We’re spending our first night under the stars in the Badlands. The view from here is breathtaking: free from the glare of night-lights, we can finally see all the stars. Gone is the silent roar of traffic, the distant whine of police sirens, the raging parties across the hall. The chirp of crickets, and the howl of a distant wolf is all we hear.
We drove over 500 miles today, starting from Minneapolis and going straight south to Austin, MN, and then straight west on the I-90. We made three stops along the way. The first stop was at the SPAM Museum. Going in, there was a wall made of thousands of cans of SPAM. This was followed by exhibits about the history of SPAM, games for kids and a big SPAM-themed gift shop.
The second pit stop was at the giant statue of the Green Giant in Blue Earth, MN. This was a bit of a let-down, since even the nearby Dairy Queen sign was bigger. We were expected the Green Giant to be, well, gigantic, not merely oversized. The third stop, at the Corn Palace of Mitchell, SD, was a little more satisfying. It was unabashedly tacky, like any other roadside attraction, but there was also majesty to it. The building itself looked like a Russian Orthodox cathedral on the plains, but covered with murals made from corn.
Perhaps the best part of the drive was the drive itself. We escaped the shadow of a rainstorm in the morning, going past the corn-fields of Minnesota and South Dakota (shadowed by an occasional windmill, like gentle giants watching over them). Crossing the Missouri River, the farms gave way to acres and acres of rolling grassland, with its roaming herds of free-range cattle.
The beauty of this place is simply breathtaking. We got 200 feet into the park when the prairie gave way suddenly to a landscape of weathered mesas and jagged peaks erupting from the grass. We ran out to a narrow spit of rock to get a better view, ignoring the fact that both sides fell away to hundred-feet-high cliffs. Later, after getting to our camp site, we decided to take a little trek back into the mountains. We cut through tall grass, following the dry streambeds, and ventured into narrow canyons carved out of the crumbing rock. We then went up, at times climbing, accompanied by passing groups of grazing deer, steady going up the mountain until we stood on a grassy knoll looking out high above the South Dakota landscape. Like a jagged gash, the peaks of the Badlands cuts across the rolling grasslands, erupting in pinnacles of red rock, rounded mounds circumscribed by layers of sedimentary rock, like little clouds over the landscape of green.
Tomorrow, we head further west, to Mt. Rushmore and from there, to Yellowstone.
No comments:
Post a Comment