Wednesday, August 27, 2025

Planning for the Yellow Stone - Phase 2

The next phase in planning for the journey across the western plains involved identifying exactly where we were going to stay, as well as  what might be worth investigating along the way.

Most of where to stay had been decided in the previous, based on availability of lodging and reviews of available lodging.  It was time to narrow things though.

Indeed, the stay in Lincoln had been driven by the alternatives.  Anywhere else within 3-5 hours of home along our route proved wholly unacceptable.  The reviews of establishments along I-80 ranged from horrible to down right frightening, leaving one to wonder if the area were being terrorized by desperados.  It was Lincoln who seemed the only safe haven.  We will confirm that in the post mortem.

The interstate hotel terrorists final destination might as well be Casper.  It seemed to host the same issue with much of the establishments.  We were lucky enough to find a basement apartment Air BnB.  A little more luck and we will survive the night long enough to make a break for Yellowstone the following morning.

image borrowed from YellowstoneParkLodges

The middle of Yellowstone seemed to be the best choice all around for those arrangements.  Rates at Canyon Lodge & Cabins seemed reasonable enough for base camp, and we could not think of a better way to become acquainted with the park, especially if we end up snow bound.

Locating a place more specific than the general locale turned out a much easier exercise for the journey homeward.  Our estimates indicated that adequate overnight facilities were very likely facilitated by a lack of proximity to any highly traveled roadway, in particular the interstate system.

In the midst of all of this decision making was going on, I also began scanning the route for various points of interest.  Actually, this had been happening all along, I just focused on it a bit more.

All of the routing had already been plugged into MyMaps.Google.com.  Adding sights to see was a natural evolution for this situation. 

Locating interesting objects along the way is more awkward and time-consuming than it should be these days. I am not sure who to hate for that, excepting maybe mobile device design trends and an inability of software makers to fully understand user needs.

image borrowed from NewEgg

The best trip planning software Microsoft could produce still trumps anything available now.  "Streets and Trips" could do all of this in a flash.  One could plan a route more easily, get relatively accurate estimates of travel time and costs, customizable based on your specifications, as well as easily identify any sort of category within a certain distance of the route.   For the life of me, I will never understand why such useful software is abandoned.  Nothing even comes close these days.

Lacking that most useful tool, the only option is manual review, which consists of zooming down to whatever scale enables a view of about a couple of miles or so of the route, then simply scanning the route for anything nearby. It does give one a sense of the proximity of more serious points of interest, like somewhere to eat.  That is not something that can really be planned.  It is nice to know available options at end points though.

The result of all of this maneuvering appears in the map below.  When the post mortem is conducted, the actual detailed maps will be shared along.


The only thing to plan now is the visit inside Yellowstone itself.  Given the number of layers already present in the little mapping application, a special map will need dedicated to the next phase.

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