When I awoke this morning, I saw the sun! The rain had finished and it was beautiful outside. I was hopeful that the sun would dry out the tent so we wouldn’t have to put it away wet.
We let the children sleep, and Steve went to shower while I ran to the store to get groceries for making breakfast. Steve, the chef, started cooking bacon while the children tried to sleep as long as possible. Finally, we had everything made (bacon, sausage, pancakes, fruit) and so the children could sleep no more. It finally felt like we were really camping! You know, the leisurely kind!
Anyway, after breakfast we started the cleanup. Not only did we have to clean up the pots and pans, but we decided to break camp as well. Everything was nice and dry, and the forecast was for storms overnight. So we decided that we’d pack everything up, spend our day doing what we had planned, and then drive towards home as far as we could getting a hotel somewhere when we could go no further. It would definitely give us a shorter drive tomorrow.
So, everything was packed up and everyone was ready to go finally by noon and we were on our way! We headed to Wind Cave National Park and got the 2:20 tour of the cave. We had a quick lunch at the car while we waited for our tour to begin (it had taken us so long to break camp that we were already hungry again!). This cave was amazing! It is the fourth largest cave in the world, and they think they’ve only discovered 5-10% of the cave so far. And they have already discovered 132 miles of cave, all compacted in 1 square surface mile! It’s quite a maze. And because it is so large, it breathes. When the air pressure is greater outside than the cave, then the entrance to the cave blows out (sometimes with winds up to 70mph!). When the air pressure is less outside than the cave, the entrance to the cave blows in towards the cave. It is always trying to balance out the air pressure. Hence it’s name: Wind cave.
Our tour took us on well lit areas where we could walk. No crawling or twisting through tight spots for us! It is a dry cave, so you don’t see stalagtites and stalagmites like in most caves. It does contain 95% of the world’s boxwood formations. They explained boxwood to us like so: This cave was once a sea floor of limestone. The water wore away the limestone but left the calcium deposits creating the boxwood formations (they look like misshapen honeycombs). To simplify the explanation she had us envision brick and mortar. The water dissolves the brick (limestone) but leaves the mortar (calcium) behind. The formations are really beautiful!
So after the Wind Cave, we hopped in the car and headed to Mt. Rushmore. The entrance to Mt. Rushmore said “To Mt. Rushmore Concessions.” That confused Steve, and he drove past wondering if there was a Mt. Rushmore entrance. Once we realized it was just a confusing sign, we were past it, and heading back down the hill. He went to make a U-turn and went off the shoulder, hitting the shoulder pretty hard (it was a hard drop off the shoulder). More about that later.
We made it into Mt. Rushmore and had a wonderful time. After many photo ops at the entrance, we went to the dining area and had dinner (they were open! Yay!). While it was expensive, it wasn’t half bad. After eating, it started to rain (ha! I was right!) and so we went into the theater where we watched a movie abut the making of the sculpture. By the time we got out, it had sopped raining and so we took the walking tour. This path takes you to the base of the mountain with stops along the way that focus on each head: facts about the president and quotes from him and about him.
After the walking tour, Steve and the kids got ice cream and I got settled in a seat in the amphitheater. We were told that the closing ceremony would be amazing, so we had planned to stay and see it. We waited for about an hour, eating ice cream, and kids taking turns running to the gift shop to look around. Finally, at 9 the program began. It was really nice with a movie explaining the accomplishments of each president and why they were chosen for the mountain. Then while America the Beautiful played, the sculpture slowly lit up. It was quite moving.
After the movie, she had all the veterans of current and past wars come up onto the stage and say their name. Everyone cheered and it was over. We all headed for one last bathroom stop before we were to leave and start driving towards home.
We got to the car and sat for a few moments while the kids got situation and Steve took out his contacts. It was 10pm. Quite late to be starting, but at least we didn’t have to break camp in the morning! We could stop whenever we wanted tonight. As we were commenting on how clever we had been, we heard someone knocking on our window. We rolled down the window and he said “Do you know you have a flat tire?”
When Steve had gone off the road, he must have hit the rear tire so hard that it was punctured. As we looked at it, it wasn’t totally flat, but was definitely losing air. I went to ask a Park Ranger for help. I didn’t want to put on the spare and try to get all the way home. I was hoping to get some air and at least get to the next town so that we could get help there in the morning.
While the Park Ranger didn’t have an air compressor, she thought the maintenance guy would, so she sent for him. While we were waiting for him, a couple came up to us and asked if we had a product called “Fix a Flat.” Apparently, this product goes into your tire, partially fills it, and then as you drive, it fills in wherever there are leaks. We thanked them for sharing it with us and asked them if we could repay them, but they said No, that just helping us was payment enough. People are so nice!
We decided to hang onto the product and see if we could first get air into the tires since the maintenance guy was on his way anyway. First he brought a compressor, but realized it was electric and not gas. So he went back to get an extension cord. After we got it plugged in, he realized that he didn’t have the right end on the air compressor to attach to the tire. And that point we thanked him for his help and told him that we thought we’d try this “Fix a Flat” product instead.
Steve emptied it into the wheel, and it did fill up a bit. It was enough to get us to the next town and a gas station with an air pump. By this time it was 11pm. At the gas station, we ran into the people who had shared the Fix a Flat with us and told them we were trying it and it seemed to be working! They were from Anchorage, Alaska and said that they never travel without it; especially on these long trips.
So, after getting it filled up with air, we headed out. We tried to stop a couple of times about 2 and 3 hours into the trip, but every place was full.
So now it is 9am, and we have 6 hours to go before we are home. We are all pretty tired, but the kids did have a nice block of sleep in the late night hours. Steve had been doing the lion’s share of the driving and I think it’ll be my turn again soon.
So I guess this is my last blog for this trip. I know how exhausted you are just reading it. Think how tired we feel! It will be nice to sleep in our own bed tonight…and not on the floor! Thanks for staying with us during this trip. We had a blast. I hope you did too.
Jen