After two years of virtual and hybrid field exercises, the Penn State Geosciences Field Camp returned to the intermontane region of the Rocky Mountains in 2022. The caravan left Deike Building in early June for the Yellowstone Bighorn Research Association’s (YBRA) facility in Red Lodge, Montana to begin the counterclockwise tour across Montana, Wyoming, Idaho, and Utah before returning to Penn State. The exercises in 2022 would be familiar to many alumni, but there were also some significant changes, with an infusion of new faculty expertise from Brian Kelley, Kimberly Lau, Miquela Ingalls, Max Lloyd, and Jesse Reimink as well as instruction from long time faculty contributors Roman DiBiase, Don Fisher, Andy Smye, and Kevin Furlong. Field Camp relies heavily on graduate teaching assistants, Tsai-Wei Chen, Hanna Leapoldt, Leonie Strobl, Adam Benfield, Kayla Izarry, Leah Youngquist, Sarah Jonathan, and Charlotte Connop, who were critical contributors for both the pedagogy and the logistics. Exercises continue to be designed around fundamental questions related to a wide diversity of geological processes, but operations have evolved over the last two decades in response to scientific advances and improvements in software and technology. Next year will be Don Fisher’s last year as director of the Field Camp, with Roman DiBiase assuming that role in the fall of 2023.