After 30 days on the road, we made it back home. Looks like the work piled up while we were gone. The grass is long (over 4.6" of rain in the rain gauge), the weeds are tall, and all the flower beds need composed and cleaned up. Other than that, but at least one lighting storm killed our router, internet modem, and ups; things were as we left them. The Moose is 4500 miles older and the Squirrel about 3,000 miles (plus the 4500 pulled behind the Moose). A good trip overall.
An Itasca Sunrise Class A and a G6 exploring America with two juvenile retirees, living the dream.
Thursday, August 23, 2012
Monday, August 20, 2012
Mark Twain Boyhood Home
This morning we left the Missouri River and trudged eastward on SR 36. It is now 200 miles of four lane across Missouri. We passed through country side closely resembling Ohio in landscape and town names. J.C. Penney, Pershing, and Walt Disney were all from this area. This afternoon we stopped on the west bank of the Mississippi at Hannibal, Missouri (Tomorrow we start back across Illinois). The Twain Museum and Hannibal is interesting although we prefer scenery to pictures and word to read. The museum also has 15 Norman Rockwell originals depicting Mark Twain scenes and a special Thomas Benton gallery is currently displayed.
Sunday, August 19, 2012
Glore Museum
We are overnighting in St. Joseph, Missouri. Several years ago I learned of the Glore Museum in this town. Actually it was better known as State Lunatic Asylum 2. This is a VERY different museum and it's displays, along with Indian, and civil war displays made a museum worth visiting. Note that much of what they have is thought provoking and insensitive and visits the dark side of humanity. I would suggest a little web surfing if interested. Stomach contents from a patient are shown below.
Friday, August 17, 2012
Scotts Bluff NM & Chimney Rock NHS
Our final part of the day took us to Scotts Bluff NM and then on to a camp site within one mile of Chimney Rock HS. These cliffs are on the Oregon Trail, running along the North Platte River. The pony express also ran thru here for 18 months. Our campground tonight is completely empty. We are the only rig and the there are no lights (something we are use to at home). We have decided not to trade the Moose for a Murphy wagon so the evening should be comfortable.
Global Change
Twenty years ago when out west my memory recalls clear sky and 100 mile visibility. This trip it seems very hazy in the distance and I believe 30 miles is the limit. Per the web, CO2 emissions are the lowest they have been in years and you never see smoke billowing into the sky. The coal fired electric plant at Thunder Basin (Gillette,Wy) looked like zero emissions. My theory is that China, SE Asia, and India is dumping massive amounts of pollution into the atmosphere and that until that stops our problem will continue and accelerate.
Agate Springs Ranch
James Cook was an early rancher here and befriended the Sioux and Cheyenne. Part of his collection is displayed at Agate Fossil NM. One of the unique items was the whetstone Chief Crazy Horse had in his possession when killed by horse soldiers.
Agate Fossil NM
Today we chose to travel south out of the Black Hills versus shooting east across South Dakota. This gave us several hundred miles on Nebraska two lane. There is lots of rolling prairie and rocks in western Nebraska. Agate, as expected, was a visitor center with several long hot trails. Eastern colleges and the government have removed most of the visible 90 million year old fossils. One unique feature were fossiled beaver dens which looked like a corkscrew.
Thursday, August 16, 2012
Mt. Rushmore
Now your probably saying I am outside the box on my Rushmore interpretation so take a look at this from a slightly different vantage point and see what you think. Admission $11 (your annual pass won't work here).
Mt. Rushmore NP
Oh boy, here we go:
Considering some of the "art" I have seen , I have to admit that Borglum was very talented and that the sculptured monument is "a work of art". Now the other side, If the flag wavers want to pat themselves on the back and build pagan idols to praise themselves more power to them ;BUT; they should do it in Little Rome (DC), not South Dakota and they should pay for it themselves, not off the back of the working class. That said, Rushmore is nothing more than graffiti on a horrendous scale. If this type of action prevails, future generations may see Obama or Romney when they look up to the moon at night.
Considering some of the "art" I have seen , I have to admit that Borglum was very talented and that the sculptured monument is "a work of art". Now the other side, If the flag wavers want to pat themselves on the back and build pagan idols to praise themselves more power to them ;BUT; they should do it in Little Rome (DC), not South Dakota and they should pay for it themselves, not off the back of the working class. That said, Rushmore is nothing more than graffiti on a horrendous scale. If this type of action prevails, future generations may see Obama or Romney when they look up to the moon at night.
The Black Hills
This is an extremely picturesque area of granite, pine, green grass covering 1900 sq. miles. Using the Pope's methods, the government called in the military to slaughter all native land owners. This allowed the big money in the east to send miners to the area for materialistic gain. After that was more or less finished, the indian agents who had successfully finished their job of killing any missed indians proceeded to turn the area into a tourist trap for future generations. If you stay in the southern part of the park you will enjoy the scenic beauty of the area. Rapid City, not so much so, is just a tourist profit center. Note: South Dakota State Park does charge $15/car entry to Custer State Park. Also the pine beetle is at work and will very likely diminish the beauty of the area very shortly.
Jewel Cave NP
This park is a must see if you like caves. While tourist accessible areas are limited this is a large cave consisting of over 160 miles underground. It has some of the best and varied formations found underground. I rate it better than Mammoth and equal to Carlsbad. Nailhead, popcorn, stalactites, stalagmites, boxwork,frostwork, ribbons, curtains, and soda straws are all present.
