国产吃瓜黑料

GET MORE WITH OUTSIDE+

Enjoy 35% off GOES, your essential outdoor guide

UPGRADE TODAY

The iconic snowcoaches have operated in the park since 1954.
The iconic snowcoaches have operated in the park since 1954. (Photo: brytta/iStock)

For Sale: A Clunky (But Awesome) Piece of Yellowstone History

The beloved Bombardier snowcoaches are headed to the auction block

Published: 
The iconic snowcoaches have operated in the park since 1954.
(Photo: brytta/iStock)

New perk: Easily find new routes and hidden gems, upcoming running events, and more near you. Your weekly Local Running Newsletter has everything you need to lace up! .

You can now own one of the world鈥檚 most bizarre and听iconic over-snow vehicles. And while the Transformer-esque听Bombardier听snowcoaches听get appalling gas mileage, are noisier than a wood chipper munching shrapnel, and cost a fortune to maintain,听they have skis for wheels, beastly V-8 engines that will annoy the hell out of your neighbors, and a vintage-cool听factor.What鈥檚 not to love?听

Next year,听Yellowstone National Park will implement tougher noise and fuel-efficiency standards. So it鈥檚 auctioning off the听majority of . The first batch sold out听quickly鈥攚ith prices ranging from $10,000 to more than $12,000鈥攁nd a second round is slated to听hit the soon.听

Introduced in the winter of 1954鈥55, the听Bombardiers听were made by a now-defunct French Canadian company.听鈥淭hey鈥檙e a joy to drive and a wonder to see,鈥 says Leslie Quinn, an interpretive specialist with Xanterra. Thirty-six years ago, Quinn started his career driving the Bombardiers. In those days, the vehicles didn鈥檛 have governors to regulate speed. 鈥淭hat first year, I got one up to 58 miles per hour. The Dodge V-8 engine was at almost 6,000 rotations per minute.鈥 These days, max speed is about 32 miles an hour. (Note: if you buy one, you can take the governor off. Quinn might even offer to help you.)

When the Bombardiers were introduced 62 years ago, they replaced an earlier (and even weirder) snow transportation concept: the snow plane. 鈥淪now planes were essentially an airplane fuselage with the wings cut off and skis attached,鈥 says Lee Whittlesey, park historian for Yellowstone National Park. The Bombardiers,听which get a whopping 3.5 miles per gallon on a good day,听were more affordable and made winter access to听 easier.

Still, they didn鈥檛 exactly open the floodgates.听Yellowstone National Park gets only听5 percent of its annual visitors during the cold months. That means only a tiny fraction of lucky Americans have ever ridden in a Bombardier, and after this year鈥檚 snow melts, getting a lift in one will be even harder.听

But it won鈥檛 be impossible. One concessionaire, , has several Bombardiers retrofitted to meet the park鈥檚 new standards. It will continue using them to make听trips through the park. The only difference: the听vehicles are painted red, not yellow, in a throwback to the original stagecoach days. Yellowstone also plans to keep at least one Bombardier for its archives,听although it won鈥檛 be in driving听condition. 听

Xanterra plans to听replace the Bombardiers with buses outfitted with听giant, balloon-like tires. 鈥淭hey鈥檙e quiet, more fuel efficient, and more comfortable because you face forward,鈥 says Quinn. (The Bombardier seats were U-shaped and faced backwards.) They鈥檙e also boring and soulless, and,听for the man who听spent the past 30听years driving the beastly vehicles, the transition is bittersweet. 鈥淚 asked one of the drivers today if I could take [a snowcoach]听to breakfast. It probably wasn鈥檛 even a mile, but I wanted to drive it one last time,鈥 he says.

Quinn won鈥檛 bid on the government auction, citing the high cost of maintenance, but he has advice for whomever does snag one: 鈥淪teer early and often.鈥

Lead Photo: brytta/iStock

Popular on 国产吃瓜黑料 Online