We drove on.
We finally found Sage creek road, the remote road not recommended for most vehicles according to the brochure I got upon entering the Badlands. (Smirks) This is where the remote campsite is located, the one I wanted last night! There are stories of a large Bison Heard in this area, and they often cross in your path. I had no idea, that this would end up being the best adventure of all.
It was beautiful! Everything around me, miles and miles of plains followed by ridge lines, of colored clay rock. The road was dirt, and rustic which of course excited every vein in my body. There was a certain pretend danger to taking the road less traveled, and not knowing where it would lead, or what I would find along the way. After my car experiences earlier, I felt my self ready to take on the task.
The first stop was sudden, as I was driving along relaxing watching “Dog-Kid” hang happily out the window when I saw a blurr of motion out of the corner of my eye. I came to a quick stop, flipping my arm in front of Rory in order to brace her from the quickness of the stop when I saw what it, or “they” were. Prairie dogs! Everywhere, their were thousands all around me, sweeping in and out of holes, across the road, and from one dirt area to another! This topped the mountain goat I was lucky enough to find earlier! Rory of course wanted to chase them, but I retrained her and went long enough to get a few pictures and shack my head at the forgotten miracles and magic of nature most only see on the Animal channel.
As if that were not enough we continued heading down our rustic road and followed the blue skies to a prairie with a Bison graving! Rory didn’t see this one, even after I stopped to take some photos. (Safely from my car) I felt like I was in a drive through wildlife refuge, except this was real! These animals were actually made to live here! I was twelve again, heart pounding, excited, exhilarated!
We carried happily on, until it happened. By it, I mean it! A scary moment, that head my heart pounding again, but in a “Oh, my god,” sort of way. What do I do? I love facts, the history channel. documentaries, and I hold information well when it is visual, but nowhere in my memory do I recall seeing anything about what to do when you have pissed of a Bison!
Here I am driving along when right smack in front of me he sat, staring. He was 10 yards away, and not at all interested in letting me pass. Especially, after “Dog-kid,” my brave adorable, sweet, Rory started barking and growling at him! He was quickly angered and starteed reacting by stomping his feet and I swear there was smoke pouring out of his thick scary nostrils!
Of course, this is me… and things never come simply. Not only were we stopped on a very narrow dirt road, but we had just climbed up a giant hill! So, not only do we have the small de lima of the pissed of Bison, and barking dog, but we have to go backwards down a hill in order to back up.
So I did, I cautiously backed up while keeping one eye on this large beautiful angry animal and restraining Rory’s mouth with my other hand. I had no choice but to wait. Quietly, if possible for him to lose interest. The road was to small to turn around, and backing up backwards any further was impossible. I waited.
What seemed like hours later was only minutes, when I finally grew tired of nervously waiting for him to let me through. I watched him start eating again, just along the side of the road. I was hoping, since he had stopped staring at me, that he had lost interest and felt as though he had tortured me with his overwhelmingly large body enough. I covered super “Dog-Kid’s” mouth (fearless leader) and drove. I didn’t make eye contact with him and lost ten pounds of sweat along the way, but we made it! I cleared the visions of Rory and I turned over on the side of the road, coffee creamer, ice, and deer sausage leaking all over and wild animals feeding on us and the contents of my cooler, and moved on. Once again.
My favorite part of the trip so far was pulling into the Black hills. I was mystified, felt small, and suddenly like I had come home. Beautiful trees, rocks, animals, and a million roads and paths at my disposal. Hour spent driving aimlessly, hiking random trails, swimming in trickling creeks, and exploring what this land had to offer.
Once exhausted, stinky, and hungry we took shelter in Deadwood. A town tha had much nightlife, casinos, and a wild west themed. We didn’t wake up until ten oclock the next morning.