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      <description>&lt;p&gt;&amp;nbsp;&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p&gt;&lt;font size="3"&gt;&lt;b&gt;Day 7: Yellowstone&lt;/b&gt;&lt;/font&gt;&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p&gt;&lt;font size="2"&gt;&lt;br&gt;Wildlife (except Bison and Elk) is
not very easy to spot during the day and where people loiter. The best
time is dawn as the animals have their breakfast and go to the
brook/creek/lake to get a drink. Also there will be very few people to
invade their space. With this piece of precious information we woke up
before Sunrise, got ready , handed over the keys to the cabin and set
out on our exploration in our explorer. We drove very slow not to scare
any wildlife away and also not to miss an interesting sighting. The
weather was not very pleasing though. Cloudy and drizzling all along, it was
not an attractive time for the animals to take their morning walks. Two hours
of driving and nothing interesting except for some Bison and Elk
grazing the grasslands. &lt;img src="http://docs.google.com/File?id=ddtp32xd_40csr7c9dn" id="yl6d" style="margin: 1em 1em 0pt 0pt; width: 320px; height: 480.48px; float: left;" mce_src="http://docs.google.com/File?id=ddtp32xd_40csr7c9dn"&gt;Finally
we ended up at Canyon Village. We were there last night for dinner and
now it was breakfast time. We grabbed something quick to eat, raided
the visitor store, bought some "chachkas" and planned our itinerary for
the rest of the day. We decided to head back to Mammoth Hot Springs all
the way North and start our tour from there. First checkout the Geysers
at Mammoth, then drive down along road2 (remember it from last night?)
to Norris, Madison and finally Old Faithful with, maybe, one or two
detours to cover anything interesting.&lt;/font&gt;&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p&gt;&amp;nbsp;&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p&gt;&lt;font size="2"&gt;"Pull over here. We will
check this out before we go back since we are not going to come back on
this road again." I said to my friend as we were passing the signs to
Upper and Lower Falls. We pulled over into the parking area and got
out. It was still raining (now it was a little more than a drizzle). I
took a trash bag out of the cargo in the car and made a hole to it.
Unscrewed the polarizer on my lens, carefully wrapped the trash bag
around the camera with the hole providing a view through the lens and
put back the polarizer. This was perfect. I could now slip my head into
the bag and take all the pictures I wanted without messing up my camera
except for the polarizer that would get wet. Not a big deal. Only
danger with this was that I had no idea where I was, what was around me
once I was in the bag. All I could see was what was visible through the
viewfinder. Of course I trusted the people around not to push me
into the 1000 ft canyon below. The canyon through which the Yellowstone
River gushes was beautiful. The Falls were enthralling. It was not an
easy task to get good shots of the gorges, the river and the falls with
low visibility and continuous rain. But I did everything I could to get
a couple of good ones. How much ever time one spends there would not be
sufficient to absorb the heavenly beauty completely. But unfortunately
we are mortals. Once again we took off and were on our way to Mammoth
Hot Springs. By the time we reached there it was still 9:30 AM. This is
always the best part about waking up early, plenty of time in the day.&lt;img src="http://docs.google.com/File?id=ddtp32xd_41gj9ftwfh" id="wtmk" style="margin: 1em 0pt 0pt 1em; width: 320px; height: 235.752px; float: right;" mce_src="http://docs.google.com/File?id=ddtp32xd_41gj9ftwfh"&gt;&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;By
now the sky cleared up a little and the rain stopped. We took a walk
along the Lower Terraces Area and the Upper Terraces Area viewing,
enjoying and analyzing all the different types of Geysers that came in
multiple colors and oozing various levels of steam. The scene was
fascinating. Especially imagining standing on top of a unimaginably
huge volcano that is expected to unleash itself at any point of time
now. "What lies beneath?" is a million dollar question. After the
stroll through one of nature's outdoor chemical laboratories, we took to
the wheel and started driving towards Norris. The weather god was still
considerate to the outdoor enthusiasts and it was a nice time to take
another stroll along the Norris Geyser Basin. This was more like a
graveyard with a mile long trail through the basin. Steam jetting out
of the earth in pretty much any direction one looked. Halfway through
the trail, my friend and his wife decided to step on it and go to the car
while I fell behind trying to capture anything and everything I could.
