Day One - Leaving the City Behind, Embracing the Wilderness
(A click on any photo will enlarge it to screen size.)
Feeling the need to step away from it all for a while, I enlisted my friend, Eric, for a road trip to Theodore Roosevelt National Park, the North Dakota Badlands. We were on the road at 6:30 a.m., armed with hot coffee and tea.
It's a long, long drive across the prairie of North Dakota to Medora, the gateway to the park. We passed the miles with lively conversation encompassing family, baseball, politics, books, movies, the state of the world, the state of our own lives. We remembered aloud our trips together to Big Bend National Park and to the great national parks in southern Utah.
I brought along my copy of the newest Terry Tempest Williams book, "The Hour of Land," so that Eric could read the chapter on Theodore Roosevelt National Park. As he read, I played a CD of piano music, and for a while my need for silence was satisfied.
Mark Settergren, owner of our local hardware store, was excited to learn of our upcoming trip. He recalled a trip to the park a few years ago and told of waking up one morning and looking out his tent door to see several bison right in his campsite. This, I thought, is what I want.
We arrived at the park late in the afternoon, with the temperature an un-Octoberlike 81 degrees. I always like to talk to park rangers to get their ideas and insights about the park, so our first stop was the visitor center. It was too late to get in a good hike, so we found a campsite and set up our tents. (We each brought our own tent, a luxury of car camping.) Then we set out on a mini-hike along the road. We hadn't left the campground before we encountered wild horses, mule deer and grazing bison!
The view from the Visitor Center |
Teddy Roosevelt's first cabin in the North Dakota Badlands |
Feral horses grazed just steps from our campsite. |
The one downside of our campsite was that, even though we were five miles from the entry point, we could hear the faint hum of the long-haul trucks speeding along I-94. We were eager to visit the North Unit, sixty miles closer to the Arctic Circle.
That night I reread Terry Tempest Williams' chapter on Theodore Roosevelt National Park until I fell asleep. I awoke sometime in the middle of the night, shivering. I had not put the rain fly over the tent, wanting to look up at the stars before I went to sleep. I now reluctantly crawled out of my sleeping bag to put up the rain fly, which made a surprising difference, and then added layers of fleece and wool on top of my polypro long johns. A polypro balaclava topped it all off. I fell back to sleep to the sound of nearby coyotes howling and barking, a good welcome to the wilderness.
Although I knew we would not have long hours of summer light, I was still a bit surprised by the short days and long nights. Eight a.m. was still too dark to crawl out of a warm sleeping bag. And we needed to be back in camp by five pm. to meet our daylight dinner goal.
Day Two - The South Unit
We woke up to find our water bottles topped with ice. That night was supposed to have been the warmest of our stay! After breakfast, we drove the 36-mile loop road, which offered great views and a few interesting short hikes along the way. The day quickly warmed, and by lunch time the temperatures were back in the high 70's.
Along the way we encountered prairie dog towns that spread over vast, empty acres, pockmarked with countless dwelling entrances. Everywhere the little critters chattered back and forth before diving beneath the surface. I think they were alerting the community. Humans! They appear harmless! Still, be careful! A few remained above ground, close to the safety of their tunnel entrance, to watch our progress. One fellow wandered through town, his head down, searching for whatever prairie dogs search for. He came within just a few feet of us, heedless of the warnings from the others. He never even gave us a glance.
We stopped in tiny Medora (winter population about 120) to purchase some supplies, including four gallons of water. We had been warned by the rangers that there was no water to be had in the North Unit at this time of the year. At the store, the woman behind the counter told us we had to try their breakfast sandwiches. She gushed with enthusiasm. They are made right there, fresh each day. It was clearly a point of local pride. We promised her that we would return for a sandwich.
Along the way we encountered prairie dog towns that spread over vast, empty acres, pockmarked with countless dwelling entrances. Everywhere the little critters chattered back and forth before diving beneath the surface. I think they were alerting the community. Humans! They appear harmless! Still, be careful! A few remained above ground, close to the safety of their tunnel entrance, to watch our progress. One fellow wandered through town, his head down, searching for whatever prairie dogs search for. He came within just a few feet of us, heedless of the warnings from the others. He never even gave us a glance.
