to North Platte, Nebraska....
680 miles one way....
and changed our lives here....
for the better.
I thought I should document the trip in photos--see what you think.
Sunrise in North Dakota, March 4, 2011 -- ready to leave. |
Lovely view of the Missouri River north of Washburn, ND, on U.S. Highway 83. |
Lewis & Clark Interpretative Center, Washburn, ND. GREAT museum. Also, one of the best rest areas in the state. |
Brief drive east on I-94, looking to pick up U.S. 83 again. |
Aaah, back on U.S. 83, headed south, hardly need a map. |
Road signs all along the route; not that a road is necessarily there. |
Tourist attraction, Strasburg, ND. |
U.S. 83 into South Dakota (stay with me now). |
Notice odometer reading and trip distance at this point in my 1999 Bonneville, south of Pierre, SD (also notice full tank of gas), still on U.S. 83. |
View at 196,000 miles (we're getting closer). |
Two hours later, on U.S. 83 (stay with me). |
Sunset south of Valentine, NE, U.S. 83. (Still two hours of driving to destination.) No color adjustments made. Also, essentially no snow!!!! |
Sunrise, North Platte, NE, March 5th. |
Best sunrise ever, named Morgan. |
Headed north into South Dakota. |
South Dakota border on U.S. 83. |
Lunch on the Missouri River at the Oahe Dam near Pierre, SD.... |
Tourists' view of the dam (Morgan, look at the Canada geese in the open water).... |
Morgan's view of the dam...and first experience in snow. |
Selby, SD, cemetery. Yes, that's what you think it is... |
...Easily visible from the roadway. |
Crossing back into North Dakota. |
Crossing back into North Dakota. (Not to be confused with the earlier crossing into South Dakota.) |
Absolutely worth every mile. |
Thanks for coming along on my little road trip...could be the best "spring break" ever.
Note for travelers who may now be interested in duplicating this route: you drive straight down the center of the Great Plains. Get out your road atlas and check the route. You can pick up NPR radio stations all along the way; also local high school sports coverage. In Nebraska, you have to prepay your fuel, which is most inconvenient as a lone traveler. The only Starbucks available were in Minot and Bismarck, ND, although the other towns and cities along the way had their local coffee shops--and in Pierre, SD, I saw two real life 2010 National Finals Rodeo saddle bronc contestants acting like normal people at Hardee's!
Great road trip ! adorable puppy !!!
ReplyDeletewow! thanks for the road trip!
ReplyDeleteand, yes, by far, the best "rest area" i've seen in a LONG time!
sweet puppy....lovely roadside views....and best of all, YOUR company along the way, dear caroline!
xx
p.s. LOVE it, your taking a road trip in a BONNEville!
Yes a new puppy will definitely change your life. I enjoyed the trip and all the sights though it didn't feel all that springy.
ReplyDeleteMorgan in that box is just to adorable for words, I like how you shop!
Congratulations, Caroline! Oh, what a beautiful pup. How EXCITING!!! Looooove the shape of Morgan's head (in the last photo -- too cute), and the white whites of those dark eyes! You must be in love. Oh, the warmth....the puppy smells, puppy paws... :o)
ReplyDeleteWhat a lucky little pup to have you.
P.S. We are going to expect "baby pics" now, you know, on a regular basis!!
xoxo
Morgan says come over and play any time. She will do her best piranha imitation, followed by her best tiger imitation.
ReplyDeleteBoth of these are improving on a daily basis.
And, yes, puppy smells are the BEST!!