Wyoming
Casper Wyoming Temple gears up for open house event
CASPER, Wyo. (Wyoming News Now) – A temple has been under construction since October 2021 and now it is ready for an open house.
The Casper Wyoming Temple of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints is preparing for open house events.
The open house starts on August 29th. Those that choose to go, can get a tour of the inside and outside of the building, and learn more about what the temple offers.
The temple is located off the intersection of Wyoming Boulevard and Eagle Drive on the southwest side of Casper. The building is around 10,000 square feet.
Open house starts with media day and then starting on Thursday, tours of the temple will be available to the public to check out the newly established site.
“This is opening up to the public to come through till September14th to see the Casper Wyoming Temple. To go through to ask questions. The Casper community has watched it being built so now they get a chance to go inside and to see it,” said Beth Worthen, the Communications Director for the Temple Open House Committee.
The Casper Wyoming Temple is the second temple in the state. The first being the Star Valley Wyoming Temple in Afton.
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Wyoming
Young bull moose captured wandering Laramie, relocated by Game and Fish
LARAMIE, Wyo. — A bull moose was spotted roaming the streets of Laramie early Tuesday morning before being safely tranquilized and relocated by the Wyoming Game and Fish Department.
Photos from the University of Wyoming Police Department and Laramie residents show the creature curiously wandering through the university campus, where he was tranquilized before heading to a strip mall along Grand Avenue and taking a nap.
“Biologists got the call this morning that the moose was wandering in the UW Apartments neighborhood,” Laramie Region Game and Fish Information and Education specialist Hannah Smith said. “They responded to the scene and were able to dart the moose.”
While he was darted near the apartments, he didn’t stand around and wait for the tranquilizer to take effect. Smith said he worked his way east for about 20 minutes before ending up, coincidentally, in front of Sportsman’s Warehouse.
Lilly Avila, a Laramie resident working at a nearby coffee shop, told Cap City News the animal was sluggishly wandering the parking lot and rubbing against cars before the tranquilizer got to him.
“They brought him to the office and got him cooled down,” Smith said. “They don’t want to be in town. It’s a stressful situation for them, too. They can overheat really easily, so we get them cooled down before we transport them.”
Game and Fish couldn’t say as of Tuesday where the moose came from. Smith said he could have come east from the Pole Mountain area between Laramie and Cheyenne or up the Laramie River from the Snowy Range. Either way, his new home will be around Medicine Bow Mountain.
He also shouldn’t be feeling the effects of the tranquilizer for too much longer. Biologists gave him a reversal drug that should have prepared him to return to the wild.
“He should be pretty normal in terms of the medication. I think, in terms of his day, hopefully he goes back to living his happy moose life munching on some willows and doesn’t go for too many more walkabouts,” Smith said.



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Wyoming
Free Crow Culture Program at Fort Phil Kearny
Wyoming State Historic Sites Superintendent Sharie Mooney Shada made an appearance on Sheridan Media’s Public Pulse to speak on the upcoming Immersion in Crow Culture program at Fort Phil Kearny on July 16.
The event begins at 6 p.m. Thursday, July 16 at the Fort Phil Kearny Interpretive Center.
S. Mooney Shada
The rangers host free, family-friendly evening talks and presentations throughout the summer. Shada said the Native American Student Interpretive Ranger Program has enriched the visitor experience at Fort Phil Kearny. In its fourth year at the fort, the program allows a perspective from the indigenous side of history.
Keep up with events at Fort Phil Kearny by clicking here.
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