A timelapse of driving our RV, a Tiffin Allegro Bus motorhome, 329 miles from Yellowstone National Park, Wyoming to Missoula, Montana.
Yellowstone 2025
Travel from Yellowstone National Park, Wyoming to Missoula, Montana
We drove our coach 329 miles, about five hours of driving, from Yellowstone National Park, Wyoming to Missoula, Montana.
Here’s a map showing our route, heading northwest:

An interactive map, with potential stops pinned:
An interesting trailer:

Check-out box:

Crowd watching something on the hill; I couldn’t see anything:

A lone bison:

Thermal feature:

Madison River:

Leaving the park:

Welcome to West Yellowstone, Montana:


Hebgen Lake:

Madison River:

Ennis:

We had originally planned to stay at Ennis RV Park, but decided to just push on through:

Route 359 North:

Truck parking closed on I-90 West:

… because they diverted traffic through the parking area due to road works:

Continental Divide:

I-90 West:

Rest area:

Wildlife escape ramp:

Interesting rocks:

Arriving at Jim & Mary’s RV Park:

Our site:

Yellowstone Artists Paintpots area
On our last day in Yellowstone National Park we visited the Artists Paintpots area, then completed the lower loop, with a picnic dinner at a secret picnic area:
A bison swimming across Yellowstone River:

Bison:

Artusts’ Paintpots:













On the way home we had a picnic in a “secret” area that seems to have mostly fallen into Yellowstone Lake:


Yellowstone Old Faithful area
On our fifth day in Yellowstone National Park we visited the Black Sand Basin, the Old Faithful area, and West Thumb Geyser Basin on the way back:
Black Sand Basin:









Upper Geyser Basin:








Old Faithful Lodge:

Old Faithful erupting:


Kepler Cascades:

Continental Divide, elevation 8262, and Isa Lake:


Ducks in Isa Lake:

West Thumb Geyser Basin:







Yellowstone Lamar Valley area
On our fourth day in Yellowstone National Park we visited the Lamar Valley area, all the way to just before the northeast entrance, then over to Mammoth Hot Springs, and around the upper loop:
Bison:

Tower Falls:




Interesting rocks:

Bison in Lamar Valley:



NE Entrance Road:

Bison in Lamar Valley:



Elk in Mammoth:

Mammoth terraces:

Waterfall:

Sheepeater Cliff:

Bison strolling on the road:

Elk:

Bison:

Yellowstone Midway area
On our third day in Yellowstone National Park we visited the Midway area, specifically Fountain Paint Pots and Grand Prismatic Spring, with a spot of shopping in Canyon and a picnic dinner at the Firehole River Picnic Area beforehand. Here’s our route, going around the lower loop counter-clockwise:
Bison jam:




Fountain Paint Pots:





We were standing around the junction of the boardwalk when Jenn spotted a bison approaching, grazing the grass, so we retreated to a safe distance (unlike those people, who are a bit too close):

Rather old and scrawny:




Midway Geyser Basin:




Rather too misty to get a good view:





Yellowstone Norris area
On our second day in Yellowstone National Park we visited the Norris area. We had actually planned to visit the Madison area, but it was a bit busy still, so we continued up to Norris, with a picnic nearby then a walk around the Porcelain Basin of Norris. Here’s our route, going around the lower of the two main loops in a clockwise direction:
A bison on the side of the road:

Picnic dinner at the Norris Meadows Picnic Area:



Norris Geyser Basin:















Yellowstone Canyon area
We seem to visit Yellowstone National Park every couple of years: we stayed in a rental trailer in 2021, stayed for a couple of weeks in our coach in 2023, and here we are visiting for nine days in 2025.
This time, we just concentrated on our favorite locations, for the most part, visiting different areas each day, or more accurately each evening after work during the week.
On our first evening, we visited the Canyon area. Here’s our route:
Grand Canyon of Yellowstone:











Fishing Bridge RV Park, Yellowstone National Park
We stayed at Fishing Bridge RV Park in Yellowstone National Park, Wyoming. (Campground Reviews listing.)
Our fourth stay in Yellowstone, our second in our coach and at this campground. The only place we can stay inside the park in our coach. It’s definitely worthwhile to stay inside the park; it’s a huge place, and the entry lines can be long.
Dates:
- Check in: 2025-08-24
- Check out: 2025-09-02
- 9 nights
Weather:
- Partly cloudy, some rain
- High temps 59-73°F, lows 45-50°F
- Some wind, gusts to 20 MPH, sheltered by trees
Noise:
- No road noise
- No train horn noise
- Lots of neighbor noise
Site:
- #321, pull-through, concrete
- Didn’t need to disconnect toad, parked behind coach
- Somewhat level site; high in front and passenger side; used hydraulic leveling
- Concrete driveway about 70 feet long by 32 feet wide
- 54 feet to neighbors on both sides
- Just grass between sites
- Picnic table
- Tall trees behind site
- Unclean site; lots of small trash (which I picked up)
- Elevation 7,790 feet, front facing south
Utilities:
- 50 amp power, very conveniently located
- 80 PSI water, conveniently located
- Good sewer connection, but too low, conveniently located (1 10-foot pipe needed)
Internet (in usage priority order):
- Starlink: 200-219 Mbps down, 27 Mbps up, 45 ms ping
- RoamLink: 8 Mbps down, 1 Mbps up, 130 ms ping (RoamLink uses whichever is best of AT&T, Verizon, and T-Mobile)
- AT&T: 12-30 Mbps down, 2 Mbps up, 150 ms ping (I have AT&T on my iPhone)
- Campground Wi-Fi: none
Amenities:
- Garbage dumpsters
- Inside Yellowstone National Park
See our previous review on Campground Reviews.
Campground map:

An interactive map:
Our site:





Disappointingly, there was lots of small garbage around the site. People are the worst:

Other sites:





Pretty basic, but the best (and only) place for us inside Yellowstone. We’ll definitely stay here again.
Video: Buffalo to Yellowstone National Park, Wyoming motorhome travel timelapse
A timelapse of driving our RV, a Tiffin Allegro Bus motorhome, 260 miles from Buffalo to Yellowstone National Park, Wyoming.