choudrantpd wrote:
I found Longhorn Ranch RV Resort which is about 1 1/2 hr. away in Dubois, WY
That is over 100 miles each way to the Grants Village Visitor Center. Much closer to 3 hours each way, especially because you have to drive through a busy part of Grand Tetons NP.
Once inside Yellowstone NP, if you can average 25 mph, it will be an exceptionally uncrowded day. And you won't see any of those in May, if all the roads are open yet.
You will have a lot of daylight in May. The charts show about 14 hours of daylight on May 1, 15 hours on May 20.
Yellowstone NP Daylight The 'Grand Loop' from the South Entrance up past Old Faithful, Madison, up to Mammoth Hot Springs, back down via Tower Falls, Yellowstone Canyon and the lake and Grants Village back to the South Entrance is about 190 miles.
That is a seven to eight hour drive - if you do not get out of your vehicle to really look at any of the wonders of the park.
We stayed at a USFS dry campground on Earthquake Lake during our last visit on Labor Day weekend 2017. The crowds were very light according to the rangers and people working the shops and restaurants in the park.
The Grand Loop was too long for us to make in a single day. We did three days and split the loop in half. A full day and a half on the south loop and another very long day on the north loop. 12 to 14 hour days.
Staying in Dubois you will be over 80 miles from the park entrance.
I'd suggest you look for reservations in West Yellowstone, or Gardiner, MT.
We left via the East entrance to Cody, Wy. It took almost 4 1/2 hours to cross the park. Towing my rig is 62' long. The size wasn't a problem.
Just the stop and go traffic for 30 minutes near Madison for an Elk Jam, then at least an hour and a half for two Buffalo Jams between the Canyon and the Lake.
West Yellowstone also has plenty of other services such as small stores and restaurants. May will be before the busiest season.
I assume you are looking at staying in Dubois partially because you will be arriving from the east/ south of the park. The 150 or so miles towing through the park each way on arrival and departure probably looks like wasted fuel and time. It isn't. You will spend as much or more fuel and time on the 'daily' commute to and from the park.
We were on our way from a summer on the Oregon and Washington coasts and had to make a firm arrival date in Texas. I would vastly have preferred to stop near West Yellowstone, and then a couple days in Grand Tetons. Maybe this summer.
Also, make sure you have a park pass of some type. Even on Labor Day with low attendance because of few school age children, the pass line at the entrance station moved much more quickly than the other four or five lines to get into the park.
Have fun, especially if it is your first trip to Yellowstone. It's going to cost more than you planned, but it will be worth it.
Took me 64 years to get there, and even though smoke from some fires obscured some of the views, every minute, every hour and every penny was worth the chance to see such an incredible amazing place.
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