Regions of Wyoming
Where to go in Wyoming, broken down by region so you can decide where to base yourself.
Jackson Hole & the Tetons
Northwest Wyoming and the headline corner: Grand Teton National Park, the south gate to Yellowstone, the town of Jackson, the Snake River, and the biggest concentration of skiing, lodging, and guides in the state.
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Cody & Yellowstone Country
The Bighorn Basin and the east approach to Yellowstone: Cody and its nightly summer rodeo, the Buffalo Bill Center of the West, the Chief Joseph and Beartooth scenic byways, and the wildlife-rich Lamar and North Fork valleys.
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Wind River Country
Central Wyoming and the state's quiet adventure base: the granite Wind River Range, Lander and Sinks Canyon, Pinedale, Dubois, and the Wind River Reservation, with high-alpine backpacking and blue-ribbon trout water.
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Sheridan & the Bighorns
North-central and northeast Wyoming: the Bighorn Mountains and Cloud Peak, historic Sheridan and the Brinton ranch country, the Bighorn Scenic Byway, and Devils Tower out toward the Black Hills.
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Southeast Wyoming
The capital corner along I-80 and I-25: Cheyenne and Frontier Days, the college town of Laramie, the granite domes of Vedauwoo, and the Snowy Range above Centennial.
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Southwest Wyoming
The high desert and red-rock south: Flaming Gorge and the Green River, Rock Springs, the Wind River front at Pinedale, fossil country at Fossil Butte, and the pronghorn plains of the Red Desert.
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