Views From the North Shore Scenic Byway (aka: Hwy. 61 Along Lake Superior)

With Voyageur’s N.P. in our rear-view mirror, it was southward-bound. Still having issues finding available space at the RV parks, we snagged a one-nighter at the Cloquet-Duluth KOA and caught a couple more nights at the Tettegouche State Park. Between both stays, we managed some minor hikes to sights between Duluth and Grand Portage (the US/Canadian border), about a 146 mile stretch. As a start, Minnesota Point is a narrow strip of land projecting out to “sea” (meaning onto Lake Superior) which has several beach areas. Driving out that way we got some expansive views from the roadway looking down at Duluth. The day we were there it was not the greatest of beach weather, but the beaches were still pretty busy. On our way out of the area we got to see an “Aerial Lift Bridge” in action. That would be a form of a draw bridge that leads to the Duluth Harbor Basin. At the mouth of the canal they have the Duluth North Pier Lighthouse and the Duluth Harbor South Breakwater Outer Light, as well as the Duluth Harbor South Breakwater Inner light. Snapped a few pix, waited for the boat traffic to clear the aerial lift bridge, and off we went for more adventure.

Congdon Park in Duluth is home to Tischer Creek and the Tischer Creek Falls. They put in a nice creekside trail that was about a mile and a half of small waterfalls. We let Woodrow Wilson take us on that walkabout. Here’s a mishmash of sights along the trail…

The town of Two Harbors contains the Two Harbors Lighthouse Museum as well as the Two Harbors Lighthouse. We weren’t real keen on seeing ANOTHER lighthouse museum, but we hoofed it out to the lighthouse for views of town and the lake. Right across the bay from the lighthouse there was an interesting iron ore mining/processing center.

Beaver River Falls, located on, oh, let’s guess…the Beaver River, in, maybe, let’s see, the “town” of Beaver Bay, on, well, Beaver Bay of Lake Superior was another of the advertised “10 Best Waterfalls on Minnesota’s north shore”. Well, maybe in another life. At present time there was very little water in the river, so the “falls” were less than spectacular.

Split Rock Lighthouse is a popular tourist stop along the north shore. We opted not to pay the $24 to be able to get up close and personal with it, mainly because I am a cheap b@$t@rd and we have actually seen our share of lighthouses, both coasts and all points in between. But they had a nice wayside rest that had a clear view of the lighthouse, so I got my pix anyway.

Gooseberry State Park contains Gooseberry Falls with a short hike to see them. The hiking trails are easy, well kept and travelled, and parking can be a zoo during season. They say there are (5) total falls along the river here, but we kept to the main touristy few.

Tettegouche State Park gave us a pretty good workout. The trail to get to Two Step Falls was a mere one tenth of a mile from our house. The only issue was then it was a matter of 200 stair steps straight downhill to get to the viewing area. I know that I sucked a lot of air getting back to the top, but it was worth the view. High Falls was only a half mile hike from our house, but then it also added 100+ more stair steps, straight downhill. Again, the view was worth it and you also encounter  the swinging bridge. On a more even note (terrain-wise; “even”, get it?!?) it was an easy walk down to see the mouth of the Baptist River. We happened to accomplish that one early in the morning with NO beachgoers anywhere to be seen. 

Caribou Falls was another disappointment. We let Woody lead the way along the path which followed the Caribou River. They advertised less than one mile to get to the falls, however, the river was pretty sad water  volume-wise. We hiked more than one mile and saw no end in sight. I had my suspicions about the location of the falls and think we passed by the area without realizing it. The photos advertised were obviously in a heavy torrential setting, far from what we were looking at. It was still scenic, as the pictures suggest.

The Cross River Falls were pretty cool even though the water was low there as well. And these were right off the highway with no hike required.

Temperance River State Park is home to the Temperance River Falls. These falls landed into some deep gorges and again, this was right off the highway with very little hike to get to.

Cascade River State Park contains its namesake falls. These also included some fairly deep gorges. With most of the sightseeing points of interest located within various state parks, it is very convenient that if you pay for any of the park entrances ($7 per car/day), your pass gets you into all the parks. And as you can see, there are a lot of state parks  here on the North Shore.

And for our grand finale, we hit up Pigeon Falls on the Pigeon River at the US/Canadian border. In the advertising for these falls they are likened to another border waterfalls area, namely Niagara Falls. Sorry, no where near in the same class as Niagara and not even close to size and scope. But still, these were pretty cool falls, with an easy paved/boardwalk path to get to them.

