This was my view from "bed" this morning. Pre-sunrise colors flooded into the car as birds sang and cows moo'd outside. I had slept like the dead and woke feeling refreshed and full of joy. Gosh it was peaceful!!! But making it last was not in the cards. I had places to be... I was a lady on mission this morning.
Showing posts with label Wind Cave National Park. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Wind Cave National Park. Show all posts
Tuesday, June 10, 2025
Custer County is WOW-worthy!
Here's the situation with Wind Cave National Park. It's free to enter! BUT it's not free to see the cave itself and it's also Ranger guided only, which means you need to get a ticket and they are limited, understandably. Tickets can be purchased online - in theory. In practice, at this time of year the supply online was long since gone and I was left with Option #2: buy a ticket in person the day of. (About half of the ticket sales are reserved for same day purchase, but it's a first come, first served thing.)
Yesterday, rocking up to the Visitor Center and inquiring, I was told that all tickets for that day were gone but if I came back at opening time (8 AM) tomorrow, I could line up to buy any available tour ticket. As I left that building, I noticed "line starts here" signs poked into the ground leading 100 yards away from the entrance... Hmm... all signs pointed to me being not alone in my quest!
So, after a quick coffee stop in Hot Springs at 6:30 AM, I headed straight into Wind Cave NP. Arriving at 6:46 AM, I expected to wait in my car until closer to 8 AM then line up. WRONG! The line was already started and I was patron #15 after high-tailing it from my vehicle, coffee and wallet in hand!
For the next hour I chatted with 3 delightful young ladies about life and travel. Inspirational and motivational. Time well spent. Here I also learned that while 50% of the tickets are sold online and 50% in person, its not 50% of each tour per se; it could be that all the morning tours sold on line and I had to wait til 3:30 PM today to see the cave... time would tell. Oh... and each person in line could be buying tickets for a group of people, meaning that just being #15 in line didn't guarantee that 150 tickets hadn't already been sold before I got to the ticket counter!
Success - well for me anyway. I was a single person hoping for the earliest possible Fairgrounds tour. And that's what I was lucky enough to score for the very reasonable price of $16.
Our Ranger/Guide was Casey. She graduated with a degree in history just 3 weeks ago, started her job with the Park Service 2 days later and last week, added Cave Guide to her list of accomplishments!
We (20 of us) loved Casey. She was funny and informative, great with the kids and prioritized conservation of the cave as well as our safety. Good job, well done!!!
Wind Cave is an extensive network for tunnels and caverns running in every direction and it is still being mapped. I believe something like 120 miles are so far discovered but it's ongoing. Nobody has conclusively ruled out this cave at some point intersecting with Jewel Cave, also in the area.
It is dimly lit and we walked on mostly concreted path and copious quantities of stairs in our particular tour which went as deep as the public is allowed to go. Entry and exit was actually by elevator! There are other tours, less strenuous and a bit shorter, to choose from too.
Essentially one sets a path to Wind Cave in order to see 3 types of cave formation:
Box Work: Flat sheets/lines of calcite that once filled the cracks in limestone rock, then the limestone eroded and left just the calcite box work.
Popcorn: Little nubbies of calcite that form from condensation in the cave. The cave is 97% humidity and 57 degrees cool. It is considered a "dry cave" though, as no water seeps in or runs through or pools in it.
Frost Work: Looks like crystal formation. It literally sparkles like frost. Also calcite... it's always calcite!
I drove the Needles Highway through Custer State Park this morning. It abuts the north side of Wind Cave NP and before you know it you've driven from one into the other. Custer SP is lush and gorgeous and shared by many! It's one of my fav's and I'd consider coming back here to explore it more in the off-season. Kudos to South Dakota.
Leaving the Black Hills of South Dakota, now one of my favorite places, the place is alive with birds and flowers and there are a thousand people on vacation pulling large RV's with even larger families, it appears.
Listening to Enya's The Return to Innocence, which seems just perfect for the energy in this area and the history of Native Americans, the legends and the vibes. It's always good to reconnect with what really floats my boat and remember how little I need in the way of gadgets and accessories, to be happy. My car is coated in bugs and dust and there is no less dust between my toes and under my fingernails. My hair needs a wash and I think that's a cactus thorn inside the tip of one of my most used fingers! But feral me feels liberated by this little roadtrip.
... and grateful to be coming home to Colorado too... despite the return to thunderstormy skies!
Monday, June 09, 2025
Run like the wind to Wind Cave National Park
It was a little cooler overnight! I woke with cold feet, remembering way too late that I did in fact, pack appropriately for this. By 4:30 AM I was up and at 'em. Foggy headed, disheveled and disorganized being the true description of my situation. The sky was clear and sunrise (pre-sunrise) was phenomenal ... but I really couldn't figure out which overlook and view was right or where to train my camera.
I walked, sat, enjoyed the changing light and little skilled photography to show for it. That's life sometimes!
The universe was telling me it was time to make coffee, eat Lucky Charms with raspberries and take time to pull myself together - So I did.
The universe was also telling me not to ignore that crawly feeling on my neck. At 8:58 AM I pulled a lively (but still hungry?) tick off my collar and released him back into the wilds. Guessing he was an American dog tick... I did a quick interwebs search of risk factors associated with ticks out here. After all, I still had a lot of "walking through the weeds" planned.
- Rocky Mountain Spotted Fever
- Lyme Disease (more likely from a deer tick)
- Tularemia
- Anaplasmosis - unlikely
- Ehrlichiosis
NICE! Ticky was all I thought I took away from a disappointing photoshoot but if I don't end up needing a dose of tetracycline, then I guess it's not a big deal. And I learned a little something.
Plus, there is always someone less fortunate and today that award goes to the hundreds of swallows frantically regurgitating white clay into pretty mud nests. Trouble is they picked a shelter located at the fossil-find area. Every morning around 8 AM a ranger stops by and uses a shovel to wipe off the half-built nests and then power washes the clay evidence so the shelter goes back to being nest-free... for a while. Truthfully, before he has even left the parking lot, they're coughing up more mud and ... it will be groundhog day again tomorrow.
Yesterday I felt devastated for them. Today it seemed the ranger and birds were evenly matched and it was hard to guess who was winning the battle of wits. I took their pictures and called it good.
What a mess! LOL
I bopped around for a bit then used the Visitor Center washroom and headed west. It was time to see what WIND CAVE National Park offered.
Obviously more prairie dog towns - because South Dakota does seem to hold them up with a level of pride only previously witnessed for Simba in The Lion King!
And for sure there were bison... But could they beat the running and dust bathing guys from earlier today?
A ranger told me to wait a couple of hours for some heat to dissipate before completing the wildlife loop by car - increase my chances of seeing animals doing anything at all. Rumor has it badgers and coyotes are possible. We'll see. In the meantime, a good chance to find shade, make a sandwich and catch up on journaling.
I literally slept on the side of this road tonight, having hit a wall (mentally, not literally) around 9 PM while driving the 7-11 Rd just outside Wind Cave. I could get used to sleeping near moo-ing cows and watching the light fade from my wee cot in the 4-runner!
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