From the Badlands to Garden of the Gods

We pulled out of our driveway in our red Retro trailer Sunday morning, September 18, 2016 heading for South Dakota’s Badlands and Rocky Mountain National Park. We planned on driving 200-300 miles on travel days and then stay in the best places like the Badlands and Rocky Mountain National Park for several since we had four weeks planned for this trip.

Our first stop was Madison, Wisconsin, 136 miles from our driveway. After that we’d only have 700 miles to go to reach the Badlands in South Dakota.
The three things we wanted to do in his trip were check out bike trails, hike and shoot photos. Madison fit in with its good bike trail system.

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From our camp at Lake Farm County Park in Madison, Wisconsin we could get on the Capitol City Trail for an easy ride to the statehouse, the University of Wisconsin and downtown Madison.

From Madison we made our way west through Wisconsin, Minnesota and South Dakota.

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A stop at Frank Lloyd Wright’s Taliesien in Wisconsin. Wright grew up in the area and once he had some money he built a compound where he often stayed. Like many of Wright’s buildings, keeping Taliesien from crumbling is a constant project.
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Cindy contemplating Frank.
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We stayed one night at Goose Island County Park in LaCrosse, Wisconsin on the backwaters of the Mississippi River. Heavy rains gave many in the campground riverside views.

In South Dakota we stayed in the town of Mitchell, home to the “World’s Only Corn Palace”. I thought it’d be a rickety building with some murals made out of corn on the outside, but actually it’s a frequently used modern event and exhibition space. The exterior corn murals are changed yearly, probably because the pigeons are hard at work pecking out kernels, but the interior ones are permanent.

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There was a Pedal Tractor Pull going on in the Corn Palace the day we were there, kids from many states competed to pedal a weighted pedal tractor the farthest.
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Outside the Corn Palace, the local Outcast Car Club was having their annual car show. One participant told us there are more gear heads in Mitchell than anywhere else in South Dakota.
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The Outcast Car Club was having a dance that evening, so we joined in and danced to the great cover band Something New.
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At the Chamberlain Rest Stop on I-80 in South Dakota, a 50-foot impressive Indian sculpture “Dignity” by Iowa artist Dale Lamphere was unveiled just 10 days before we passed through.

We finally arrived at the Badlands after 7 days touring. The temperature was in low 80s days / 40s at night. The Badlands are surreal, the towering spires eroded out of what was a lake bed some 75 – 35 million years ago. The 40 mile Badlands Loop Road goes right through them, many people drive through making a stop here and there to see a vista or the prairie dog village and then go on their way like the pioneers did, assessing the area as unproductive and a “Badlands”.

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I was interested in seeing how light played across the Badlands landscape, so we were out before sunrise and again at sunset shooting photos.

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A stop at Wall Drugs for 5 cent coffee and a donut. Why would you eat a donut like this?

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We stopped at Devils Tower National Monument in Wyoming for a close encounter. Some trees there are wrapped in prayer cloths.

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We made our way to Custer, South Dakota for the 51st annual Buffalo Roundup in Custer State Park. The cow pokes slowly herded hundreds of buffalo into pens. They are inoculated and counted before being released back into the park.

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The top photos are what a buffalo roundup looks like through a zoom lens, the last is the reality of craning to get a buffalo view past the other thousands of spectators.

While in Custer, we pulled the bikes down and rode the Michelson Bike Trail. The stretch north out of Custer is stunning, through valleys with mountains in the background. We even had views of Crazy Horse Memorial at one point.

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Good thing there was a sign on the The Michelson Bike Trail where viewing the Crazy Horse Memorial is possible.

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The Michelson Bike Trail near Custer, South Dakota.

We heard there was a Volksmarch at the  Crazy Horse Memorial so we laced up and hiked 6.2 miles through woods & mountains right up to the Crazy Horse memorial with a few thousand others.

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Volksmarchers on Crazy Horse’s arm.

We decided to go to Mt. Rushmore for the lighting at 8 pm, it was the second to the last one of the year so our timing was good. The lighting ceremony was quite patriotic and moving. It’s a video with narration about Washington (the nation’s birth), Jefferson (nation building), Lincoln (nation in crisis), and Roosevelt (our nation becomes a world power). Following the video, the mountain faces are lit. The master of ceremonies invited all the veterans in the audience to the stage for a flag lowering ceremony. Each gave his or her rank, name and branch.

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We also went back to Mt. Rushmore to see it during the day.
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Fantastic breakfast at the Waffle Lab on Ft. Collins, Colorado. (Thanks, Nora Cronin, for the recommendation.) The waffles there are made from dough rather than batter, and cooked with Belgian sugar that caramelizes on the outside.

The limit of our westward travel was Estes Park, Colorado. We’d been there before* and revisiting Rocky Mountain National Park was magic.
*(It was June 1972 and I thought Colorado mountains would be warm like Chicago…I shivered in the tent every night.)

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This gnarled pine on the Emerald Lake Trail in Rocky Mountain National Park reminded me of a Japanese ink drawing.
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The Emerald Lake Trail in Rocky Mountain National Park actually highlights three lakes, Nymph Lake, Dream Lake and Emerald Lake.
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Fall is a great time to see the elk in Rocky Mountain National Park. The bulls are gathering and guarding their harems

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The view from the top of Deer Mountain in Rocky Mountain National Park looks at the town of Estes Park and Lake Estes.

After Rocky Mountain National Park we visited Garden of the Gods in Colorado Springs, Colorado. A most amazing place set right in the heart of a metropolis.

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Biking at Garden of the Gods is a challenge, the paved loop is not that long, but grades of up to 15% give you a workout.
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Sunset at Garden of the Gods.

We pulled back in our driveway in Glen Ellyn, Illinois after 32 days and 3,687 miles in time to watch the third presidential debate of 2016!