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Chuck Schneebeck Photography

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Chuck Schneebeck Photography

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  • A wall at Mammoth Hot Springs gives the feeling of a watercolor painting.  Taken at a slow shutter speed, the water looks silky and the steam being given off by the hot water acts as a filter to soften the look of the rocks.
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  • "Whenever the pressure of our complex city life thins my blood and numbs my brain, I seek relief in the trail; and when I hear the coyote wailing to the yellow dawn, my cares fall from me - I am happy." - Hamlin Garland
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  • “Our task must be to free ourselves... by widening our circle of compassion to embrace all living creatures and the whole of nature and it's beauty.” <br />
― Albert Einstein
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  • "Scattered clouds among the mountains are like women’s lingerie, they leave something to the imagination." - Alaskan Bush Pilot
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  • This bison was standing close enough to my car to get a closeup photo.
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  • Male Mountain Bluebird.
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  • Pronghorn on Elk Ranch in front of the Tetons.
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  • The snow-covered Tetons loom over an old beaver dam.  There is a bit of snow in the grass from the first snowfall of the season in the valley.  Fall is in the air.
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  • Western Meadowlark singing.
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  • These lenticular clouds formed over the Tetons. They lasted for about fifteen minutes and then they were gone.
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  • In early July, the spring flowers have lost their petals but still add texture to the garden.  There were fires burning nearby and the smoke is visible at the base of the Tetons.
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  • Fall colors in Grand Teton National Park greeted by a small morning rainbow.
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  • The bison is the largest land mammal in North America.  A bull can weigh a ton, a female can weigh 1000 pounds.  And they are fast.
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  • "The earth laughs in flowers." -  Ralph Waldo Emerson
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  • “Flowers always make people better, happier and more helpful; they are sunshine, food and medicine for the soul.” – Luther Burbank
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  • Great Horned Owl in Grand Teton National Park.
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  • Male Mountain Bluebird.
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  • Killdeer.
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  • Sage Thresher.
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  • “My father considered a walk among the mountains as the equivalent of churchgoing.” <br />
- Aldous Huxley
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  • “What breaks in daybreak? Is it the night? Is it the sun, cracked in two by the horizon like an egg, spilling out light?” <br />
― Margaret Atwood
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  • "Colors are the smiles of nature." – Leigh Hunt
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  • Bull elk in velvet lounging in the shade.  Growing big antlers is all about the rut.
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  • Summer wildflowers in Jackson Hole.
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  • A view of the Tetons from the Gros Ventre mountains which are east of Grand Teton National Park.  This view is looking over the red hills of the Gros Ventre drainage.
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  • Bison herd in front of Mount Moran in the Teton range.
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  • Bullock's Orioles arrive in Jackson Hole toward the end of May.  It is as if a flying flower has arrived in the valley.
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  • “The beauty of the natural world lies in the details.” -  Natalie Angier
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  • Bison in front of an erupting Castle Geyser - two iconic symbols of Yellowstone National Park.
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  • Great Gray Owl sitting on an Aspen tree branch.
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  • "Those who dwell, as scientists or laymen, among the beauties and mysteries of the earth are never alone or weary of life." -  Rachel Carson
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  • “Watch the clouds. They will teach you about the world of form.” - Eckhart Tolle
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  • Teewinot in the clouds.
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  • Frosty Pronghorn.
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  • Lenticular clouds look as if they are being spewed out by the Grand Teton.
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  • Coyote licking its chops after a snack of a Pronghorn carcas.
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  • “Dancing of the autumn leaves on the surface of a lake is a dream we see when we are awake.”  - Mehmet Murat Ildan
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  • One of the most colorful birds found in Jackson Hole.    They arrive in late May.
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  • Violet Green Sawllows are colorful little birds, but the color is best seen in photographs.  They fly so fast that is difficult for the human eye to see the color patterns.
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  • Arriving in the spring, this little finch brings bright red color and a cheerful song to Jackson Hole.
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  • A grizzly bear in the vegetation above the Oxbow parking area.
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  • Alpine glow.  There was smoke in the valley from nearby fires.  It caused a bright red sunrise which painted the mountains.
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  • A Western Meadowlark all puffed up.
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  • Arrowleaf Balsamroot with Lupine.
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  • Arrowleaf Balsamroot flowers.
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  • Looking across the bridge at the outlet of String Lake in Grand Teton National Park.
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  • Pronghorn family gathering in Grand Teton National Park.  Their soft colors blend into their surroundings.
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  • “When you are where wild bears live you learn to pay attention to the rhythm of the land and yourself. Bears not only make the habitat rich, they enrich us just by being.” – Linda Jo Hunter
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  • Silex Spring is a deep, beautiful hot spring in the Lower Geyser Basin.  The blue water in the center is so hot that it is devoid of life.  Mineral deposits are deposited around the edges of the pool where appear to form a lace like edge.
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  • A winter meal is had for this bison by swinging its head through the snow to expose the grass.  The giant muscle that forms the hump on its back is used to power the “bison snowplow”.
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  • Gas escaping from deep within the earth exits through red mud of low viscosity, blasting the mud into the air, forming interesting shapes that last only seconds.  It takes a camera to freeze these structures in time.  They happen too fast for the human eye to see them clearly.
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  • Fountain Geyser, beside the walkway in the Lower Geyser Basin, goes off frequently.  The early morning light brings out the colors of the water and the rocks.  The dark specks in the photo are bits of debris that are being ejected by the geyser.
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  • Yellowstone National Park was created in large part due to the extensive thermal features in the region.  When the park was established in 1872 there were only about 25 wild and free bison in Yellowstone.  This photo of Geyser Hill and other thermal features with a bison in the foreground captures the spirit of why we have the park today.
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  • A stout wind from the left allows a view of Fountain Geyser going off with the steam from other thermal vents in the distance.
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  • The Opalescent Pool is located in a forest that has been killed by thermal activity.  Mineral laden water has wicked up the dead tree trunks, turning them gray.  The pool maintains the beautiful blue color.  Notice where bison have walked along the near side of the pool.
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  • This view is looking up the Firehole River from the bridge to the Grand Prismatic Spring.  The steam is caused by a combination of hot water pouring in from upland thermal features and vents or hot springs along the river interacting with cold air..
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  • Situated above the Firehole River, Beehive Geyser erupts.  Steam can be seen from numerous hot springs and geysers in the lower part of the Upper Geyser Basin.
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  • Located in the Black Sand Basin, Cliff Geyser is adjacent to Iron Spring Creek that bisects the Black Sand Basin thermal area.  Cliff Geyser is named for the geyserite buildup that forms the small cliff next to the river.  It erupts frequently with eruptions of 10 to 15 feet every three minutes.
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  • This hot creek exits the region around the Grand Prismatic Hot Spring.  The colors are the result of heat loving microbes.  Different species of microbes live in different temperature zones.  The color of the microbial mats is determined by the pigments within the microbes and on the temperature gradient in the runoff.
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  • This colorful hot creek runs toward the Firehole River form an area near the Grand Prismatic Hot Spring in the Midway Geyser Basin.
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  • Hot water bubbles out of the top of Chocolate Pots Hot Spring beside the Gibbon river.  Just by looking at the cone you can tell where the hottest water flows (orange) and where the cooler water flows (green).  In the springtime during the snow melt more water escapes from the top and more of the cone is colorful.  It is part of the Gibbon Geyser Basin.
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