Deep in the Teton Wilderness, I have one foot in the Atlantic Ocean. The other is in the Pacific. I turn 180 degrees. The foot that had been in the Atlantic is now in the Pacific and the Pacific one in the Atlantic. I lift my one foot out of the Pacific and, springing off the one in the Atlantic, land with both in the Pacific. Another standing broad jump has both feet in the Atlantic.
Parting of the Waters Natural Landmark, where North Two Ocean Creek flows down from a plateau, slams into the Continental Divide in the form of the summit ridge of Two Ocean Pass and then splits into two: the aptly named Atlantic Creek and Pacific Creek. Finding the spot where I was standing with one foot in each ocean, or at least in water that eventually made its way to each ocean isn't that difficult.
Wyoming has some other water wonders as well:
At Three Waters Mountain, near Union Pass, water wends its way to three different major bodies of water, the Gulf of California (the drop travels 1,300 miles), the Pacific (a 1,400-mile trip), and the Gulf of Mexico (3,000-miles distant). This is one of only two places in North America where three of the continent's seven major watersheds meet.
But not all of Wyoming's water gets around so much. There is a 90-mile wide, 50-mile long area in the Red Desert, in the heart of the state, which actually drains to...nowhere. The Continental Divide splits and runs around it, leaving the few inches of rain the basin does get with no choice but to hang out (it usually eventually evaporates).