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Become a Travel Agent in Alpine, WY


Categories: Alpine WY


Become a Travel Agent in Alta

Just a few miles from the Idaho border, Alta is located west of the Teton Mountain Range. This small quaint town is made up of a few B&Bs, a library, and a church. What makes Alta so special to Wyoming is the fine powder snow that falls annually aver...

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Become a Travel Agent in Brooks Lake

Tucked away in the Shoshone National Forest is a scenic 234-acre lake surrounded by 800,000 acres of natural wilderness. Serene and secluded, Brooks Lake is a short drive from Yellowstone National Park and has a great mountain view of the jagged Teto...

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Become a Travel Agent in Buffalo, WY


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Become a Travel Agent in Casper

Casper, Wyoming's second-largest city, is located in the center of the state 180 mi/290 km north of Cheyenne. It was made rich by the stores of natural resources that still pump the economy there. Before oil and gas were discovered, pioneers crossed ...

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Become a Travel Agent in Cheyenne

Cheyenne is Wyoming’s capital and most populous city. Situated in central USA, it serves as a gateway from the Great Plains to the transcontinental railroad. Cheyenne was established in 1867 where the Union Pacific Railroad passed through and i...

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Become a Travel Agent in Clearmont

Clearmont is a small town in Sheridan County, Wyoming, United States. Clearmont provides its travelers a plethora of exploration of wildlife, miles of trails, national parks and monuments such as: Yellowstone National Park, Grand Teton Natioal Park, ...

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Become a Travel Agent in Cody

Cody, Wyoming is known as the "Rodeo Capital of the World." Enjoy an authentic rodeo when visiting, or some of the many other historic experiences of the old west, such as a visit to the Buffalo Bill Historic Center. Located at the edge of ...

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Become a Travel Agent in Devils Tower National Monument

Devils Tower National Monument is an enormous geologic feature protruding out of the prairie in the Black Hills. Devils Tower draws visitors from all over, making it one of the most popular traditional climbing areas in North America.

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Become a Travel Agent in Dubois

Dubois is located along the Wind River in Wyoming, between the Absaroka and Wind River Mountain ranges. The town was first settled in the late 1800's and the main street is lined with rustic log buildings, looking much as it did when first settle...

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Become a Travel Agent in Fort Bridger

Originally a trading post on the Oregon Trail, started by mountain man and tall-tale artist Jim Bridger in 1842, this town on Interstate 80 near the state's western edge was an important stop for settlers on the way west, including Mormon pioneers. T...

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Become a Travel Agent in Ft. Laramie National Historic Site

Fort Laramie started out in 1834 as a fur-trading post, then became an important government outpost on the Oregon Trail. Settlers traveling west would stop there for supplies or to seek protection during hostilities with Native Americans during the P...

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Become a Travel Agent in Grand Teton National Park

Towering more than a mile above the valley of Jackson Hole, the Grand Teton rises to 13,770 feet. Twelve Teton peaks reach above 12,000 feet and support a dozen mountain glaciers. The west side of the range slopes gently, showing the angle of tilt of...

Categories: Grand Teton National Park


Become a Travel Agent in Jackson Hole

This rollicking cowboy town hasn't changed much since the West was won, with historical architecture, authentic saloons and whitewater river rafting nearby.

Categories: Jackson Hole


Become a Travel Agent in Jackson, WY

This town hasn't changed much since the West was won, with historical architecture, authentic saloons, and a true wild western atmosphere.

Categories: Jackson WY


Become a Travel Agent in Laramie

Located in the southeastern part of the state 40 mi/64 km west of Cheyenne, Laramie began as a railroad town similar to others in southern Wyoming. Laramie is now the third-largest city in Wyoming and home of the University of Wyoming, the nation's h...

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Become a Travel Agent in Rock Springs


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Become a Travel Agent in Saratoga


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Become a Travel Agent in Sheridan

Discovered in 1876 and named after General Philip Sheridan of the Union Calvary in the American Civil War, this town remain to be Wyoming's jewel. It's western history and dramatic mountains like the Bighorn Mountains sits gracefully among th...

