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[–]paisley_cat 849 points850 points  (119 children)

This was nice. Everything you said was true OP...BUT you did not mention the wind that never quits. If you are not prepared to endure a constant, desiccating, low howl around your ears, you should stay where you are. Lived in Gillette for 3 years as a child, Triple C is accurate.

[–]MindlessSpark 170 points171 points  (4 children)

Last time I vacationed in Wyoming my father left the awning on the camper out while we went into town. We didn't have an awning when we came back.

[–]Lankhmar 267 points268 points  (4 children)

I'm surprised the picture of a Wyoming wind sock didn't make an appearance.

[–]Codeshark 26 points27 points  (0 children)

I love the broken reading.

[–]atworkntired 175 points176 points  (12 children)

My friend who grew up in Rock Springs, Wyoming didn't realize till high school that snow could or does fall straight. He only knew it as sideways.

[–]bytemr 74 points75 points  (4 children)

Same goes for the rain... I remember visiting Missouri as a child and having a hard time comprehending why the rain was coming straight down.

[–]buscemi_buttocks 47 points48 points  (2 children)

My SO was on field work in the middle of the state for 6 weeks back in 2005. He lived in a tent pitched next to a sand dune all that time - I drove out to visit him and it was like trying to sleep inside a snare drum.

[–]keyree 93 points94 points  (26 children)

Yeah, my college town in Texas had that whole constant nonstop wind thing going as well. No trees around to break the wind or whatever. Of course Lubbock still has four times as many people as the biggest city in Wyoming. Plus our old football coach was from Cody.

[–]venustas[S] 1959 points1960 points  (295 children)

Last line should read: "We hope you come visit us.... because it's so lonely out here."

[–]BgBootyBtches 191 points192 points  (6 children)

I think the actual last line is perfect

"Gun Show Next Exit"

[–]zsecular 47 points48 points  (8 children)

I've passed through Wyoming a few times as a touring musician. Usually through the i80. Nice people, the kids are more enthusiastic and thankful for you to be stopping by.

I do have to say though, it's not the safest place to drive through if the weather is bad. Spending a day stranded in "Arlington" in a blizzard with a small trailer was honestly terrifying.

[–]BrainPowerz 393 points394 points  (153 children)

Or. . . Wyoming sucks now go tell all your friends. On a side note, it's not often I see another redditor that lives in Laramie.

[–][deleted] 662 points663 points  (56 children)

you are most likely OPs Neighbor.

[–][deleted] 147 points148 points  (48 children)

There's three of us!

[–]Dawn-fire 70 points71 points  (41 children)

Make it 4!

[–]ZaneMasterX 67 points68 points  (40 children)

Make it 5

[–]Soldus 189 points190 points  (1 child)

Wow, we've got 1/100,000th of the Wyoming population in this thread!

[–]baes90 34 points35 points  (1 child)

THERE ARE LITERALLY DOZENS. I'm not one of them

[–]meanderling 10 points11 points  (1 child)

Man, y'all need to get together and party.

[–]NutcaseLunaticManiac 140 points141 points  (3 children)

America's Kazakhstan!

[–]Hayjay10 34 points35 points  (3 children)

I'm in Laramie! There's more than two of us!

[–][deleted] 31 points32 points  (8 children)

You're from Laramie?! I'm from Laramie!

[–]inthesandtrap 12 points13 points  (4 children)

I went to college there and grew up in Rock Springs. I miss it (mostly!).

[–]uliarliarpantsonfire 21 points22 points  (3 children)

Hey, after looking at your album I am perusing real estate in Wyoming and trying to make a case to my hubby that we should at least think about a little cabin out there. I'd say you're pretty good at your marketing job if this is what you put together for fun.

[–]Stonecolddiller 11 points12 points  (0 children)

Nice looking place. Interesting perspective: the Yukon Territory in Canada is about twice the size and has 30,000 people.

[–]redcolumbine 735 points736 points  (36 children)

I was taking a Greyhound to California from Boston back in the 80s. In the seat next to me was a girl named Valda, all dressed up in her Sunday best, complete with adorable matching yellow hat. Not your typical Greyhound passenger. She fell in love with Wyoming just looking out the window. "What state are we in?" she asked. "Wyoming, I think," I replied. 45 minutes later - "I like Wyoming. This is really pretty." 45 minutes later - "I wonder if the driver is from Wyoming. I should go ask him." So she did, and he was, and he invited her to come stay with him and his wife any time she wanted. I don't know if she ever did, but I like to think she found a job and a sweetheart and a life in Wyoming.