'mon... 5 GB of memory, why would I not do that. Three quarters of a
mile and the I could see the commotion going on in the troposphere
above us once again. Thick dark rain clouds appeared in no time. It was
just a matter of minutes and everyone knew there was going to be a
downpour, an extremely heavy downpour. Now I had to reach the parking
lot before things kicked in because even if the rain started when I was
10 ft away from the car, I knew i would get soaked horribly before I
actually got into it. Now I started to run like crazy. Luckily I had
company. "That was close!" I exclaimed as soon as I got into the car.
The second I closed the door, the rain was so heavy that the windshield
wipers were useless. People were driving with instinct. Luckily this
chaos did not last long. Once again the sky was clear and we were on
the wheels. We passed the Gibbon River and decided to take a small
detour to the Firehole Canyon Drive. "Glad we took that detour" all of
us thought once we got back onto the main road. The drive was
beautiful. It was a winding one-way drive. Halfway through the drive we
reached the Firehole River and were driving on it's bank. The panorama
was splendid.&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;It was almost 2:30 and 16 miles to the
destination. As soon as we reached Old Faithful, we headed to the
visitor center to see when the faithful one was going to keep it's
word. There was more than an hour to go for that and hence a good time
to grab a bite. After lunch we strolled around a little and proceeded
to the benches around the geyser so as to get a good view. I did not
want to miss this opportunity for photographing, most probably, the
most popular geyser in Yellowstone. Since we were almost half hour
before time, we ended getting &lt;br&gt;&lt;img src="http://docs.google.com/File?id=ddtp32xd_42d8j7b5gg" id="rkta" style="margin: 1em 1em 0pt 0pt; width: 320px; height: 480.48px; float: left;" mce_src="http://docs.google.com/File?id=ddtp32xd_42d8j7b5gg"&gt;pretty
much whatever seat we wanted. Obviously it was the front row. It was an
uneventful wait for more than 20 minutes when all of a sudden everyone
started to get up and turn around to see something. "looks like an
alien just landed in his UFO. What else can grab these guys attention
so much?" I thought. Why not share the excitement; I also made a 180
degree turn to see a huge Bison running around crazy. Obviously the
poor thing was minding it's own business when he realized he wandered
into this place with weird creatures walking on two legs, with some
weird stuff instead of hair on their bodies. After he gave a thousand
curious humans (including me) a photo-op, he left the place. I'm sure
he would have gone back to his herd and told the story and they might have
had a kick-ass laughing session. Once again everything went back to
normal and the wait began. After a never ending wait, enough pressure
started to build under the surface and the old man started to throw up.
It started with two to three feet jets of water and slowly rose to more
than 20 ft. The entire session lasted about fifteen minutes. Not bad.
It was worth the wait.&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;By the time the spectacle ended, it was 5
in the evening and we wanted to get out of the park by 6. We had just
the right amount of time to exit Yellowstone via the West Entrance
(funny - you exit from an entrance :-)). We started to head out of our
final stopover in the road trip. Till now, everything worked out really
great. There was no time when we were bored, disappointed or fed up.
Everything fell into place everywhere and every time except for some
very minor hiccups. In a way, it was not a very happy moment leaving
all this pleasure behind and go back to the materialistic world but I
think that's where the beauty lies. If I were to do this for a year, I
don't think I would appreciate it as much as I did now. A break from
the routine is what defines this enjoyment. If this itself were
routine, there is no escape. Anyway, everything was already decided and
obviously nothing would change. As planned, we were out of the 2
million acre park right on time.&lt;/font&gt;&lt;br&gt;&lt;/p&gt;</description>
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