Tuesday, December 4, 2012

TRNP, again...

 Cannon Ball Concretions -- strange, eh?  Looks a bit like some factory reject pile.  Oops!  That batch didn't work...oh, well...Try again...


 We did NOT pitch our tent in TRNP.  I thought about it, but wanted a shower handy.  Seeing this affirmed my choice. Wild ponies in the Assategue campground, okay...But bison and their bigness, and their waste, and a tent...I don't think so!


TRNP and the neighborhood

 The Little Missouri River -- one of God's awesome sculpting tools.


 Another lunch spot -- beautiful, peaceful...
Open grasslands swallow failed dreams.

 This part of North Dakota harvested plenty of hay.  Storage is not an issue.

Temporary housing crowds old elevators, testifying to the massive influx of people working in the oil fields.  The area is a curious mixture of ranchers and oil workers.  In some ways, the cultures seem to co-exist but not mingle.  Then, at times they run smack into each other's space, resulting in friction and frustration.  And, North Dakota can't decide whether to be offended by the change forced on them, or pleased at their swelling coffers.  Regardless, the stress created shows in crowded housing forcing low income people out of the area, labor shortages in service industries, wear on the infrastructure, under manned and under prepared police, 'women of the night' and drugs and violence as in the Gold Rush days.



 But God...
 They call this a 'slump formation'.  If you don't know what that is, look it up.  Anyway, what happens to the soils and rocks is on public display.  There's little vegetation to disguise anything.


Theodore Roosevelt National Park

 Curious things happen to the landscape when you combine a dry environment and erosion with various soil types.

 Somehow, 'we' managed to find a low, shady spot at the edge of the national park, for lunch and ruminating.

Views in the North Dakota Badlands seem limitless.

Prairie dogs playing 'Telephone'.

 Redefined 'own your lane'.  Bison roam at will and, wallah! gridlock...


Tuesday, September 18, 2012

Random...Somewhere between Lewis and Clark and Medora...

Along the way we spotted this pile of rust that excited someone in the car :).  It is a tractor equipped with a hay buck (hope I got this right...), a tool used to gather up loose hay.  Those mean looking hooks at the top come down somehow and grab a bucked up pile of the loose stuff so it can be heaped together in one spot. 

I'm waiting for Mike and Elizabeth to apply for a franchise.  You could go head to head with Chick'n'Lick'n' in Vriesland.

Monday, September 17, 2012

Rambling around eastern Montana and western NDThe

The past...

The lunch...

Relics...

Oilers and farmers share the road, not without tension.

Flood irrigation...

A few bales...

The Oil Rush moves into every spot it can.  Housing have sky rocketed, pushing low income renters out of town.

I'm pretty sure the transient population above really changed the dynamic in this little town which consists of the old elevator and these few houses.

And, everywhere, evidence of the oil wells.

We heard that it takes 2000 trips by semis to get a well going.  With a quarter of the projected 40,000 wells drilled, it's not surprising we saw huge traffic issues, crowded towns, and paved highways grooved as much as 5 inches deep from the heavy truck use.

Our first ride through Theodore Roosevelt NP

Lest we forget -- bison rule!

And, where the bison roam, the chittering prairie dogs play freely.

Layers of sandstone, siltstone and clay kept us tracing the colors across the landscape.  Some made unusual shapes.






Managed to find a small road, off the beaten trail of course, and at the edge of the national park, where we could kick back.

Sandwiches, a bit of fruit, a few pretzels, something to drink and a nap.  Life is good.






As I said, bison rule...

...and prairie dogs tell stories.