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Florida to yellowstone

Mmartinez10903
Explorer
Explorer
Prospective travel trailer owner here. Looking to take family from Florida to Yellowstone for the summer. Can this be done adequately in a two-week block or will I need three weeks? How soon do I need to book our sites? Are there any places we “have” to see or stay at? Any insight is appreciated. I realize this is opening a giant can of worms.
Thanks to those who respond.
13 REPLIES 13

yr2017
Explorer
Explorer
fanrgs wrote:
yr2017 wrote:
If you don't already own a trailer, consider a fly/drive - fly to Denver and rent a class C there
Very good advice and not just because of the distance. If you have not had an RV before, it will give you a chance to find out if your family really enjoys being together in a "confined space" (ie., RV) for that long. That is an often overlooked, but very important, part of making an RV buying decision.

Incidentally, it takes 12 travel hours to tow my fifth wheel from my house in a Denver suburb to West Yellowstone, MT. And, in summer-early fall, the trip from Cody, WY, to West Yellowstone takes the last two hours of those 12!


When I pull from Ralston to West Yellowstone, the trip is typically four hours depending on the time of year - longer on hot summer days b/c of the backup of vehicles at East Gate. Shorter on fall days near closing. From there up to Glacier is six hours
Big AL
DOD - 02 APR 2020 - CANCER

fanrgs
Explorer
Explorer
yr2017 wrote:
If you don't already own a trailer, consider a fly/drive - fly to Denver and rent a class C there
Very good advice and not just because of the distance. If you have not had an RV before, it will give you a chance to find out if your family really enjoys being together in a "confined space" (ie., RV) for that long. That is an often overlooked, but very important, part of making an RV buying decision.

Cruise America has a big rental facility in the Denver suburb of Federal Heights. It is a convenient distance from DIA and on the north side of town. So you wouldn't have to learn to drive the RV through downtown Denver's horrible I-25 traffic to be on your way to YNP. The Denver Lazy Days RV dealership is even closer to DIA and also rents motorhomes.

An alternative, if you have a truck or SUV with a hitch, would be to drive to Denver in two very long days and rent a trailer. Colorado Camper Rental's website can be found HERE.

Incidentally, it takes 12 travel hours to tow my fifth wheel from my house in a Denver suburb to West Yellowstone, MT. And, in summer-early fall, the trip from Cody, WY, to West Yellowstone takes the last two hours of those 12!
"Retirement is the best job I ever had!"
2015 RAM 2500 4x4 crewcab 6.7L CTD; 2016 Rockwood Signature UltraLite 5th wheel

richardcoxid
Explorer
Explorer
Some general information about YNP (some general items apply to GTNP also)

YNP is BIG!, about 45 miles E/W and about 65 miles N/S (2.2 mil. Acres total). The “figure 8 grand loop” road inside the park is about 140 miles around. The lower loop is 96 miles and the upper loop is 70 miles around and yes, it is bigger than the states of Rhode Island and Delaware combined.

Whatever time that you think you will need to see YNP you better double it, or to say it another way is that you will see one half as much as you planned on in the allotted time. The Bison think that they own the road (they do!) and will slow down the traffic to walking speed or stop all traffic for 1/4 mile or more blocking both directions of travel, the thermal attractions also tie up traffic and with a 5 month long summer tourist season that coincides with a 5 month long road construction season and a 45 MPH radar controlled speed limit it will take about a full day to see each loop and then you will only see the main attractions. In addition to the occasional construction delays they will also sometimes close whole sections of road (for uninterrupted night construction) between 10 PM and 8 AM in the morning, if you are running late and get caught at night in the wrong area it CAN be a LONG way around to your CG! (The entrance stations will have current construction information or go on line to check it out)

Then there is the elevation- YNP ranges from a low at Mammoth- 6239 ft to 7784 ft at Fishing Bridge or higher if you go hiking and there are passes on the grand loop road that are close to 8000 ft or so! Drink plenty of liquids and pace yourself when walking.

I recommend that you get up EARLY, leave the CG and be back by 4 or 6 PM have dinner and be sitting in your recliner drinking a cool one when your neighbor drags himself back to the CG at 8-10 PM. Remember that from mid May to mid July in YNP the sun doesn't set until about 9:30- 9:45 PM then there is a long twilight.

Cell Phone Service- Only at the major visitor centers, otherwise non-existent!

