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Yellowstone National Park
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Livingston, MT
A stop in Livingston, Montana, 25 mi/40 km west of Bozeman, is a "must-do" for art-loving visitors to Yellowstone National Park.
Livingston is just an hour's drive through gorgeous Paradise Valley from Yellowstone, and is home to more than a dozen art galleries, featuring works by exceptional Western artists and photographers.
Throughout the summer, the community hosts monthly art walks. Visitors who enjoy fly-fishing will love the Fly Fishing Discovery Center, filled with aquariums and exhibits about the history of fly-fishing. Excellent local dining and lodging options make an overnight stay enjoyable.
Jackson, WY
This town hasn't changed much since the West was won, with historical architecture, authentic saloons, and a true wild western atmosphere.
Bozeman
Located in the heart of southwesten Montana's Rocky Mountains, just 90 miles south of Yellowstone Park, Bozeman is a mecca of year-round outdoor recreation and offers some of the world's finest fly-fishing, skiing, hiking, camping, biking, rafting, climbing and kayaking.
Yellowstone National Park
Established on March 1, 1872, Yellowstone National Park is the first and oldest national park in the world. Preserved within Yellowstone are Old Faithful Geyser and some 10,000 hot springs and geysers, the majority of the planet's total. These geothermal wonders are evidence of one of the world's largest active volcanoes; its last eruption created a crater or caldera that spans almost half of the park. An outstanding mountain wildland with clean water and air, Yellowstone is home of the grizzly bear and wolf, and free-ranging herds of bison and elk. It is the core of the Greater Yellowstone Ecosystem, one of the largest intact temperate zone ecosystems remaining on the planet. The human history of the park dates back 12,000 years. The events of the last 130 years of park history are reflected in the historic structures and sites associated with various periods of park administration and visitor facilities development.
Big Sky
The scenic community of Big Sky, Montana rests high in the Gallatin National Forest, where Lone Mountain, at 11,166 feet, towers over the community. Big Sky is home to the Big Sky Ski and Summer Resort, a year-round playground for outdoor recreationists. Big Sky also has new terrain for the young and young at heart in Moonlight Basin. As Big Sky's newest ski resort, visitors can enjoy over 1500 acres of extraordinary ski terrain on the north face of Montana's famed Lone Mountain.
A stop in Livingston, Montana, 25 mi/40 km west of Bozeman, is a "must-do" for art-loving visitors to Yellowstone National Park.
Livingston is just an hour's drive through gorgeous Paradise Valley from Yellowstone, and is home to more than a dozen art galleries, featuring works by exceptional Western artists and photographers.
Throughout the summer, the community hosts monthly art walks. Visitors who enjoy fly-fishing will love the Fly Fishing Discovery Center, filled with aquariums and exhibits about the history of fly-fishing. Excellent local dining and lodging options make an overnight stay enjoyable.
This town hasn't changed much since the West was won, with historical architecture, authentic saloons, and a true wild western atmosphere.
Located in the heart of southwesten Montana's Rocky Mountains, just 90 miles south of Yellowstone Park, Bozeman is a mecca of year-round outdoor recreation and offers some of the world's finest fly-fishing, skiing, hiking, camping, biking, rafting, climbing and kayaking.
Established on March 1, 1872, Yellowstone National Park is the first and oldest national park in the world. Preserved within Yellowstone are Old Faithful Geyser and some 10,000 hot springs and geysers, the majority of the planet's total. These geothermal wonders are evidence of one of the world's largest active volcanoes; its last eruption created a crater or caldera that spans almost half of the park. An outstanding mountain wildland with clean water and air, Yellowstone is home of the grizzly bear and wolf, and free-ranging herds of bison and elk. It is the core of the Greater Yellowstone Ecosystem, one of the largest intact temperate zone ecosystems remaining on the planet. The human history of the park dates back 12,000 years. The events of the last 130 years of park history are reflected in the historic structures and sites associated with various periods of park administration and visitor facilities development.
The scenic community of Big Sky, Montana rests high in the Gallatin National Forest, where Lone Mountain, at 11,166 feet, towers over the community. Big Sky is home to the Big Sky Ski and Summer Resort, a year-round playground for outdoor recreationists. Big Sky also has new terrain for the young and young at heart in Moonlight Basin. As Big Sky's newest ski resort, visitors can enjoy over 1500 acres of extraordinary ski terrain on the north face of Montana's famed Lone Mountain.