homehome Home chatchat Notifications


Apparently, boiling chicken in Yellowstone's hot springs is illegal

The real information you need to now on a Monday.

Mihai Andrei
February 13, 2023 @ 11:26 am

share Share

You’d think some things go without saying but, well, it’s not always like that. A group of tourists in Yellowstone tried ‘cooking’ some chicken in a Yellowstone hot spring, and as you may suspect, it didn’t go too well.

Good for sightseeing, bad for cooking. Image credit: CC-BY-SA-3.0

Winner, winner

Yellowstone is a true wonder of nature. It’s essentially a supervolcano area where magma lies very close to the surface, heating up the rocks and water. That’s why there are hot springs in Yellowstone — because the molten hot rock heats the water.

But as cool and useful as that can be, you really don’t want to use it for cooking.

To their merit, they came prepared. Two cousins, one neighbor, and their families spent a day canoeing and hiking in one of the more remote areas of Yellowstone Park (the Shoshone Geyser Basin). But reports started coming to the ranger’s office of people hiking with “cooking pots”, says Linda Veress, a park spokeswoman.

The three men had indeed brought big pots to a remote part of the park. They were planning on using the volcanic heat to cook a meal for themselves and their friends and family in the geothermal hot springs of the Shoshone Geyser Basin, the largest backcountry geyser region in Yellowstone National Park. They even came prepared to limit contamination: they wrapped the two chicken in burlap sacks and roasting bags before dropping them into the hot spring.

They got caught before they could try out their concoction (though let’s face it, how good can boiled chicken really be?). The rangers found them and after assessing the situation, they came back with citations, fining the would-be chefs, banning them from the park, and placing them under probation after a night in jail.

Fowl play

Unsurprisingly, cooking in Yellowstone is illegal in several ways. For starters, it’s illegal to go off trails in Yellowstone (and many other national parks). You shouldn’t venture into remote areas. Throwing stuff into hydrothermal springs is even worse. For starters, you’re putting yourself at risk as any splashing can cause serious, maybe even life-threatening burns. You’re also polluting one of the most pristine and unique environments on Earth, so it’s a big no.

The hot springs are also acidic and are likely not good to cook in. They typically contain things like sulfur and chloride which smell bad, taste bad, and really shouldn’t be consumed. So you’re likely to get hurt, you’re fouling the park, and even if everything goes well, you’ll still not have a good meal.

Researchers found evidence that 2 million years ago, some of our ancestors may have cooked some of their food in hot springs. But things are very different now, and there’s basically no excuse for doing this.

To sum it up, if you’re somehow transported into the past or faced with a post-apocalyptic situation and fighting for your life, cooking in hot springs can work — but then and only then. Otherwise, just don’t do it.

There is a local legend though, of an angler catching a fish in Yellowstone and then cooking it in a nearby hot spring without even taking it off the hook. Henry J. Winser described performing this in his 1883 guide for tourists. He caught a fish, and then in front of spectators, dipped it in and out of a hot spring for a few minutes. Yes, the man boiled a fish alive, which today should also be a pretty big no.

Unsurprisingly, Yellowstone has had its fair of people trying to use its hot springs for unorthodox purposes. Some tourists washed their clothes in the thot springs, and many other tourists tossed coins into the pools, treating them as wishing wells. These actions can clog the subterranean vents and affect the local ecosystem.

If you’re looking for some funky ways to cook chicken, here are two ancient recipes taken straight from the history books:

This article has been published more than a year ago and has been edited.

share Share

New Global River Map Is the First to Include River Bifurcations and Canals

GRIT provides a much more detailed look at how rivers merge and split, which could enhance hydrological modeling, flood forecasting, and water management efforts.

Barbie’s Feet Have Something to Say About Modern Womanhood

Barbie's feet are changing from heels to flats, and it says a lot about our society.

Scorpion Stings Are Surging in Brazil with Sting Rates Rising 155%

Climate change and urban sprawl are fueling a surge in venomous stings.

How the US can mine its own critical minerals − all without digging new holes

Rare earth elements are tiny yet essential parts of many of the technologies you use every day. New techniques are making their recovery from US sources increasingly viable.

A pet dog was found alive and kicking 529 days after going missing on a deadly island full of snakes

Meet Valerie, a superdog that survived the Kangaroo island and its deadly snakes. It even gained weight in the wild.

The Cubist of the Undergrowth: Scientists Discover Snail with Picasso-Like Shell

A tiny new snail species echoes the angular spirit of modern art.

9 Environmental Stories That Don't Get as Much Coverage as They Should

From whales to soil microbes, our planet’s living systems are fraying in silence.

Scientists Find CBD in a Common Brazilian Shrub That's Not Cannabis

This wild plant grows across South America and contains CBD.

At 99, David Attenborough Releases "Ocean", The Most Urgent Film of His Life — and It Might Be His Last

Saving the ocean could be the only way

Why Whales Are Like Floating Fertilizer Tanks and It’s Saving Marine Life

Baleen whales shift huge amounts of nutrients, including nitrogen, from high-latitude feeding waters to tropical breeding areas.