Showing posts with label Wind Cave National Park. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Wind Cave National Park. Show all posts

Monday, January 12, 2015

Best trails for seeing Wind Cave’s wonders

The Fairground of Wind Cave.
Photo courtesy of  Wave Cave NPS.
While Wind Cave National Park is best known for its cave system, there are plenty of other above ground sites to see as well. In fact, among the best ways to enjoy national park’s top sights is via a day hike.

Just four short trails will allow you to take in each of the South Dakota park’s highlights – boxwork in the caves, a prairie dog farm, panoramic views of the Black Hills, and a variety of nesting birds.

Boxwork in caves
Scientists have no idea how the mysterious “boxwork” – thin sheets of calcite that form honeycomb-like patterns on the cave ceilings – form. Your best opportunity to see these natural patterns is the Natural Entrance Cave Tour, a ranger-led 0.5-mile walk.

Prairie dog farm
A large prairie dog farm sits among the rolling hills in the park’s northwest section. The 6.2-mile round trip Sanctuary Trail heads through the prairie dog farm and passes a fire tower, which is closed to the public.

Panoramic views of Black Hills
Among the best vistas for seeing the beautiful Black Hills to the west is the Rankin Ridge Nature Trail. Interpretive signs about the area’s ecology dot the 1-mile loop.

Birdwatching
Wind Cave Canyon’s limestone cliffs and standing dead trees offer excellent nesting grounds for a variety of birds – cliff swallows and great horned owls in the case of the former and woodpeckers in the latter. The 3.6-mile round trip Wind Cave Canyon Trail heads through the habitat.

Learn more about national park day hiking trails in my Best Sights to See at America’s National Parks guidebook.


Thursday, January 8, 2015

Best trails for seeing Black Hills’ wonders

Trail through Badlands. Photo courtesy of Badlands NPS.
Among the best ways to see the major sights of South Dakota’s popular Black Hills is via a day hike. Just seven short trails allow you to enjoy the region’s highlights – the Badlands, Mount Rushmore, caves, the Crazy Horse carving, the Wild West, prairie wildlife, and fossils.

Badlands
The 1.5-miles out-and-back Notch Trail runs through the eroded buttes, pinnacles and spires that this corner of South Dakota is known for. The rock making up the formation were deposited from 75 million to 34 million years ago; they only started to erode away about half a million years ago. The trail begins at the south end of the Door and Window parking area. If you have a fear of heights, avoid this route and instead do either the Door or Window trails.

Mount Rushmore
Four hundred workers spent 14 years carving the faces of four presidents out of a granite mountain, creating one of America’s iconic images. To get close up and personal with the monument, take the 0.5-mile looping Presidential Trail.

Caves
A number of caves can be found in the Black Hills, with Wind Cave National Park the crown jewel of them. Try the park’s Natural Entrance Cave Tour, a ranger-led 0.5-mile walk where you’ll see the mysterious “boxwork” – thin sheets of calcite that form honeycomb-like patterns on the cave ceilings.

Crazy Horse carving
The world’s largest granite monument carving – of the great Native American Chief Crazy Horse – is an ongoing project in the Black Hills, which are sacred to the Lakota Indians. A section of the George S. Mickelson Trail heads past and to the carving; take the Mountain Trailhead (at MP 49.6 on U.S. Hwy 385) north then follow a spur trail uphill to the monument for a 6-mile round trip.

Wild West
Once the stomping ground of Wild Bill Hickock, Calamity Jane, and gold miners, the Northern Hills section of the Black Hills is full of Wild West legends and myths. Many miners and pioneers to the area walked what is now the Crow Peak Trail, a 6.4-mile round trip in the Black Hills National Forest with great vista at top.

Wildlife viewing
A number of native prairie animals as well as a wild burro herd can be spotted at Custer State Park. A great trail for wildlife sightings is the park’s 6-mile round trip Grace Coolidge Walk-In Fishing Area, with its many ponds along a stream, off of Hwy. 16A. Wildlife are most active during early morning and dusk.

