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Contact the Hospitality Desk for
More Information.

Wild Horse Tour

Observe wild horses in their natural habitat on the open prairie
22 miles from Cody. This is an unforgettable experience. Available
by reservation only, $23 per person. Sign up at the MCMLA
Registration Desk.

Cody Trolley Tour

Learn the history of Cody and get a taste of the West from
the tour guides on this trip around the town in the Cody Trolley.
$18 per person. Sign up at the MCMLA Registration Desk.

Welcome Reception at the Buffalo Bill Historical Center

Join your colleagues for appetizers, beverages and fun in
the Whitney Gallery of Western Art. See the art of George Catlin,
Thomas Moran, Charles M. Russell and more.

Hoe Down in the Bandana Room

Our very own Bearded Pigs will delight and entertain.
We may have a visit from a mysterious dancer from Missouri.
Enjoy the barbecue.

Dine Arounds

Cody is known for its excellent restaurants. Join the Wyoming
librarians for fine dining around the town.

Other Activities Around Cody

The Irma Hotel

Built by Buffalo Bill Cody for his daughter Irma, this hotel,
restaurant and gift shop will transport you back to a by-gone era.
A stop in Cody is not complete without a visit to the Irma.

Yellowstone National Park

Cody is only a few miles from the Nation’s first National Park.
Take a day off, rent a car and tour the park. You will see
unbelievably beautiful landscapes, Yellowstone Lake, mud pots,
geysers and wild life like elk, buffalo, eagles and more.

Heart Mountain Relocation Center

A few miles to the east of Cody lies the memorial to one of the
tragedies in American history. Between 1942 and 1945, 11,000
Japanese Americans were relocated to Heart Mountain. Once the third
largest city in Wyoming, today, only the infirmary stands. Follow
the Interpretive Trail that tells the story of imprisonment, birth,
death and resilience. http://www.heartmountain.us/

Confinement and Ethnicity: An Overview of World War II Japanese American Relocation Sites by J. Burton, M. Farrell, F. Lord, and R. Lord
Heart Mountain Relocation Center History