Yellowstone: Predator and Prey: Apr 01—06, 2011

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Price: $1,855
Departs: Bozeman, MT
Tour Limit: 14
Operations Manager: Greg Lopez
Download Itinerary: PDF (84.3 KB)

Tour Leaders

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Denver Holt

Denver Holt is a wildlife researcher and graduate of the University of Montana. He is founder and president of the Owl Res...


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Register for this Tour

You can register for this tour by phone (800-328-VENT or 512-328-5221) or by downloading a printable file of our full tour registration form. Signed and completed forms can be faxed to 512-328-2919 or mailed to our office.

bull elk

bull elk— Photo: Brian Gibbons

A complete natural history experience focusing on wolves, grizzlies, birds, and the natural processes of Yellowstone National Park.

Yellowstone National Park is known throughout the world for its magnificent wildlife, spectacular geothermal features, and tremendous scenery. Created as our first national park in 1903, it is today a bastion of wilderness, harboring the greatest abundance of wildlife in the lower 48 states. In this exciting tour, wildlife researcher and guide Denver Holt will lead us through the north portion of the park at the end of the winter season, presenting a course on the natural history of this region.

Yellowstone is known for its mega-fauna, and bison and elk have long been symbols of the park. Grizzly bear studies in the 1960s, and wolf reintroductions by the U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service in the 1990s have made these animals some of Yellowstone's most popular, and we will spend considerable time searching for them. There are other species of mammals to look for, however, and mule deer, bighorn sheep, and pronghorn are relatively easy to observe.

The park hosts a number of bird species during the winter, and our visit should produce Bald and Golden eagles, Rough-legged Hawk, Black-billed Magpie, Clark's Nutcracker, and American Dipper. Specialties such as Trumpeter Swan, Barrow's Goldeneye, Black and Gray-crowned rosy-finches, Red Crossbill, and Northern Pygmy-Owl are possible as well.

Our discussions will include the ways in which animals adapt to the extreme conditions that grip Yellowstone in winter, and predator and prey relationships with observations of wolves, elk, bison, coyote, fox, and other animals. We will observe and discuss the natural history of all these species, and their effects on the ecology of Yellowstone. We will also discuss aspects of snow ecology and geothermal features of Mammoth Hot Springs.

Our accommodations will be at Chico Hot Springs Lodge in the scenic Paradise Valley in Pray, Montana. Although modernized for today's world, the lodge still gives the feel of old Montana.

A single accommodation tour with excellent lodging and cuisine; conditions may include cold weather and snowfall.