Wyoming
Bluesky brings age verification to South Dakota and Wyoming

Bluesky will now check the ages of users located in South Dakota and Wyoming to comply with local online safety laws. The platform announced on Wednesday that users in both states will be able to prove their age using an ID, payment card, or other method.
Both South Dakota and Wyoming pushed ahead with their online safety laws after a Supreme Court ruling upheld a Texas law requiring age verification for porn sites. While many states only apply online safety laws to adult websites or platforms containing a certain threshold of harmful content, 404 Media points out that South Dakota and Wyoming’s laws don’t include this carveout. That means they could affect a much broader swatch of online platforms, including Reddit, X, and Discord, according to the Electronic Frontier Foundation.
Last month, Bluesky and Mastodon stopped operating in Mississippi after the Supreme Court refused to block a “likely unconstitutional” law that forces platforms to verify the ages of users when they create an account. Bluesky said the law “would block everyone from accessing the site — teens and adults — unless they hand over sensitive information.”
Just like in the UK, Bluesky spokesperson Elisabeth Diana confirmed to The Verge that the platform will restrict unverified and underage users in South Dakota and Wyoming from accessing adult content, as well as from using certain features, like direct messaging.
Update, September 10th: Added information about the age verification process.

Wyoming
Utah football vs. Wyoming by the numbers

Looking to remain unbeaten before embarking on a rigorous Big 12 slate, Utah wraps up its nonconference schedule Saturday with a trip to Laramie, Wyoming, to take on the Cowboys.
The Utes (2-0) enter the matchup following consecutive wire-to-wire victories to open the 2025 regular season, having thumped UCLA (43-10) and Cal Poly (63-9) in their first two games.
The Cowboys (2-0) also have an opportunity to move to 3-0 after beating Akron (10-0) and Northern Iowa (31-7).
Here’s a look at some key numbers and statistics ahead of Saturday’s game.
7,220: Elevation of War Memorial Stadium (in feet)
No venue in Division I sits at a higher elevation than Wyoming’s War Memorial Stadium. Located in the heart of Laramie, Wyoming, the home of the Cowboys is positioned at a staggering 7,220 feet above sea level, according to the team’s official website. Perhaps the only stadium in the country that sits at a higher elevation is Division II constituent Western Colorado’s Mountaineer Bowl in Gunnison, Colorado (7,750 feet above sea level).
For comparison, Utah’s Rice-Eccles Stadium is approximately 4,600 feet above sea level. Whittingham doesn’t expect the discrepancy to impact Saturday’s game much, though it’s still worth mentioning for any fans who plan on making the trip to Laramie for the first time.
200: Receiving yards for Wyoming’s Chris Durr
Just two games into his sophomore season, Wyoming’s Chris Durr has already accounted for 57% of his total production from last season (348 receiving yards in 12 games). The 5-foot-10 Chicago native is putting up 100 yards per game and has scored touchdowns in each of the Cowboys’ wins over Akron and Northern Iowa to start 2025, with 146 of his 200 total receiving yards coming in the 10-0 victory over the Zips in Week 1.
Utes head coach Kyle Whittingham mentioned in the lead-up to Saturday that his secondary has allowed too many opposing pass-catchers to turn “loose up the field” due to what he called “poor eyes” from his younger defensive backs. The Utes’ pass defense could be something to monitor against the Cowboys, especially with regard to Durr.
83: Previous meetings between Utah, Wyoming
For those who didn’t hear Whittingham or Jay Sawvel discuss it already, Saturday’s matchup will be a brief rekindling of an old Mountain West Conference rivalry between the Utes and Cowboys, as they’ll square off on the gridiron for the first time in roughly 15 years when they take the field at War Memorial Stadium.
According to Utah’s team site, the Utes lead the all-time head-to-head record 49-31-1, with victories in eight of their last nine meetings dating back to 2000. Their last four wins over the Cowboys came by an average margin of 29.8 points, including a 50-0 thumping in 2007. Granted, the two schools haven’t seen each other since October 2010.
