Green River Wyoming White Water Park And Expedition Island
Another Beautiful Morning for Flying
Expedition Island Park in Sweetwater County, Wyoming
Take a virtual stroll through Expedition Island State Park in Sweetwater County, Wyoming.
Drone View around Green River, Wyoming HD
Went from the House to Expedition Island
Green River , WYOMING
I unloaded on the little island park.
Drone View Rock Formations Green River Wyoming HD
Another Flight around Town
with some great music from Cocoon, Lord of the Rings, and Brave Heart. by James Horner and Howard Shore. Enjoy
Green River Wy
Please watch: jumping into the river, snow run off Gopro Hero 5
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Green River, wy walk
uncut no color correction
UP Train is coming
thumbs down only with comments
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Canon 7D Mark II
Canon 6D Mark II
Hero 5
Hero 6
Canon HF G40
Memory SD Card
Rode wireless mic
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My Home Town, Green River, Wyoming
What is a hometown? What does your hometown mean to you? How have you been impacted by the people of your hometown? Watch to see what all these things mean to me as I share my hometown in story and in art. Meet those who have impacted me and what I have become.
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Please watch: Painting Independence Hall - Ep 5 National Park Series with Eric Dowdle
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Home- A photo slideshow of Green River, Wyoming
Final Project for my Photography class. We could do it on any subject we chose, I decided to do mine on my home town, where I grew up. Pictures are from around Green River, Wyoming and the Flaming Gorge.
Paddling Labyrinth Canyon on the Green River - TMWE S3 E60
In this episode we go on a 3 day paddling expedition in Labyrinth Canyon. We paddle 45 miles on the Green River, starting in Ruby Ranch and ending at Mineral Bottom in Moab, UT. Follow along as we travel with friends and family on this memorable trip.
Looking for a seriously durable inflatable kayak ,SUP or canoe? Check out our Sea Eagle buyers guide then head to to place your order.
HUGE thanks to Sam and Jess from for joining us on the trip and for sharing Sam's amazing drone footage. The Curren family has been living full time in their Airstream for 3 years now, and they have an awesome website. Check em out
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Ep. 109: Island Park | Idaho RV travel camping
The area of southeastern Idaho known as Island Park is mostly a large crater, or caldera, named the Henry's Fork Caldera that was created by the same volcanic hotspot that created the later and much larger Yellowstone Caldera nearby. For the July 4th Independence Day holiday we find a boondocking camp right on the water at Island Park Reservoir for a little kayaking and camping with friends, while visiting Mesa Falls and Harriman State Park in this little town with a very unique history, just 25 minutes from Yellowstone National Park.
Filmed: July 1-6, 2019.
FOR MORE INFORMATION
* Our campsite
* Mesa Falls
* Grandview Campground
* Harriman State Park
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* All music in this episode is open source and obtained from the YouTube Audio Library or licensed from Soundstripe
ABOUT US
Welcome to Grand Adventure, a YouTube channel that focuses on RV-centric outdoor activities including not only of course camping, but also mountain biking, hiking, kayaking, skiing and more, nearly always filmed in stunning 4K.
We're based in Salt Lake City, Utah, and invite you to come along as we travel all around the western U.S. My wife Patricia and I, and our dogs Zoe and Maggie are avid boondockers, so you'll seldom find us in RV parks or even dry campgrounds. Instead, we're usually camped in some of the most remote and beautiful spots that you could ever pull a travel trailer into. And unlike most other RV channels on YouTube, we're not RV dealers or full-timers -- we're weekend warriors just like you!
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Murphy Lake, Wyoming with Jesse's drone
Murphy Lake, Wyoming
The Wind River Highline Trail, Wyoming
The Wind River section of The Continental Divide Trail with a side trip into Titcomb Basin. 7 days and 78 miles hiked in July 2018. One of my favorite mountain ranges in the states!
Green River Wyoming High School Graduation 2007
Throwing balloons
Powell Expedition 150th Anniversary Green River, WY May 24th 2019
To celebrate the Sesquicentennial of John Wesley Powell’s first expedition, a group led by Professor Thomas Minckley is floating the same route explored by Powell and his crew in 1869.
