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Woman who recorded viral Yellowstone explosion video says family trip still on

"We’re here, we’ll go back and see more of the park. I mean, we only got a little taste yesterday. You gotta live your life," says Vlada March.
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WEST YELLOWSTONE — A dangerous explosion in Yellowstone National Park led to a video exploding on the internet on Tuesday. The woman who took that video and her husband described how their vacation took an unexpected turn.

“We didn't realize the gravity of the situation in the first few moments. And then when the rocks started raining all around us from the sky? Ok, this is bad. We’ve got to get out of here,” says Steve March.

WATCH THE MOMENT THE EXPLOSION HAPPENED:

Visitor footage of "small hydrothermal explosion" in Yellowstone National Park

Vlada and Steve March are from Palm Desert, Calif. and said they’ve both always dreamed of visiting Yellowstone National Park. The couple booked a six-day trip with Vlada’s mother and their two kids, 6-year-old Ethan and 9-year-old Maxwell.

On Tuesday, they booked an all-day guided tour for their first day in Yellowstone. One of their first stops? Biscuit Basin.

They had no idea what was about to happen, but their guide noticed something was off.

"Our tour guide, he’s very experienced and he knows how things are supposed to look. We were heading towards Jewel Geyser on the boardwalk and he turned around and said, ‘Huh, this is weird. This is not how that's supposed to look,’” Steve said.

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Vlada and Steve March talk about their experience when a hydrothermal explosion occurred in front of them at Biscuit Basin in Yellowstone National Park.

That’s when Vlada got out her phone and started recording hoping she would see something interesting. But what happened next, no one could have expected.

“Moments later, the whole thing just blew up. There was massive amounts of water, rock, and ash that just shot up into the air, hundreds of feet,” says Steve.

Park officials say it was a hydrothermal explosion. Vlada and Steve said the ash covered the sun and sky, and their survival instincts kicked in as you can hear in the video when Vlada tells her two young sons to run.

WATCH MORE: Aftermath of Biscuit Basin explosion seen in NPS photos

Aftermath of Biscuit Basin explosion revealed in National Park Service photos

Shortly after the explosion, Vlada and Steve’s tour guide safely directed the visitors down the damaged boardwalk and back to the parking lot.

“Even when it cleared and we could see the path back, we weren't sure if anything else was going to explode. There was a little bench there where my mom sat before that. Half of it was gone. It was really scary,” says Vlada.

The family safely left the park, and there were no reported injuries from the explosion. But was the family planning on going forward with their Yellowstone trip?

“Absolutely. We’re here, we’ll go back and see more of the park. I mean, we only got a little taste yesterday. You gotta live your life. You never know what's going to happen anywhere in the world. So it really makes you see things differently," says Vlada.

RELATED Q2 COVERAGE:

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'Small hydrothermal explosion' reported at Biscuit Basin in Yellowstone National Park