It was frosty again this morning, and I ate
‘continental’ breakfast at the common room of the Sagebrush Inn before continuing
my trek across the continent to Ohio. I
left Broadus and drove southeast on Hwy 212 & cut across the northeast
corner of Wyoming into South Dakota. I
gassed up and got a latté in Belle Fourche, and dropped down to Sturgis,
Isn't Sturgis all about Motorcycles? |
and
then to Mount Rushmore National Memorial.
This is
a memorial to four of America’s premier Executives, conceived by historian
Doane Robinson, and brought to fruition by sculptor Gutzon Borglum. Borglum was a child of Mormon Polygamy, was
the initial carver of the Stone Mountain Confederate Memorial, and was one of
six Knights who sat on the Imperial Koncilium in 1923, which transferred leadership
of the Ku Klux Klan from Imperial Wizard Colonel Simmons to Imperial Wizard
Hiram Evans. Nice guy. They don’t teach you about this stuff in
school . . .
I
walked the Presidents’ Trail, and the “nature” trail, and watched the video of
the history and creation of the Mount Rushmore memorial.
I sent
a shot of the mountain to some friends, and one - Doug - noted that there was
room for Donald Trump’s head on the mountain.
I replied that it would have to be on the Far Right.
My
birding goal here was to see a White-winged Junco, which is endemic to the
Black Hills region. It was considered a
separate species until it was “lumped” with the other subspecies of the
Dark-eyed Junco in 1976. There were a
few feeding just below the visitors’ center.
Yup. They look a lot like the Slate-colored Junco . . . |
Leaving
the monument, there was a small group of Mountain Goats feeding alongside the
road, showing no fear of the people or vehicles in close proximity.
No Fear! |
On the
road out, a small herd of pronghorn were grazing, and a coyote was hunting her
way through a prairie dog town.
Pronghorn - Antilocapra americana |
Coyote - Canis latrans |
I
stopped to eat a quick snack at the Wind Cave National Park, and walked a bit
around the Prairie Vista trail. The site
is important to many of the Lakota people, as Wind Cave is the sacred site in
their oral creation story. This is where
the Pte Oyate - Buffalo Nation People - emerged from inside Mother Earth and
became Ikce Wicasa - Common People.
Then it
was time to make some miles. I dropped
down through the Pine Ridge Reservation.
I thought about stopping at Wounded Knee, but in my old age, I’ve
developed an aversion to visit places where murders and genocides have taken
place. Perhaps there truly are Spirits
remaining on the land. I continued east
on Highway 18 to the town of Martin, then dropped south to US Hwy 20 and east
to Valentine, Nebraska. I checked into
the Raine Motel for $67.19, and ate an order of the ribs special at the
attached restaurant. I’d never tried the
Leinenkugel's Summer Shandy before, and probably won’t again. I also tried a Kinkaider’s Devil’s Gap
jalapeño ale, which would also be a beer that I’d drink on a hot summer day if
the beer was cold enough.
Mount
Rushmore eBird Checklist is Here
Wind
Cave National Park eBird Checklist is Here
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