Mount Rushmore Trip – Day 3

Sunrise in Wyoming

The night and day are punctuated by the beauty of the sun, turning the sky into gorgeous shades of the spectrum that strike our eyes in just a way that makes us ooh and aah. We love these travel days when we are motivated to rise early and witness these moments of dawn where the stillness and quiet are about to give way to the world reanimated.

John Wise getting a ticket in Wyoming

“I swear I did not see the speed limit sign or you hiding wherever it was that allowed you to come out of nowhere to give me this ticket.” Come on; we are out on the Great Plains where I can see for 100 miles; this state trooper must have been in an underground camouflaged bunker using a periscope radar to see that I was “kind of” going over the speed limit. He was a great sport in letting Caroline take his photo while he was giving me my ticket; all officers should be as nice as Wyoming troopers.

Bison in Wyoming

See, I told you that I couldn’t see the speed limit sign; it was behind all those bison milling around it. Come to think about this was probably some intricate speed trap, but how they trained an entire herd of bison to participate in these shenanigans is beyond my comprehension.

Devils Tower National Monument in Wyoming

I’d like to know the statistics of how many people who visit Devils Tower National Monument have that iconic 1980s music from Close Encounters of the Third Kind in their ears.

Devils Tower National Monument in Wyoming

Another one of those wildlife signs that will prove disappointing because, just like the ones that warn of elk ahead or deer crossing, there obviously will not be any prairie dogs seen today that might be ready for some potato chips.

Devils Tower National Monument in Wyoming

Okay, well, it looks like this one has already had his fill of potato chips. And no, Mr. Prairie Dog, it’s not the photo that makes you look bottom-heavy; you are that fat, did some kid give you their entire pizza?

Caroline Wise in Wyoming

Somebody built their lucky kid the greatest lemonade stand ever! Unfortunately, there was nobody else here who had some lemonade to sell us, so we commandeered it for our photo-taking purposes.

Tipple in Wyoming

This is the Aladdin Coal Tipple, built in 1898, and when it was in use, it transferred coal to rail cars. That coal was sent through Belle Fourche, South Dakota, to gold smelters at nearby Lead and Deadwood. If you ever dreamt of visiting a tipple, I’d recommend you get busy, as this is one of the last remaining of its kind in the western United States.

Aladdin, Wyoming

The town of Aladdin has shrunk from its coal mining days of having a population of about 200 to just 15 today. The old general store is now over 100 years old. A nice little place to stop for a drink and a treat on Wyoming Route 24.

Caroline Wise and John Wise entering South Dakota

Entering South Dakota for the first time from the west because this is the “Western Edge” trip to Mount Rushmore.

Black Hills of South Dakota

Into the Black Hills of South Dakota because this place is known for the Black Hills, and we have a deep desire to know all of these iconic places throughout America.

Caroline Wise in the Black Hills of South Dakota

And, of course, Caroline has a deep desire to stand in as many waterways, lakes, rivers, streams, oceans, and bodies of water across America as she can.

Caroline Wise and John Wise at Mount Rushmore in South Dakota

Maybe there’s a bit of cheesy factor going on here, but it’s still impressive. Caroline and I, being who we are, had to learn about the controversy of using Native American sacred lands for celebrating white Americans when we, as a country, have done little to nothing in gratitude for their sacrifices. You wouldn’t think it all that hard to offer at least an apology and an expression of gratitude to the many diverse peoples of our country in trying to modernize our magnanimity.

Custer State Park in South Dakota

Custer State Park is as beautiful a place as one could hope for, but I do have to scratch my head that there is not one park in America named after Crazy Horse, Sitting Bull, Chief Joseph, or Geronimo. While we do have Pontiac, Michigan, the honor of those whose lands were taken for our nation remains sadly neglected.

Custer State Park in South Dakota

From the old wooden corkscrew bridges to tiny tunnels carved through boulders instead of being blasted to smithereens that would have allowed RV’s and small airplanes to navigate these roads, the designers and engineers responsible for the layout of Custer State Park did a great job.

Custer State Park in South Dakota

We ran into a couple of bison jams on the road, but this solitary one grazing in the shade won the “Bison of the Day” award.

