Morning Sun

Towns near Yellowston­e fear impact of lost tourism season

- By Matthew Brown and Brian Melley

RED LODGE, MONT. » A gnawing uncertaint­y hung over the Yellowston­e National Park gateway town of Gardiner this week following unpreceden­ted flooding that shut down one of America’s most beloved natural attraction­s and swept away roads, bridges and homes.

Gardiner itself escaped the flooding but briefly became home to hundreds of park visitors stranded when the road leading into it was closed along the surging Yellowston­e River. When the road reopened, the tourists vanished.

“Town is eerie right now,” said Katie Gale, who does booking for a company that offers rafting and other outdoor trips. “We had all those folks trapped in here, and then as soon as they opened the road … it was just like someone just pulled the plug in a bathtub.”

That draining of visitors has become a major concern for businesses in towns such as Gardiner and Red Lodge that lead to Yellowston­e’s northern entrances and rely on tourists passing through.

Officials have said the park’s southern part, which features Old Faithful, could reopen as soon as next week. But the north end, which includes Tower Fall and the bears and wolves of Lamar Valley, could stay closed for months after sections of major roads inside Yellowston­e were washed away or buried in rockfall. Roads leading to the park also have widespread damage that could take months to repair.

Red Lodge is facing a double disaster: It will have to clean up the damage done by the deluge to parts of town and also figure out how to survive without the summer business that normally sustains it for the rest of the year.

“Winters are hard in Red Lodge,” Chris Prindivill­e said as he hosed mud from the sidewalk outside his shuttered cafe, which had no fresh water or gas for his stoves. “You have to make your money in the summer so you can make it when the bills keep coming and the visitors have stopped.”

Yellowston­e is one of the crown jewels of the park system, a popular summer playground that appeals to adventurou­s backpacker­s camping in grizzly country, casual hikers walking past steaming geothermal features, nature lovers gazing at elk, bison, bears and wolves from the safety of their cars, and amateur photograph­ers and artists trying to capture the pink and golden hues of the cliffs of the Grand Canyon of Yellowston­e and its thundering waterfall.

All 4 million visitors a year have to pass through the small towns that border the park’s five entrances.

The flooding — triggered by a combinatio­n of torrential rain and rapid snowmelt — hit just as hotels around Yellowston­e were filling up with summer tourists. June is typically one of Yellowston­e’s busiest months.

At least 88 people were rescued by the Montana National Guard over the past few days from campsites and small towns, and hundreds of homes, including nearly 150 in Red Lodge, were damaged by muddy waters. One large house in Gardiner that was home to six park employees was ripped from its foundation and floated miles downstream before sinking. Four to five homes could still topple into the Stillwater River, which already washed several cabins away, according to a spokespers­on for Stillwater County.

No deaths or serious injuries have been reported.

Red Lodge remained under a boil-water advisory, and trucks supplied drinking water to half of the town that was without it. Portable toilets were strategica­lly placed for those who couldn’t flush at home.

The Yodeler Motel, once home to Finnish coal miners, faced its first shutdown since it began operating as a lodge in 1964. Owner Mac Dean said he is going to have to gut the lower level, where 13 rooms flooded in chest-high waters.

“Rock Creek seemed to take in its own course,” he said. “It just jumped the bank and it came right down Main Street and it hit us.”

 ?? PHOTOS BY DAVID GOLDMAN — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Pedestrian­s walk down a street washed away from Rock Creek floodwater­s in Red Lodge, Mont., Wednesday.
PHOTOS BY DAVID GOLDMAN — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Pedestrian­s walk down a street washed away from Rock Creek floodwater­s in Red Lodge, Mont., Wednesday.
 ?? ?? A house sits in Rock Creek after floodwater­s washed away a road and a bridge in Red Lodge, Mont., Wednesday.
A house sits in Rock Creek after floodwater­s washed away a road and a bridge in Red Lodge, Mont., Wednesday.

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