Before we decided to plan our trip to Yellowstone National Park, Wyoming, I had chosen “Fountains and Falls” as one of the September themes for the Sunday Stills Photo Challenge.

“A fountain’s magic lies in its water, which is always moving and yet never leaves.” – Toba Beta
Now that my father is gone, my step-mom moved away from Payson, Arizona to the Tucson area. We loved our walks beside this little lake in Payson.

This post is all about the water features you see in nature, whether it’s waterfalls, cascading rivers, water fountains, or features found in parks and urban areas. I’m also sharing water features that boil and erupt out of the Earth, as seen in Yellowstone.

“Yellowstone: where geysers dance and bison roam.” – Unknown 🦬
Yellowstone’s Geothermal Water Features
Having visited almost every national park in the Western US, Yellowstone was still on the must-see list and a long time coming. I erroneously thought the park was only known for the Old Faithful Geyser and the herds of bison roaming the golden grasslands.
It wasn’t until we moved to Eastern Washington in late 2020 that I realized visiting the park was a mere day’s drive. This year, we made plans to camp in West Yellowstone, Montana, in mid-September 2025, once the summer crowds had diminished. Wow, was I surprised when I did a little research on attractions to see.
“Yellowstone is not just a park; it’s a laboratory.” – Jim Robbins
On our first full day in Yellowstone, we opted to drive straight to the Old Faithful Geyser complex. On the drive, there was plenty of steaming water escaping the bonds of the Earth. Near the Grand Prismatic Spring area, numerous trails lead to the various small geysers, hot springs, and fumaroles (steam vents).


Iconic Old Faithful Geyser
“Faith is the fountain of life.” ― Lailah Gifty Akita
Old Faithful is named as such because it can be predicted to erupt about every 90 minutes. There is a phone hotline you can call to get the approximate times. To drive from West Yellowstone, through the gate entrance, all the way to the Visitor Center complex, it took us over 90 minutes. We left at 9:30 a.m., hoping to arrive on time for the 11:30 a.m. show. We did.

Geysers are rare geologic features. Scientists estimate there are only about 1,000 geysers worldwide, and Yellowstone alone is home to roughly 500 of them—more than anywhere else on Earth. Source

And thar she blows!
“Old Faithful has erupted more than a million times in recorded history—and counting!” – Source

“The geysers and hot springs of the Yellowstone are another proof of recent volcanic activity.” — Ellsworth Huntington

Other surface features include hot springs and fumaroles, areas where steam erupts from the Earth. Not all geysers are as tall as Old Faithful’s, which can vary in height from 90 to 180 feet into the air.
No wonder Old Faithful Geyser stands as a Yellowstone icon; it offers a moment in time we can count on! After spending three hours gawking, chatting with visitors, walking Brodie around, eating, and shopping, we drove back toward the Grand Prismatic Springs area for another look.
There are two views of the Grand Prismatic Springs from which one can park in a large parking area: one right off the highway and another to visit the overlook. I chose the overlook, which involved an uphill mile walk in 80°F heat on already wobbly legs. 17,000 steps later, which included walking at the Geyser complex, this was my treat:

Yellowstone’s Waterfalls
On Day Two of our Yellowstone tour, we drove to the Canyon area. Who knew the park boasts a Grand Canyon of its own? We stopped by the Visitor Center to ask questions about the best views that didn’t involve hiking. The Park Ranger gave us a small map of the loop showing the turnouts, hiking trails, and parking areas. Let me just say that arriving before the crowds guarantees a decent parking space. An easy paved pathway led us to several lookout spots.

The Yellowstone River created the Grand Canyon of the Yellowstone. The canyon is approximately 24 miles (39 km) long, between 800 and 1,200 feet (240 and 370 meters) deep, and from 0.25 to 0.75 miles (0.40 to 1.21 kilometers) wide, bookended by the Lower Falls and the Upper Falls.
The 308-foot Lower Falls may have formed because the river flows over volcanic rock that is more resistant to erosion than the downstream rocks, which are hydrothermally altered. The 109-foot Upper Falls flows over similar rocks. SOURCE NPS

Do I look happy?