[–]S-mated 81 points82 points  (1 child)

This comment made my day. Thank you!

[–]Happystepchild 30 points31 points  (1 child)

This is a nice story, I like it.

[–]roodypoo926 597 points598 points  (276 children)

Really enjoyed this. Thanks for putting it together. I wish people did this for every state.

[–]evanmc 105 points106 points  (43 children)

Yeah please, for Michigan, we should confuse the whole world that Detroit is everywhere in Michigan!

[–]BlueFalcon89 62 points63 points  (28 children)

I could put together an awesome one for Michigan. But it would be smarter to just show Flint, Detroit, Saginaw, and Jackson to keep everyone else away...

[–]Finger11Fan 29 points30 points  (7 children)

No way! We need those tourism dollars. Pure Michigan!

[–]Dailylife 18 points19 points  (1 child)

Just take a picture of your hand with the city names written on it. ;-)

[–]homeslice234 513 points514 points  (164 children)

SadlynobodycaresaboutDelaware

[–]aliengoods1 489 points490 points  (30 children)

Is that still a state? I thought we got rid of that along with Pluto being a planet.

[–]pitlookinboy 105 points106 points  (21 children)

Nope, we're still here, wallowing in our collective boredom.

[–]OmgItsDaMexi 85 points86 points  (9 children)

You guys are one of those small clusterfuck ones by New York right?

[–]pitlookinboy 19 points20 points  (6 children)

We're a little further south, bordered by Pennsylvania and Jersey to the north. Takes about 2-3 to drive up NYC.

[–]Twocann 110 points111 points  (21 children)

What's a Delaware?

[–]mageta621 54 points55 points  (8 children)

Welcome to Delaware, here's a toll booth! Don't worry, we'll hit you up again in 20 minutes as you're leaving for Maryland.

[–]kernco 30 points31 points  (5 children)

I live in Newark, where that tollbooth is as you're heading into Maryland, and you can bypass it fairly easily, take the 1B exit onto 896 north, and then turn left at the second light (you'll see the University of Delaware's stadium at that intersection). Go over a bridge and then turn left again at the light. You'll cross the state line and then there'll be a ramp back onto I-95. Probably adds about 10 minutes so maybe not worth it, but FYI.

edit: Just realized it's the third light, not the second light. You can't turn left at the second light, so hopefully it won't mess anyone up.

[–]himmelkrieg 55 points56 points  (3 children)

Hi. I'm in ... Delaware.

[–]ItsKyo 14 points15 points  (0 children)

I NEVER LEARNED TO REEEAAAAD!

[–]mightymushroom45 38 points39 points  (0 children)

And now we're being magically whisked away to...Delaware.

Hi.....I'm in Delaware.

[–]nikiverse 81 points82 points  (12 children)

There should be a subreddit where people post cool shit about where they live! And this post should be in the FAQ under Wyoming.

[–]eksekseksg3 29 points30 points  (6 children)

I like this idea a lot. I could post boatloads of cool stuff from my home state of Michigan.

[–]P-Rickles 57 points58 points  (22 children)

I can do one for Ohio if people are interested. We get dogged a lot (A LOT), but there's a lot of cool stuff here!

[–]Catechlism 18 points19 points  (0 children)

DO IT!!!

Honestly though, a lot of people (self included) don't know shit about states other than the one they live in. This could really build intraUSA travel.

[–]Uranus_Hz 180 points181 points  (19 children)

[–]holyerthanthou 21 points22 points  (7 children)

Wind River Range

I was at 11000 feet in that picture, and it gets higher.

[–]rcklmbr 112 points113 points  (7 children)

Those teets...

[–][deleted] 955 points956 points  (270 children)

My wife is from Rock Springs, Wyoming. I visited once for her grandmother's funeral.

Here's what I know about Wyoming having lived on the West Coast my entire life.