To monitor their whereabouts, visit the link below from which some of the following text was sourced:
On May 24th, 1869, the ten men of the Colorado River Exploring Expedition stood at the banks of the Green River in Wyoming prepared to enter into a region of the United States known only as “unexplored territory.” The expedition was to enter into the “Great Unknown,” take scientific measurements, chart the region, and effectively complete our nation’s maps. To John Wesley Powell, unexplored territory was unacceptable and unknowns were opportunities for greater understanding. Powell and his crew traveled over 900 miles from Green River, Wyoming to the mouth of the Virgin River, in present-day Lake Mead, through a wild, largely uninhabited system of river canyons. The West was a new and final frontier, ripe for development and lacking only a system for the manipulation of the Colorado River’s water, a subject Powell addressed in his “Report on the Lands of the Arid Region of the United States”. By erasing empty space and, in turn, leaving only defined place, Powell’s journey fueled a western migration that continues today.
The unexplored territory of 1869 through which the Colorado River Exploring Expedition was the first to travel in a continuous, deliberate progression continues to be explored by adventurous boatmen and boatwomen. Powell’s unknown has become a highly visited, studied and managed environment encompassing five states, two U.S. Forest Service units, three Bureau of Land Management field offices, three U.S. Bureau of Reclamation reservoirs, two U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service refuges, and five Nation Park Service units The Colorado River Basin also continues to support indigenous groups in five Native American reservations.
In many ways, experiences similar to those of the Colorado River Exploring Expedition are available through the stewardship of public land management agencies. However, our perception of place and the resulting relationship to the environment of the arid West are easily distinguished from Powell’s time. The Colorado River Exploring Expedition embarked from Green River, Wyoming armed with “two sextants, four chronometers, a number of barometers, thermometers, compasses, and other instruments” (Powell 1875, pg. 8) and began a process of complete geographic, geologic, and topographic surveys of the American West. The linear progression of the systematic and methodological utilization of water resources— a process commenced by Powell’s surveys of the arid region of the United States—has led to a contemporary Great Unknown, one in which we have inherited a system of management built upon incomplete scientific knowledge and techniques better applied in more humid regions. This system has begun to show weaknesses and has forced reactive management as pressures increase from climatic uncertainties, increased populations, compact obligations for water allocations, and most recently a move to privatize 640 million acres of public lands. Today, nearly 150 years after Powell, a methodological lineage exists between his systematic inquiry into the unexplored territory of the arid West and the complex plumbing of the modern Colorado River system that supports over 40 million Americans through storage reservoirs, irrigation, and transbasin diversions.
The 150th anniversary of the Colorado River Exploring Expedition offers an opportunity to once again begin a systematic and deliberate expedition into the unexplored territory of Western economies, politics, and ideologies as they relate to the water resources of the Colorado River Basin. Powell was able to travel through a continuous, natural riparian ecosystem. This experience is no longer possible, as the system is now separated into two basins, with three major dams, 15 management areas, and over 20 significant laws governing the allocation of Colorado River water. Because of these major differences, this expedition is not a reenactment of the past, but rather a re-envisioning of our future that engages traditional, historic, and contemporary river ecosystem perspectives to derive proactive management strategies, integrating community values, science, and humanities through an analysis of culture, informed management, and traditional ecological knowledge.
#powell150 #paperpowell #findafeature
Green River KOA, Rock Springs, Wyoming
Green River KOA, May 2018
Explore Rock Springs & Green River, Wyoming
In Southwest Wyoming, it’s not just about getting here; it’s about getting out. Don’t just vacation. Explore in Rock Springs and Green River, Wyoming.
Check out TourWyoming.com for in depth details!
Pilot Butte in Rock Springs, Wyoming
Pilot Butte in Rock Springs, Wyoming
Green River with Jeff
On The Green River Wyoming playwave with my son several years ago.
Green River Indians 1
Green River, Kentucky. Cherokee Yuchi Shawnee Kaskaskia
Wild Horse Canyon - Green River Wyoming
Car ride thru small portion of Wild Horse Canyon Northeast of Green River Wyoming.