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Waypoint Tours : Grand Teton National Park Tour
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Explore the fascinating highlights, history, geology & nature of Grand Teton National Park with this entertaining, educational, point-by-point Waypoint Tour - your personal tour guide for Grand Teton travel adventure.
Genre: Spoken Word: Audiobook
Release Date: 2008
Grand Teton National Park Tour Record Label: Waypoint Tours
  • Buy CD - $17.95
  • Download Album (MP3) - $9.95
SPECIAL: 40% discount if you buy more than one copy of it today!
Preview Song Name Time Format Price Select
Grand Teton 3:19 $0.99
Mormon Row 3:02 $0.99
Schwabacher Landing 2:36 $0.99
Snake River Overlook 4:04 $0.99
Cunningham Cabin Historic Site 3:07 $0.99
Oxbow Bend Turnout 3:06 $0.99
Jackson Lake Lodge 2:58 $0.99
Colter Bay 4:14 $0.99
Jackson Lake Dam 3:17 $0.99
Signal Mountain 3:27 $0.99
Mount Moran & Cathedral Group Turnouts 3:04 $0.99
String & Leigh Lakes 2:23 $0.99
Jenny Lake Overlook 2:35 $0.99
South Jenny Lake & Hidden Falls 3:10 $0.99
Teton Glacier Turnout 3:15 $0.99
Menor’s Ferry Historic Area 4:02 $0.99
National Elk Refuge 3:48 $0.99
Jackson, WY 2:59 $0.99
Teton Village 2:41 $0.99
Yellowstone 3:08 $0.99
Waypoint Tours 0:47 $0.99
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Album Notes

This CD & DVD Complete Tour Package Includes:
* Audio CD Driving Tour & DVD Narrated Tour
* Full-Color Maps, PC Screensaver & Digital Photo Gallery

Grand Teton Tour

Grand Teton is the triumph of national parks. It was the land that everybody wanted for something else, but was instead preserved as a national park for all to enjoy. Most travelers only get a few windshield glances at the majestic mountains as they pass, hurrying through on their way to Yellowstone. The good news is, this means you won’t have to share the grandeur of Grand Teton with quite so many others.

First, there is a multitude of wildlife to watch, and while number one on almost everyone’s hope-to-see list is a bull Moose, that’s just the beginning. Bison, Elk, and Pronghorn can be viewed in the sagebrush meadows along the back roads. Signal Mountain is a good place to look for Black Bears. 225 miles of trails lead hikers to secluded wonders beyond the reach of roads. Ponds, lakes, and rivers offer canoeing, boating and rafting. Lake Trout and native Cutthroat Trout make these waters all the more exciting to the skilled angler. Eagles, Hawks, Pelicans, Herons, Geese, and Osprey, among others, ply the skies and the waterways. They are sustained by the land and waters our forbearers had the wisdom to preserve.

Though not as obvious as the landscape, but ever-looming in history, is the Tetons’ role in defining conservation compromises. Grand Teton National Park is a compromise in every sense of the word. Though most of the park’s 310,000 acres are federally-owned, Teton also contains over 100 private in-holdings dating back to the late 1800s. Those who settled here called it Jackson Hole.

The park also issues over 700 Elk hunting permits each year. Commercial jet airliners roar over the southern portion of the park making hourly landings and take-offs from a regional airport inside the park’s boundary. However, if it weren’t for these and many other compromises, the natural glory of Grand Teton might never have become a national park and therefore never made available for millions to enjoy.

And last, but certainly not least, there are the mountains. – archetypical mountains, they are towering majestic peaks, glacially-carved and snow-adorned; the kind of mountains that all other mountains aspire to be. As the story goes, an unknown lonely French Fur Trapper named the mountains—Les Trois Téton. Since he selected three of the grandest peaks for that name, it’s doubtful he was reminiscing about any one particular woman.

This is the opening chapter in the always interesting, often ironic, and occasionally amusing story of one of America’s most controversial national parks…. Grand Teton.
Welcome to Grand Teton National Park!

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