The Great Plains, Our Summer Trip in 2021

The Great Plains

Our 2021 summer trip was to the Great Plains and focused on six states in which we have never camped.  Those states are Kansas, Nebraska, South Dakota, North Dakota, Montana, and Wyoming.   It was a long trip—five and a half weeks and over six thousand miles in our vehicle.

We were traveling in our NuCamp T@B 400.  It is a fine camper and I am happy to say it performed beautifully.  The only issue we had was that the air conditioner did not cool as much as we would like when in direct sun and 100 plus degrees in high altitudes.

Mountain View Campground in Sundance, Wyoming

It was a long trip, but was worth the effort because each state was beautiful and a joy to experience.  Also, our map of states we have camped in is filling up nicely.  So, we now have thirty-eight states.

States in which we have camped

National Parks

This Great Plains trip included four major National Parks:  Theodore Roosevelt, Yellowstone, Grand Tetons, and Badlands.  These iconic parks have been on my bucket list for a long time.

Theodore Roosevelt National Park

North Dakota’s Theodore Roosevelt National Park was our first encounter with the Badlands.  The desolate landscape of the Badlands was exquisite and was filled with creatures, great and small.  For example, we saw hundreds of bison and thousands of prairie dogs.

Bison at Theodore Roosevelt National Park

While in Medora visiting the Roosevelt National Park, we saw the Medora Musical.  It was a fantastic show and the best evening of our entire trip!  I am so glad we were able to see it.

The Medora Musical
Yellowstone National Park

Yellowstone in Wyoming was the pinnacle of National Parks for us.  The park is enormous, encompassing 3,471 miles.  It has an abundance of wildlife, geysers, a Grand Canyon, rolling hills, rivers, and  lakes.  We completed the south loop, but did not have time to see the north loop.

Yellowstone National Park in the Great Plains
Mud Volcano in Yellowstone National Park
Grand Tetons National Park

Grand Tetons is a much smaller National Park at 485 square miles.  It is located directly south of Yellowstone in Wyoming .   We stayed in a Jackson Hole campground, which is in a deep valley surrounded by mountains.   There was not an abundance of wildlife, but it was breathtakingly beautiful.

Grand Tetons in the Great Plains
Grand Tetons Jackson Lake

Custer State Park

Custer State Park in South Dakota is large for a state park at 114 square miles and has all sorts of wildlife.  Two of the most exciting times on our trip occurred while at Custer.  Firstly, we had an up close and personal encounter with many bison when at the dump station.  After we left, they were all over the spot as you can see in the photo below.

Bison at Custer State Park

Secondly, we traveled through Needles Highway.  It is considered one of the most epic routes in South Dakota.  Portions of the highway only exist because workers in 1922 blasted holes through several solid granite “needles”.  The road is extremely twisty with multiple narrow tunnels.  I was on pins and “needles”, but my husband loved it.

He drove the Needles Highway

Great Plains Memorials and Monuments

The Great Plains has many iconic memorials and monuments.  So, we tried to see as many as possible.

It was so cool to see Mount Rushmore in South Dakota after seeing it in in photos or prints for so many years.

Mount Rushmore in the Great Plains
Mount Rushmore National Memorial

I hiked the 1.3 miles around the Devils Tower in Wyoming  and was able to enjoy some astonishing views.

Devils Tower in the Great Plains
Devils Tower

Wyoming’s Little Bighorn Battlefield was a sobering place to visit.  The countryside is very beautiful and it is sad to imagine all the lives lost in that famous battle.

Little Bighorn Battlefield
Little Bighorn Battlefield

The Crazy Horse Monument is near Mount Rushmore and is a work in process.  The vision for the completed monument is of epic proportions.

Crazy Horse Monument in the Great Plains
Crazy Horse Monument

Presidential Libraries

We tried to visit the Truman Library last year, but it was closed because of Covid and renovations.  While in Topeka, Kansas, we made a day trip to Independence, Missouri to see the library.  Truman was an amazing president and the newly renovated library was wonderful to visit.

Harry S Truman Presidential Library

Abilene, Kansas was a stop for us to see our next presidential library, the Eisenhower Library.  Unfortunately , it closed before we arrived because of a spike in Covid cases.  We did, however, walk the grounds.  Ike was an incredible president and I would love to know more about him.

Dwight D Eisenhower Library

Great Plains Capital Buildings and Museums

I love visiting capital buildings because of the history and architecture.  We saw the outside of three state capitals and toured one while in the Great Plains.