Wednesday, August 15, 2012
Wind Cave NP
Today was morning travel to a new RV park 100 mile down the road and then an afternoon at Custer State Park and Wind Cave NP. Saw lots of buffalo, pronghorn, burros, and pine trees. Custer is a nice park. Took the hour tour at Wind Cave and saw their specialty boxwork honeycomb. The east wind picked up today so it was windy, cloudy, and 72F. If you want a nice RV park outside Custer and away from the Rapid City tourist traps, go to Hermosa (Heartland RV Park).
Tuesday, August 14, 2012
South Dakota State Parks
It seems I have always had issues with the Rapid City area. Twenty-five years ago I visited and left less than pleased. So far they are right on course and I can hardly wait to see the next two days. We did stop at Wall Drug, a unique part of Americana, and probably the biggest tourist trap in the US. Also stopped at the South Dakota State Park Sod house at the Badlands where they have a tourist trap and try to charge $7/head to see a sod house. I tell you, these people are the crookedest jerks I've seen (not counting Washington DC) and are all likely decendants of US Indian Agents. Here is a sod house and you and I don't need to pay $7 to see it.
Minuteman Missile National Historic Site
Back in the 60's when the US government was actively trying to provoke Russia into a world war, they placed hundreds of missiles in underground silos across the US (500 of these are still active). Each missile contained a 1.2 megaton warhead. The NPS decided to turn one of the obsolete silos into a historical site. This is where the problem begins; The "offical site" at I90 exit 131 is a two room plywood shack with a extremely poor 5 minute video. If you want to see a silo, you need to drive 15 miles west to look down in a plexiglass covered concrete hole. If you want to see the defunct "Launch Control Facility " you need to arrive early in the morning to get a ticket. Now this is high tech stuff with retired military NPS rangers (who apparently have to limit tours because they can not repeatedly climb 60' stairs more than once or twice a day). Lucky they are not "working" at a lighthouse. Any way, after visiting over 1/4 of the NPS parks, memorials, & historical sites; I can truely say this site is FUBAR (in military terms) and is the poorest managed NPS site in the US that we have (not) seen to date.
Badland NP
Bad as usual, this parks major claim to fame is that it is the first true western look you find as you travel west. If you like bentonite quarries, this is the place to be. The sad note is that it erodes about inch a year and will eventually disappear unless the government spends trillions of $ to cover the entire area with a roof.
Monday, August 13, 2012
Devils Tower National Monument
Today was technically a travel day. Billings to Sundance, Wy took 5 hours (300 miles). But we passed on Custer's Last Mistake (definitely a great stop if you have not been there as standing on the hillside you can vividly feel his last thought -"Oh S---, I'm not getting out of this one!" We trudged thru Sheridan, Buffalo, thru the natural gas and coal fields of Gillette (Boy this town has grown since the 80's), and on to Sundance where we stopped for overnight. However, being only 3PM we drove another 60 miles by Squirrel to see Devil's Tower. This is one neat volcano core and the 1.25 mile path around the tower is great. No wonder it was the first National Monument (1906).
Sunday, August 12, 2012
Billings Montana
The Milky Way was great in Emigrant, Montana and the Perseid was okay at 23 meteors in 1/2 hour. Drove the two hours to Billings today which gave us a free afternoon to visit the Yellowstone Art Museum, Pictograph Caves State Park, and Pompeys Pillar National Monument. All three had their high points but viewing W. Clark's 206 year old name carved on Pompeys Pillar was probably the best.
Friday, August 10, 2012
Yellowstone3
Today was on and off rain in Yellowstone, tomorrow may need to switch to long pants. Hope it clears up for the Perseid Saturday night. In the meantime we like boiling mud.
Thursday, August 9, 2012
Yellowstone 2
After geysers yesterday, we hit the east side of the park , Yellowstone Canyon. We also were up to 8800' so we could see the caldera rim clearly. When this puppy blew 630,000 years ago it must have been quite an event. Finished the day with a country four piece band at the campground, a fine Thai dinner at Lighthouse Restaurant, and an evening thunderstorm. That's okay, we were done for the day and the Moose needed a bath. The wax job in June is long gone after 3,000 mile plus.
Wednesday, August 8, 2012
Yellowstone
We have moved to Yellowstone. Today was the primary geyser area at Old Faithful. The weather was too excellent, we are not getting any cloudy sunset pics. Guess we will have to settle for algae and bacteria in the hot pools.
Monday, August 6, 2012
Two Medicine
It cooled down to the low 60s today and was overcast so we went to Two Medicine. Lots of flowers and the waterfalls were great. Also got to see several moose and a very spry 80 year old professor from New Hampshire.
Many Glacier GNP
We spent a week exploring Glacier. By day seven we were hiked out and spent our last afternoon sitting in the woods at Swift Current Lake. The first sketch is Karen's and took 2.5 hrs. The photo is Keith's and took less than a second.
Wednesday, August 1, 2012
Avalanche Lake
Today was a drive across the top of Glacier (twice) and a four mile hike to Avalanche Lake. A beautiful day (49-75F). The rangers were busy at Avalanche looking for a hiker last seen five days ago. He was alone and there is a bear and cat in the area. Due to construction, I was able to drive from Logan Pass to the loop this morning with zero traffic. We enjoyed 10mph and several stops with no people. The 1,000' drop was magificent.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)