OK, so I hope I left nothing out. And I really really really hope I get the right photos with the right narrative. But, hey, if I don’t, sue me. If you can find me. And remember, you should click on each of the photo blocks to be able to see the photos uncropped, in a carousel manner. Until next post…

Continuing With Our South Dakota Exploits

The Leonard Swanson Memorial Pathway seemed like a good break-in start for our bicycles. The bike trail starts near the Cleghorn Springs State Fish Hatchery and traverses about 9 miles (one way) through downtown Rapid City to end near the Central States Fairgrounds. The trail is concrete/paved nearly all the way, but can get confusing through all the downtown road construction that is currently underway. But hey, we managed. The best views we caught were the Canyon Lake Park and Meadowbrook Golf Club. Other than that it was mostly downtown sights with a scattering of small community parks. I think I’ll forgo posting pictures of Safeway and the local gas stations…

Jeanne located a REAL bicycle trail, a participant in the Rails To Trails system, called the George S. Mickelson Trail, and promptly set her sights on it. Our dilemma was logistics that include a K9. The trail is 108 miles long, stretching from Deadwood south to Edgemont. There are 14 trailheads scattered along the trail and the Hill City/Custer areas are about the midpoint. We generally have about a 6 hour window where we can leave Woodrow Wilson at home, but not much longer to avoid a major “clean up in aisle #5.” Now, you might be silently yelling at me, “Hey stupid, just kennel the mutt!” We learned the hard way on our visit to NYC that Woodrow Wilson is not amenable to being kenneled any more. And with Hill City being about a 40 mile drive from home, we would already lose a couple of hours in our window. So while we were contemplating the plan, we took a roadtrip over to the area of Hill City to check it out. We found several campgrounds in the area (probably already booked up for the summer, we’ll find out soon), then circled back home, still wondering how this is gonna work out. But since we “were in the neighborhood”, we returned via Road 16A (Iron Mountain Rd) so I could try to get proper photos of the Presidents as viewed through the 3 tunnels cut through the mountains (OK OK OK, hills already. As locals say, there is a reason they are called “Black Hills”.) My attempt at artsy-fartsy photography on our previous visit to the area failed miserably. This time, traffic was not outrageous, so I was able to achieve my objective. Now my only challenge is that I get the right names linked with the right tunnels in the pix.

As all of you fellow full-timers know, life on the road can create daunting tasks when you need to get chores/repairs done and we are all at the mercy of the various business’s scheduling gremlins. We who are constantly on-the-move live life with a moving target mentality regarding appointments. We have been lolly-gagging in Rapid City waiting on a repair date for my rear slide mechanism grinding issue, so we have been able to thoroughly explore the area, including just the simple things in life like all things “city-life”. It certainly helps when there are lots of sights/features/points of interest in the same area you are burning time in. One such outing took us to check out the Rushmore Mall in Rapid City. It was a Saturday close to noon. I was surprised to see the lack of shoppers there at that time. The China-virus-hysteria has been a non-issue in this here part of the world for quite some time, so I find it hard to use that as an explanation for the lackluster patronage of the city’s big mall. We stumbled onto the Trader’s Market, a strange sight to see inside a big mall. This appeared to have been one of the usual big department stores typical of most U.S. malls, but now it was a massive indoor “swap meet”, complete with a small section for selling used/classic cars.

One Sunday found us making the one-hour drive east on I-90 to the “world famous” town of Wall and the infamous “Wall Drug”. Wall Drug has morphed from its humble beginnings in 1931 as a local pharmacy in a podunk gateway town to the Badlands into a large, mostly indoor tourist-trap “mall” laid out in no particular pattern. Wall is still a podunk gateway town to the National Park, but Wall Drug on this Sunday was jam packed full of We The Tourists. We still have the Badlands on our wish-list itinerary at some point, probably after our chores are finished in Rapid City & we can relocate to the area.

Not wanting to TOTALLY exclude Woody from all the fun, we loaded him up and took him back to Canyon Lake Park in Rapid City to let him lead us on a walkabout. It was about a short 2-mile loop in and among several water features (lake, ponds, channels) chock-full of very nice sized trout. We saw herds of another type of fish, we tried to ID but have thus far failed big time. If any of you recognize them from these photos and want to share, feel free to comment to this blog post.