The museums we visited were all compelling in different ways.  Each contributed to an understanding of those earlier times in our history.

Capital Buildings

We took a tour of Nebraska’s capital building in Lincoln, which was completed in 1932.  It is a beautiful building with a very ornate foyer with arches, mosaics on the walls, and magnificent marble.

We checked out two other capital buildings (Bismarck, North Dakota and Topeka, Kansas), but it was on weekends and they were closed.

Nebraska State Capital
Moss Mansion

Moss Mansion Museum showcases a house built in 1903.  The cost of the home was $105,00 at a time when the national average cost was $5,000.  The home was extremely opulent and there is a room in the house that looks much like the Palace of Versailles.  It was used exclusively as the home of Preston Boyd Moss and his family until it became a museum.

Moss Mansion
Moss Mansion Museum in Billings Montana
Seelye Mansion

Seelye Mansion is an impressive old home built in 1904 in Abilene, Kansas.  It is still intact with all the original furnishings.  Most importantly, it has connections to a young Dwight D. Eisenhower.  The story of the home, its residents, and current ownership is fascinating.

Historic Seelye Mansion
Durham Museum

The Durham Museum in Omaha, Nebraska was delightful!  It is an old train station and has some actual old trains inside.  It was like a walk back in time to old movies I have seem.

The Durham Museum in Omaha, Nebraska
Hjemkomst Center

The Hjemkomst Center is actually in Moorhead, Minnesota.  But, it was less than ten miles from our campground in Fargo, North Dakota.    The centerpiece of the museum is a replica of an actual Viking ship dating back to 800 AD.  The ship was actually sailed to Norway and at great risk to those on board.    This museum is a must see, if in the area.

Hjemkomst Center in Moorhead, Minnesota
Fort Casper Museum

Fort Casper Museum is a replica of an actual fort and the original was key to the westward movement in the 1800s.  The fort is furnished as it was in those days. It is an educational and extremely interesting place to visit.  Also, check out those mountains in the background.   The area is so beautiful!

Fort Casper Museum in the Great Plains
Fort Casper Museum in Casper, Wyoming

Challenges of a Long Trip with a Puppy

Sophie, our puppy has been on several camping trips with us and is a great little traveler.  But, those trips were only two weeks long and did not involve more than two or three stops   This trip was five and a half weeks and twenty-two different campgrounds.

Not much room in our camper

Sophie was wonderful on the trip, but there was very little room in our camper.   As you can see in the photo above, dog and crate leave very little room for other inhabitants.  It was very, very close in our camper, but we managed.

Concern with puppy feet at 105 degrees

Also, we were traveling during a terrible heat wave.   Most days it was quite hot, but we encountered highs between 100-105 degrees a few days.  On one of the hottest days, we couldn’t let our pup walk on the ground because we were afraid it would burn her feet.  So, on stops that day, my husband had to carry her.

Dogs hiking in the Great Plains
Sophie with a Rover Sitter

Lastly, some of our activities could not include a dog.  We needed a dog sitter three times on our trip because we had to be away longer than we could leave her in the crate.  Fortunately, we had three excellent Rover sitters and our girl had some fun times.

Great Plains State Posts

Lastly, there is a separate post for each of our new states in the Great Plains.  If traveling to any of these areas, you might want to review.

Kansas, A New State on Our Long Summer Trip

Montana, a New State on our Long Summer Trip

Nebraska, a New State on Our Long Summer Trip

North Dakota, a New State on Our Summer Trip

South Dakota, a New State in Our Long Summer Trip

Wyoming, a New State on Our Long Summer Trip

In Conclusion

This was a trip of a lifetime for us and we thoroughly enjoyed it.  It was a long trip, but we saw so many beautiful and interesting places.

Happy Camping!

Retired couple

Montana, a New State on our Long Summer Trip

Montana

Montana is so beautiful!   It is called Big Sky County for good reason.  The sky seems so big because it is very sparsely populated and absent of tall buildings.  We were fortunate to be able to camp in three different areas in the southern portion of the state and loved the big sky views.

Traveling in Montana

Driving through Montana certainly was lovely.  The area we traversed was very mountainous.  We drove through Bozeman, but didn’t stop.  However, it was very nice and seemed like a great city in which to live.

