WonderlustAdventures

  • Feb 25, 2021
  • Joined Jan 13, 2021
  • For much of my life, I've had an immense fascination for the natural world and its inhabitants. This fascination has always driven me to wonder to share those feelings of wonder with other people. "Wonderlust" was the name I gave to that feeling.

    With my videos, I hope to bring to you improved understanding and appreciation for nature in its many forms across the world, and the human history that has existed in those places. I film my travels in a highly cinematic style, and with corresponding narration aim to both educate on the history of these places and inspire wonder for the astonishing aspects of the natural world.

    While here, and in your own journeys, wander in wonder.

  • The Yellowstone River, a beautiful tributary of the Missouri River most famous for its astonishing falls in Yellowstone National Park's Grand Canyon of the Yellowstone, is a place of remarkable wonder and beauty. It was partly roaming the cottonwood forests on its shores that lead me to develop my love for nature, and it still fills me with awe when wandering it today.

    However, when visiting Montana, most are only aware of the western, mountainous part of the state, and miss out on the incredible beauty the eastern Montana lowlands have to offer. It's my hope with guides like this to remedy that!

    In this hiking guide, I bring you on an unmarked hiking adventure alongside a stretch of the Yellowstone River accessed from Buffalo Creek Road by Custer, Montana.

    Yellowstone River Hike Map

    Yellowstone River Hike Guide

    When hiking the Yellowstone, it truly is an unstructured, open-ended adventure, with little in the way of developed trails, but plenty of room to wander and roam. Nature here has many stories to tell, and touch those who listen in a profound way.

    On this section of river, cottonwood forests are bound by tall sandstone cliffs, giving astonishing viewpoints of the surrounding landscape. Even on a gray, exceptionally snowless day for the Montana winter, the intricate patterns of beauty where land meets water are striking to the eye, and when sunny glow in an utterly radiant gold.

    Behind these cliffs, the landscape is covered in sagebrush grasslands, with ponderosa pine taking refuge in whatever sections of more hilly terrain are made available. But these entities, while contrasting, also flow together into a greater, beautiful whole.

    While the terrain is technically modest, hiking boots are a useful piece of gear when navigating steeper hillsides and muddy sections of ground. The rest will depend on the weather, from exceptionally warm summers to cold, freezing winters (these winters were not apparent on this February day!).

    From my initial hike along a ridge top ending in an incredible view of the river (see second photo and 'Viewpoint' labeled on the map above), I worked my way back downhill to a muddy, rugged road. I would recommend not driving this road without a specialized vehicle capable of dealing with the slippery wear and tear of the Montana ground!

    From that road, I continued hiking until I reached the partially frozen banks of the Yellowstone River.

    The Yellowstone River is world famous for its incredible rocks: agates and petrified wood formed by a now largely forgotten fiery volcanic past. But with a keen eye, stories from those violent times remain, etched in stone.

    Following along the frozen ground by a seasonal island (surrounded by water during the Yellowstone's violent Spring flooding events), you're gifted amazing views of the towering cliffs that mere minutes ago you stood above.

    Through all my adventures across the western U.S., the Yellowstone River will always be a special place for me, with a secret kind of subtle beauty that is breathtaking to behold. I hope that one day you are able to visit it in your own travels one day, and wander its shores in wonder!

    • Cedar Creek Trail Montana Overview

      While Yellowstone National Park is world famous for its astonishing and epic beauty, less well known are some of the surrounding trails just outside the park in Montana's incredible Absorka mountains. In this trail guide, I bring you one of these hidden gems, the Cedar Creek Trail, a 1.5 mile path that runs through a breathtaking mountain pass and ends in the ethereal decaying remains of a long since abandoned alpine ranch.

      Cedar Creek Trail Montana Map

      Cedar Creek Trail Montana Guide

      The parking area for the Cedar Creek Trail can be found 10.3 miles north of Yellowstone National Park (see map above), and is immediately met by beautiful views of the surrounding mountains.

      The trail itself starts as a gaited road, covered in snow when I visited it this January.

      The Cedar Creek Trail was used as a movement corridor through the mountains north of Yellowstone for many hundreds of years, wandered by numerous natives tribes.

      While the first mile is gradually uphill, the terrain flattens approximately a mile in, and after another mile of easy hiking, you are met by a beautiful and remarkable piece of history: the OTO Ranch, a now abandoned ranch that once housed livestock brought into Yellowstone National Park from the property.

      The remains of the buildings that once housed the ranch's workers and horses are slowly returning to nature, visually morphing back into the mountain wilds.

      From the surrounding beautiful landscape to the historical treasure hidden within, the Cedar Creek Trail was an incredible way to spend a couple hours that morning, and I hope that it provides your own journeys by the park with endless wonder.