The snail was named “State of Maine” because we bought it while in Belfast, Maine, at the Purple Baboon back on our first cross-country road trip. The otter travels with us from the Monterey Bay Aquarium in Monterey, California, and if I’m not mistaken, the Kodama from the movie Princess Mononoke was picked up at Kinokuniya bookstore in Los Angeles, California.

Caroline Wise and John Wise entering Nebraska

Out collecting states, making sure we see as much of America as possible. That’s our motto, and I believe we’re doing pretty good living up to it.

Nebraska

Cattle on the windswept Great Plains. By the time we get home, we’ll order “The Great Plains” by Ian Frazier after falling in love with these sights and the idea that, at one time, there were seas of bison out here that painted the landscape black with their numbers. Hopefully, we’ll get a chance to read Steinbeck’s “Grapes of Wrath” before our next visit.

Nebraska

What would a visit to Nebraska be without sunflowers at sunset?

Caroline Wise and a giant sunflower in Nebraska

It would be nothing if I couldn’t beat that with the largest sunflower I’ve ever seen, along with my wife’s smiling face.

Nebraska

The metallic clang of the windmill spinning at dusk against the purple and red sky makes for a perfect close to an extraordinary day where it felt like we experienced three or four days all smushed into one.

Mount Rushmore Trip – Day 2

Albuquerque, New Mexico

We’re running late. It’s already 6:15 a.m. when we are getting back on the freeway. Why the rush? We are trying to get to Mount Rushmore in South Dakota, which is about 1,200 miles (2,000 km) from home. Our first stop this morning is 383 miles (616 km) from this overpass. Time to move quickly.

Garden of the Gods in Colorado

The trip of the “Western Edge” appears to be a theme here as we are just to the west of Colorado Springs, Colorado, when we arrive at Garden of the Gods, our first stop. This free-to-visit park was designated a National Natural Landmark in 1971, and should you find yourself driving up the middle of Colorado one day, you should drop in.

Garden of the Gods in Colorado

If we had the time, we’d be out there on that wagon for a hayride.

Garden of the Gods in Colorado

Our visit to Garden of the Gods was brief, but we did get a great impression of the place.

Caroline Wise and John Wise at Rocky Mountain National Park in Colorado

Anybody who knows us knows that there was no way we were going to pass up on the opportunity to visit a national park, even if it meant we’d have to drive through midnight. To dip our toe into Rocky Mountain National Park was only going to add about 100 miles (160 km) of driving, which sounded easy peasy to us, too, and so up the mountain, we strode.

Rocky Mountain National Park in Colorado

Out in these mountains, the Colorado River is born, which makes possible the abundance of food, life, recreation, and prosperity that many people enjoy from around the globe. Without the snowfalls in the Rockies, our lives in Arizona, Nevada, and Southern California would be vastly different.

Rocky Mountain National Park in Colorado

How lucky are the people of Earth that America’s 18th President, Ulysses S. Grant, established Yellowstone National Park? He was followed by our 26th President Theodore Roosevelt, who was one of the park system’s greatest supporters in giving to all of us these pristine, undeveloped treasures that we can experience in the way nature has shaped them without the heavy hand of man who has often been less than kind on our environment.

To the west are mountains, mountains, some desert, more mountains, and the ocean, and to the east, the Great Plains for as far as you can go, sort of.

Caroline Wise and John Wise entering South Dakota

While to the north is Wyoming and beyond that are parts unknown to the two of us, though we are willing to go into that void to see for ourselves just what is there.

And what we find is the golden sunset of perfection and you need to know that we had to bask in this beauty as long as we could because these two travel cheapos are on the hunt for a motel and not just any motel.

Carpet in cheap motel, Wyoming

We scored with that vintage kind of flair that lets you know these rooms have not been renovated since 1974. The great thing about this carpet is that it doesn’t matter how many people before our arrival have bled, ejaculated, vomited, urinated, defecated, blew snots on, or rolled around with open sores on the carpet because that’s all lost in the pattern. No, we do not travel with a black light, as knowledge is not power when you are only interested in saving money.

Cheap motel in Wyoming

These types of bed covers are a kind of Russian roulette where you just want to close your eyes before pulling back the corner. Then you have to decide if you really want to count how many pubic hairs are on the sheets and pillows. Almost worse is when you realize there’s no blanket underneath it and that this thing is going to be lying right on top of you. Our favorite moments, though, are when we finally do lay down, and gravity pulls us into the developing black hole at the center of the mattress that hardly qualifies as being such, as it is more a membrane funneling us into the center of the universe known as the “pile of John and Caroline trying to not roll onto each other.”