82.4: Utah’s third down conversion rate
No Division I team has been as efficient on third down as Utah has been through the first few weeks of the season. The Utes lead in the country with the most third down conversions per game (14.0) and rank No. 2 in the land in third down conversion rate at 82.4% — just slightly behind Arkansas at 83.3%.
79.2: Devon Dampier’s completion percentage
Speaking of efficiency, Utah quarterback Devon Dampier has been superb through the air in his first couple of games as the Utes’ signal-caller. The junior who transferred in from New Mexico enters Week 3 with the second-highest completion percentage in the Football Bowl Subdivision at 79.2%, trailing only Ohio State quarterback Julian Sayin (79.5%).
Saturday will pose a different test for Dampier, as he faces a Wyoming defense that’s allowing opposing quarterbacks to complete 42.1% of their passes (No. 4 in the country) in 2025, and one that held Dampier to 16-of-31 (51.6%) through the air last season in a 49-45 win for Wyoming over his Lobos (albeit, Dampier also rushed for 207 yards in that game).
3.4: Yards per play allowed by Wyoming
There are only seven other teams in the country that have held opponents to a worse yards-per-play average than the Cowboys have this early into the season. After holding Northern Iowa to just 170 total yards of offense last week, Wyoming will attempt to slow down a Utah offense that’s averaging 492 yards per game (16th-best in the country).
2: Total touchdowns allowed by both teams
Utah’s only offensive touchdown allowed so far this season will have been two weeks ago by the time Saturday rolls around, while Wyoming’s only touchdown score against it was to a Football Championship Subdivision team. Both defensive units have been stout out of the gate, though time will tell if one begins to crack on Saturday.
MORE UTAH NEWS & ANALYSIS
Wyoming
Colorado Buffaloes Schedule Update: Kickoff Time, Television Set For Wyoming Cowboys

Coach Deion Sanders has received his least-favorite kickoff time for the Colorado Buffaloes’ Week 4 home game against the Wyoming Cowboys.
As announced by the Big 12 Conference on Monday, Colorado and Wyoming will get going at 8:15 p.m. MT on Saturday, Sept. 20. The game will be broadcast nationally on ESPN, which has now grabbed four of CU’s first five games this season (Georgia Tech, Houston, Wyoming and BYU).
Exactly one week after facing Wyoming, Colorado will host the BYU Cougars in another 8:15 p.m. MT game on ESPN (Saturday, Sept. 27). This Friday, the Buffs will battle the Houston Cougars at 5:30 p.m. MT (ESPN) in their first road game of the year.
It’ll be another late night at Folsom Field as 8:15 p.m. (or later) starts have often attracted Colorado since “Coach Prime” was hired three years ago. Still, Folsom Field should be rocking as the Family Weekend game has been sold out since mid-June.
Colorado last hosted Wyoming in 2009 and is 24-2-1 all-time against the Cowboys.
One year after finishing 3-9 (2-5 Mountain West), Wyoming is 2-0 to begin 2025 with wins over Akron and Northern Iowa. Quarterback Kaden Anderson has thrown for 427 yards, three touchdowns and an interception, and linebacker Brayden Johnson leads the team with 14 total tackles.
Wyoming will face a much taller task on Saturday, however, with the No. 20 Utah Utes set to visit Laramie.