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Become a Travel Agent in Shoshone National Forest


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Become a Travel Agent in Teton Village


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Become a Travel Agent in Thermopolis

Named for the hot springs located there, Thermopolis is three hours from both Moran Junction in eastern Grand Teton National Park and the east gate of Yellowstone National Park. The town is also the location of the Wyoming Dinosaur Center, a museum w...

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Become a Travel Agent in Torrington


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Become a Travel Agent in Ucross

Ucross is a commune located in the wide open spaces of northeastern Wyoming, USA. It's a summer vacation paradise for the great outdoors with vast woodlands and natural scenic beauty.

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Become a Travel Agent in Wind River Indian Reservation

The empty and windswept Wind River Range, the tallest mountain range in the state, towers over this reservation, which is home to the Eastern Shoshone and Northern Arapaho tribes. The town of Riverton sits near the southeast corner of the state's onl...

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Become a Travel Agent in Yellowstone National Park

Established on March 1, 1872, Yellowstone National Park is the first and oldest national park in the world. Preserved within Yellowstone are Old Faithful Geyser and some 10,000 hot springs and geysers, the majority of the planet's total. These ge...

Categories: Yellowstone National Park


How to Become a
Travel Agent in
Wyoming

Wyoming


With bears, bison, elk, wolves, moose, pronghorn antelope, bighorn sheep and bobcats, not to mention lots and lots of cattle, Wyoming is full of four-legged creatures that can make your visit a memorable one. That's a good thing, because the people of Wyoming, as nice as they are, can sometimes seem the most endangered species around: Fewer humans live in Wyoming than in any other state in the U.S. The pronghorn alone have them outnumbered.

The terrain the animals roam is an attraction in its own right: The state is blessed with two of the country's most spectacular national parks, Yellowstone and Grand Teton. Although they get crowded in summer, don't pass up a chance to see them.

With its spewing geysers, bubbling hot pots and colorful canyons, Yellowstone is still one of the most impressive pieces of wilderness in the U.S., and Grand Teton's scenery—wildflowers set against a backdrop of craggy purple peaks—is hard to beat.

Both parks are good places to get out of the car and take a hike. You can go for days on the backcountry trails and encounter only a few other hikers, if any. Even with Yellowstone's popularity, there is much undeveloped land in this vast state.

Geography

The eastern portion of the state consists primarily of rolling hills, farmland and plains. The west is dominated by the Rocky Mountains and forests. Large areas of the state are sparsely populated, but developments are popping up quickly—especially those associated with mineral extraction.

History

The area that became Wyoming was inhabited by several Native American groups before the arrival of Europeans. In fact, its name is derived from the Algonquin words for vast plains, and many of its towns are also named for Native American peoples and words.

The Shoshone, Arapaho, Cheyenne and Crow lived in the eastern portion of the area. They hunted bison, following the tremendous herds—now reduced to numbers in the low thousands—through their seasonal migrations, and lived in tepees. The Ute people inhabited Wyoming's western mountains, depending less on bison and more on the gathering of wild foods, the hunting of smaller game (antelope, rabbit, deer and elk) and fishing.

Historians believe the first European to see Wyoming was Francois Louis Verendrye, who arrived around 1743, but it wasn't until 1807 that John Colter, who had been a member of the Lewis and Clark expedition, first explored the area that would become Yellowstone National Park. Fur trappers and traders followed, and by the 1840s, large numbers of westward-bound pioneers were trekking across Wyoming on their way to Utah, Oregon and California. This influx led to conflict with Native Americans.

In the late 1860s, the Union Pacific Railroad began stitching Wyoming to the rest of the country, and the population began to increase. By the 1880s, the Native Americans had been confined to the state's only reservation, which opened lands for the new settlers. Cattle ranchers began arriving in Wyoming (many of them having driven herds north from Texas), and they were later joined by sheep herders. Bitter and violent range wars ensued between the two groups, though cattle became the more vital business in the long run.

Wyoming joined the Union in 1890, becoming the 44th state. Soon after, the state's mineral resources attracted a new kind of pioneer. Today, natural gas, crude oil and coal-bed methane extraction, along with ranching, tourism and agriculture, power Wyoming's economy.

