Showing posts with label South Dakota. Show all posts
Showing posts with label South Dakota. Show all posts

Monday, July 9, 2018

South Dakota, Rapid City - Monday, July 9, 2018 - Devil's Tower



We drove a couple of hours today to visit our last stop while we are parked in Rapid City.  Devil’s Tower is actually in Wyoming so we stopped at the Wyoming Visitor Center to gather some information on our next adventure which will be a one night stop in Buffalo, Wyoming before moving on to Cody, Wyoming for a week.



The inside of this place is pretty awesome.



This statue draws a crowd, had a hard time getting a picture of it without a person in the picture too.



That is our destination in the distance.  The tower rises 867 feet from its base and stands 5112 feet above sea level.  The area of its teardrop-shaped top is 1.5 acres.



Devil’s Tower was designated by President Theodore Roosevelt as the nation’s first national monument.  We used our senior national parks pass to get in free.  A carload is normally $20.  If you want to see the Tower but don’t want to pay the fee there are several pullover areas along the highway leading to it where you can get some fantastic photos.



This is the tower from the visitor’s center.  Based on the rocks that can be seen today, scientists have different interpretations of the Tower’s geologic history.  But, they do agree on two points:

1.      The Tower is composed of previously molten rock, which formed approximately 1.5 miles below the earth’s surface when magma pushed up through the sedimentary rock layers about 50 million years ago.

2.     Over millions of years, erosion stripped away the softer layers of sedimentary rock, exposing the Tower as we now see it.




There is a 1.3 mile paved trail around the base that could probably get you some good views..  I could tell Greg wasn’t even considering this since the temperature today was 90+ degrees.  However, I was thinking I could do 1.3 miles, I might try it even in the heat.

Then I saw a sign that said “after a steep first 100 yards, the trail becomes moderately rolling”.  That “steep” part was starting to make me wonder if it was worth it.

Then I saw a sign that said “do not approach the rattlesnakes”.  I was going to the car!

I personally think that the views of the tower are better from a distance.  We took a gravel road up to the Joyner Ridge trailhead and got this beautiful shot.



There is a black-tail prairie dog town just inside the park entrance.  We caught this little guy checking things out as we left the park.


Sunday, July 8, 2018

South Dakota, Rapid City - Sunday, July 8, 2018 - Chapel in the Hills



Our only destination today was the Chapel in the Hills that sits just outside of Rapid City.  Informal half-hour worship services are conducted every evening at 7:30 p.m. Memorial Day through Labor Day.  Lots of weddings also take place here, I’m glad we didn’t interrupt anything today.



The chapel was a dream of Dr. Harry R. Gregerson who was the originator and preacher of the Lutheran Vespers radio show.  After considering other places he finally decided that the Black Hills in his home state of South Dakota was the perfect place to build the chapel.

The next step was deciding what the structure should look like.  It was decided that many of the settlers of the Dakotas and surrounding states were Norwegian Lutherans so something Scandinavian would be appropriate.

The Norwegian Department of Antiquities agreed to send a set of blueprints of the Borgund Stave Church in Norway on the condition that this new church be built as an exact replica of the 12th century church which is still standing in Norway.

The last step of financing this project was provided by a local banker, Arndt E. Dahl, on the condition that it would be in memory of his parents.  His father was a pioneering Lutheran minister.  His generous gift provided for the land, original structure and landscaping.  The project was completed July 6, 1969.



Lots of Scandinavian artwork.





The roof is composed of 16,000 wooden shingles.



Intricately carved front door looking into the chapel.



Inside the chapel.  Although we were the only ones in the chapel I didn’t feel right about using the camera’s flash so these pictures don’t do it justice.





The small 18” door on the right wall allowed lepers to listen to the service and take communion even though they couldn’t mix with the congregation.



This covered walkway around the chapel provided cover for people while they were waiting for the services to start.



Detail of the cross on the roof.



A Prayer/Meditation Walk takes visitors into a quiet forested area for prayer and reflection.  We didn’t take advantage of this walk today.  The temperatures here were in the mid 90’s today.



Even the trees here are dressed up.



The gift shop with a grass roof was constructed in Norway and imported to Rapid City.



Also on site is a log cabin that was built in 1876 by a Norwegian prospector who came to Palmer Gulch to make his fortune in gold.  The cabin was purchased at auction, dismantled and moved by volunteers in 1987.  The museum is dedicated to those of Scandinavian descent who brought a part of their heritage to America.



Inside the cabin I like the chair caved out of a tree trunk.




Really a beautiful spot, I’m glad we came out to enjoy it.


