Montana Bound: The Road to Yellowstone
As we continued our RV journey across the American West, we left White Sulphur Springs and headed toward one of the destinations I had dreamed of visiting for years—Yellowstone National Park.

The drive itself was an adventure.
Montana was everything I had imagined it would be. Vast open spaces stretched toward distant horizons beneath endless skies. Rolling grasslands, rugged mountains, and quiet highways created a sense of freedom unlike anything I had experienced before.
Highway 89 carried us through some of the most beautiful scenery of our trip. Around every bend there seemed to be another postcard view waiting to be discovered.
Along the way, we spotted a herd of pronghorn antelope grazing peacefully in a green meadow. They appeared perfectly at home in the wide-open landscape, occasionally pausing to look up before returning to their morning routines.

Then came something completely unexpected.
A cattle drive.

One moment we were enjoying a quiet drive through Montana, and the next we found ourselves sharing the road with a herd of cattle being moved by cowboys. Traffic came to a standstill as the animals slowly crossed the highway.
It felt like stepping back in time.
The scene looked as though it had been lifted straight from an old western movie. We sat and watched, smiling as cowboys guided the cattle across the road while travelers patiently waited.

Far from being an inconvenience, it became one of the highlights of the day.
Moments like that cannot be planned. They simply happen, becoming the stories that are remembered long after a trip is over.
As the day continued, our excitement grew with every mile. Yellowstone was getting closer, and after years of wanting to visit America’s first National Park, I could hardly wait to arrive.
Neither of us knew that our adventure was about to take an unexpected turn.