National Park

The South Dakota Badlands in Late Summer

Published on by Katya in the category National Park | Leave a comment

The main reason I wanted to visit South Dakota was for the Badlands that I have wanted to see for as long as I can remember. What I didn’t expect was all the other things the Black Hills had to offer. I expected the Black Hills to be something like the Smoky Mountains, but smaller. Not only was the whole area around Deadwood, where we stayed 2 weeks, beautiful and full of bright fall colors, but on the weekends we had a countless number of things to do and see.

The Badlands we held off on till our last full weekend in the area. It was about an hour and a half drive from Deadwood to Wall, SD, where we turned south into the park.

Bison Bull in the Campground in the Morning

Bison Bull in the Campground in the Morning

We had found that there was only really 2 official campgrounds in The Badlands and we chose the more rustic of the two, Sage Creek Campground. For some reason they consider it “primitive”, though has a pit toilet, which is actually a luxury when camping (to me at least). The campground is however 12 miles down a long well kept dirt road where you pass acres of prairie dogs, bison and amazing views. The campground is in a valley frequented by a huge bison herd, and fairly riddled with bison poop naturally, (most of it dried up) but for the most part the bison were about a half mile away in the distance, always visible during our time in the park. The campsites are in a loop surrounding an open pasture with 4 campsites for horse campers to the west of the loop.  We got to the campsite early in the afternoon and for the second time this summer, nearly didn’t get a spot. There was only one spot on the loop open and a couple horse camping spots that we weren’t sure we were supposed to use. It all worked out though because the horse camping sites filled up with trailers running generators all night by the time we got back from driving around the park.

Camping at Sage Creek Campground

Sage Creek Campground, Bison on Hill

After we set up our tent and left a few things on our table to secure our new territory, we decided to continue on Sage Creek Road to the west side of the park and back east through Buffalo Gap National Grasslands. For most that drive we could see the real Badlands in the distance but the area was pretty and drive was nice. The loop around the park took so long that by the time we got to where the really interesting stuff started, we needed to head back to the campsite. The 12 mile drive on the dirt road would consume a good half hour and we didn’t want to eat our dinner in the dark.
We arrived back at the campground just as it got dark. It was chilly out but nothing we couldn’t hang outside in and it wasn’t supposed to get lower than 50 at night. Pretty good for late September. We had a couple beers and hung out , watching our neighbors have a good time and cook their dinners. We had brought wood for burning in case we could, and had hoped to make our food on that but since we were unable to, we had to use our back-country camp stove, which consists of a can of gel that catches on fire and a small aluminum grate. We, for some reason, bought some cheesy garlic ravioli and a rather bland garlic sauce, thinking it would make good camp food. It would have been OK if we didn’t have to use the stove which was almost impossible to boil water on. After the pasta was mostly warm, I then added some insane hot sauce that practically made it inedible. We horked down luke-warm hotter than satan’s spit pasta till I gave up and just had some chips and another beer.

Ross in the Badlands – Sage Creek Road

Once it got really dark, and everyone else had gone to bed, we sat up and talked and drank while I set my medium format camera up for a long exposure shot of our tent and the insanely starry night sky of The Badlands. The moon was bright at this point still but behind the camera. It wasn’t till I got up late at night to use the bathroom that I really saw how amazing a night sky can be. South Dakota is such an unpopulated state. With Rapid City at least 59 miles away and all the other small towns too small to corrupt the horizon with light, you can see more stars than you imagined existed and huge solar systems like clouds strung across the sky.

Not my photo but you get the idea (click image for source)

The next day we packed up and took the slow route through everything we sped past the night before. Hikes (as much as my leg would let me), viewpoints, canyons, fossil beds and tons of great places to stop and take photos. The weather was perfect for walking around in, sky was bright and blue with a few clouds (excellent for taking pictures), and we had a pretty good lunch at the Cedar Pass Lodge, where the other campground is located.

For wildlife, the Badlands did not disappoint and although you may not usually go on dirt roads on your road trips, Sage Creek Road has the majority of animals on it. Bison herds the like of Yellowstone, a prairie dog city,  pronghorn and hawks were regular sights on that long drive and is also has some of the best view points in the park. I’m glad they haven’t paved it because it keeps the majority of tourists away but if you are the adventurist type, take Sage Creek Road and turn around at the campground 12 miles in.

People are strange:

When we were in Sheridan Wyoming, we met a man as he got his 5th wheel ready to leave. We told him we were on our way to Dodge City and the Badlands and he proceeded to tell us how incredibly ugly the Badlands are. I was a bit shocked. Having never seen it in person I still knew it would be one of my favorite places in the country. I love strangeness, geology, history and the otherwordliness of places like that. He also considered the Sheridan area ugly. All he could see was dried, dead grass where I saw striking yellow and golden fields, rustic fences, old historic buildings and the awesome Bighorn mountains in the background. It’s hard to remember that some people just want to see green gardens and waterfalls while people like us are seeking out mars. To each their own, so I’ve heard.

