Image via WikipediaKadoka, from the Lakota word Hadoka meaning "hole in the wall", has been called the Gateway to the Badlands, and with good reason. Bridging a crest from the interstate, your eyes are suddenly dazzled by a landscape dominated by blazing white eroded buttes and spires.
It can be a little disconcerting, but it's beautiful. Kadoka is the only place where the Badlands formations are all this color. Definitely a sight to see!
The Badlands formations are caused by the erosion of rocks from what is known as the White River Group. Millions of years ago, the Badlands were covered by a shallow inland sea that stretched from the Gulf of Mexico into North Dakota.
This inland sea caused the formation of mudstone, sandstone and limestone layers throughout the northern Great Plains over many eons. When the shallow inland sea retreated, these softer layers of rock (softer than the Pierre Shale they overlie) began to be eroded by the strong winds that still buffet the plains year-round. That erosion has led to the other-worldly look of the Badlands, a place that looks like few others on earth.
Want to learn more? Read on here
Black Hills Insider
Saturday, January 7, 2012
Visiting the Remote Badlands South Unit
Image by merriehaskell via FlickrBadlands National Park, under control of the National Park Service is the part of the Badlands that most tourists see.
Half of the Badlands is under the control of the Oglala Sioux Tribe. This is the undeveloped area of the Badlands referred to as the South Unit.
The South Unit is beautiful, and treacherous. With the exception of a dirt (sometimes mud) road near Sheep Mountain, there are no developed areas or easily spotted trails.
The drive over Sheep Mountain is beautiful, but if you're planning on hiking here, make sure you are very experienced and well prepared.
Want to learn more? Read on here
Half of the Badlands is under the control of the Oglala Sioux Tribe. This is the undeveloped area of the Badlands referred to as the South Unit.
The South Unit is beautiful, and treacherous. With the exception of a dirt (sometimes mud) road near Sheep Mountain, there are no developed areas or easily spotted trails.
The drive over Sheep Mountain is beautiful, but if you're planning on hiking here, make sure you are very experienced and well prepared.
Want to learn more? Read on here
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Monday, December 12, 2011
Visiting the Rosebud Indian Reservation
Image via WikipediaThe Sicangu Oyate or Burnt-Thigh people are one of the bands of the Oceti Sakowin (Seven Council Fires) that comprise the Tetuwan Oyate, Lakota or Great Sioux Nation. The name supposedly comes from a time when the band had to run through a fire on the prairie which left many tribal members with burns.
Lewis and Clark called them the Teton of the Burnt Woods in their journals of 1804, and said they "rove on both sides of the Missouri, White, and Teton rivers." The French trappers and traders thereafter called them the Upper Brule.
Want to learn more? Read on here
Lewis and Clark called them the Teton of the Burnt Woods in their journals of 1804, and said they "rove on both sides of the Missouri, White, and Teton rivers." The French trappers and traders thereafter called them the Upper Brule.
Want to learn more? Read on here
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Monday, November 28, 2011
Our Favorite Displays at Storybook Island
Image via WikipediaHave you ever been to Pooh's house? I have! If you visit Storybook Island in Rapid City, South Dakota, you can visit Pooh's house too, along with numerous other displays from some of the world's best-loved storybooks. Come join me as we take a stroll through some of my family's favorite displays at Storybook Island.
And here is Pooh's treehouse! You can enter from the front, or through a tunnel in back. On the ground you'll find Pooh (in a tree stump) and his friends.
Reach the treehouse by climbing directly up, or from the bridge that winds around to the side. The first floor is accessible to nearly every one, the second floor is a bit tougher to reach and the third floor is a climb straight up through a narrow trap door.
Want to learn more? Read on here
And here is Pooh's treehouse! You can enter from the front, or through a tunnel in back. On the ground you'll find Pooh (in a tree stump) and his friends.
Reach the treehouse by climbing directly up, or from the bridge that winds around to the side. The first floor is accessible to nearly every one, the second floor is a bit tougher to reach and the third floor is a climb straight up through a narrow trap door.
Want to learn more? Read on here
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Sunday, November 27, 2011
Visiting D.C. Booth Historic National Fish Hatchery
The D.C. Booth hatchery was in commercial operation from 1896 until 1983, providing trout stock for lakes in the Black Hills and throughout the country.
The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service took over the property in 1989 and has since turned the property into a living history museum to interpret the rich history of our national fish hatcheries and fish culture.
Today, anyone can visit this historic site, which is still in operation as a hatchery. The D.C. Booth National Historic Fish Hatchery still provides trout to stock Black Hills lakes for fishers.
Want to learn more? Read on here
The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service took over the property in 1989 and has since turned the property into a living history museum to interpret the rich history of our national fish hatcheries and fish culture.
Today, anyone can visit this historic site, which is still in operation as a hatchery. The D.C. Booth National Historic Fish Hatchery still provides trout to stock Black Hills lakes for fishers.
Want to learn more? Read on here
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Friday, November 25, 2011
Old MacDonalds Petting Farm: Family Fun in the Black Hills
Image via WikipediaOld MacDonalds petting farm is a fun spot to bring your kids when you're visiting the Black Hills of South Dakota.
On the farm you'll find animal displays (some of which you can enter), watch eggs incubate, hold baby chicks, and bottle feed baby animals in the nursery and bottle-baby pens.
You'll also find a centrally-located playground, where adults can relax in the shade while their kids play, a fish pond, barrel train and pony rides.
Want to learn who is on Old MacDonald's farm? Read on here
On the farm you'll find animal displays (some of which you can enter), watch eggs incubate, hold baby chicks, and bottle feed baby animals in the nursery and bottle-baby pens.
You'll also find a centrally-located playground, where adults can relax in the shade while their kids play, a fish pond, barrel train and pony rides.
Want to learn who is on Old MacDonald's farm? Read on here
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Thursday, November 24, 2011
Storybook Island Family Fun Park
Image via WikipediaStorybook Island theme park opened its doors in 1959 and has remained a family favorite attraction ever since.
Maintained by the Rotary Club, the city of Rapid City and hundreds of volunteers, Storybook Island is the place to take your kids in Rapid City.
Storybook Island is home to dozens of play sets and displays from children's books and nursery rhymes. Some favorites are The Hundred Acre Woods, complete with a three story tree-house and tunnel, the pirate ship, full-size train engine, Snow White's castle, Cat in the Hat, Santa's workshop, the maze, castle gates, Cinderella's pumpkin carriage and Jack's beanstalk to name just a few of the many attractions this park has to offer.
Maintained by the Rotary Club, the city of Rapid City and hundreds of volunteers, Storybook Island is the place to take your kids in Rapid City.
Storybook Island is home to dozens of play sets and displays from children's books and nursery rhymes. Some favorites are The Hundred Acre Woods, complete with a three story tree-house and tunnel, the pirate ship, full-size train engine, Snow White's castle, Cat in the Hat, Santa's workshop, the maze, castle gates, Cinderella's pumpkin carriage and Jack's beanstalk to name just a few of the many attractions this park has to offer.
Related articles
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- Why do people visit South Dakota (wiki.answers.com)
- Stars and Stripes (spoelstrafamily.wordpress.com)
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