There is a company that offers guided float trips along Snake River. Meet at a designated spot in Moose, then take a shuttle to Deadman's bar, 10 miles upstream, and take a raft back down to Moose junction.
There's a designated swimming area in Colter Bay Village, perfect to cool off. There's also a lakeside trail from the swimming area back to the marina which is great for evening walks. Sunsets are beautiful here!
Long (10-ish mile), flat (very little elevation gain) hike out near Jackson Lake. Amazing view at Hermitage point! Bring sunscreen and try to hike it in the morning - some parts of this trail are not shaded.
Beautiful lake at the foot of the mountains! For the avid hiker, take the trail further into Death Canyon for beautiful views. Be sure to bring bear spray - bears frequent this area.
Dami and Josh have done about half of this trail. The first quarter of the trail takes you to a lookout above Phelps lake (2ish miles there). Some people will turn back here making for a nice 4ish mile hike. The next quarter of the trail takes you by the lake, then up through Death Canyon to a patrol cabin in a mountain valley. (Dami and Josh have been up to the patrol cabin and gone back). The second half of the hike takes you all the way up to static peak for amazing views of the park.
Shorter hike with a lot of elevation gain, rewarded by beautiful alpine lakes!
Great day hike! Plus, with a short (semi-strenuous scramble) detour, you can find the beautiful, hidden Delta Lake with bright torquise water.
The full loop is not for the faint of heart! But there are many, many shorter trails (such as the Inspiration point trail) that follow parts of this trail.
Dami and Josh would like to recruit you for this hike.
Josh is hoping to recruit you for this hike.
We will be just south of Yellowstone National Park. If you have never been, a day trip is definitely worth it: drive around the south loop stopping at Old Faithful, the geysers, the artists pots, the Norris geyser basin (beautiful!), the upper falls and lower falls along the Yellowstone river, Hayden valley (where the bison roam!), and Yellowstone Lake. If you plan to do this, check your license plate! Yellowstone is currently limiting the number of people in the park using an alternating license plate system, meaning if the last numeric digit of your license plate is odd (or you have no numeric digits), you will only be allowed in the park on the odd days of the month. If your the last numeric digit of your license plate is even, you will only be allowed into the park on even days of the month. Feel free to reach out to us - if someone else is planning to do a Yellowstone trip, we can hook y'all up.