In 1995, wolves were reintroduced to Yellowstone National Park, and the issue still alights controversy in the West, particularly in the communities around Yellowstone and Grand Teton National Parks. In 2011, wolves were “delisted” in Idaho and Montana, removing the species from the Federal Endangered Species List, and in 2017, Wyoming's wolves were delisted as well, following a several-year court battle between conservation groups and the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service. Conservation groups continue to review their options.

The other heated issue in the region concerns snowmobiling in Yellowstone. Park managers tried to ban snowmobile use in 2000, but West Yellowstone and other gateway communities protested, arguing that banning snowmobiles would be economically devastating. In 2013, after 15 years of debate, both environmentalists and snowmobile operators agreed on a rule that allows a prescribed number of snowmobile events in Yellowstone daily, but only snowmobiles that pass stringent noise and air pollution tests. The rule also sets limits for the number of snow coaches that can run in the park.

Snapshot

Wyoming's main attractions include Yellowstone and Grand Teton National Parks, spectacular mountain scenery, snow skiing, fishing, hunting, backpacking, white-water rafting, cowboys, photography, Devils Tower and Fossil Butte National Monuments, camping, horseback riding, mountain climbing, Native American history, Cheyenne, the culture and art of the Old West, and an abundance of wildlife.


Travelers who love rugged outdoor scenery and outdoor sports, and who enjoy a nontouristy atmosphere, will appreciate Wyoming. Fast-lane travelers may find Wyoming's decidedly nonurban pace (even in its biggest cities) too slow for their liking.

Potpourri

During the Yellowstone fires of 1988, firefighters dug 665 mi/1,070 km of fire line and dropped 10 million gallons of water to try to snuff the fires. Still, the fires burned until the first snow fell in mid-September. The charred remains are still visible today, but new growth is slowly taking over, adding yet another dimension to the ecology of the nation's first national park.

In 1941, a skydiver parachuted onto the top of Devils Tower—an impressive bit of aerial accuracy. The only problem was that he couldn't climb down the pinnacle, having lost the rope he planned to use for his descent. He was rescued by climbers after being stranded for six days at the top.


Infamous outlaw William Carlisle held up a train stopped at the Medicine Bow station in 1919. One of the last train robbers, the escaped convict eluded capture until November of that year, when he was apprehended in the Laramie Range.

If you're driving along Highway 30 northwest of Rock River, you'll see Como Bluff, one of the richest sites for dinosaur fossils in the world. Most of the fossils have long since been carted off to various centers of paleontological research, but you may want to stop to see the building that's constructed almost entirely of dinosaur bones (it was once a museum and gift shop).

You can tour the old gas chamber and gallows (no longer in use) at the Wyoming Frontier Prison in Rawlins. The prison housed men from 1901 to 1980, and it changed little in those years. Rawlins is also where the notorious hellion George "Big Nose" Parrot was dispatched by vigilantes—and believe us, you don't want to know what happened to him after they lynched him.

If prison tours are on the agenda, stop at Laramie's Territorial Prison. It operated from 1872 to 1903 and is one of few prisons that held the notorious Butch Cassidy for a time. The frontier village offers a glimpse of those Old West ways.

The notorious Teapot Dome, the source of a White House scandal in the 1920s, is located north of Casper. It's an underground oil reserve that was leased to the Mammoth Oil Company in exchange for a bribe paid to a member of former U.S. President Harding's administration.

At one time—and not for very long—Wyoming was part of the short-lived Republic of Texas.

The gang led by Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid was named for its Wyoming hideout, Hole-in-the-Wall. The cabin has since been relocated to Old Trail Town in Cody.

In 1869, before it had even become a state, Wyoming granted universal suffrage. In 1870, the first female judge was appointed in Wyoming. Jackson voters elected the first all-female town council in 1920, and the state elected the country's first woman governor, Nellie Taylor Ross, in 1924.

Almost half (48%) of Wyoming's land area is owned by the federal government, and 6% is controlled by the state. About 91% of Wyoming's 97,914 sq mi/253,596 sq km is considered rural.

In 1998, former Gov. Mike Sullivan was appointed ambassador of Ireland, and in 2001, Wyoming's Dick Cheney was inaugurated as vice president of the United States. He and his wife Lynne graduated from high school in Casper. The Cheneys own a home in Jackson Hole.




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