MORE: Three Key Takeaways From the Colorado Buffaloes’ Statement Win Over Delaware
MORE: Quarterback Julian Lewis Makes History But Underwhelms In First Colorado Buffaloes Drives
MORE: How No Rookie Reps Could Shape Colorado Star Shedeur Sanders’ NFL Future
MORE: Deion Sanders Reacts To Ryan Staub’s Breakout Game, Colorado Buffaloes Quarterback Situation
MORE: Colorado Buffaloes Quarterback Ryan Staub Turns Heads in Win Over Delaware
*All times Mountain
Aug. 29 vs. Georgia Tech Yellow Jackets (L, 27-20)
Sept. 6 vs. Delaware Blue Hens (W, 31-7)
Sept. 12 at Houston Cougars (5:30 p.m., ESPN)
Sept. 20 vs. Wyoming Cowboys (8:15 p.m., ESPN)
Sept. 27 vs. BYU Cougars (8:15 p.m., ESPN)
Oct. 4 at TCU Horned Frogs (TBA)
Oct. 11 vs. Iowa State Cyclones (TBA)
Oct. 25 at Utah Utes (TBA)
Nov. 1 vs. Arizona Wildcats (TBA)
Nov. 8 at West Virginia Mountaineers (TBA)
Nov. 22 vs. Arizona State Sun Devils (TBA)
Nov. 29 at Kansas State Wildcats (TBA)
Along with Colorado-Wyoming, the Big 12 Conference announced six other kickoff times and television selections for Saturday, Sept. 20. Plus, the Oklahoma State Cowboys’ Sept. 19 game against the Tulsa Golden Hurricane was changed from 5 to 5:30 p.m. MT (ESPN).
Texas Tech Red Raiders at Utah Utes (10 a.m. MT, Fox)
SMU Mustangs at TCU Horned Frogs (10 a.m. MT, ESPN or ESPN2)
North Carolina Tar Heels at UCF Knights (1:30 p.m. MT, Fox)
West Virginia Mountaineers at Kansas Jayhawks (4 p.m. MT, FS1)
Arizona State Sun Devils at Baylor Bears (5 :30 p.m. MT, Fox)
BYU Cougars at East Carolina Pirates (5:30 p.m. MT, ESPN2)
Wyoming
Wyoming’s Vast Killpecker Dunes: Like Another Planet Where The Sand Sings To You

Wyoming is full of unusual, surreal places, but among the strangest are the Killpecker Sand Dunes in the Red Desert about 30 miles north of Rock Springs.
Covering 109,000 acres, it’s the second-largest active dune field in the United States and the largest where you can drive motorized vehicles.
Although the overall largest sand dune field in the U.S. is in western Nebraska and the tallest dunes are in Colorado, these Wyoming dunes are absolutely magnificent.
First, where did that crazy name come from?
Nearby is Killpecker Creek, which was named by early pioneers. The creek is full of saltpeter which can diminish a man’s potency.
Yes, that is really where the name comes from.
After mentioning my desire to ride the dunes in a column about my Wyoming Bucket List dreams, a desert rat from Lander named Pat White said he would like to be my guide.
So, on the last day of July, Pat, his son Shane, his friend Perry Roberson of Shoshoni, and I headed out to the desert southwest of Lander.
We first drove 70 miles to Farson, and then 10 miles south on Highway 191, and then we turned off on a nice gravel road and headed for the dunes.
Our first stop was the impressive Boar’s Tusk, a 400-foot-high volcanic monolith that serves as a landmark for the extreme western portion of Red Desert and overlooks the 55-mile long stretch of sand dunes.
This Boar’s Tusk and Devils Tower in northeast Wyoming are considered to be somewhat similar center cones of long-extinct volcanoes. Both are in Wyoming, 412 miles apart.
Now, About That Sand
Scaling 15-story-high sand dunes in a side-by-side has been on my bucket list for more than 50 years.
This year I finally got to experience this amazing adventure.
White leads tours by folks who drive these off-road-vehicles across deserts and over mountains in western Wyoming. On this day, he was driving a very nice Polaris General that probably cost more than $35,000. It even had air conditioning.
His friend Perry had a Honda version of the same machine.
After looking over the Boar’s Tusk up close and personal we headed over to a huge parking lot that was well equipped with restrooms, some camping areas and plenty of space for club or family gatherings.
You could see the dunes stretching out to the north and the east. They actually run for more than 55 miles.
Pat has been visiting all parts of the desert for 30 years and says the dunes have moved considerably (over a mile) during that time.
My original request had also been to go to the summit of Steamboat Mountain, the biggest mountain in the desert. My old friend Dave Kellogg had always planned to take me there but unfortunately passed away two years ago.
