Leaving by 8:00am this morning (Friday 6/9/2017) so we can
get to Devils Tower before the larger groups of people show up. On the way we are on back roads and encounter
barns of all things.
The landscape has definitely changed as you can see from
this picture. We are in more rolling
hills, yes there are still some flatlands which are still used for a crop of
some sort, but there is a change in the terrain.
Speaking of different things we see on the landscape, here
is a snow fence. Now there was a truck,
a big Chevy four door, and the fence was almost twice as tall as the
truck. They must have some pretty strong
winds to need a fence like this.
This isn’t our first look of Devils Tower, but it is our
first best look. We are high up on WY-24
when we got this view and had to stop.
We’ll be closer when we reach the site, but we do not know if we’ll have
another big view of the tower standing there by itself.
While I was taking the “big” picture of Devils Tower, Carmen
sees this entrance to one of the many ranches that dot the area. There is a carved bear on the top, crossing
bar and a bear cub on each of the vertical beams. Now how great would this be coming in and out
of your ranch, seeing Devils Tower and your ranch entrance?
Before reaching Devils Tower, we stopped at an information
plaque describing the geological landmark.
Also note at the end where in 1906, President Theodore Roosevelt quickly
used the Antiquities Act to make this the Nation’s first National
Monument. Bully!
Nearly at the tower and once again at a high elevation as
compared to the rest of the area, you can see the varied landscape. The ranch below seems to use the further
field for haying.
After many different views of Devils Tower, we finally reach
the National Monument and after paying our entrance fee (actually we have
life-time passes), we begin our drive along the park road to the tower. Before driving very long though we come to a prairie
dog colony and have to stop to take some pictures. We won’t bore you with all of the pictures,
but I can’t help to show you at least one of the pictures Carmen took.
At the Tower, we are on the west side and the sun is shining
into our face and any pictures are heavily shadowed. So we decided to walk the trail around the
tower. The Tower is held sacred to many
of the American Indians and there are a number of prayer bundles and prayer
cloths (like this one) hanging from different trees around the trail, like this one
One of the views Carmen gets as we begin to come around
from the shaded side of the tower. You
can clearly see the hexagonal columns formed when the magma forming the tower
cooled.
Speaking of Carmen, here she is after taking a picture and
ready to tell me not to take her picture.
Ha, like that’s going to happen!
All around us is a forest of Ponderosa pines and there was a
deer just beyond this small clearing. By
the time I got my camera up to take the picture, someone was trucking up the
lower trail making noise and it scooted.
So I missed it, the deer is somewhere there but I can’t find it. Anyway, you can see the trail we are taking
around the tower gives us good views of he tower and also the forested area
that surrounds it.
Here is Carmen again with a good view of the Tower from the
trail we are on. We just finished
reading about the top of the tower which is rounded rather than flat and is
about the size of a football field.
You can clearly see the columns from the close-up Carmen got
of the Tower. Some of the columns have
broken off and the upper portions remain in place. A lone Turkey Buzzard flies by as Carmen took
the picture. There was a hawk flying
around, but when we would try to get a picture of it, the hawk would land
somewhere. Oh well, that’s how it goes.
When we were about half way around the tower, we came to a
section that had burned. You can see,
from Carmen’s picture that some of the trees have burned completely while
others did not. Also the grasses are now
very lush.
So we are about three-quarters of the way around (we went
counter-clockwise around the tower) and come upon this view. Fantastic!
You can clearly see where the magma came from the left and right sides,
where it is wide, and tried to push its way up through the narrower
section.
But wait, we read this information plaque about how in 1893
two local ranchers climbed the tower using wooden stake ladders. So we were looking for it and you can see it
in the picture before this one. Here is
the ladder, the top part anyway, on the right side, between the third and
fourth column from the right. In the
picture before this, it is just below the top “grassy” area and just to the
left of the second wide shadowed column from the right. Good Luck!
We have nearly completed our trek around Devils Tower and
come to an open area where we can see the surrounding countryside. We can see the hay field below that looks to
have already been cut and bailed.
We have seen various flowers and decided to at least show
you one of them. Mind you we have no
idea what this flower is named.
We finished our trek around and some people were looking up
towards the tower. Now this side is
still in the shade because we are on the western side, but someone pointed out
two climbers. We got this picture of the
climbers. All I can say is that I don’t
know if I could do that split now while standing on the floor let alone
climbing. Oh the top guy is about half
way up the tower.
We leave Devils Tower National Monument and happy the
President Roosevelt made this a National Monument. One last look at Devils Tower before it is
gone from sight. This is the hay field
we could see when we were hiking around the tower trail.
Back on the road again, we are headed to Theodore Roosevelt
National Park in North Dakota and will take the route bringing us up through
South Dakota along US-85 then into North Dakota. As we pass one of the small towns along the
way we see this “Fine Antiques” shop.
Notice that they are opened 23 hours.
Here is one of the ranches we have been passing. I think this one had an established date of
1893.
We have passed quite a number of ranches all with varying
barns. This one near the Black Hills
National Forest actually looked more modern and kept up. Nearby we also read about Custer’s 1874
Expedition to the Black Hills and the discovery of gold had wide reaching
effects on the area.
We are out of Wyoming and into South Dakota north of the
Black Hills area and again the terrain has become varied. We begin to see buttes within the prairie
floor and grasslands, after all the Black Hills are just south of us.
Ha! I knew we would
see one along the way and Carmen was able to get this picture of a
Pronghorn. It’s not facing us, but we
almost get a good side view of it.
We have seen some very different names for towns on our
trip. But this is confusing. We are told that they are not Buffalo, they
are Bison. So is this the same town with
two different ways to get there or where they confused also?
As we get closer to the North Dakota the surrounding
landscape continues to build on our west side.
The east side remains having mostly grasslands.
Sheep! Our first view
of sheep and I guess this rancher never watched any of the old westerns where the
cattle ranchers drove the sheep herders out.
Got wool?
And what ranch wouldn’t have horses? We have seen many horses on this trip so far,
mostly farther away and not as close as this. The horses run free
in the fields much like the cattle have been doing.
As we have seen since driving into Nebraska, there are many
pumps for oil and natural gas in the fields, whether that field is grass,
wheat, or corn.
Now this was a sight that we just had to share. What do they haul in these that each would
need six axles to hold the weight?
No sooner then we cross into North Dakota we see another
Pronghorn in the field. The Pronghorn was some distance away and Carmen had to
quickly take the picture because the speed limit here is 75 mph.
Nearing our destination for the night, Dickinson, North
Dakota, we are driving through part of the national Grasslands. And as you can see from this picture they are
vast.
One last look at the grasslands and shack before reaching
our hotel for the night. We are here for
two nights since tomorrow we will visit the south and north units of the
Theodore Roosevelt National Park and will not travel very far afterwards.
Awesome views of the Devils Tower. Wow.
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