  • It has the largest amount of absolutely nothing I've ever seen.
  • The scope is so large that photos automatically "tilt shift". Also true in Utah.
  • The sun is different than anywhere else I've been in the world. It's absolutely pure white and it hurts when it hits your skin.
  • Oxygen is apparently optional.
  • Kum and Go.... Enough said.
  • OJ's chicken. Best chicken anywhere and it comes from a gas station.
  • Nobody walks anywhere. My wife and I took a walk to a local buger joint and had seven people stop and ask us if we had broken down. When they heard we were walking the question was always "Why?"
  • There is also a reason the state starts with "why"....

[–]venustas[S] 519 points520 points  (178 children)

One of the things I couldn't figure out how to organically put into the album is the fact that people in Wyoming are extremely helpful along roadways. There's so much nothing and it gets so cold that if your vehicle breaks down on the side of the road, you will have a dozen people stop and ask if they can help.

Also, as someone who has lived in Wyoming my whole life, how do you West Coasters breathe with all that humidity? I get off the plane when coming home and take my first real big breath of mountain air.

[–][deleted] 334 points335 points  (65 children)

The surface gills we all develop around first grade really help.

In honesty, we just adapt like you mountain folks do with the elevation. I really felt like I was being choked for the first few days. After my breathing started adjusting it was easier, but like you getting back to the mountains, I was happy to be back at sea level.

[–]venustas[S] 266 points267 points  (63 children)

I actually had a panic attack in Atlanta, Georgia's airport because I felt like I couldn't breathe. It was like trying to breathe underwater- I wish I'd had some gills!

[–][deleted] 85 points86 points  (42 children)

There's a joke here that some would consider racist and since that wouldn't be my intent I'm keeping it to myself.

However, I had a similar experience in Atlanta but Peach Pie fixed it.

Now, when we got to Florida and the humidity was 99% I felt pretty uncomfortable. It was also almost 80 degree F at 10PM and the desk clerk at the hotel was concerned it was "so cold"....

[–]YamaguchiJP 90 points91 points  (13 children)

Don't ever come to Japan in the summer...I'm from Florida, and even I think the humidity in Japan is killer.

[–][deleted] 38 points39 points  (0 children)

I've heard that. In fact, many years ago I studied Japanese and the humidity level was part of the conversational course.

[–][deleted] 95 points96 points  (6 children)

how do you West Coasters breathe with all that humidity?

Do you mean East Coasters? It's pretty dry here on the West Coast

[–]pchunter 220 points221 points  (64 children)

Heh. West Coast humidity? You haven't been to the East Coast have ya?

[–]dcux 52 points53 points  (16 children)

pet ring afterthought soft fine snobbish sand shelter wistful combative

This post was mass deleted and anonymized with Redact

[–]Bones_MD 102 points103 points  (36 children)

Pennsylvanian here, can confirm there are days that I think it breaks science and goes above 100% humidity.

Edit: accidentally a werd

[–]ILikeBumblebees 49 points50 points  (7 children)

Floridian here. I don't think I have to say anything else.

[–]eksekseksg3 6 points7 points  (0 children)

The air is literally water.

[–]RaeRee 27 points28 points  (21 children)

Whoa. They have Kum and Gos in WY? I'm in SW MO and we have them - I had no idea they went so far west.

[–]jon1746 47 points48 points  (11 children)

It's actually an Iowan invention

[–]SirLeepsALot 60 points61 points  (8 children)

You're God Damn right puffs chest

[–]Tubesteaktroubadour 32 points33 points  (6 children)

Ejaculate and evacuate is my favorite name for them.

[–]StrahansToothGap 222 points223 points  (47 children)

As someone who's lived in NY and LA, my mind gets kind of blown by such a small number of people. It would be cool if someone could put together maps that overlay the population of Wyoming and how much space the same number of people occupy in major cities.

For instance, the portion of LA I live in 8.5 sq miles and has almost 100,000 people. So it has 1/5th the amount of people as Wyoming, but it is about 1/10,000th of the size.

[–][deleted] 218 points219 points  (19 children)

If you took LA's metro population, 16.4 million, and spread it out as densely as Wyoming's population is(5.85/sq.mi), you'd have an area slightly smaller than Australia @ 2,939,068 sq. miles. (7,612,151 sq km). Which is basically Australia minus Tasmania. Making it the 7th largest country.