Clothing- Especially in the early or late season it is not unusual to have a 30 or even the occasional 40 degree temperature change throughout the day. Dress with easily shed layers of clothing. Also dress in bright easily seen clothing. I am sure that we all have been to a sporting event, parade or Disney World etc. and we blink our eyes and our partner/child has disappeared. My DIL was born and raised in HI, you guessed it, every Xmas, b-day or Father's Day I receive a Hawaiian shirt. One of them is shiny black with 4-5 inch dia. bright flowers. Not many of them in Wyoming and in YSNP, that is what I wear. If your partner has on a Violet blouse and a Orange scarf with a Pink hat I guarantee that she will be the only one within the boundaries of either NP. It can save you a few anxious moments.

Water- Now I will have to contradict myself, at the altitude of YNP yes, drink lots of water! HOWEVER, be aware that the flush toilet restrooms are are in the major tourist areas- Mammoth, Canyon, Fishing Bridge, Lake Hotel, Bridge Bay, Grant Village, Old Faithful, Madison Junction etc. The geyser basins and other thermal attractions areas only have pit toilets. I have seen the pit toilet line at the lower Geyser Basin (2 R/Rs) 25 or more feet long (bless the tour buses) So be smart about drinking your water and use the major tourist area R/Rs before leaving the area! I.e. “Never pass up a flush toilet!”

Sun- At YSNP altitude the Sun is intense (uv)have and apply sunscreen, wear that old floppy wide brim sun hat, wear Sunglasses!

If your luck is like mine Old Faithful will have just erupted when you get there and you will have up to a hour and 10 to 15 minutes wait for the next one. Tour tour the O/F Geyser basin while waiting. O/F INN is a must see, reportedly the largest LOG building in the U.S. (Meals in the O/F Inn dinning room are “A OK” also.

We have lived about 110 miles from West Yellowstone, MT since 1964, go to YSNP 3-4 times a summer (normally before Memorial Day and after Labor Day) and haven't seen it all yet! So don’t be discouraged that you didn’t have the time to see all of it. Just plan on coming back another time!

I honestly don’t mean to scare or discourage you but to give you a heads up as to what to expect! After all there was 4.1 million visitors in 2015! As far as I know we didn’t lose one of them. Except those who by their own stupidity step off the board walks into BOILING HOT water and ignoring the warnings about the WILD ANIMALS! That is called purifying the gene pool!

Note I have seen on this blog and others about folks “day tripping” from YSNP to GTNP, it is done all the time (myself included) however remember this is BIG country and with the speed limits, animals and thermal attractions you will be doing a LOT of driving. From Grant Village Visitor Center (extreme S/E corner of the lower loop road) to Jackson, WY is about 80 miles with Coulter Bay being about 1/2 way then from Grant Village you have to add the distance to your CG it will be a Long days trip!

A point of Coulter Bay (GTNP) clarification- there are two (2) CG’s at Coulter Bay, One the “Coulter Bay RV Park” a full service “RV Park” with FHU’S that takes reservations. The other is the “Coulter Bay Campground “ has no hookups and doesn’t take reservations. Both have about 300 sites and are basically across the road from each other.

When in the Jackson area I highly recommend seeing the Bar J Chuckwagon dinner show! If you go, MAKE RESERVATIONS and BE THERE EARLY TO PICK UP YOUR MEAL TICKETS/ TABLE SEATING ASSIGNMENTS! They seat you by when you show up to get your tickets NOT by your reservation number. Tim, their fiddle player has won the "Idaho state old time fiddle contest 7 times and the US open fiddle championship twice". If you decide to go you will sit at picnic type of bench seats/table, they get pretty hard, I recommend that you take along a blanket/pads to sit on. We day trip it there 2-4 times every summer just to see them! Disclaimer- We have no financial or other interest in the Bar J only that it will be the best $$ value for your money on your trip! Check out their website.

http://www.barjchuckwagon.com

Also in Jackson check out the “COWBOY” bar, the bar stools are saddles and the # of Silver Dollars in the bar. The Wort Hotel Bar (just around the corner from the Cowboy Bar) also has Silver Dollars imbedded in the Bar
2017 GMC Denali 3500 4x4 Duramax
2019 Outdoor RV (ORV) Timber Ridge 24RKS

yr2017
Explorer
Explorer
agesilaus wrote:
Well Rocky Mountain NP is about 1800 miles, 4 days easy travel, South Rim of the Grand Canyon is about 2000 miles or 4 and a half days. Rocky Mountains isn't the greatest NP but if your family has not been out west much you'll enjoy it. Lots of real mountains, Mountain Goats, Elks and so on. There are a number of rother parks in Colorado's east side that you could visit too.