Another easy-to-walk-to view is the overlook of Upper Falls.

As we bid farewell to the Grand Canyon of the Yellowstone, the park’s 500 geysers and countless steam vents, my thoughts echoed the words in this quote:
“… As I took in the scene, I realized my own littleness, my helplessness, my dread exposure to destruction, my inability to cope with or even comprehend the mighty architecture of nature…” – Nathaniel P. Langford, 1870
Waterfalls Closer to Home
There are several towns in our county in Eastern Washington named after waterfalls: Kettle Falls, Metaline Falls, and Nine Mile Falls. There is something romantic about living in a small town named after a local waterfall. We love to see our Nine Mile Falls flow from March to July.

For our wedding anniversary in August, we took a short road trip to northern Stevens County to the town of Kettle Falls for this view of Meyers Falls. Not a big, grand waterfall, but pretty!

Last summer, we took a day trip to the town of Metaline Falls (home of the Sasquatch Festival!). It was tricky to figure out its waterfall feature, Pee Wee Falls, which is best viewed from a kayak. We hiked a half mile for this view.

Two hours south of Spokane is Palouse Falls, which flows from the Palouse River. Worth the drive for the payout!



“I go to nature to be soothed and healed, and to have my senses put in order.” – John Burroughs
There’s still no place like home!
Thank you for reading today! After seeing nature’s majestic beauty in Yellowstone, I couldn’t help but share the fascinating information I learned.
Sharing this week for Johnbo’s CellPic Sunday and Lens-Artists: Home and Away
Sunday Stills Photo Challenge Reminders
The Sunday Stills weekly-themed photo challenge is easy to join. You have all week to share and link your post. Please use your own original images, whether new or from your archives.
- Remember to title your blog post a little differently from mine.
- Please create a new post for the theme or link to a recent one.
- Entries for this theme can be posted all week.
- Tag your post “Sunday Stills.”
- Don’t forget to create a pingback to this post so that other participants can read your post.
- I also recommend adding your post’s URL to the comments.
If you are participating in the photo challenge, I look forward to seeing how you interpret this week’s theme! Creativity is encouraged, so please share your own photographs (old or new), poems, original short stories, and music inspired by the theme.
Remember, you don’t have to share anything from Yellowstone if you’re participating in the challenge this week. Show us your favorite waterfalls and fountains. Images from your archives are always accepted and encouraged!
Join me next week as we explore windows. The Autumnal and Vernal Equinoxes arrive on Monday–happy Autumn or Spring to you!

