#27  We left Hazen, ND & drove to Shadehill Reservoir SRA.  This is a very nice campground with electric hookups.  Near here in 1824 Hugh Glass, a fur trapper, was mauled by a grizzley bear & a few days later was left by the 2 men who were supposed to stay with him until he died & bury him.  Glass came out of his coma & began to crawl the 200 miles to Fort Kiowa.  He crawled most to the way because his leg was broken by the bear.  There is a monument on a hill overlooking the reservoir. 
From Shadehill we went to Hart Ranch RV Resort near Rapid City, SD.  This resort is part of the RPI system & a great resort.  We spent a week here.  During the week we went into town to one of our favorite restaurants, the Golden Corral.  Also, we went to the Geology Museum at the University of South Dakota.
On Oct 14, we left Hart Ranch & went to Devils Tower National Monument in Wyoming.  We spent 2 nights at the campground & took the hike around the tower.  We were really impressed by this geologic wonder, it is quite spectacular.  As we were going back to our car after our hike we saw some rock climbers leaving the parking lot.  When we got back to our coach in the campground we were able to watch the climbers scale the side of the tower to the top.  By the time they reached the top it was nearly dark so we suppose they stayed on top of the tower for the night.  That night there were high winds & some rain so the climbers couldn't have been very comfortable on the top.

The next day we continued to Casper to spend the night in an rv park near the freeway & railroad.  Not to pleasant.  We then went to Lander, WY.  The road from Casper to Lander follows the Oregon Trail.  We stopped at several spots marking landmarks on the Trail.  Interesting to see places we have read about since we were children to say nothing of recognizing places from playing "Oregon Trail" on the computer in the past.  After we left Lander, we went through South Pass & could really see the advantage when compared with the rugged Wind River Range visible to the north.
This brought us to Fort Bridger.  Another place I wanted to see after reading about it for many years.  The rv park was next door to the restored military fort and in the back was the restored fort that Jim Bridger & his partner built & ran as a supply station along the Oregon Trail.
#26  On Oct 1 we left Mike & Karen & continued our walkbout.  That night we stopped at the campground at Fort Peck dam run by the Corps of Engineers.  This was our first stay at a COE campground & we were plesantly surprised at the spacious sites.  The sites were long & level & their was a lot of room between them.  As it was after Labor Day there were many open sites to choose from.  This campground is at Fort Peck Lake on the Missouri River & I imagine it is very busy during the summer.
The next day we drove into the NW corner of North Dakota.  At Williston & Watford City we were surprised at all of the bustling activity with all kinds of trucks going in every direction.  This is an oil boom area with oil wells sprouting up everywhere because of the fracking activity on private lands.  There are many trailer parks & modular dormitory housing areas for the workers.  We understand that anyone willing to work can get a job in this area.  Even with all the well sites going up in many fields the work is being done in a very systematic manner & everything looks very orderly except for the dust & mud.  Many of the small towns we passed were enjoying the boom.  Because of the increase in revenues the small towns are improving or replacing streets, sidewalks & curbing as well as sewer systems.  It was very encouraging to see all of this activity when you compare it to other parts of the country.
Our stop on Oct 2 was at Theodore Roosevelt National Park North Unit.  This is a nice campground & the first night there we were one of about 6 rigs in the campground.  The next day we visited the Visitors Center & drove through the park.  It was rainy in the morning & in the early afternoon the rain turned to snow.  But by late afternoon the weather warmed & it turned back to rain & washed off the snow.  That night we were the only ones in the campground.
Oct 4 we drove to Hazen, ND and stayed at the city RV park on the edge of town.  The next day we drove the 30 miles to the restored Fort Mandan near where Lewis & Clark spent the first winter of their journey across the continent.  The young men who gave the talk at both the Visitor Center & the fort were very knowledgable & gave us lots of information  about the Corps of Discovery.  As we had driven across ND we had seen several large industrial plants  & when we asked about them we were told that they were processing plants for coal.  They are strip mining for coal & processing it into natural gas that is then put in pipelines & sent to the eastern US for power production & heat.
The young man telling us about it was very proud of his state & how they were able to do all of this without federal interference because it was on state & private land.  At current consumption rates it is estimated that the coal will last for 800 years.  All of this oil, coal & natural gas production is taking place with very little pollution.  Shows what can happen if you keep the federal government regulators out of things they know nothing about.