Mount Rushmore Trip – Day 1

Caroline Wise and John Wise leaving Arizona

When leaving on a Labor Day weekend, make note that it is better to depart on Thursday, a day before everyone else is about to hit the road for the last long weekend of summer. It was already after 3:00 in the afternoon when we joined the barely moving cluster of holidaygoers that had us inching out of the city.

Bloody Basin Road sign in Arizona

What should have taken about 45 minutes to reach the Bloody Basin Road exit took about 90 minutes today, but once we got to this point on the highway we were moving fast and were well on our way.

Meteor City, Arizona

We passed through Flagstaff at 6:00 p.m. and drove east on the I-40 as sunset was approaching. Caroline was pointing out how long it had been since we last traveled this highway and how much she enjoyed seeing the Painted Desert, the various Trading Posts with their faux teepees, and the roadside dinosaurs that try to pull people into Holbrook for petrified tree souvenirs.

Toilet Mint at Motel in Albuquerque, New Mexico

It was 9:00 p.m. when we passed through Lupton, Arizona, and already 10:01 p.m. when we hit the New Mexico state line less than a mile later. Oh yeah, we changed time zones! By 11:30, we are checked into our $26-a-night Interstate Inn on the western edge of Albuquerque. At the time I took this photo, I was too tired and bleary-eyed to notice the urine stain carnage, but what does one expect for $26? I took the photo because of the toilet mint, which perfumed our room with its men’s room odor. No time to worry about these things as we’ll be back on the road in little more than six hours.

Giant Moth

Caroline Wise near Tucson, Arizona

Drove down earlier in the day to visit the Silvas in Tucson, and on the way home this evening, we pulled over needing gas and found this giant moth with some waterlogged wings that had it stuck to the ground. It is early August, we are still having monsoons and rather than let this beautiful specimen be run over by the next driver, Caroline got out and collected the moth, giving it the chance to dry its wings enough to return to mobility.

Hawaiian Dance in Los Angeles

Caroline Wise at Goldilocks in Artesia, California

There are trips we made over the years (I’m writing this in 2018) where, not knowing we’d travel as extensively as we did and certainly not knowing that we’d ever have been assembling a blog of those travels, we failed to take notes or take photos on each and every time we ventured out. This is one of those. Apparently, we had left Friday night because here we were at Goldilocks Filipino cafe in Artesia, California way too early to have driven over on this day. Besides not having any data or images for Friday, when you arrive at the end of Saturday, things will drop off, and we have nothing for Sunday. With the advent of digital photography and date stamps on photos, it is fortunate for us to have a record of when we did what; I only wish we’d been more detail-oriented about documenting these excursions.

Devdas movie poster in Artesia, California

It’s obvious why we stayed in Artesia this weekend, also known as Little India; we were here to see this blockbuster film Devdas. Seeing this movie signaled a huge change in our lives as we fell in love with the work of Shahrukh Khan, the opulent beauty of Indian cinema, and the non-aggressive, non-violent storylines, and wanted to see even more Hindi films than we were already watching. We had already been renting movies from a small shop on Bell Road in Phoenix during the previous year, but this movie was a milestone that made us more discriminating consumers of the genre.

Morning Glory from Mix Bowl Cafe in Pomona, California

Last month, we had Morning Glory at Mix Bowl Cafe over in Pomona; we loved it so much that we drove back across Los Angeles to have it again.

Koo Chai from Mix Bowl Cafe in Pomona, California

Oh yeah, there was that other dish called steamed Koo chai that we’d tried, this is what they look like. It’s funny that the staff at Mix Bowl are surprised we like these dishes as usually their “white” customers don’t like these things.

Vista Theater in Los Angeles, California

And back across Los Angeles into Hollywood for some cruising up Hollywood Boulevard and back down the Sunset Strip.

Hawaiian Dance Exhibition in Los Angeles, California

This was the other reason besides today’s movie for our trip to southern California, a performance by students of a local Halau (Hula School) demonstrating Hawaiian dance.

Hawaiian Dance Exhibition in Los Angeles, California

We are in Little Tokyo for tonight’s entertainment.

Hawaiian Dance Exhibition in Los Angeles, California

It makes us think about going to Hawaii someday.