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[…] Join Terri’s Sunday Stills: Fountains and Falls, Featuring Geysers of Yellowstone […]
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[…] week Terri is challenging us to display images of Waterfalls and/or Fountains we have seen. In our area we do […]
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[…] Sunday Stills: Fountains and Waterfalls – Water Water Everywhere #280 […]
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So beautiful! You have some really amazing National Parks – and Yellowstone was the first one I read about as a child in school.
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Thank you, Anne-Christine! The US has a LOT of NPs. Each state has a wonderful set of state parks as well 🙂
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♥
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[…] has us all pumped up for Sunday Stills. We can’t compete with the geysers in Yellowstone, but water everywhere is lovely to look at, […]
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[…] For SundayStills […]
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Terri,
Yellowstone is awe-inspiring and the National Park is one of the greatest gifts Americans have given to ourselves. My son lived in Jackson Hole for five years and we have been fortunate to visit many times. The last time was in 2021 during COVID and we almost had the park to ourselves (no tour busses). Since you’re within driving distance, I recommend a trip in winter. The snowmobile ride to Old Faithful from the Park entrance is a hoot! Your pictures are fabulous and you were blessed with wonderful weather, while making the most of your visit. My contribution is a picture of Riverside Geyser in the upper Geyser Basin, about a mile walk from the Old Faithful parking lot.
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We loved everything we saw, Joe! Hmm, driving in winter through northern Idaho and Montana? Sounds good in theory! 😆 Thanks for sharing the pic!
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[…] Sunday Stills: fountains and falls […]
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[…] am going to share these images from the summer in Juveninkoski, Finland for Sunday Stills: Fountains and Falls. The cascading water, while not enormous in size, offers a charm that captures the essence of […]
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[…] Sunday Stills: Fountains and Falls […]
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oh, what a gorgeous place, one more for my bucket list
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Wow! Wow! Wow! Gorgeous photos! You brought back so many sweet memories for me. Thank you for that!
I am unable to participate this week as we just got back to Pennsylvania from Texas.
Happy Fall!
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Thank you, Nancy! I’m glad you have wonderful memories of Yellowstone and maybe one of Fountain Hills 😉 welcome back to your home!
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Thank-you Terri! It’s been a whirlwind with two trips close to each other.
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I always learn something in every post, Terri. I didn’t know that about the number of geysers and so many of them being in Yellowstone. Nature really knows how to display its water! You’ve got some gorgeous pictures here, and a ton of memories. Thanks for sharing them with us. 🙂 xxx
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Thank you, Marsha! I didn’t know that either! Its fun for me to research places and learn new facts! The caldera under Yellowstone is like a sleeping giant! A bit scary!
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I’m ok if it’s asleep. Are you sure it’s sleeping, and how big of a giant is it?
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Such a great trip. The photos tell the nicest story.
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Thank you, Donna! It was a thrill to see it all in person.
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Gorgeous Terri. I never got to Payson. When we used to winter in Arizona, in Scottsdale, we’d drive up to Sedona a few times. Someone told us the turn off to Payson was a worthy detour, but we never got there. I have friends who live in beautiful Fountain Hills. 🧡
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Payson is a nice town, Debby. We thought about buying a vacation home there but changed our minds. Sedona is amazing 👏 My brother lives in FH. I could see myself living there in my 80s if hubby goes before me. ❤️
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I don’t blame you. xx
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Terri, here’s my fountains and falls https://wanderingdawgs.com/2025/09/22/sunday-stills-fountains-and-falls/
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[…] Many thanks to Terri for taking us on a trip around Yellowstone National Park with her Sunday Stills challenge Fountains and Falls […]
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My state waterfalls https://threebylisa.wordpress.com/2025/09/21/louisiana-hidden-gems-waterfalls
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[…] Sunday Stills (SS) – Fountains and Falls […]
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Such a wonderful collection of photos. The movement of the water can be mesmerising, creating a calming effect on the mind. It’s like nature’s own soothing melody, washing away worries and stress. Thanks for sharing, and have a good day 🙂 Aiva xx
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Thank you for your lovely comment and for stopping by!
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You are welcome 😊
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Thank you for taking us on your trip with you, and enjoying the beautiful waterfalls and geysers. I love the many shades of blue!💙
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Thank you, Eugi! Yellowstone delivered amazing-ness, but our local waterfalls are wonderful too!
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You’re welcome, Terri.
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Hi Terri, here is mine: https://robbiesinspiration.wordpress.com/2025/09/22/robbies-inspiration-tanka-tuesday-esther-chiltons-writing-challenge-and-sunday-stills-poetry-photography/
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Hi Terri
For us, the magic of geysers lies in the fact that water flows up in an eruption. We saw geysers on Lanzarote and Iceland.
The Fab Four of Cley
🙂 🙂 🙂 🙂