Fossils
Thanks to heavy erosion, a number of fossils have been found throughout the Black Hills. The 30-minute guided tour at the Mammoth Site of Hot Springs, South Dakota, takes you over and around an active dig of Ice Age fauna that has yielded more than 55 mammoths. Kids can sign up for digs on specific days of the year.

Learn more about national park day hiking trails in my Best Sights to See at America’s National Parks guidebook.


Saturday, December 14, 2013

Observe elk, bison on Wind Cave N.P. trail

Bull elk at Wind Cave National Park.
Photo courtesy Wind Cave NPS.
Map of Elk Mountain Nature Trail,
courtesy Wind Cave NPS.
Day hikers can spot elk on the prairies and foothills of a short trail in Wind Cave National Park.

While most visitors check out this South Dakota national park for it complex cave system, there are plenty of great hiking trails above ground. Indeed, visiting the caves requires that you join a tour group, anathema to the hiking soul, which enjoys roaming and lingering as one pleases.

The 1.2-mile Elk Mountain Nature Trail is among the park’s great aboveground trails. It heads through a mixed-grass prairie, a ponderosa pine forest, and crosses a creek and its riparian ecosystem along the way.

Bison and prairie dogs
To reach the trail, from Hot Springs, S.D., take U.S. Hwy. 385 north into the park. Turn left/north onto the park road, heading past the visitor center. Then take the only road going west into the Elk Mountain Campground, which sits at the base of foothills that turn from prairie to ponderosa pine forest as heading west. Park at the fee station and check in to inform the ranger that you’re hiking the trail rather than camping.

Continue by walking west down the campground road. The trailhead sits between Campsite No. 20 on the north side of the road and the path to the amphitheater on the south side. Walk the trail counterclockwise by going right/north onto it.

The trail loops northeast past several ponderosas destroyed by wildfire and into open prairie. Bison often can be spotted in the grasslands to the north, but don’t worry about them charging you. A fence separates them from the campground.

And though difficult to see in the distance, there’s also a prairie dog town about 600 feet across the fence. A spur trail takes you to a tree near the fence for a better view of it and the bison.

The main trail next swerves southwestward, heading back toward the campground then into the ponderosa forest. It loops south, crossing a creek that runs out of the foothills toward the park road. The high point west of and nearest the campground is Elk Knob, rising to 4,752 feet above sea level.

September's elk show
Elk usually can be spotted near the trail. The native subspecies, Eastern elk, disappeared from the area in the 1800s, and the Rocky Mountain subspecies was introduced to the national park in 1914.

They are an impressive sight. Bull elks can grow up to 1000 pounds and five feet high. An average set of antlers on one can weigh 30 pounds.

If hiking in late spring or early summer, those antlers might not look like much. Elk shed them each spring and grow a new rack. By mid-September, however, the antlers are immense, and you may be treated to two bulls sparring as the mating season begins. You’ll also likely get to hear the bull elk bugling, a series of screams that can be heard for miles.

Elk feed on grass and forbs, which are abundant in this area. Because only wolves hunt elk and there are none of the former anymore in the park, the latter’s population is large.

While elk don’t mind you watching them from a ways off, you shouldn’t approach or try to interact with them. At best, you’ll simply scare them off, spoiling the main reason for hiking the trial; at worse, they will defend themselves, and that can be deadly.

Pets welcomed
The trail, after heading east through the forest, swerves north for its last leg, ending at the amphitheater.

Nine interpretive signs can be found along the trail, offering the opportunity to learn more about the ecosystem. Leashed pets also are allowed on the hike.

Be aware that sometimes prairie rattlesnakes cross the trail, so you may want to instruct children in advance about how to avoid snakes and familiarize yourself with what to do if a bite occurs.

Learn more about national park day hiking trails in my Best Sights to See at America’s National Parks guidebook.