Grizzly Lake Trail, Yellowstone National Park, WY

Published on by Katya in the category Environment, Hiking, National Forest, National Park, survival | Leave a comment

Grizzly Lake Trail, Yellowstone

The Grizzly Lake Trail is an awesome and fairly easy hike, but be prepared to get wet. May is pretty much the middle of the wet season in Yellowstone (if the snow is even thawed that is), so it was muddy and wet 100 yards into the trail. We hadn’t really expected it (or had hoped for the best), so Ross had to run back to the car early on to get better footwear.

The hike starts with a hill to the left and plains to the right (or should I say wetlands). Much of the trail itself was a sort of rudimentary stream, shallow and crystal clear with a pebble bottom. Because of this you spend most of the first part of the hike walking in mushy grass and avoiding bison dung. All along the trail were a single pair of bison prints, possible some lone male in search of greener pastures. Occasionally we would see wolf scat,wolf prints and at least one large blackbear print. The ground was also littered with obsidian, starting with a huge glimmering boulder of pure obsidian sticking out of the trail, later with an even larger one in the field, and from then on, obsidian shards riddle the trail and ground all the way to the lake.

Obsidian Boulder

After hiking about a mile or 2 in,  we came to a creek, swollen and white, though not too deep or fast to cross. We were dedicated to continuing our hike so we found the most narrow part we could, about 50 yards south of the trail, and “jumped” across. Naturally being too wide to actually jump, we just ended up mostly soaked and were now apparently on an island with another larger creek still to cross. We walked back up the island towards the trail till we found a log and walked across that precariously, of course having take photos of our “daring” moment. From then on the hike was mostly up and down small hills, rocky and open with random small trees and signs of animals. We kept a good look out for bears, bison and wolves, both for photographic reasons and safety, but never ran into anything. After about 4 miles we decided to turn around just before reaching the first back country campground on this particular trail. It was a cool day and we had only drank part of one bottle of water but had not brought snacks (for bear reasons), only bear mace, water and a backpack. We hope to camp at one of the back country campgrounds before we leave the Yellowstone area.

Ross crossing the creek, Grizzly Lake Trail, Yellowstone

Spiky Plant in the Yellowstone

 

White Flowers in Yellowstone

Grizzly Lake

 

Weekend one in the Smoky Mountains

Published on by Katya in the category Hiking, National Park, out and about | 2 Comments

Ripley's CircusWe arrived a the Smokey Bear Campground on a Saturday, after our stress filled drive through the mountains. It was a relatively warm, sunny day. We had somehow avoided a major storm system due to hit Asheville. After we setup the trailer, inside and out, and made the animals happy, we headed into Gatlinburg with almost no idea what to expect. We don’t generally travel based on what’s in the towns we go to but rather what they’re near to – places like The Everglades, “anywhere with alligators” or the Smoky Mountains, so although we knew Gatlinburg was different by looking at it a bit on google maps, we had no idea what a circus of a town it would be.

We started by driving through the center of town, the street were filled with meandering tourists and their hyperactive kids, adorned with brightly colored spray paint tees, funnel cakes and bags full of quirky “Smoky Mountain” memorabilia. We decided to park in a garage at the farthest end or town and take our chances walking to find a place to eat.  As usual, searching for places that have vegetarian food in a small tourist town can be hit or miss (usually miss) so we headed to a place that had pizza. It was appropriately called, Smoky Mountain Brewery, and oddly our waiter and several other people working there were German. In many ways Gatlinburg reminded me of the German settled Fredericksburg, Texas, though with a lot less reference to its German origins. Since it was a Saturday, the restaurant was full, as was every place in the 8 blocks of downtown Gatlinburg, from Fudge Shoppe to Olde Tyme Photo Studio (Gatlinburg has about 20 of these). The pizza was actually pretty good, a veggie with white sauce and lots of tobasco. We went home with leftovers and a little bewildered from all the sights and sounds. Compared to the places we usually stay, Gatlinburg was to us, like a dance party is to a slug .
Having previously been excited about seeing the Movie Car museum and the Ripley’s Believe it or Not franchise, we realized that just walking past these places was almost as good. One of Ripley’s many buildings had great and creepy animatronic circus folk outside, luring people in with their surreal, desaturated demeanors. And the Movie Car Museum had the Dukes of Hazard car and Herbie the Love Bug parked right in the doorway- what more could you want from a Museum that most likely holds none of the original cars anyway. I was more interested in a small dose of people watching, than the attractions themselves. Although the main event is that Gatlinburg is the “Gateway to the Smokies”, and that was the supposed reason many people were there, the majority of people didn’t seem like the “hiking in the mountains” types and I suspect many of them were on a little day trip from Pigeon Forge, where they went to Dollywood, watched hillbilly family feud reenactments like the Hatfield & McCoy theater show, went to the Titanic Museum and had Southern BBQ every day. This may some of my anti tourist sentiment. Travelers and tourists are very different. At the same time, I don’t really blame anyone for wanting to get the hell our of their routines, kids and all, and go somewhere where they can just tune out, I just wish people wouldn’t encourage the atrocities that happen in downtown Gatlinburg and main street Pigeon Forge. Off the main strip, Gatlinburg can be really pretty.

