Wyoming/Montana/Alberta
The Best of the Grand Tetons to Banff: Iconic National Parks
Program No. 20524RJ
Explore six national parks — Grand Teton, Yellowstone, Glacier, Waterton, Banff and Jasper — and discover unique waypoints like Old Faithful, Many Glacier, Lake Louise and much more!
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12 days
11 nights
30 meals
11B 9L 10D
1
Check-In, Orientation, Welcome Dinner
Jackson Hole
3
Grand Teton National Park, Yellowstone National Park
Canyon Village
4
Yellowstone National Park, Old Faithful Geyser
Canyon Village
8
Travel to Waterton, Buffalo Jump, Canmore
Canmore, AB
12
Program Concludes.
Calgary
At a Glance
Prepare yourself for an adventure of monumental proportions — a journey through six national parks in Wyoming, Montana and Alberta Canada. The Rocky Mountain colossus must be seen to be appreciated, and your journey will take you to Grand Teton, Yellowstone, Glacier, Waterton, Banff and Jasper national parks. Experience famous waypoints like Jackson Hole, Old Faithful Geyser, Mammoth Hot Springs and Lake Louise as you learn about the geology, history, flora and fauna of the Rocky Mountains.
Activity Level
On Your Feet
Walking up to one mile daily. Standing for up to one hour with optional seating available. Elevations up to 8,041 feet.
Best of all, you’ll…
- Visit the massive Columbia Icefield and venture by snowcoach onto the surface of the Athabasca Glacier.
- Experience the Crown of the Continent via the Going-to-the-Sun Road as we traverse Logan Pass aboard Red Jammers in magnificent Glacier National Park.
- Discover Head-Smashed-In Buffalo Jump, and witness an Aboriginal hunting practice that was used by Native people of the North American plains for almost 6,000 years.
General Notes
Transit days include one six-hour and two three-hour drives. Field trips and transit days include stops along the way, and motorcoach is equipped with a lavatory.
Featured Expert
All trip experts
Cynthia Blankenship
Cynthia Blankenship fell in love with Earth science in 9th grade and never looked back. She is a geologist, outdoor enthusiast, and award-winning speaker. After two degrees in geology from Duke and Rice Universities, and 30 years in the energy industry, she is pursuing her next career passion: to make the geology of Jackson Hole understandable and fascinating for all. Through innovative displays and clear explanations, Cynthia will delight with a heightened understanding of the powerful forces that created this magical place.
Please note: This expert may not be available for every date of this program.
Jack Gladstone
View biography
Jack Gladstone is a storysmith and troubadour from the Blackfeet Nation of Montana. Regarded as a cultural bridge builder, he produces programs on indigenous history and tradition. Jack has released 15 critically-acclaimed CDs, and garnered the prestigious Best Historical Recording award from the Native American Music Association. A former college instructor and Smithsonian scholar, Jack has opened shows for Rita Coolidge, Garrison Keillor, and Bonnie Raitt.
Morag Mottram
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Morag Mottram was born in Scotland and immigrated to Toronto in 1964; she moved to Canmore in 2004. While managing the Banff Springs Hotel fitness facility, she started leading hikes and running nature-based programs for visiting groups. As a certified Professional Interpretive Guide, she gives presentations and leads hikes and interpretive walks as a step-on bus guide and trip facilitator. Her interests include music—she plays the oboe and English horn in several Calgary ensembles—cycling, hiking, kayaking, snowshoeing, sewing, cooking, and reading.
Timothy Raben
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Tim Raben grew up in Rapid City, South Dakota and attended the University of South Dakota and North Central College in Illinois. Tim and his wife Karen saw much of the country during his career in insurance. Following his career, Tim and Karen were business consultants in the Chicago area until 2004 when they retired back to Rapid City. Tim has always enjoyed culture, history, travel, and people. Tim loves running and achieved a lifetime goal by completing the Boston Marathon.
Cynthia Blankenship
View biography
Cynthia Blankenship fell in love with Earth science in 9th grade and never looked back. She is a geologist, outdoor enthusiast, and award-winning speaker. After two degrees in geology from Duke and Rice Universities, and 30 years in the energy industry, she is pursuing her next career passion: to make the geology of Jackson Hole understandable and fascinating for all. Through innovative displays and clear explanations, Cynthia will delight with a heightened understanding of the powerful forces that created this magical place.
Michael Snyder
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Michael Snyder grew up in the Black Hills near Sturgis, South Dakota on a family-owned cattle ranch as part of the fourth generation along with his two brothers working cattle, riding horses, and driving tractors. Attending college at South Dakota State University led him to internships for the South Dakota State Legislature and United States Senate along with study abroad in Florence, Italy. After graduation, Michael got involved in the travel sector and began leading trips across the country and around the world.
Pat Van Eimeren
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Pat Van Eimeren, originally a “cheesehead” from Wisconsin, has been in Montana for more than 30 years. He recently retired as a Fisheries Biologist for the Flathead National Forest. Pat has a passion for wild places and wild creatures. In the winter, he works atop Whitefish Mountain Resort as a Mountain Ambassador, and in the summer he will be deep in the solitude of the Bob Marshall Wilderness with a fly rod in hand. He enjoys all the recreational venues that Montana has to offer.

