In a message dated 7/17/2006 4:31:10 AM Mountain Standard Time, fanandmortar at hotmail.com writes: July 9 -- 1023 (Ind. 1004) July 10 -- 0415 VR On the 10th, gazers were waiting for Beehive most of the morning before we got the report that a visitor had seen Beehive overnight. It was barely splashing, so the report made a lot of sense. However, this represented the shortest interval by far in the two weeks that I was in the park. Ah, how nicely geysers can reset themselves -- I don't have the exact times, but following that 0415vr eruption, Beehive had another couple of shorts, and then what was unquestionably an interval of 33+ hours (no question but that this was a single interval). That took it from just after 0100 back to late morning-early afternoon, where it now remains. Scott Bryan -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: </geyser-list/attachments/20060717/9d14af0e/attachment.html>