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Scenic Drives: Three for the Road - Wyoming
Amazing family-friendly scenic drives in
Alaska, Hawaii, and Wyoming
by Candyce Stapen
The road from Yellowstone National Park to Cody, Wyoming, is
known as "The most scenic 52 miles in the U.S" (Corel)
Buffalo Bill Cody Scenic Byway
Highway 14/16/20 from Yellowstone National Park to Cody, Wyoming:
52 miles
President Teddy Roosevelt called the stretch of road from Yellowstone
National Park's (www.nps.gov/yell/home.htm)
east entrance to Cody, Wyoming, the "most
scenic 52 miles in the U.S." The land along what has since
become the 27.5-mile Buffalo Bill Cody Scenic Byway, route 14/16/20,
hasn't changed much since Roosevelt uttered his tribute.
The drive parallels the North Fork of the Shoshone River
and pulls you through the Shoshone National Forest
(www.fs.fed.us/r2/shoshone)
and the Wapiti Valley. The steep granite walls
of the Shoshone Canyon reflect the sunlight, cottonwoods line
the riverbanks, and the highway cuts through gorges surrounded
by yellow and pink mesas, buttes, and bluffs with names like the
Slipper, Laughing Pig, and Chimney Rock. Look carefully and you
might see Bighorn sheep and elk clattering over the boulders,
while bison graze the adjacent grasslands. This is the West of
pioneer treks and movie scenes.
In Cody, learn more Western lore at Old Trail Town
(http://museumoftheoldwest.org),
a collection of 26 authentic, turn-of-the-century log buildings,
including the Hole in the Wall Cabin where Butch Cassidy and the
Sundance Kid plotted, and Trail Town Cemetery,
where pioneers and mountain men lie buried. Cody is also home
to the Buffalo Bill Historical Center (www.bbhc.org),
often called the "Smithsonian of the West." Besides
artifacts of the famous showman and his sharp-shooting star Annie
Oakley, the complex houses the Whitney Gallery of Western Art,
a first-rate collection of Western paintings and sculpture; the
Cody Firearms Museum, a comprehensive collection
of guns; the Plains Indian Museum, an intriguing
display of Native American clothing, ceremonial garments, and
artifacts; as well as the Draper Museum of Natural History,
with informative exhibits on the geology of the Yellowstone area.
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