Nikki Heim
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Nikki Heim has been working in the field of natural resource sciences for over 15 years throughout western Canada and the northwestern United States. She held roles in terrestrial wildlife ecology, focusing on understanding population dynamics of medium to large-sized carnivores and promoting wildlife co-existence, gaining a foundation in landscape ecology and wildlife management. In her free time, you can find her in the woods playing with her pup Koda, hiking, skiing, climbing, or enjoying improving her skills in nature photography.
Mike Pflaum
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Mike Pflaum grew up in southeastern Minnesota and graduated with honors from Mankato State University with a B.S. in recreation and parks administration with minors in geology and earth science. He retired at the end of 2021 after a 41-year career with the National Park Service where he held a variety of positions, including naturalist, park ranger, and park superintendent. Mike enjoys photography and discussing the value and importance of parks and large landscape preservation. Mike has been a Road Scholar group leader since 2022.
Natallia Fodemski
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Natallia Fodemski began her career as a group leader in 2009. She started a small business, and led private and group outings including hikes and adventures all over Colorado State, gradually adding other states. In 2019, she graduated from International Guide Academy in Denver with a Certificate of International Tour Director and Guide. She also has years of experience working as a program coordinator at the Center for Creative Leadership and at Colorado College Fine Art Museum.
Suggested Reading List
(6 books)
Visit the Road Scholar Bookshop
You can find many of the books we recommend at the Road Scholar store on bookshop.org, a website that supports local bookstores.
The Best of the Grand Tetons to Banff: Iconic National Parks
Program Number: 20524
Wildflowers of Grand Teton and Yellowstone National Parks
The purpose of this paperback book is to picture and describe the beautiful wildflowers of Yellowstone and Grand Teton National Parks as well as the other areas included in the Greater Yellowstone Ecosystem.
Crown of the Continent
A professional naturalist's incredible, personal portrait of America's largest and most pristine wilderness in the lower 48 states: the Northern Continental Divide ecosystem in Montana, Alberta, and British Columbia. This vast area includes two national parks in two countries (Glacier National Park and Waterton Lakes in Canada), three designated wilderness areas, including the famous Bob Marshall Wilderness. This book describes the area's geology, wildlife, plant life, and crucial environmental issues with over 150 stunning photographs.
Rocky Mountains; Smithsonian Natural Histotry Series
The Rocky Mountains are one of the Earth's most spectacular geological features, containing vast stretches that remain wild and untamed. The diversity of life found along the Rockies' 2,000 mile range is so varied that the mountains are divided into three regions: the Northern, Central, and Southern Rocky Mountains. Scott A. Elias discusses the unique features of each region in his comprehensive natural history of "the backbone of the continent." Elias examines the physical environment of each of the three regions, looking at geology, important land forms, climatology, soils, water resources, and paleontology. reptiles, amphibians, birds, and mammals.
Wildflowers of Glacier National Park
Wildflowers of Glacier National Park and Surrounding Areas is a user-friendly guide featuring over 300 of Glacier National Park's most common plant species. From wildflowers to trees to grasses and sedges, this book features beautiful photographs, detailed descriptions, notes on habitat and fun facts for each plant. It's a perfect plant reference for anyone with an interest in the natural history and splendor of Glacier National Park.
The Great Divide: The Rocky Mountains in the American Mind
For most of our Nation's history, Americans have identified with the "purple mountain majesties" of the Rockies. Trappers and debutantes, miners and missionaries, artists and drinkers, escaped slaves, independent women abandoning hoopskirts, and assorted black sheep of respectable families have all sought refuge and inspiration there. This spectacular landscape has always offered a sense of freedom from crowds and conformity--a world, as Frederic Remington described it, "beyond derby hats and mortgages bearing eight percent." Gary Ferguson spins magnificent tales about the vivid characters who have peopled this majestic region, from the original Indian inhabitants and their interactions with European explorers to the delirious victims of gold rush fever, to hippies in the Sixties, to today's adventure travelers in high-tech outerwear toting satellite phones into the wild. Throughout, he explores the ebbs and flows of America's attitude toward the vast expanses that embody our sense of freedom.
Empire of Shadows: The Epic Story of Yellowstone
Empire of Shadows is the epic story of the conquest of Yellowstone, a landscape uninhabited, inaccessible, and shrouded in myth in the aftermath of the Civil War. In a radical reinterpretation of the nineteenth century West, George Black casts Yellowstone's creation as the culmination of three interwoven strands of history - the passion for exploration, the violence of the Indian Wars and the "civilizing" of the frontier - and charts its course through the lives of those who sought to lay bare its mysteries: Lt. Gustavus Cheyney Doane, a gifted but tormented cavalryman known as "the man who invented Wonderland"; the ambitious former vigilante leader Nathaniel Langford; scientist Ferdinand Hayden, who brought photographer William Henry Jackson and painter Thomas Moran to Yellowstone; and Gen. Phil Sheridan, Civil War hero and architect of the Indian Wars, who finally succeeded in having the new National Park placed under the protection of the US Cavalry. George Blacks Empire of Shadows is a groundbreaking historical account of the origins of America's majestic national landmark.