Hundreds and hundreds of prairie dogs! |
Our afternoon hike required a short drive on I-94 to reach a gravel road that we followed north along the border of the park for about ten miles to reach the Petrified Forest trail.
A sight along the park road, South Unit |
A common sight |
Magnificent Creature |
Badlands of the South Unit |
We sat, and Eric revealed his secret. His backpack opened to become a portable picnic basket, complete with cloth napkins, plates, utensils and a bottle of Argentine malbec (stemware included). The wine was good enough to finish off right there, but we still had miles to go. We corked the bottle for further use at our campsite and set off down the trail to the petrified forest.
Our lunchtime view |
Eric's Surprise |
Petrified forest. Those rocks scattered about were tree trunks eons ago. |
Badlands |
Pete and Novotny. The badlands are popular with horseback riders. |
Days Three and Four - The North Unit
That night, big winds rolled across the open spaces. Lying in my tent, I heard the winds break the stillness, growing louder as they approached until they hit my tent like a heavyweight's best punch. My tent caved in on me, popped back up, then collapsed again under the next gust. I had experienced this before on a mountain top in Nevada, in Death Valley and in Arches National Park. I knew it could go on all night. So I crawled out of the tent, took the tent down and took my sleeping bag to Eric's tent, which was sheltered by trees.
In the morning, the plan was for a breakfast of eggs and bacon before heading to the North Unit. Chilly temperatures, gray skies and lingering winds put that idea to rest. Eager to get on the road, we thought of those breakfast sandwiches the woman spoke so proudly of and had our new plan. We packed up our gear and were off. A different woman was behind the counter, with the same friendliness we had encountered the day before, and the same enthusiasm for their breakfast sandwiches.
Soon we were on Highway 85, heading toward the North Unit, hot coffee and muffins filled with eggs, sausages and cheese in our hands. Those sandwiches were as advertised, and we both regretted not buying two each. After all, we had to fuel up for hiking later.
Back in 2014, when the Bakken oil fields had been the center of a drilling frenzy, Highway 85 was a dangerous road. In "The Hour of Land," the park superintendent at the time, Valerie Naylor, told of a constant stream of "big, fracking trucks and oil carriers" barreling down the highway. There were frequent obituaries of people killed in crashes. These days, the boom has died down quite a bit. We had an uneventful drive.
Back in 2014, when the Bakken oil fields had been the center of a drilling frenzy, Highway 85 was a dangerous road. In "The Hour of Land," the park superintendent at the time, Valerie Naylor, told of a constant stream of "big, fracking trucks and oil carriers" barreling down the highway. There were frequent obituaries of people killed in crashes. These days, the boom has died down quite a bit. We had an uneventful drive.
Climbing to the river overlook along the Caprock Coulee Trail. |
The Little Missouri as seen from Sperati Point |
The Little Missouri, looking north from the River Bend Overlook on the Caprock Coulee Trail |
Eric is also a pretty good teacher when it comes to the night sky. He helped me find Cassiopeia and and Pegasus easily enough. Then he used them as reference points to find Perseus, Pleiades and Andromeda, all strangers to my eye. The surprise came once I had found Pleiades and Perseus with the naked eye and then looked at them through binoculars. Both star clusters burst into brilliant arrays with seemingly ten times as many stars as I could see with the unassisted eye.
I wanted to see all of Orion, but it rises too late at this time of year to be seen before bedtime. Eric described it to me, and when I awoke later in the night, I left my tent to look up and see Orion in its entirety presiding over the night sky. My grandson, Orion, died in infancy ten years ago. Standing alone on the prairie and looking up at the constellation Orion, a sadness came over me at the great loss our family experienced. Soon, however, the sight of the Hunter in the night sky began to comfort me. I found Orion when I returned to the Twin Cities and found the same comfort at seeing it shining above the city.
The trail head of the eleven-mile Buckthorn Trail was just across the road, a short walk from our campsite. Although we didn't attempt this big time hike, we did visit it before dinner on our last evening. Eric went one way; I, another, for a last hour on wilderness trails.
A stream seen from the Buckthorn Trail |
Looking west from the Buckthorn Trail |
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