 
 
		Guess where I am this morning. Mt. Rushmore is a very spiritual and relaxing place 
		to me and is actually a nice place to visit. I've been many times. The trip up the mountain 
		is always relaxing and I like to just sit and listen to the wind and the hawks.  Of 
		course when I'm here in September and October the crowds have gone for the year.
		
		The sculpture is cool too. My favorite is Jefferson. I like the way he seems 
		to be staring off into the future, like he can see what is going to become of the nation 
		he helped found.
		
		
		
		
		I liked the old visitors center they had back when I first visited in 1993 
		more than the new one. It was small and rustic and fit in better with the feel of the 
		mountain. The new center is all marble and granite and even has a 4 story parking deck. It 
		looks like it belongs in Washington D.C. It definitely has that Federal Monument feel 
		to it. I guess a thousand years from now the ruins of this place would be cool though.
		
		
		Although I didn't go on this trip, the 
		Crazy Horse Memorial is another cool place to visit. When complete it will be the 
		largest sculpture in the world.
		
 
 
		The Black Hills have a 
		certain feeling to them that I love...
		
		
		...pine covered mountains with broad grassy valleys with cattle, horses, 
		and hay fields. 
		
		Speaking of horses... if it's horses you love, and I do...
		
		... you can head south of Mt Rushmore to Hot Springs SD, and go to the
				Black Hills Wild 
		Horse Sanctuary!  The two  photographs above are copyright © 2003 by Alvis 
		Upitis, you can view more of his work in the BHWHS
		photo gallery.
		
 
 
		Here we are on the Old Hill City road that runs between Keystone and Hill 
		City. I would not mind living here at all. 
		
		
		
		Water doesn't seem to be too scarce so there's lots of green and a few 
		ranches, but not a lot of people.... sounds good to me.
		
		 
		
		We are on US 385 heading from Hill City to Deadwood.
		

		I've stopped at this 
		reservoir overlook just past Custer Gulch Road many times . 
		
 
 
		I get the dogs out for a little walk about..
		
 
 
		... of course they enjoy getting out every chance they can. It also give 
		me a chance/excuse to get out and see things I probably wouldn't if I weren't walking them. Here Sugar has just heard 
		something moving around in the grass.
		
		
		Back on the road we go through another scenic valley.
		
		
		Of course it's not all scenic, but interesting none the less.  This 
		is the Homestake goldmine in Lead, SD. According to the
		Black Hills Mining Museum, "The 
		Homestake mine, which ceased operation in 2001, was one of the largest in the world, 
		reaching a depth of 8,000 feet below the surface of the city of Lead ". Of course gold is 
		what brought white settlers to the Black Hills, but that is another story.
		
		
		Here we are on the outskirts of
		Deadwood, SD. We didn't go all 
		the way to Main St. on this trip, but I've been there before.
		Deadwood is an infamous town. Resting place of 
		Wild Bill Hickok and Calamity Jane. You can read a little about 
		it's colorful past
		here.
		To quote the author from the Deadwood about page, Dusty in Deadwood, "In reality, Deadwood 
		during the 1870s was indeed a pretty brutal place. Some sources estimate there was a murder 
		a day in the ramshackle gold camp, which was destroyed several times by fires, floods and 
		blizzards. Some order did arrive when Seth Bullock was appointed sheriff. Of course, as John Leonard 
		mused in New York magazine last month, this was like “being appointed hall monitor in hell.” 
		"
		The town is full of 
		gaming halls (for 
		some reason they don't like to call them casinos). Quite a unique 
		town. Heck it even has an HBO series 
		about its old days!
		 
		Ahh, we're about to get on I-90 west. Soon we'll be in...
		
		
		

		...one of my favorite states!  
		

		Time for another pit stop. Kenny and I get out and stretch a bit. I give 
		Timber and sugar some water.
		
		
 
 
		An interesting monument here at the rest stop.
		
		Back on the road for a while and we start to see some big mountains off in 
		the distance. The Big Horns! You can first see the mountains when you're probably 50 miles 
		way. The highest peaks are over 13,000 feet!
		It's time for us to leave the Interstate behind and cut across the state. There are three 
		roads that cross over Big Horns. I've taken them all (I've been on every major road in 
		Wyoming!) From Buffalo I decide to take US-16 to the Powder River Pass and over to Ten 
		Sleep. Of course I have another reason for taking this road...
		... Right before I came out to Wyoming the first time in 1993, I read a really good book by Gordon R. 
		Dickson called 
		
		Wolf and Iron. It is set in a post apocalyptic future. The disaster wasn't 
		nuclear, it was just called the Collapse. Everything, the whole global economy, just fell 
		apart. The main character escapes the hell that the cities became by walking all the way 
		from Michigan along abandoned I-90 to the west side of the Big Horns. The book describes the 
		journey across the prairie and mountains and is written well enough that you can really feel 
		what it would be like to walk it. Rain, sun, snow, hunger... you can feel it. You are there 
		when he's fighting bears (he almost dies from an 
		infection from that attack), avoiding people (they usually try to rob you), starving, 
		figuring out how to survive. Even though it's set 
		in the future, it's really what a journey across the county would have been like 200 years 
		ago, but from the perspective of a modern day person. He misses all the conveniences he used 
		to have and he doesn't know much more than the basics of how to survive. 
		Along the way a Wolf starts traveling with him... I had better stop or I will recite the 
		whole book. Anyway, the main character crosses the Big Horns on US-16 and camps in 
		Ten Sleep for the night...
		... So when I come this way I can remember all the experiences I had through the book as 
		I retrace his journey taking the same route!
		
		

		We start up the mountain as the sun starts to go down.
		
	
		
 
	 
		
		The Aspens as we go up are starting to turn... it's fall here. Too bad I wasn't able to take more picture as we went...

... here we are going down the west side of the mountains, heading down into Ten Sleep.
		
		The sun has set and I don't have time to stop and take pictures in the low light. After 
		getting out of the Big Horns there is not a lot to see as you cross the
		
		Wyoming Basin. So we're not stopping until we get to our destination tonight, Cody, WY. 
		Half way across the state!
		
		
Back to Day 3