Entries tagged as Black Hills

October 2025

Park News

The federal government shutdown

         Not all the 433 National Park Service sites are closed, but several former park superintendents wish they were. In a letter sent to Interior Secretary Doug Burgum, they noted that during past shutdowns, when some parks stayed open despite limited staff, there were more incidents of vandalism, trash piled up, and visitor safety was compromised. With the newest personnel reductions (25% of the National Park Service’s permanent employees, according to the National Parks Conservation Association, it’s sure to happen again.

The changing of the leaves

        If you crave seeing the fall foliage in our parks, Travel + Leisure and Forbes have some ideas for you. Check first to make sure the sites are open, and what the hours are.

It's not even Halloween but the Christmas stuff is already out

I started seeing it mid-September!

 

The Park Service has to work that far in advance for the annual National Christmas Tree Lighting Ceremony. This is held on the Ellipse, part of the Park Service’s White House and President’s Park. As of today, information about the lottery for tickets to this the event hasn’t been posted yet, but keep checking the site if you’re interested in attending.

 

 

One hundred years for Mount Rushmore National Memorial

         A century ago, on October 1, 1925, the area in South Dakota’s Black Hills where four presidential faces would be carved was dedicated as a national monument. The actual sculpting, conceived and begun by Gutzon Borglum, didn’t begin until two years later. Read more about its construction here.

By the way, do you know why Borglum chose those specific Commanders-in Chief, and what each stands for? Washington, the most prominent figure, embodies America’s founding, Jefferson, its growth (think Louisiana Purchase), Lincoln the country’s preservation, and Theodore Roosevelt its development.

Mount Rushmore continues to be a sore subject with the Lakota Sioux. The 1868 Treaty of Fort Laramie returned the Black Hills, known by the Native Americans as Paha Sapa, to the Sioux. In exchange for giving up thousands of acres of land, they were “allowed” to relocate their reservation there, a sacred space for them. That pact was never rescinded so it remains valid, but obviously was never enforced. The reason? Gold was found in them there hills. FYI: Wyoming’s Fort Laramie is a national historic site in the Park Service.

Some of you may remember the 1970 American Indian Movement protest at Mount Rushmore about this issue. AIM leaders Dennis Banks (pictured) and Russell Means led the demonstration.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

The lead-up to America’s 250th birthday in our national parks

         In July 1775, the Continental Congress adopted what’s called the Olive Branch Petition (note John Hancock’s large signature, just as is on the Declaration of Independence). The paper aired the American patriots’ grievances, and entreated King George III to resolve the crisis between Great Britain and the colonies.

         The King didn’t even bother to read the petition. But what he did do was issue a proclamation the following month, declaring the revolt in American was the work of those “misled by dangerous and ill-designing men”…who forget “the allegiance which they owe to the power that has protected and sustained them…by open and avowed rebellion.”

         During this month 250 years ago, in an address at the opening of Parliament, King George offered his own magnanimous olive branch: “When the unhappy and deluded multitude [in America] become sensible of their error, I shall be ready to receive the misled with tenderness and mercy.”

         The song “You’ll Be Back” from the musical Hamilton is based on this speech, sung by the character of King George.

         Following the battles of Lexington and Concord in April 1775, British soldiers occupied by Boston in a standoff between them and the patriot troops. This eleven-month period became known as the Siege of Boston.

         Since July 1775, after being appointed Commander-in-Chief of the Continental Army, George Washington was stationed in Cambridge, Massachusetts in what's now the Park Service’s Longfellow House-Washington’s Headquarters National Historic Site (yes, poet Henry Wadsworth Longfellow later lived there). In October that same year, by his own authority and at his own expense, Washington organized a small fleet to fend off British ships trying to resupply their dug-in soldiers. On the schooners, he hoisted this pine tree flag.

         This banner is also known as the Appeal to Heaven flag. The phrase, which has seen a resurgence in recent years, comes from English political philosopher John Locke’s writings of 1689: “Where the body of the people, or any single man, is deprived of their right, or is under the exercise of a power without right, and have no appeal on earth, then they have a liberty to appeal to heaven.”

Minute Man National Historical Park and Boston National Historical Park in Massachusetts are where to find more information about these events. In September, my husband and I walked the Freedom Trail (5 miles round trip!).

