[Geysers] Tiny Geyser pictures?

Mario Durrant yellowstone17 at bridgernet.com
Fri Sep 8 22:08:58 PDT 2006


Hi Scott,

Thanks for your reply, I really appreciate your taking time to answer my questions.  I have wanted to come several years running now to the annual gazer meeting around July 4 to kind of introduce myself, but always seem to have to work.  Of the really great gazers I have only met Lynn Stephens and the Schroeders before, and would love to get to know more.  I have been a Yellowstone devotee ever since I was 9 years old, when I saw my first Daisy (1980), but had to put it on the back burner for years while I attended school, etc.  The past six years I have really been able to spend more time there and do at least one backcountry trip every summer.  Most of the time I work as a small animal veterinarian in northern Utah.  

Anyway, thanks again for your email, I will make sure we get back to Geyser creek sometime when Tiny is active so I can be sure to find it.  I'm one of those small geyser fans-- Ivory at Heart Lake is probably my favorite, but I also love Rusty in Biscuit basin and the Anemones on geyser hill.  

Mario
  ----- Original Message ----- 
  From: TSBryan at aol.com 
  To: geysers at wwc.edu 
  Sent: Thursday, September 07, 2006 9:47 PM
  Subject: Re: [Geysers] Tiny Geyser pictures?


  In a message dated 9/7/2006 6:05:13 PM Mountain Standard Time, yellowstone17 at bridgernet.com writes:
    One more stupid question-- In a Norris report some time ago Mike Keller had mentioned the unnamed perpetual spouter across from Pearl geyser as vigorously active and playing to 3-4 feet (see third picture down below)-- maybe it's because of the new boardwalk, but I had never noticed this thing until this year although it seems like it would be hard to miss; is this an old spring newly reactivated or have I just totally been blinded by the exhilaration of being in Wonderland?? :)  I swear I have never seen it before this year-

  Mario:

  Although I have not printed them out so as to closely examine them, your photos appear to NOT show "Tiny Geyser." However, I am notr at all sure what they do show. As for the feature at Norris, you must have been blinded as that thing is not new this year. The spring you show in your photo is "newly" erupting in 2006, as shown, but the complex as a whole has been in existence for several years now, constant change not withstanding.

  Scott Bryan

  Mario: wish we'd meet one day!


------------------------------------------------------------------------------


  _______________________________________________
  Geysers mailing list
  Geysers at wwc.edu
  https://mailman.wwc.edu/mailman/listinfo/geysers
-------------- next part --------------
An HTML attachment was scrubbed...
URL: </geyser-list/attachments/20060908/87c0f323/attachment.html>


More information about the Geysers mailing list