Gatlinburg, Tennessee

Gatlinburg, Tennessee

Downtown Gatlinburg, Tennessee

Gatlinburg Downtown & The Space Needle

Gatlinburg Downtown & The Space Needle

On Sunday, we headed straight for the park. We stopped at the Visitor Center where there was a small display of stuffed local flora and fauna, from poisonous plants to strange exotic flowers to the large and woolly, wild boar. From there we headed, whichever direction seemed interesting, and saw the signs for numerous trails, but the first one we pulled off the road for was probably my favorite. It was a seemingly uninteresting trail, but our first in the Smokies. It just sort of headed up a hill into the trees, no creek or cliff side to be seen, but the eerie lighting was great. The southern forests always make me think of epic and overly emotional independent films (sometimes horror films). Generally any film where the forests provides a creepy mood throughout (this is a good thing, I love movies). The climb took us to the top of a low peak with a fairly nice view. There was a small clearing with unmarked stones placed in rows, and for some reason, it took seeing a name on one of the stones to register that we had come across a cemetery – on a trail, on a mountain, in a National Forest. I imagined a family from 140 years ago who used to live on this land before it was a National Park, but the strangeness of a headstone from as recently as 1992 said whoever’s cemetery it was, was still somewhat around. We joked that someone must have snuck the body up the hill one night, headstone in tow, to put them in the family cemetery. How else does one get buried on National land? I know if I had 7 generations of family buried in a private cemetery in the Smoky Mountains with a great view I would.. somehow.. hmm.. maybe getting too morbid here.

Smoky Mountain Cemetery

Smoky Mountain Cemetery

The next place we came across was the Laurel Falls trail. There was actual parking for this trail, lots, and several cars already there. We brought only our regular walking shoes, mine flat black Keds and Ross with some worn out Asics. This didn’t actually matter though, the trail was relatively wide, paved and occupied by some of the larger and more elderly tourists that I thought I’d never see off the streets of Gatlinburg. Surprisingly, the trail wasn’t as short and easy as I expected. It was about 1.3 miles each way, a steady climb though with little to no risk to life or limb. Along the way we ran out of water, unprepared to need more than one bottle, and filled it from a small waterfall coming out of the rocks. When we reached Laurel Falls, there was a bridge over the water and about 15 people lingering about. Some resting, others taking photos. We looked around for a place to sit and opted for the more inaccessible lower falls, which could only be reached by maneuvering down a rocky cliff side trail, difficult with flat soled slippery shoes, but worth it to see the jealous faces of the people above who were unable or unwilling to climb down.

Laurel Falls Trail

Laurel Falls

Lower Laurel Falls

After Laurel Falls, we continued our drive into the park, finding a campsite we could never stay at (because of our need for internet for work), and stopped for a cold pizza picnic next to a postcard perfect creek – complete with a fly fishing Boy Scout and dorky swimming teenage girls (there weren’t many places to pull off the road). We watched the young boy continuously get his fly caught in the trees, and quietly laughed as we watched the girls’ sandals float down stream. The ants had left us alone and it was time to move on. We had time for one more trail before heading back to check on the animals. This trail was marked and had some parking, but was ultimately unchallenging. Really a perfect trail for the end of the day and a great place to see some of the flowers and insects of the park. The trail basically stayed on even ground, leading into an “open” meadow filled with amusingly placed fallen trees and enough sunlight for life to be interested in.

Lion Dance Tree

Tree Romance

We headed home to our lonely pets after that. Dreading  the work week ahead but with 3 more weekends in the Smokies to look forward to and a great view, we couldn’t complain too much. Our campsite, right across from the park, and neighbour with 15 bird feeders, would prove to be a great view while we worked.

Chena at Smokey Bear Campground, Gatlinburg Tennessee

Chena at Smokey Bear Campground, Gatlinburg Tennessee