 

 

October’s Sub-par calendar park review

         “It rained on me in the friggin’ desert!” is the incredulous review of Big Bend National Park in Texas. In its defense, the park does have indoor places to go to—its four Visitor Centers and the Fossil Discovery Exhibit,

 

 

          When the sun’s out (fall through spring bring cooler temps), there are plenty of outdoor activities. And because the park is so remote, it’s one of the best places in the lower 48 states for stargazing.

 

 

 

 

 

 

Life’s Sun and Rain

         I love the verse in Matthew 5:45 that says God brings both sun and rain on the evil and good alike. This is His “common grace,” as the phrase goes, but really, there’s nothing common about it. God’s undeserved favor, kindness, and goodness extend not only to those who follow Him, but also to people who don’t, either openly or indifferently.

         That alone should move all of us to thankfulness.  

July 2024


USA Today put together a list of national parks that now require timed-entry reservations. This is an attempt at crowd control at popular sites, and usually is just for the busy season, from around Memorial Day through at least Labor Day, and sometimes into the fall.

  Some spots have had measures like this in place for a while. I’ll be visiting Washington, D.C. in August, and will have to select a specific time in advance to enter the Washington Monument and Ford’s Theatre

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Cool parks for hot days

  Beat the heat by going underground! Here’s a list of national park sites where you can go below the surface:

Jewel Cave National Monument, situated in South Dakota’s Black Hills, has over 220 miles of surveyed and mapped passages (so far). The space was first written about by a pair of brothers in 1900—Native Americans had populated the area way before that, of course, but there’s no record they ever explored it. President Theodore Roosevelt designated the cave as a national monument in 1908.

  This is a free-free park, meaning walk the trails and explore the Visitor Center without cost, but the only way to enter the cave is through one of four ranger-guided tours. Advance reservations are recommended, and you must follow strict rules for safety reasons and to prevent White Nose Syndrome among the cave’s bats.
 
About 30 miles away, in Custer, is Wind Cave National Park, which is closed through the fall for elevator replacement.
 
  Kentucky’s Mammoth Cave National Park is a UNESCO (United Nations Education, Scientific and Cultural Organization) and International Biosphere Reserve. At more than 400 miles, it's the world’s largest cave system. Again, no entrance fee is charged for the Visitor Center, grounds, or regular ranger talks, but cave tours require a ticket, best reserved in advance.

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Carlsbad Caverns National Park in New Mexico is so popular you now need a timed ticket to visit, which costs one dollar, as well as $15 to get in (save on national parks and federal recreational lands entrance fees by purchasing a pass). Here, you can explore the cavern on your own, or reserve a spot on one of two guided tours . Ranger programs include a bat flight viewing, in which you may or may not see these creatures swarm out of the cave in the evening, and monthly star parties through October. On the third Saturday of this month is the Dawn of the Bats program, to watch the free-taileds return to their home down under.

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
  In Utah is Timpanogos Cave National Monument, undoubtedly known about and explored for thousands of years before Whites “discovered” it. President Warren Harding declared the property a national monument in 1922. Strenuous three-and-a-half hour main tour (https://www.nps.gov/tica/planyourvisit/cavetours.htm) during the short caving season include an uphill 1.5 mile hike from the Visitor Center to the entrance, and a tramp through three different colorful limestone caves. Additionally, two early morning lantern tours, and an arduous Introduction to caving excursion for those who don’t mind crawling on their knees, also are offered. All need booked-ahead paid reservations.

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

  If the outdoors is more to your liking, check out these tips from the National Park Service. Click on “Ways to Play Outside” to find places near you for water sports, hiking, birding, and camping, among other warm weather pursuits.

  Where not to go in the summer: Death Valley National Park. That’s when temps average 100 degrees and often climb over 120 degrees. Save a visit for the other three seasons.

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
*****

Planning to move anytime soon? How not to get taken for a ride in my latest article.

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“There is nothing new under the sun.”

  Have you ever read the book of Ecclesiastes in the Bible? What was your first impression? A real downer, right?

  The quote in bold above comes from that book (chapter 1, verse 9). Written by King Solomon, Ecclesiastes can seem cynical or pessimistic, as he examines the seeming aimlessness of our existence. His conclusion, though, is this: life is to be enjoyed to its fullest, because it is a gift from God (3:12-13, 5:18-20).