On the mountainside coming down the mountain I stopped at one of the pullouts and noticed a Forest Road going further back into the valley. I checked with my binoculars and I could see people camping in the clearings and they were so scattered they couldn’t have been in a campground. I decided I would check it out when I got down off the mountain.
At the bottom of the road I turned left away from Red Lodge and found Forest Road 2412, Rock Creek Rd. and started following it back the valley. You’ll come to a “T” and you want to go left. If you go right you are going up Hellroaring Road which looks great but it climbs quickly until you are up in the mountains and I think it will be too difficult for most of us. I followed 2412 as it wound around Rock Creek and the road is mostly good but in a few places it’s bumpy and wash-boarded but any car of van could make it. In fact I camped in a spot where there was a 5th Wheel just pulling out, so any rig can make it.
This was one of my all-time favorite camps! It’s surrounded on both sides by tall mountains and I was camped about 50 feet from Rock Creek which is a beautiful creek! Looking south down the valley you can see the mountains at the headwaters of Rock Creek. Looking up the mountain on the east you can see the Beartooth winding its way back and forth across the face of the mountain and it’s kind of fun to watch the traffic working its way up it.
There were a LOT of people camping along the road, but the further I went the less people there were. I found a nice camp with no one else around and spent a great night there. The next day had a gorgeous blue sky so I broke camp and headed back up the Beartooth.
This camp is too far from Yellowstone NP for it to be a basecamp. For that I suggest you camp close to Cooke City which is at the end of the Beartooth Highway. It’s in a beautiful area with beautiful mountains and creeks all around you. Best of all it’s only a few miles from the Northeast entrance into Yellowstone NP so it would make a great Basecamp into the Park. I didn’t go searching for a camp but I had the MVUM to it and it listed many dispersed campsites. I downloaded it as a PDF and took this snip from it.
There are many campgrounds in the area, but I rarely stay at campgrounds. However, there were also numerous signs saying no tent camping or pop-up campers allowed, only hard-sided vehicle. I assume there are so many bears that tents aren’t safe. If you are camping in a tent I would call the Gallatin NF and ask if you could safely camp in a tent there before you go.
Driving the Beartooth is a wonderful experience and having this as a campsite just makes it all the better!
Bob, FR 2412 is the road I camped on for about a week in 2014. I rode my motorcycle to the top of the mountain there. What a beautiful area! I also hiked some there and I believe I had pushed a bear off the trail. As I turned a switchback there was very fresh scat right on the trail. I’m sure glad he heard me and left before I got there!
Greg
I’m glad you got to spend so much time there, Greg. That’s all Bear country and deserves great respect!!
Bob
Nice views for @ permanent camping area; hope U & Cody are having a blast !
My regards, Lucy.
Lucy, for both of us life just can’t get any better than this!
Bob
If I had stumbled across a bear, he wouldn’t have been the only one leaving fresh scat!
I understand the feeling Tommy!!
Bob
Loving these posts since you are totally in my neck of the woods! I’ve been up that road and went to the right – big mistake – the road got so bad that even in my high clearance 4wd I turned around. Definitely will be heading up the road to the area you were in to check it out in a few weeks when we are down there! 🙂 Safe Travels!
Thanks Sherry! I looked that road over from up on the Beartooth and it did not look very inviting to me! You were brave to have tried it at all!
Bob
Hi Bob;
Enjoy reading your blog and all the helpful information you share. Looking forward to getting your book when you get it done.
Just wondering what program you use to put words, highlights and arrows on the pictures you post.
Enjoy your travels
Art
Thanks Art! On the maps those I use the Windows snipping tool and it has a highlighting tool I use a lot and it also has a red pen tool I use. After I’m done with that I save it as a .jpg and open it with Picassa which is a free photo editing program from Google. It has a very simple text tool that I use for all the text. Most of the arrows are just the less than/more than arrows <>.
I highly recommend Picassa!
Bob
Any chance of a cell signal there? I mean THAT’s what’s important. 😉
Al, I think I didn’t even check. I got there late and didn’t have time. I have the bad habit of assuming I wouldn’t so I don’t even bother. That’s a mistake I’m trying to break.
Bob
Simply gorgeous! Perhaps one of these years I’ll get out that way, with or without my wife. She plans to work another eight years, and I’m not sure I can wait that long.
My last few years were torture waiting to finally go. I lost 5% a year in my retirement for every year I retired early so the longer I stayed the better off I was. But I just couldn’t wait! I retired at 52 and lost 35% I have never regretted it for one second!!
I wish you good luck in hanging in their for 8 years! I couldn’t do it.
Bob
Bob,
Thanks for the great pics and info. I was on the Beartooth yesterday and spent the night at Island Lake CG. Sure wish I knew about your campsite. I had no cellular reception on Beartooth once I left Red Lodge until I arrived in Cody, WY. Heading to Yellowstone today.
Omar
Omar, I’m in the Grand Tetons now, if You are going to be around maybe we can get together. I’m waiting for it to cool off then I’m moving, I think to Cody but possibly south to Pinedale.
Bob
Bob,
Below is a link to a recent NYT article talking about how walking in nature helps the brain. The research suggests the same thing you have been saying for years.
http://well.blogs.nytimes.com/2015/07/22/how-nature-changes-the-brain/
Jerry, thanks for that link! There is a huge body of scientific studies that leave no question that being in nature is very good for us and being separated from it is very bad for us. Finally, common sense prevails!
Bob
Hi Bob,
It would be GREAT to meet up with you, but I plan on heading toward the Lamar Valley. If your in the Tetons mid-week I’d definitely meet you. From Tetons I’m heading to Rocky mountains NP most likely.
Omar
Omar, my current (very lose) plans are to go to Cody, WY tomorrow, then the Black Hills for a week, then south toward Rocky Mountain NP. So we might can meet up later.
Bob
Beartooth is great. When I lived in Billings, myself and the kids would run up it occasionally (via Red Lodge) and go find a waterfall to sit at and also have a ‘random picnic’. I believe I know of the road you’re speaking of here. I really like that first picture in your post and it looks like you had a great campsite.
I never got a chance to say this before – but I made it! I’m out doing it/living it, working in Glacier NP this summer. I was the guard on duty when the wildfire broke out. My location was extremely rural (we’ve all been relocated temporarily now) so there were no cell signals and wifi at that lodge was crawling slow. Instead of an office, I now wrangle bears and evacuate guests & staff from wildfires – far from boring. It CAN be done even if you’re not retired. I live in my Scamp full time now, pulled by a GMC Vandura conversion.
If anyone is headed up this way, the East side of the Going-To-The-Sun road from St Mary to Logan Pass is closed yet, but a large part of the park is still open.
That’s great Magicwolf! A Scamp pulled by a van is the ideal full-timing rig! And what way to get started by being a Ranger at Yellowstone! I hope you can make it down to see us this winter in AZ.
Bob
Hi Bob,
Thanks for taking us on your trip. 🙂
I haven’t read anything else you’ve posted yet…Do you take a portable generator on your trips?
Gary, no, I am 100% on solar. I have 380 watts on my van and that meets all my needs! I used to carry a Honda 2000 but i never used it so I sold it. Bob
Wonderful. Looks like we need to go back to Wyoming one day. 🙂