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Yes, great point, KB! I’m sure Iceland landscape puts on a great geothermal show!
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[…] I am joining Terri’s Challenge this week: Fountains and Falls. […]
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great post, Terri 🙂
“The waterfall is nature´s laughter” – Ladyleemanila
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Thank you, LL!
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I found the geology of Yellowstone fascinating! I wouldn’t want to be around when It blows again!
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We’d be instant vapor if it blew again. Pieces of starlight.
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dust to dust
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I smiled. You indeed look happy, Terri. The waterfalls look fascinating as well as the geysers. Thanks for taking us with your trip, Terri.
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Aww, thank you Hazel! I suppose I was also happy to be amazed!
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Yes, exactly! My pleasure, Terri. Enjoy your week!
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You as well!
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This was a great tour you gave us of Yellowstone National Park Terri and I feel like I was there with you. The facts that you shared with us were interesting too. I knew about Old Faithful but I had no idea that its activity was timed so precisely. My knees would be wobbly after a 17,000-step-hike too. You are lucky you are so close to beautiful falls, even in your own town. My friend lives in Honeoye Falls, New York and the village is all about the picturesque falls and the mill, a quaint centerpiece of the village. It is about 4th of July parades through town and they won’t let franchisees move into the village … my kind of place.
My post will be along later, a few fountains at Heritage Park, as there are no fountains or waterfalls near me.
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Thank you, Linda! When I plan to visit a new place, I learned as much as possible. Your friend’s town sounds wonderful. We don’t have much of a town center. Yesterday my SIl and I walked around the Fall Vendors Fair in town, and I stopped and chatted with 10 different people that I knew. Small town atmosphere for sure!
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I used to do the same when I traveled Terri as you get so much more out of a trip that way. I could go for a small town atmosphere, away from the hustle and bustle of the city.
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What a great collection of photos! I feel like I went on vacation. 💜
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Thank you, Colleen! We feel so blessed to be able to see all of this!
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My wife and cousins and I were in Yellowstone in August. We also went to Glacier then into Alberta, Canada at Waterton Lakes Park. That part of the world is amazing and gorgeous.
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So nice to hear of that wonderful trip, Tony! I’ve yet to visit Glacier or Alberta!
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You have to go. It’s worth it!
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Thank you for sharing more of your pictures from Yellowstone. Most of your images makes it look like you had the park to yourselves (except for, of course, the buffalo), but yikes to the crowds at Old Faithful (even though many fewer than in the summer). Fortunately, you were able to get a great view of the geyser.
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We only arrived at the Old Faithful complex 30 minutes early, Janis. Found plenty of parking. We sat down at the amphitheater just 15 minutes before the “show” and got good seats! Seating is spread out enough and many folks can watch the eruption from the huge windows of the visitor center. September crowds aren’t bad at all and the lines to get in at the West entrance were short. Our longest “lines” were on the highways waiting for bison and elk to move along, LOL!
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Your photos are wonderful examples of nature at its best! And also so informative 🙂
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Thank you, Lisa! Its hard not to include the info, LOL!
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[…] Waterfalls […]
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Lovely photos Terri.
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Thank you, Cindy!
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Stunning Teri….that is on my list of places to visit. We are heading to Colorado this week for a 2 week vacay and I’m excited for mountains, fall colors, wildlife, and maybe waterfalls.
https://troyerslovinglife.blogspot.com/2025/09/taking-in-life-around-mesundaystills_21.html
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Thank you, Kirstin! I’ve never been to Colorado so take a lot of fall pics! Enjoy!
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Terri, your fantastic images of Yellowstone take me back almost 20 years when we camped outside the west entrance to the park in Idaho! Seeing how many people were there at Old Faithful confirmed what I’ve heard about the park being much more crowded now. That being said, anyone who has never been there should not let the crowds scare you away! It is a special place. I also love all your waterfall images. I love waterfalls! How lucky you are to live withing driving distance of these beautiful falls.
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I’m glad you have such cool memories of Yellowstone, Beth! September was a great time to go. The crowd at Old Faithful was big that day but there was plenty of parking and places to sit and watch the eruption. I so love our little town of Nine Mile Falls. The dam that creates the seasonal Falls and Lake Spokane along the Spokane River. I didn’t share Spokane Falls this time, but that is also a sight to see.
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https://judydykstrabrown.com/2025/09/21/mexican-fountains-for-sunday-stills/
Impossible to compete with your fabulous waterfalls, Terri, so I’m just doing Mexican fountains for your prompt! Hope some of these please.
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Thank you Judy! National Park water features are usually a wow factor to see. Its the hometown ones that are dear to our hearts!
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[…] Sunday Stills prompt is Fountains and […]
