I never enjoy hearing that alarm go off at 4 AM in Cooke
City, but I have learned to treasure this morning. It is the moment when our
group is finally tied together-- in the way many groups are united-- by a common uncomfortable experience. My
travelers have to finally ante up. Up to this point, they have just had to climb
into the vehicles and let us whisk them away to amazing places in (generally)
total comfort. But this morning is when folks face the facts that wolf watching
is never easy. No matter how fresh the fruit, how experienced the guides, or
how nice the equipment, there is no way to get around the reality that the best
experiences in this ecosystem happen at first light, if they happen at all.
Discomfort is required.
I like getting to
breakfast early to watch the group arrive over a cup of tea. Many folks stumble
into the dim café, sit down next to the fireplace, and quietly look down at
their cup of coffee, groggily sipping away. Others come in with their guns
drawn, hollering about the snowmobilers ripping down main street at 3 in the
morning. Others arrive in a bewildered and disheveled haze, clearly not having
woken up this early in years. The most straitlaced traveler lets his guard down
a bit, arriving in purple sweatpants and eating his bacon with his hands. Everything
smells like coffee and blueberry pancakes. There is a blizzard outside that has
to be navigated in the darkness to get to the restaurant from the hotel a
hundred yards away.
Our naturalist friend Dan Hartman has these inquisitive pine martens living around his cozy log cabin. A world-class naturalist of an endangered breed, Dan invites us into his home to share stories and cookies with us. Occasionally, one of these beautiful martens appears just outside the living room window to listen in on Dan's tales. |
I go outside and shovel a foot of snow off the roof of the vehicle. Then I figure out which of the four gas pumps in town will turn on that morning. I need four-wheel drive just to make a turn around the pump without sliding into the dozen snowmobiles lined up next to the service garage. The only lights in town are coming from the Sinclair gas sign, the inside of our cozy restaurant, and a streetlight down the road illuminating a dog and nothing else of importance.
My anxiety builds alongside the group’s. You can be in the right place (Yellowstone’s northern reaches), at the right time (before first light), with every possible controllable variable under control. Then all you can do is hope. You’ve flown in from New York or New Zealand, paid a thousand dollars or a million, been motivated by mere curiosity or by a lifetime dream to see a wolf in the wild, but the animals are the great equalizers. They will show up or they won’t. At some point, between bites of muffin or sips of coffee, this realization gradually materializes in every traveler, and we roll out of Cooke City, unified, into the first glow of dawn.