Montana Countryside
Montana Countryside

The roads in Montana surprised us though.  We took a Google maps shortcut on Fly Creek Road.  It looked curvy, but it would save eight minutes.  About four miles in, it became a gravel road.  We had twelve miles to go and hoped the gravel was temporary.  It was not!   We traveled at 5-10 miles an hour because it was shaking our car and trailer so much.   We saw a few farms and some cows.   The gavel road connected directly with the interstate at the end of our very long twelve-mile drive.

Montana cows
Curious Cows

Garryowen

Our campground was in the tiny town of Garryowen.   It is located just a few miles from Little Bighorn Battlefield.   Also, Billings was roughly an hour away.

7th Ranch RV

We loved 7th Ranch RV!   Our full hookup site was in the shade with actual green grass with the help of a sprinkler system.   The shade was such a blessing because of the extreme heat in the area.  We were also welcomed with free ice cream.  The campground bathhouse and laundry were nice,  but the views were spectacular.

Montana campground
7th Ranch RV
Our 7th Ranch Site # A24
Little Bighorn Monument

We listened to two very knowledgeable park rangers talk about the famous Little Bighorn battle and provide information about the monument area.

Little Bighorn Monument

Markers indicate where soldiers were thought to have fallen in the battle.

Markers for fallen soldiers

The beautiful rolling hills look much like they looked during that famous battle.  A cemetery that is an extension of Arlington is also located on the land now.

Little Bighorn Battlefield in Montana
View of the cemetery

Billings

Billings is the largest city in Montana.  However, its 2020 population was only 109,868.  We were there for one of our days in the area.

Moss Mansion

Moss Mansion was the home of one of the important founders of the city, Preston Boyd Moss.   It was built in 1903 and was designed by Henry Janeway Hardenbergh, the designer of the original Waldorf Astoria and Plaza Hotels.    The mansion was in two movies, Son of the Morning Star and Return to Lonesome Dove.

Moss Mansion

The dining room below shows some of the exquisite details in this elegant home.

Interior of the mansion
Yellowstone Museum

We visited the Yellowstone Museum while in Billings.  It is a small museum with a very friendly staff and several interesting works of art.  It was a  nice part of our day.

Yellowstone Museum
A Rover Sitter

We had a Rover sitter while we were in Billings.  Eryn, the sitter, has a house in the foothills of the mountain.  She took Sophie and some other dogs on a mountain hike.  Sophie seemed to enjoy it and was one tired pup when we returned to the camper.

Doggie mountain hiking in Billings Montana
Sophie’s hike on the mountain

Livingston

Livingston was a one night stop for us. The campground was very nice with flowers, nice landscaping, and an amazing view.  I especially appreciated the large dog park.  Our puppy really needed to run and get rid of some energy.

View from Osen’s RV

West Yellowstone

West Yellowstone is an access point to Yellowstone National Park.  It is a small town that is right at the entrance to the park.  The bulk of Yellowstone National Park is in Wyoming, but the entrance from the west is the park’s busiest with many restaurants and shopping opportunities.

Rainbow Point Campground

I booked our Yellowstone camping site about four months earlier and all electric sites were already taken.  So, I booked a non electric site and we brought a generator.  Thankfully, when we arrived someone had cancelled which meant that we did not have to roast in the extreme heat.   The site was very large (AND ELECTRIC), so we were happy.

Site D9

Hebgen Lake was a short walk from our campsite and it was absolutely gorgeous!  I waded in the water with our pup because she got very dirty playing with another dog.  The water was a very comfortable temperature, but we did not go far because our pup has not learned to swim yet.

The Lake water was so amazingly clear.

Hebgen Lake

We went to the Yellowstone Visitor’s Center the afternoon we arrived and the ranger said we should head to Old Faithful right away and then do the southern loop clockwise very early the next day.  The park was very crowded, but this strategy worked well.

Yellowstone Park Entrance

 Montana Food

While traveling, we stopped in Miles City for an excellent lunch at Black Iron Grill Rotisserie.   The food and service were stellar!  It has very nice outdoor seating, so we could take our dog.  Without an outdoor seating option, we have to eat in our car when traveling.

Chislic at Black Iron Grill Rotisserie in Miles City

In Billings, we had a fabulous meal at Jake’s Downtown.   The restaurant is very nice and we were surprised to learn it was owned by a lady named Kathy from Alabama.  She came out to chat with us and we enjoyed our conversation.

Steaks at Jake’s Downtown in Billings

In Conclusion

Montana was a fantastic time for us!  But, photos and films do not do it justice.  You just have to see it!  Posts of other states we have visited can be seen on our page, States Visited, a Campsite Resource.

Happy Camping!

Retired couple