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Oh my Terri – a wonderful display of nature’s power! I must admit I might have turned around and left after seeing the crowd at Old Faithful – happily our visit was much less busy but it was many years ago. Loved those images and also the waterfalls. Terrific!
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Thank you, Tina! I’m told that was a small crowd… there was still sitting room. Yellowstone is so popular worldwide, it will always be busy. But mid September is a great time to visit.
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Wonderful photos Terri. I love all the colors of Yellowstone and the backdrop of steam rising in so many places. Like you, I didn’t know about the grand canyon there until I visited. I expect you’ll being going back there a time or two! Here’s mine this week: https://grahamsisland.com/2025/09/21/waterfalls/
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Thank you, Graham! Glad to read you’ve also been there. Still so much to see!
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Wow! What a beautiful collection, Terri.
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Thank you, Egidio! I have more waterfalls, but best to dial back. 😁
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I find it fascinating that it continues to erupt on schedule, despite climate change, earth shifts and all the other naturally occurring atmospheric changes.
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Me too, Dawn. It’s schedule hasn’t deviated much. The giant Caldera underneath the park is clearly more powerful than the factors you mention.
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[…] This week’s Sunday Stills challenge theme is ‘Fountains and falls.’ See more responses here. […]
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These are great photographs, Terri. I have seen geysers in New Zealand. Pretty spectacular. The waterfalls are marvelous.
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Thank you, Robbie! How fascinating to know there are geysers in NZ. Makes sense due to its volcanic nature.
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I’ll see if I can find the pictures.
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Wow, it’s such a beautiful park! Thanks for sharing these, Terri! ❤️😊
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Thank you, John! It was thrilling!
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You’re welcome, Terri. ☺️
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enjoyed your photos in this post
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Thank you, Yvette!
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hope your week is off to a nice start
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Can’t complain, its officially autumn!
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‘0)
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The fountain at Fountain Hills is beautiful, but it pales next to the natural fountains in Yellowstone. Don’t get me started on the beautiful waterfalls around the country!
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That fountain in FH was my original inspiration for my theme, but the geysers stole the show, of course.
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These are fantastic, Terri!
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Thank you, Sofia! Memories forever!
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Looks like lots of people at Yellowstone. I’ve heard it and most of the parks out west are that way now. I’d still like to go. You have wonderful images here, thank you so much for sharing!
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Thank you, Dawn! The biggest crowds were at the old Faithful Geyser amphitheater, but overall it wasn’t as bad as the summer months.
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Your Yellowstone pictures are amazing Terri! During our last visit, we stayed in their RV park. It was handy but spaces were tight.
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Thank you, Anne! Its crazy to see heated water venting out of the ground. Yes the RV spots are smallish there. At least it was quiet. We got an end unit which felt more open.
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Beautiful photos Terri.
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Thanks so much, Sadje!
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I may have some of the pictures somewhere in an album. Good to see them again.
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AWESOME photo essay, Terri! 😍Thank you for sharing your amazing tour of Yellowstone, plus all the beautiful nature you have in your area. It must have been so exciting to see Old Faithful erupt!
https://thedogladysden.com/fountains-and-falls-sundaystills/
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Thank you, Debbie! There are other falls to see within a 2 hour drive here, but saving those for next spring. Old Faithful was truly remarkable.
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I may never get to Yellowstone except through your pictures. These are energizing.
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Thank you, Jacqui! It was worth the trip, if you can visit some day.
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That is incredible, Terri
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Thank you, Toni!
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These are all amazing, Terri. I’ve never seen a geyser in real life but I can imagine how spectacular they must be. Have a great new week!
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Thank you, Cathy! Waterfalls are amazing in themselves but watching water fly up into the sky is wild!
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I thoroughly enjoy all your photos of Yellowstone and the waterfalls near your home, Terri. Water is a subject I love to photograph.
Great theme for this week. Thank you. And a blessed week to you.
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Thank you, Suzette! I’m giving Yellowstone a rest for a couple of weeks, after this, LOL! We are blessed to have waterfalls so close to us and our town named after one.
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It is a place I hope to visit one day, maybe. I love to see photos of Yellowstone. Thank you so much Terri.
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Fabulous photos, Terri! I love waterfalls.
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Thanks so much, Darlene! No two are alike, which makes that seem amazing to me!
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