The Sand Sings
The sand dunes are immense and made up of very, very fine sand.
The sand grains are famous for “singing” in the wind. They are so small and perfectly polished that they emit a singing noise when that perennial wind blows across them.
On this day, the wind kicked up late in the day and was as fine as snow.
We were able to drive almost to the summit of the biggest dune.
I wanted to walk to the top, so we struggled up the side. It was a hard slog and we held on to each other as we balanced on the fine, narrow edge on the top.
The sand seemed like a mixture of newly poured cement and the heaviest wet snow you ever saw. What an experience.
Experts say these dunes were formed over millennia by sand washed from the Big and Little Sandy rivers left behind during glacial melt, then driven by prevailing westerly winds through the volcanic Leucite Hills to pile up into a swirling, whirling sea of sand.
Within the Killpecker Sand Dunes Open Play Area, roughly 11,000 acres are designated for motor use. Dune buggies, ATVs, dirt bikes, and side‑by‑sides can roam widely, but strict rules apply.
All vehicles must have a whip mast and red or orange safety flag, and must drive under 15 mph within 500 feet of access roads. Glass containers are prohibited, and Wyoming state trail registration is required on ORVs.
The dunes host a fee‑free campground, located at the terminus of Chilton Road near the open play area.
The Killpecker Sand Dunes Open Play Area Campground offers fire rings, picnic tables, and ADA‑accessible features. No reservations, vault toilets, first‑come, first‑served for stays of up to 14 days.
Steamboat Mountain And The Spanish Gold?
I first heard about Steamboat Mountain from the late Randy Wagner of Cheyenne, who was a former head of the state travel commission and an expert on South Pass and the Oregon Trail.
He said he had always heard stories about a mysterious cave in the vicinity where an old sheepherder had discovered some Spanish helmets and other items.
He left them there, but told some folks. When some archeologists went to check on it, the cave was there but the artifacts were gone.
Had the Spanish come this far north with Montezuma’s Gold? That was a question that Randy was always hoping to find an answer to.
On this day, we drove through 10-foot-high sagebrush over some old trails and worked our way to the top of the mountain.
We could see the famous buffalo jump that was used for millennia by early members of Indian tribes, according to St. Stephens Indian Mission Foundation.
The Shoshone Tribe that occupies the Wind River Indian Reservation roamed these areas for millennia, according to historians. The Northern Arapaho Tribe moved onto the reservation in the 1870s and probably did not participate in those early buffalo jump hunts.
The summit of Steamboat at 8,683 feet is the highest point in the vast Red Desert, which some folks claim is over 9,320 square miles.
The view looking back toward the dunes and the Boar’s Tusk is magnificent, and it was possible to even see the tall smokestacks of the Jim Bridger coal-fired power plant off to the southeast.
Tri-Territorial Marker, Animals
Northeast of Steamboat Mountain and back on good roads, drivers come up to the Tri-Territorial Marker, which marks a spot where the Continental Divide and the 42nd parallel intersect.
It shows where the Louisiana Purchase, the Oregon Territory, and the Mexican territory meet at one agreed-upon spot among the different countries.
Wild horses are abundant in the Red Desert and can be found in most parts of the vast area. They usually are found in small herds headed by a big stallion.
Watching them on the gallop kicking up dust is a sight to see.
Much harder to see are members of the famous Red Desert Elk Herd. These are usually mountain animals in the rest of Wyoming, but this solitary herd rules anyplace in the desert it chooses to reside in. On this day, we saw one elk.
The White Mountain petroglyphs are incredible as they are located in an area just north of Rock Springs that also features rocks which appear to have hand holds carved into them.
Some observers think these were birthing areas where indigenous women would hang on while giving birth.
Well Worth The Trip
Visiting the Killpecker Sand Dunes and its surrounding areas in the Red Desert should be on everyone’s bucket list. These are amazing sights and sites to see in Wyoming.
I am so glad to finally experience them up close, although it took me 55 years to get the job done.
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