubbling mud
- Fountain Paint Pots - All four types of thermal features found in the world are concentrated along one short ½-mile boardwalk.
- Gibbon Falls - Gibbon River cascades 88’over the edge of the caldera left by Yellowstone’s most recent major volcanic eruption - roughly 640,000 years ago.
- Norris Geyser Basin - An otherworldly landscape of porcelain pools and hissing steam home to the unpredictable Steamboat Geyser, the tallest active geyser in the world!
Throughout the day, your guide will be sharing the fascinating and complex ways in which volcanism, glacial periods, plate tectonics, and hydrology have shaped the landscape and laid the foundation for the ecology and wildlife we see in and around Yellowstone today.
Your tour experience:
- Experience the magic of Yellowstone’s iconic hydrothermal features
- Your own local naturalist guide
- Private and fully customizable tours
- Small, single-party groups
- Away from the crowds and into the wild
- Vast, wide-open spaces and clean mountain air
- Breakfast and lunch – picnic style
- Safe, fun and educational
What to Bring
- Warm clothes for cooler early morning hours
- Dress warmly so that you can comfortably be out in the elements during the cold hours of the dawn. You will be at high elevations in the Rocky Mountains, and temperatures will be unseasonably cold. Be prepared!
- Close-toed shoes/hiking boots
- Long pants
- Sweater/sweatshirt
- Windbreaker/rain jacket
- Hat and gloves
- Duffle/backpack to store warm clothing as the day warms up
- Water (reusable bottle or water bladder)
Your guide will provide a water cooler for refilling your bottles/water bladders - Sun hat
- Sun glasses
- Sunscreen
- Lots of questions and curiosity