These are the facilities at Walker Jenkins Lake, a fishing hole that was, originally, an open pit Uranium Mine.
We'll let you ponder that for a second.
Fairly typical rural facilities for Wyoming, and a nice example.
A blog dedicated to those necessary and anticipated features of travel in the West. . . the highway rest stop.
These are the facilities at Walker Jenkins Lake, a fishing hole that was, originally, an open pit Uranium Mine.
We'll let you ponder that for a second.
I should really have started this blog with this entry, as more than any other Wyoming rest stop, it's the one I've stopped at the most.
It's a small, but typical, rest area of this type. The Wyoming Wildlife sign has suffered from the elements heavily over the years, and the weather in this area is frequently bad. Isolated when first built, and largely still pretty isolated, a small village now exists across the highway from it, housing Wyoming Department of Transportation crews who keep the highways open, or try to.
In that sense, this is one of the more rustic, in terms of atmosphere, Wyoming rest areas. It has picnic benches and the like, but I never see them actually used. It's old enough that I can recall it having a pay phone, and there was an area rancher who had never had a phone put in at his headquarters as late as the 1990s, who used the phone at the station if he needed to.
This much welcome and nicely maintained rest area is between Riverton and Dubois. It's large, in addition to having the regular WYDOT a...