Excepting for the bison and stinky water, you're better off at RMNP - the view there is spectacular.
Still would do the fly/drive
Big AL
DOD - 02 APR 2020 - CANCER

prichardson
Explorer
Explorer
Anything less than three weeks will leave you worn out from driving especially if towing a trailer is new to you. While Yellowstone should be on your "bucket list"; I would save it for when there is time for the journey to be as much fun as the destination.

greyhook
Explorer
Explorer
We're from western NY and we've done Yellowstone twice using two weeks of vacation each time. In each of those trips we visited Badlands, Rushmore, Devils Tower, Yellowstone, Craters of the Moon and Grand Teton. It's 1900 miles to YNP from here so if you condense it to maybe just Yellowstone and Grand Teton, it can be done. We have dedicated "travel days"(about 700 miles a day)--a necessity for a trip like this. Do not listen to people who say it can't/shouldn't be done. If you're ok with the driving, do it. If you've never been there, it will be the trip of a lifetime, highly recommended!!
Sights in YNP; Old Faithful(of course), Lower Falls, Artist Point, Travertine Terraces in Mammoth Hot springs, Grand Prismatic Spring.
You might have luck in Grizzly RV Park in West Yellowstone but I'd call ASAP, the CGs in YNP will be a challenge to book this late. Colter Bay cg(not the one with hookups) in Grand Teton usually has spots open. Good luck!

ppine
Explorer II
Explorer II
When I was young we did such things. You need 3 weeks or it will be a driving marathon.

agesilaus
Explorer III
Explorer III
Well Rocky Mountain NP is about 1800 miles, 4 days easy travel, South Rim of the Grand Canyon is about 2000 miles or 4 and a half days. Rocky Mountains isn't the greatest NP but if your family has not been out west much you'll enjoy it. Lots of real mountains, Mountain Goats, Elks and so on. There are a number of other parks in Colorado's east side that you could visit too.
Arctic Fox 25Y Travel Trailer
2018 RAM 2500 6.7L 4WD shortbed
Straightline dual cam hitch
400W Solar with Victron controller
Superbumper

Gulfcoast
Explorer
Explorer
600 miles a day is way too much for my family.
RV'ing since 1960
Dodge Cummins Diesel
Mega Cab
Jayco Travel Trailer

agesilaus
Explorer III
Explorer III
The four day drive time is a bit optimistic unless you really push hard. It's about 2300 miles so you are talking about 600 mile days. And that is from North Florida, add another day from South Florida. If you don't know this it is a very bad idea to exceed 60 mph when towing a TT. We've made the trip a number of times from Florida and I'd put it at 5 days each way. With stops for fuel and other reasons you can probably figure on 50 mile/hr on average traveling. So that would be 12 hour days, start at 7 AM and drive to 7 PM. You'll be exhausted on arrival.

My advice try somewhere closer. One trick I used was to start the first day of a holiday preferably a Friday holiday. That gives another day or so and a two week block is actually 16 days since you have a weekend on each end if you start your vacation on a Monday.
Arctic Fox 25Y Travel Trailer
2018 RAM 2500 6.7L 4WD shortbed
Straightline dual cam hitch
400W Solar with Victron controller
Superbumper

BB_TX
Nomad
Nomad
Inside YNP there are some first come/first serve campgrounds with no hookups that will probably be your only option if you want to stay inside the park. Otherwise check for openings at West Yellowstone for sites with hookups. P

It is over 2,300 miles Tampa to YNP south entrance. 600 miles is a long day. 600 miles for 4 straight days is really long. And that means no real stopping along the way. Even on interstates you will probably average about 55 mph factoring in rest stops, fuel stops, eating.

IB853347201
Nomad
Nomad
If you were hoping to go this summer, I would have booked my camping already.
2010 Suncruiser

yr2017
Explorer
Explorer
Mmartinez10903 wrote:
Prospective travel trailer owner here. Looking to take family from Florida to Yellowstone for the summer. Can this be done adequately in a two-week block or will I need three weeks? How soon do I need to book our sites? Are there any places we “have” to see or stay at? Any insight is appreciated. I realize this is opening a giant can of worms.
Thanks to those who respond.


Takes a 4 days to drive out and another 4 back if you don't stop and view the landscapes. Take 3 weeks to see everything.
If you don't already own a trailer, consider a fly/drive - fly to Denver and rent a class C there
Big AL
DOD - 02 APR 2020 - CANCER