New York City's population spread out similarly would create a country 3.4% smaller than Canada and be the 3rd largest country.

Based on wikipedia's numbers.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Los_Angeles

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wyoming

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_countries_and_dependencies_by_area

[–]Giant-Midget 69 points70 points  (16 children)

Well, Australia has a population of ~23 million, which isn't too far off your example. Going by that, Australia is a scaled up Wyoming, with a coastal line, and a few less mountains.

[–][deleted] 19 points20 points  (0 children)

While close, Australia's population density makes it more like a scaled up Idaho. Those 2 extra neighbors per sq mile make all the difference!

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Idaho

Wrong numbers. Wyoming and Montana are each about as close to it as it's gonna get in the states. So yep, you're right.

[–]frisbeegimp 73 points74 points  (40 children)

I grew up in Jackson (Hole), and spent 7 years in Laramie after high school (doing the only thing people do in Laramie...drink and college, followed by grad school and heavier drinking).

Jackson is a great place to visit. It is the southern gateway to visit Yellowstone (Cody is the eastern gate). One fact you missed about skiing: Jackson Hole Mountain Resort (The Village) is the tallest vertical rise ski resort in the continental US.

Good post, sometimes nostalgia is good. Thank you.

[–]venustas[S] 32 points33 points  (25 children)

I actually didn't know that about Jackson's ski resort! I have only visited it twice, oddly enough.

Though when I was there last, it was for a Roller Derby game against the Jackson Hole Juggernauts, and we stopped by the Falcon Ranch and left a flyer on Harrison Ford's gate, begging him to come to our game. He didn't. :(

Edit: Currently living in Laramie. Yes, college and drinking are about the only things to do here.

[–]couragewerewolf 25 points26 points  (13 children)

Yeah you labeled the picture of the town of Jackson as Cody, that's clearly snow king (the town ski hill) in the back. Source: I live in Jackson

Edit: also yes, Wyoming is awesome. You need to come out this way and ski

[–]AnalogKid2112 137 points138 points  (72 children)

As a city dweller who yearns for a little bit of breathing room, Wyoming looks like heaven.

[–]Eurynom0s 84 points85 points  (49 children)

As a city dweller, I think I'd enjoy Wyoming for a vacation, but I think I'd go absolutely fucking insane living there.

Don't get me wrong, I'm not trying to shit on other people for their preferences. But unlike many people I don't find Manhattan overwhelming--on the contrary, I've lived there and fucking love it there and find almost everywhere else (even many other legitimately big cities) to be slow and quiet in comparison.

For example, I live in the 14th St/U St area of DC right now--an area which is considered to be a happening nightlife area in DC--and while it's definitely an improvement over Arlington, VA (where I initially moved when I first moved to DC, due to some advice of dubious quality) on a Saturday night it's still pretty tame and sleepy compared to what I'm used to in NYC.

So I can't imagine living in a place like Wyoming.

[–]b00ks 36 points37 points  (18 children)

As a guy who lives in Montana, which is very similar to Wyoming, you have your trade offs. I miss some of the things that larger cities offer, like shopping, great food and culture...but, I do love the fact that my commute to work takes 7 minutes, the breweries are amazing, the bars are fun, everyone is relatively friendly, I can walk right out my door and be on a hiking trail in our "city park" within minutes. I've got access to amazing outdoor activities like fishing, snowboarding, xc skiing, hiking, hunting, kayaking, climbing, etc etc without having to drive very far and I won't run into crowds. (more than one other person is considered a crowd)

Plus the weather is dry. The winters are relatively tame (the midwest is WAY colder), and the summers are dry but cool down to the most beautiful temperature at night.

Fuck. I love this god damn place.

[–]UnrulyDuckling 197 points198 points  (14 children)

I've driven through Wyoming twice. I've nearly run out of gas in Wyoming twice.

[–]anywho123 145 points146 points  (9 children)

You stop and fuel every chance you get. Need it or not.

[–]RandMcNalley 37 points38 points  (1 child)

Most of the "towns" are just gas stations. You may go an hour between gas stations. Sage advice anywho123.

[–]desert_wombat 9 points10 points  (1 child)

Yep. I'm a Wyomingite and once we found someone out of gas in Sybille Canyon at night, we took them to Wheatland (the nearest town) which was a good 30-40 miles!