Well son of a gun, that gets us up-to-date on the blog, so what the heck, I might as well post it. Until next post…

Spearfish Canyon

Spearfish Canyon is a National Scenic Byway traversed by the So. Dakota road designated “Alt 14”. We loaded up Woody and headed out to sightsee a 13 mile section, basically between Spearfish and the area called Savoy. There are several trails, campgrounds, picnic areas, and points of interest along the route, we chose to travel from south to north, ending in Spearfish. 

At Savoy, before starting north, we headed down Roughlock Falls Rd. to check out a couple of points of interest. First up was Roughlock Falls. The falls are on Little Spearfish Creek about 1 mile past Savoy. They have a nice parking/staging area there, with well built/developed sidewalks with hand rails and various viewing platforms along the creek. It was nice to see the water here was just as clear as the waters in Montana and Wyoming. 2 more miles past Roughlock Falls lies a film site used in the movie “Dances With Wolves”. Not a big wow-factor for me, just another narrow canyon area among many. It might not even have been recognizable as the film site, considering our current time of year and the scenes in the movie were winter scenes…

Back to Alt 14 and points north. Right in beautiful “downtown” Savoy sits The Latchstring Restaurant sitting on the junction of Little Spearfish Creek and Spearfish Creek (the latter runs adjacent to Alt 14 all the way to Spearfish). Spearfish Falls is located directly behind the restaurant, accessed by a 1.5 mile roundtrip trail. The trail is easy, with just the first short section having a mild grade to it. This trail was also well maintained with a nicely developed viewing platform area at the bottom of the falls. There is an upper viewing area simply off the parking lot of the restaurant with a skewed angled view of the top of the falls. This was the most visually intense waterfall of the 3 total to be seen today.

Kissing Rocks (aka: The Dice) are laying in the middle of Spearfish Creek and if you are not paying attention, you can drive right by them without taking notice. There was barely enough shoulder to pull over to ogle, but we managed. Another feature known as “11th Hour Gulch” was supposedly a stone’s throw away. The gulch is a 50’ wide slot carved into the canyon, According to our “tour guide” (Spearfish Official Activity Guide), “blink and you’ll miss it.” And it claims there is a “parking lot” just downstream from the gulch. There is no “parking lot”. Yes, we blinked.

Victoria’s Tower is a limestone face rising above the canyon floor. We found it looming over a private residence in the canyon and photo opportunities were limited, but I successfully snagged a couple.

The Homestake #2 Hydroplant stood at the trailhead for The Devil’s Bathtub. The Homestake Mining Co. built the plant on Spearfish Creek in 1917 to generate power for use by their gold mine in nearby Lead. They have since abandoned use of this plant, but still use an older (1911) plant in Spearfish.

Woody decided to sit the next one out, so Jeanne & I took off K9-less in search of The Devil’s Bathtub. I do have to say the trail(s) to get there are a bit lacking in trail markers (to say the least), particularly since there are a lot of private residences/properties in the area with GREAT signage advising all to stay out. This was a moderate hike based on some rock scrambling as well as crossing the creek 8 times. If I’m not totally brain dead, I believe the bathtub is actually on Squaw Creek which feeds Spearfish Creek. Once we passed the third trail marker, we were on our own for trailblazing. Trails followed the creek on both sides, at times intermittently (hence the creek crossing) and there was quite a bit of foot traffic seeing that The Devil’s Bathtub is a pretty popular point of interest not only for we the tourists but also for locals. We hiked (more accurately described as “stumbled”) upstream for about 9 tenths of a mile and “found” The Devil’s Bathtub. Well, picture picture picture and we turned around and returned to the Jeep. We thought it was a cool find on our part…until the next day when surfin’ the web regarding The Devil’s Bathtub I discovered there is a common confusion as to where the bathtub is actually located. Many people stop at the “false” Devil’s Bathtub which is a small pool area fed by a short water slide/fall. In actuality The Devil’s Bathtub is about another 2 minutes upstream. Well, after giving Jeanne another of my awesome lessons in 4-letter vocabulary (%$#@&*^”%$#@&*^!!!!!!!!) we made another trip back to “the tub” a couple of days later and retraced our hike, this time actually arriving at The Devil’s Bathtub. I was glad we returned, the sights are spectacular. Now, for anyone planning on a visit, from The Devil’s Bathtub parking area it is a 2-mile round trip hike to see “the tub”.

The final point of interest we saw along the scenic byway was Bridal Veil Falls. There is a viewing platform right on the highway and no hiking to view the falls. It seems the name “Bridal Veil Falls” is used on numerous falls throughout our country, we have seen many. This was one of the most underwhelming I have seen.

That about covers us for the Spearfish Canyon National Scenic Byway. Until next post…