Sunday, August 16, 2020

Saturday, August 15, 2020

Who makes the best tortilla chips?

Grocery shelves are crowded with a head-spinning array of options. So we collected 14 varieties, including the top-selling brands in the United States and popular grocery store private labels, to determine which was the superior chip. (In the interest of keeping things simple and uniform, we omitted any flavored varieties.) We ranked them on texture (how crunchy are they? are they sturdy enough to stand up to your famous seven-layer dip?), salt balance (too much? too faint?) and overall flavor, for a combined score of 20 possible points. With seven tasters, the best possible overall score was 140.

Getting Around Yellowstone Through Time











 

The Buses.

 

Yellowstone Gardiner, Montana: The North Entrance





 

Mamoth Hot Springs Hotel

The National Hotel was built by the Yellowstone Park Improvement Co. and partially opened for business in August 1883 with 141 rooms. This was the first high-class hotel built in the park and was the first stop for visitors coming to the park on the Northern Pacific RR.



 

Old Faithful Inn Historical Postcards & Photos Constructed In 1903

Millions of people have walked into the lobby of the historic Old Faithful Inn over the past 100 years. Their heads tilt back as eyes look up and up and up—in an instant they are smitten with the creative gran-deur of the lodge. Wonder and awe of how such a distinctive structure was built—in the wondrous setting of Yellowstone National Park—may creep into their minds.

Postcard from 1928.
 

1904.
On top of Old Faithful Inn.
Around 1906.
1913.

Yellowstone of the Past

Handkerchief Pool

 The History of Handkerchief Pool.

Setting the table for bears at Lake Camp.

 History of feeding the bears in Yellowstone

Fish Pot Hot Springs (Fishing Cone)

Fishing Cone is a hot spring located in the West Thumb Geyser Basin. The Folsom party probably saw it in 1869, but the first recorded description of Fishing Cone comes from the 1870 Washburn Expedition. Party member Walter Trumball wrote about Cornelius Hedges's experience fishing:

A gentleman was fishing from one of the narrow isthmuses or shelves of rock, which divided one of these hot springs from the [Yellowstone] lake, when, in swinging a trout ashore, it accidentally got off the hook and fell into the spring. For a moment it darted about with wonderful rapidity, as if seeking an outlet. Then it came to the top, dead, and literally boiled (Overland Monthly, June 1871, p. 492).

From that time on, and perhaps even earlier, visitor after visitor performed this feat, catching fish from the cold lake and cooking them on the hook. Hayden Survey members did it in 1871, and the next year they named the spring "Fish Pot" or "Hot Spring Cone." Later names were "Fisherman's Kettle," "Fish Cone," "Fishpot Spring," "Crater Island," and "Chowder Pot." The name Fishing Cone came about gradually through the generic use of the term in guidebooks.

The cooking-on-the-hook feat at Fishing Cone soon became famous. For years, park Superintendent P.W. Norris (1877-1882) demonstrated it to incredulous tourists, and in 1894 members of Congress hooted at their colleagues who described the process. A national magazine reported in 1903 that no visit to the park was complete without this experience, and tourists often dressed in a cook's hat and apron to have their pictures taken at Fishing Cone. The fishing and cooking practice, regarded today as unhealthy, is now prohibited.

Fishing at the cone can be dangerous. A known geyser, Fishing Cone erupted frequently to the height of 40 feet in 1919 and to lesser heights in 1939. One fisherman was badly burned at Fishing Cone in 1921.


Tourists and a motor home in 1924.



Fishing Bridge.

Original Bridge.