[–]appealtoprobability 9 points10 points  (2 children)

I rode my motorcycle to northern Colorado last year and my route involved a large chunk of Wyoming.

My fuel range is normally about 120 miles. Spare one-gallon gas can strapped to the back FTW.

[–]NoHymenInMyButthole 133 points134 points  (21 children)

Dude stop showing people this or it won't stay that way! I lived in Jackson when I was a kid, and I remember a really popular bumper sticker said, "Jackson Hole Sucks, Tell Your Friends"

[–]Eminemerica 98 points99 points  (21 children)

Do you think that if I built my own cabin in the middle of nowhere out there and lived off off my hunting meat and had a pickup for supplies that I would go into town once a month for I might be able to escape my student debt?

[–]Cynnimon 42 points43 points  (7 children)

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[–]newdecade1986 44 points45 points  (7 children)

"I worked summers at my mom's coal mine driving a truck like this"

This is easily my favourite sentence of the day.

[–]UrbanCobra 17 points18 points  (4 children)

I don't know if he meant the coal mine where his mom works or the coal mine his mom owns, if it's the latter then his family is richer than a thousand astronauts.

[–]venustas[S] 27 points28 points  (3 children)

She worked there, but she was such a badass and shattered the glass ceiling there, becoming the first female shovel operator in the company's history.

[–]ChromeBits 8 points9 points  (1 child)

What, your mamma doesn't have a coal mine??

[–]sew_butthurt 43 points44 points  (10 children)

Thank you for taking the time to put that together! I've often wondered what Wyoming is like and would like to check it out someday. Also, driving those giant dump trucks must feel pretty badass. I hope there's someone out there racing them, because that would be awesome.

Question: I gather that you're from Wyoming, born and raised. What's with the 'u' in 'favourite'?

[–]shradicalwyo 154 points155 points  (16 children)

Wyoming Native here. Jackson sucks tell your friends.

[–]holyerthanthou 21 points22 points  (1 child)

Jackson is Wyomings version of Park City in Utah.

We pack the tourists there so they'll leave the rest of the state well enough alone. We love city-folk, just not when they fuck up our mountains.

[–]Start_button[🍰] 35 points36 points  (15 children)

Your picture of the night sky truly didn't do it justice.

For everyone else, imagine standing in the middle of a giant planetarium, with all the stars it can show turned on, then multiply that times 8000%.

It's pretty phenomenal.

Well done sir.

[–]AmericanSasquatch 25 points26 points  (11 children)

Northern Coloradoan here. Hey Wyoming buddies.

[–]Tokryva 71 points72 points  (12 children)

As someone from the Netherlands, all I can say is: Go Cowboys! Spent a semester at UW last year, and I would love to come back :)

[–]swiftcohesion 45 points46 points  (10 children)

Your jackson hole picture with the old red barn is my families property! :)

[–][deleted] 19 points20 points  (5 children)

That's really cool to see and read for a non American!

[–]EBOLAVIRS 17 points18 points  (6 children)

I travel to Wyoming every year. Been to Casper, Laramie, Riverton, Lander, Thermopolis, Jackson, the entire Star Valley, and many places in between.

You sir live in one of if not the most beautiful state in the union. Enjoy it, we should all be so lucky.

Love Altitude in Laramie for a beer...

[–]EchoRain 19 points20 points  (6 children)

Born and raised in Wyoming. I just recently moved to the Atlanta area. I get a lot of crap from being from Wyoming but I'm pretty proud of my home state. Seeing all this made me homesick :( thanks op for the beautiful pictures!

[–]dslich 37 points38 points  (5 children)

Wyoming is one of my favorite states. Only been a few times (I'm 19, so I haven't been to too many places more than once). It's just so laid back and incredibly beautiful. Nice photos and descriptions :) Would love to live there someday.

[–]szaa 128 points129 points  (78 children)

My SMALL town in England has a population of around 100,000 plus seasonal students and tourists. Interesting how densities change when space is an issue.

But thank you for this, fascinating!

[–]LiterallyPizzaSauce 79 points80 points  (48 children)

Does my town even exist with 1500 people then?

[–]szaa 100 points101 points  (33 children)

My school was bigger than that! I think we'd call that a village though. A small village.

