Blue Mounds State Park

This morning, Greg and I took the Prairie and Bison Bus Tour at Blue Mounds State Park.

We got to see the bison herd almost as soon as the tour started.
The prairie was beautiful and so different from anything I’ve seen before.

I learned some pretty cool facts on the tour:

  • The prairie needs to be burned every few years to keep it healthy and prevent it from evolving. People have been burning prairies for thousands of years.
  • No bison currently living in the US is purebred due to cattle/bison inbreeding many years ago by ranchers.
  • Only 4% of the original long grass prairie remains in the U.S.
  • The soil that makes up the prairie of Blue Mounds State Park is at most 3 ft. deep. Underneath the soil is up to 350 ft of Sioux quartzsite. Because of that, the root system goes sideways rather than down.
  • Bison like to hang out together, so it is rare to find one on its own.
  • The various parks that breed bison swap the bulls between them in order to prevent too much inbreeding.

We saw some cool wildlife on our tour, too. Thanks to another woman on the tour, who had a powerful set of binoculars, we got to see a red tail hawk and a falcon. We also got to see some pheasants.

Our tour guide was delightful.

Palisades State Park

Next, we headed to Palisades State Park. This was a cute park with some beautiful quartzsite cliffs along Split Rock Creek.

I could post about 20 pictures from this park. I thought it was beautiful.

I really wanted to be one of those kayakers!

One more photo, just because.

Falls Park

Next, we headed to Falls Park in downtown Sioux Falls.

The feels-like temp today was between 100 and 103 degrees, despite the cloud cover (humidity over 70 percent), and Greg was beat by this point, so he took a little convincing to keep going. But after a short stint in the air-conditioned camper, he was game.

And in the end, we were both glad that we went. Wow. Falls Park was a pleasant surprise!

It’s a wonderful community park with a water playground for kids, shops, picnic areas, and restaurants. But the highlight of the park is the falls.

You don’t see something like this right in the heart of a city very often. It was very cool. (By the way, that building is a cafe.)

Miscellany

Some observations about Wisconsin and South Dakota:

  • The names of county roads in Wisconsin are letters of the alphabet (e.g. County Road V, County Road E). In South Dakota, the names of county roads are numbers (e.g. County Road 478, County Road 452).
  • The roads are so straight!
  • The fields of crops (corn or soybeans) are so vast that they disappear into the horizon. It’s all farmland here.
  • People in South Dakota say hi to you when walking past you.
  • The roads in Wisconsin are in terrible condition. So are a lot of the roads in South Dakota. Even I-90, which is a major highway!
  • The roads in South Dakota are sparsely traveled. We went nearly 20 miles today and only passed one other car.
  • We’ve been feeling a bit like we’re driving across the top of the world, even though our elevation is only 1200 ft. above sea level. I think it’s because the landscape is so flat that the horizon is very far away.
Until tomorrow!

Cave of the Mounds

Yesterday, we visited Cave of the Mounds in Blue Mounds, Wisconsin. Before our tour of the actual cave, we walked the Karst View Trail. It took us past a number of sinkholes in the ground. (A karst is another word for sinkhole. More or less. I think.)

The sinkholes were not particularly interesting
But the wildflowers along the trail were beautiful!

Afterwards, we took a self-guided tour of Cave of the Mounds. This is the first time we’ve been in a cave where we did not have a guide. It was nice because we were able to linger over things that interested us and take pictures without feeling rushed.

Unfortunately, cave pictures never come out well. The contrast between light and dark is too extreme.

Therefore, I will not bore you with a bunch of crappy cave pictures. Just trust me when I say that this was a fun and different cave experience.

Lake Farm Heritage Trail

The weather was actually gorgeous today, so we decided to take a hike.

Wisconsin has been experiencing a lot of flooding in the last week. Consequently, the trail was flooded in a number of places, and we had to turn around and try different routes.

Despite the challenges, we got to see some pretty scenery.

And wildlife!

Monarch butterfly
Great blue heron

National Mustard Museum

Next, we headed to the National Mustard Museum in Middleton, Wisconsin.

Middleton is one of the cutest towns I’ve ever seen. I loved it.

We tried a slew of different-flavored mustards, toured the museum, and watched a film about the making of mustard around the world.

And, of course, we bought some mustard!

The Pink Elephant

Apparently, no visit to Madison would be complete without a visit to see the Pink Elephant. So we did that, too!

The pink elephant has been standing on the site of this gas station since the 1960s. It is not the only pink elephant in the country, but it is the only one wearing glasses.

Drumlin Ridge Winery

We finished the day at Drumlin Ridge Winery, where we tasted some wines and enjoyed some snacks.

It was lovely!

In between all of those activities, we managed to make time to see the new Superman movie (it was good but not great), did laundry, went grocery shopping,  and did some maintenance on the travel trailer.

This trip has been different from previous trips with the travel trailer because of the amount of maintenance we’ve had to do while traveling. 

Greg ended up ordering a new weight distributing hitch for the trailer. It will be delivered to our campground in Sioux Falls and installed before we leave. Not ideal, but hopefully, the new hitch will fix the sway problem.

We’re also having a problem with water backing up into the fresh water tank, so Greg spent some time trying to solve that problem, too.

On to Minnesota!