The heat continued on the plains. But there was always air conditioning, cool breezes, cold drinks and cool nights.
Pa's cottonwoods in the background |
The Black Hills were our next destination on the western side of South Dakota. We had a campsite reserved for a couple nights that sat along Grizzly Creek, a few miles from Mount Rushmore. Grove, park-like stands of tall, spaced out Ponderosa pines with their bare lower trunks fill the quartz and granite mountains. Lavender swaths of wild bergamont colored the understory of the forest.
We mountain biked on trails, walked through the long passages of Wind Cave, and watched the lights come on the President’s heads in the evening and looked at the massive sculptures from different angles in the day.
And when it got to 100 degrees, we needed water. Hot springs bubble up throughout the west, and one with and enticing 87-degree temperature wasn’t far away. I didn’t need a lot of convincing to initiate Bella into the cult of hot spring appreciation. She knew about them from our last trip out west and happily assented to this trip. Evan’s Plunge in the town of Hot Springs did the trick for us. A giant indoor pool with a rock bottom, slides, and even a lap area for me cooled us completely.
We were very close to the Rockies and would be there by day’s end, high in an alpine meadow full of wild flowers with snow still on the peaks.