On the road

Saturday, May 12, 2012

Theodore Roosevelt National Park South Unit





We pulled into the park early in the morning when the sun was coming up. 



Sunrise
  It had a nice campground called cottonwood a national campground. No hookup but nice spots with good rates. As we found out later in the day the bison come into the park. They will just lay around in the RV spots or eat.

 We went to the visitor center and museum first. Then the small town of Medora. Where they have a lot of shops and restaurants. Looked through some of the shops but there were lot of them not open yet. They have a couple campgrounds and motels there also.

We drove the 36 mile scenic drive through the park. There is a lot of petrified wood exposed in the badlands.



 There is a blue-gray layer of clay that has been traced to ash from ancient volcanoes far to the west. Some of the views were beautiful.



scenic view
  We saw bison throughout the park and small calves too. The first time for me to see the babies.


They were reintroduced in 1956 and elk in 1985. We saw mule deer and white tail deer and three turkeys. They were quite large. Wild horses roam in the south unit, we saw a few. There were hundreds of prairie dogs running all over the place.


 Roosevelt had two ranches in the badlands. He pursued his interest in establishing the U.S. forest service. He established 5 national parks and 51 wildlife refuges. He proclaimed 18 national monuments. They have a lot of Roosevelt memorabilia in the visitor center.Very nice place to visit.





 
After taking this picture relized we saw a face in the rock looked like a lion







 More to come.         Ginny

North Dakota

We entered North Dakota and that is our 48th state we have visited in the three years of our travel. It has been a wonderful journey. Some of you thought I would have killed Charlie by now but truly we have enjoyed every minute. A few disagreements .
While traveling in North Dakota it was mile after mile of farm land. A small line of trees between the fields for a wind break. These farmers are serious and the tractors they drive are really big. They have lots of water in North Dakota it might be a small pond to a large lake. Some areas you can’t tell what they are.

We saw a train from Canada come through. Not sure how important it was but there were a couple cars of people who got out to watch it and their cars were marked Canadian Pacific railroad.


                                                  Lake Ashtabula
We stayed at Lake Ashtabula in North Dakota. It was a beautiful park on a lake. While we were setting up the frogs were all over the place. I wanted to take some back to my grandson Logan as he loves frogs but they probably wouldn’t make it. I took a walk around the park and took some pictures.

pelicans on the lake
  I saw three pelicans on the lake but I had to walk through the weeds to get a better shot. I got some great pictures of them. There were some boats on the lake saw a man catch a bullhead he didn’t want to touch it so he keep swinging his pole around to knock him off. When I got back I realized I had a bunch of dog ticks on me. Charlie was helping me get them off. Well later that night we found one of them on Charlie’s belly. It had attached. I had a hard time getting to sleep even after a shower that night thinking there might be more.

                                                   Jamestown
We went to Jamestown ND to see the largest Buffalo in the world.


Buffalo
He was pretty big. He weights 60 ton and stands 26 feet tall. His name is Dakota Thunder. They had a herd of bison and three were albino bison but we didn’t see them they were in a field away from the center for the winter months. American Indian legend holds the rare albino bison as sacred. They also have a nice Buffalo Museum. They have a frontier village with artifacts and antiques from the region. It was not open yet but you could look through the windows.
We stopped in Steele ND. They had the largest Sand hill Crane in the world. It was built in 1998-99.


He was also big you could see him from the road. He is 40 feet tall and weights 4 ½ ton. The man who built him was a self-taught ironworker .
We went on down the road to a town called New Salem where Salem Sue was up on a hill you could see her for miles. We parked into a fairground. Then I walked up the road ½ mile or so to see her.


Salem Sue
 We couldn’t take the 5th wheel up as the parking lot was too small. She was pretty a big cow. She is the worlds largest Holstein cow in the world.
38 feet tall 50 feet long weights 12,000 lbs. built in 1974 and cost $40,000.

We went to Regent ND where Gary Greff builds the worlds largest sculptures. One of them is called the Geese in Flight. The sun ray is 156 feet long and 110 feet tall .The largest goose has a 30 foot wing span and is 19 feet long.

My favorite is the fisherman’s dream. This sculpture is a three dimensional that is made out of tin to form seven fish. The fish swimming under the water scene includes a small mouth bass, walleye, catfish, northern pike, salmon and bluegill which measures thirty feet long. Jumping out of the water is a 70 foot long rainbow trout.




Pheasants on the Prairie are made of wire mesh. The rooster stands 40 feet high and 70 feet long. The hen is 35 feet tall and 60 feet long. The chicks are15 feet tall and 20 feet long.
The Tin Family. Built of used farm equipment. The pa stands 45 feet and is held up by 16 telephone poles. The ma is 44 feet tall while the son is a mere 23 feet tall.

Tin Family
                                                  Grasshoppers in the field.


                                                           Teddy rides again 


                                                             The deer family

The next one will be dogs. The area around Regent has lots of Chinese ring neck pheasants. 
Pheasant

The farmers will allow you to book hunts on their farms. When we left Regent we ran into a bit of trouble. The wind was blowing and the gusts were pretty bad. It blew the medal from the under belly loose under the storage area. We stopped to try and hook it down until we could get to town. It looked like it could pull a big hole in the side.
We pulled into a Wal-Mart in Dickenson. We were trying to hook the medal down and the wind got stronger and pulled out our awning and was flipping it over the top of the fifth wheel. We had to turn the truck around so we could roll it back in. It broke a bracket off one of the arms. We were getting hammered by the wind. We stayed in the parking lot for the night. It is so hard to sleep in a parking lot. We were waiting for the high wind warning to go off and we left at 4am headed for the Theodore Roosevelt National Park about 45 miles away. More to come
Ginny