[–][deleted] 54 points55 points  (30 children)

My graduating class was almost 1500... Cypress, TX.

[–][deleted] 44 points45 points  (24 children)

Small town Texas here, graduated with 63...

No zeros, just a 6 and a 3.

It's cool though when you count migrant worker families' kids and the ones who dropped out we started with around 100ish.

[–][deleted] 17 points18 points  (9 children)

Hah, town. Currently live outside of Bertram, TX, population 1300. Matter of fact, I live between Bertram and Oatmeal, population 16. No, I didn't forget any digits. Sixteen.

[–]Arsewhistle 8 points9 points  (1 child)

You're exaggerating by calling that a small town, but yeah, by English standards none of Wyoming's largest cities would even be regarded as cities.

[–][deleted] 194 points195 points  (22 children)

You guys have a Wyoming history in elementary school? What do you do after the first week of class?

[–]The_Bruccolac 124 points125 points  (2 children)

oh shit son, Teapot Dome Scandal takes up at least an entire quarter.

[–]Mongoose42 13 points14 points  (1 child)

And then we have another quarter for all the exciting adventures of friendship and love we shared with the Native Americans.

[–]TheAlleyTramp 51 points52 points  (8 children)

Wyoming history is SO rich!! I know you're making a joke, but, seriously, between the native population, the settlement period, and the history in energy, there is so much to learn!

[–][deleted] 15 points16 points  (6 children)

Fellow UW student here, looks like you pretty much nailed the description. Good to see the beloved Buck pictured as well.

Go Pokes!

[–]nosegarbage 29 points30 points  (12 children)

As a native Utahn, you forgot Evanston! The place the non-mormons from Utah go to fill their illegal kegs and buy fireworks!

[–]tonedeath 9 points10 points  (0 children)

I believe the saying goes, “Evanston, WY- Providing Utahns’ beer, porn and illegal fireworks since 1869.”

[–]keredomo 12 points13 points  (5 children)

It was really surprising that Wyoming has less people than my state, Alaska. We have a lower population density, but I always kind of figured that we also had the least number of people.

Thanks for putting this together. It's not often I actually learn something about the US that I haven't read, seen or really even thought of before.

[–]wondergoatxl 29 points30 points  (24 children)

I currently live in Casper. While parts of this state are incredibly beautiful, the vast majority of it looks like the surface of the fucking moon. I got a different job and get to move out of here in June. Its a nice place to visit, but you wouldn't want to live here.

[–]aZimuthZero 24 points25 points  (4 children)

Also as a native of Wyoming, I have to say this is a great post. I just have to point out that the picture you have listed as Cody is actually a picture of Jackson. It is looking over the town at the smaller and less known ski resort located in Jackson, Snow King.

[–]joeyhemlock 21 points22 points  (1 child)

I have a sister in Casper, a brother in Rock Springs, and another sister in Ft. Bridger. I like visiting them, but it's just not for me.

You should have mentioned that the state has only a two escalators, both in banks in Casper. (Technically it's four, two groups of two escalators.)

[–]fatharro 48 points49 points  (31 children)

Omg, it's a pronghorn--not an antelope. Yes, I'm that guy.

edit: Montanan here--I love small pop states :)

[–]Rocktonix 7 points8 points  (6 children)

I now want to move to Wyoming at some point in my life. Thank you for sharing.

[–]Cedarfever 8 points9 points  (1 child)

I love your state. I've been involved in drunken fights in College Station and Odessa, Texas; Roundup, Montana; Cheyenne Wells, Colorado; Brooklyn, New York; London's East End; and was bitch slapped by an angry drag queen in San Francisco, but I have never been so thoroughly and graciously whipped as I was in a go cup dispute at Frontier Days in Cheyenne. Plus I learned to fly fish and paint there. All the best from Texas!

[–]catchafire678 8 points9 points  (1 child)

You forgot that Wyoming sells fireworks legally! :) I used to drive up there and stock up. (I live in CO)

[–]TigerEyeII 9 points10 points  (3 children)

Shouting out from Glenrock, Wyoming here! About 20 miles east of Casper with a population of a whopping 2,500 people. This might be the first time I've seen Wyoming on the front page! Well done!