
What Creatures LURK In Wyoming Teton Lakes? Tourist Wonders
The various lakes in front of the Grand Tetons in Wyoming are cold and deep.
What LURKS in them?
A tourist from the UK wants to know.
According to him, we have
Some really mental wildlife in Wyoming.
He wants to get on a paddleboard and head out into the lake, but he's a little afraid to.
That's understandable, since he has heard of the Lockness Monster in Ireland.
He recites a list of wild Wyoming animals that live on land who would kill him if he got too close.
While standing by the lake, he saw some really big fish, and that concerned him.
At the end of the video, he paddles out into the center of the lake, despite his fears.
But all the while, he is talking about what might be in the lake and how he is sure that there must be.
Mirror Lake in Grand Teton National Park is not one of the deep lakes in the park.
While Jackson Lake is the deepest, reaching 438 feet, and Jenny Lake is 256 feet deep, Mirror Lake is known for its reflections and accessibility, not its depth, according to the National Park Service.
With depths like that and how cold and dark the water is, anyone can understand how he might be a little worried about what lurks down there.
All of the Teton lakes are fed by the glaciers and snow that run down from the mountains.
This makes some of the purest and cleanest water in Wyoming.
Or maybe not, if we have some big lake creature pooping in that water.
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