American Realities with Bill Youngs
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      • Part I: Possessing the Falls >
        • Chapter One: James Glover: Purchasing the Falls
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        • Chapter Three: Harnessing the Falls
        • Chapter Four: "The World's Fair of the Northwest"
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        • Chapter Six: The Twilight of Old Spokane
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          • Tom Foley's Turn
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        • Chapter Sixteen: Opening Day
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      • Part V: An American Environment >
        • Chapter Twenty-One: Spokane Falls, An American Environment
      • The Fair and the Falls Map

A River of Elk and one "Moose"

12/20/2015

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Wildlife Encounters on the National Elk Refuge, Jackson Hole, Wyoming​
​
The National Elk Refuge outside of Jackson, Wyoming, boasts one of the largest elk herds in the world—about 7,500 animals. The refuge was established in 1912 to protect the herd, which had thrived in Jackson Hole before the arrival of cattle and the depletion of grasses needed by the elk. The refuge has set aside an area of about 25,000 acres, which has helped the animals thrive during more than a century.

Arriving in Jackson in December, 2015, I learned that animals had begun coming down from the nearby mountains for the winter. Along the highway, I could see hundreds of elk near the fence:
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All photos in this post are by Bill Youngs
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I was staying near the refuge, and late in the afternoon of December18 I decided to take a walk along a road on the eastern side of the refuge. As night fell, I navigated by moonlight and the lights of an occasional passing car or truck.
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​About a mile into the refuge, I decided it was time to return home. Up in the hills on the east side of the road I could hear coyotes and an indistinct rustling—a sound that I can only describe as a restlessness in the forest. Then a truck came past and halted about 50 yards ahead. In its lights I could see one elk, then another two or three, than dozens—a veritable river of elk flowing down from the mountainside, across the road, and into the refuge. The truck slowly moved on through the herd, and several thoughts flooded my mind?
-- Would I be able to walk through the flowing elk?
-- Should I wait for another vehicle and hope for a ride?
But at that moment the herd split: those across the road continued into the refuge. The others, now seeing me, vanished back up the mountain. I had walked on only a few yards when I saw a moose directly in front of me beside the road. My mind raced through a succession of quick thoughts:
-- In Alaska more people are killed every year by moose than by grizzlies.
-- If I was in danger, I might as well continue walking toward the moose as flee in another direction.
Somehow I was not particularly worried, but I was deeply interested in what would happen next.
A few more steps forward and I had the answer: my "moose" was simply a park sign beside the road! 
​
Before you laugh at my mistake, consider this. It was dark—very dark, as evidenced by a photo I took of the sign:
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It looks just like a moose—right?!
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​Click here to view a complete list of entries on the American Realities blog...
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If you enjoyed this article you may enjoy these other articles about Parks and Mother Nature:
• New York's Central Park: A Wilderness?
• The Japanese Garden at the Hotel New Otani -- an Exercise in "Parkology"
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       Some years ago, while writing a biography of Eleanor Roosevelt I jotted this note in my journal: "I want to tell the stories of American History as though I were among friends, sitting beside a fire." In this web site and blog I aim to tell some of those stories in words, images, films -- and with other media marvels.

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