Saturday, July 7, 2018

South Dakota, Rapid City - Friday, July 6, 2018 - Mr. Rushmore and Custer State Park



We thought if we got to Custer State Park early we would have a better chance of seeing the buffalo.  We stopped in Keystone for breakfast.



We ate at the Powder House Lodge Restaurant.  The current restaurant sits on the site of the original Powder House which was used to store blasting powder and bootleg liquor.  The lady in the picture just kept meandering across the parking lot, I got tired of waiting on her and took the picture anyway.



Some more of that local knotty pine.  Breakfast was great.



The wooden bridges they have in this area are amazing.  A couple of these are part of the pig tail bridge system.  From the air it does curl around like a pig’s tail.





In addition to all of the ponderosa pines in the area, we saw a lot of birch trees.



This is the Sovel Johnson Tunnel.



The Iron Mountain Road has a lot of areas filled with trees.




The Wildlife Loop Road has more grassland.



When we noticed this pronghorn I was so excited I almost didn’t get a picture.  Thank goodness this one didn’t take advantage of the fact that it can run 60 mph for great distances.



We didn’t know until last night when I was doing some research that Custer State Park was devastated by a huge fire just this past December, 2017.  What started as a small spark caused by one of the ponderosa pines falling across and breaking a power line, escalated quickly through the dormant grass.  Over 50 mph winds fanned the flames quicker than fire fighters could get it under control.  At this same time a lot of the hot shots who would normally help fight this type of fire were in California fighting another wildfire.  The local firefighters eventually lit back fires to get it under control. The fire swept so fast through the area that it remained largely at ground level.  This helped save some of the trees and it meant that the fire didn’t remain in one place long enough to burn through to the roots of the grass and wildflowers, which are flourishing now.  The charred trees still remind us of the devastation that took place.





We took Fisherman Flats Road in search of the buffalo herd.  This is a gravel road which will accommodate cars coming and going.  However, the road goes nowhere, it ends and you have to turn around (if the buffalo will let you).  We found the herd but it was off in the distance grazing so we didn’t get up close to any.  The lighter colored ones are the new calves, lots of them throughout the herd.






Scenery on Fisherman Flats Road.



We decided to take a road less traveled and headed out on Oak Draw Road.  There are lots of these yellow flowers out here.  They look a lot like smartweed that we have back in Indiana, except they are yellow.  I think I found out they are called goldenpeas.




Scenery on the Oak Draw Road.




Just as we were leaving Oak Draw Road we saw this deer in the distance.  It was so far away I had my camera zoomed as far as it would go and still didn’t get a very good picture.



Ok, this prairie dog looks fake to me.  I think someone set this up so I could get at least one “wildlife” photo today.



These buffalo thought they could avoid us noisy tourists by hiding in the shade.




These stacks of wood throughout this part of the park are another leftover from the fire.



This is just outside the Scovel Johnson Tunnel as we come out of the park.  If you are quick you can catch Mt. Rushmore between the trees.



Even though Mt. Rushmore is a national monument, we couldn’t use our national parks pass.  There is no actual admission to the monument, but there is a $10 fee for parking.  Either because we are licensed in South Dakota or because we are senior citizens, we got in for $5.



I know, we saw most of the monument from the road, but I am really glad we came to see it close up.  I would have missed the man of obvious Mexican descent proudly telling his children what he had learned about the presidents who are depicted on Mt. Rushmore.  I didn’t intrude to ask, but it sounded like this knowledge was new to him and he was very proud of it so I am assuming he learned it in order to become a citizen.  He knew a lot more about these presidents than I could remember.

The Avenue of Flags was pretty impressive.



We found the Indiana flag, but couldn’t catch a picture of it when it was blowing in the wind.



There is a plaque for each state on the column underneath where the flag is located.



The carving by Gutzon Borglum is breathtaking.  Borglum died March 6, 1941 just months before it was completed.  Borglum’s son, Lincoln saw the project through to completion on October 31, 1941.  The original cost of the carving was $989,992.00 about 85% of that was federal funds.  Around 400 laborers, mostly from the unemployment ranks worked on the memorial.  Hourly pay ranged from 35 cents to $1.50.  In the 1990’s it was renovated at a cost of $56 million dollars. 




This has nothing to do with the Mt. Rushmore Monument other than it was over to the side of the viewing center and I thought it was interesting.



We learned in the film about the monument that 90% of the carving was done with dynamite.  The rest was done by weakening the granite by drilling holes in it and then chipping it away.



In my research I found out a lot of things about the monument that I didn’t know.  One was that Susan B. Anthony’s portrait almost made it into the carving.  Borglum had planned a Hall of Records storage vault behind the heads to store important national documents and an American time capsule, work ceased on that before completion.

Through the tunnel heading home.