Monday, February 29, 2016

Winter Hike Stockade Lake Custer State Park, SD

Stockade Lake
Stockade Lake is located  near the western entrance to the park on Hwy 16. Take a right following the Stockade lake signs and the lake is on your right. During winter you will experience less crowds in Custer State Park but there will still be people camping and hiking on the weekends. 
 There is a playground and picnic tables next to the lake.

The lake is still frozen and a probably  thick enough for ice fishing.
The Stockade Lake Trail has parking next to this sign. The trail is a short 1.5 mile loop that climbs up and then back down.  

 Traveling up was fun and not too tough. You encounter many wonderful rocks along the trail including large pieces of clear quartz, grey feldspars, muscovite mica and quartzite.

 There are many view points at the top of climbs. This is a view of the Needles area and Harney Peak in the distance.
The trail eventually reached the top and then you come back down through some aspen trees. The rocks change on the way down.

 Near the end of the trial outcrops of granite make fun climbing boulders.

 Here you leave the trail and follow the road back to the trail head.

 

Wednesday, February 17, 2016

History Sticks in Muddy Nevada Cave 2014

This was the second kids caving adventure for our group of three caver families. We chose an easily accessed cave with mostly horizontal passages. This cave has a section of very dry and dusty passages with many and sometimes historic inscriptions on the walls. Once you pass through a constriction the cave becomes very, very muddy. This mud is the sticky kind that doesn't really rinse away instead you must scrape it off everything. The cave was included in George Wheeler's 1872 expedition and contains historic inscriptions form their cave expedition.
http://www.davidrumsey.com/luna/servlet/detail/RUMSEY~8~1~32259~1151615:Cave-Valley,-Nevada-


 The entrance is at road level and looks like a mine portal. This is the local bat biologist taking notes about the Townsend big-eared bats.
 The kids are clean and testing their cave lights. Note some of the many inscriptions on the rock behind them. Currently (2016) the Bureau of Land Management is inventorying and determining the historic and non-historic inscriptions in preparation for cleaning efforts.
 Kids 5, 8, 6, 4, 4, and 2.
 These guys are great at finding small passages.
 Carbide inscriptions.
 We finally left the dry part and ventured into the wet and muddy cave.
 We explored a side passage, crawling for adults yet walking for two-year-olds.
 We made it past the constriction and into the very sticky mud. This is one of the pits where the mud was mined and used for pottery. The kids stopped and began testing their climbing skills.
 Sometimes you need a hand from your friends. Half of our group, mainly adults and the oldest child, ventured further to collect data from data loggers. The small kids tried to follow but quickly became frustrated slipping, falling and getting stuck in the mud. The decided to stay at the pit and continue to slide in and then climb out.
 These guys found something.
Then we moved back to the dry passages and the kids began to draw in the dusty floor.


 This little one couldn't stop climbing.
 We tested our ultraviolet light and looked for fluorescence in the rocks.
 These two tried telling scary stories.
 Our groups rejoined and these guys were muddy, though people often emerge covered from head to toe.
 Mostly free of mud with easier cleanup. I do have a helmet, I was just using it as light for the photo.


Fish Hatchery...Free Fun in Spearfish, SD

Our long weekend began with warm 40 degree weather and we enjoyed playing outside until a snow cloud moved into Sundance, WY. It stayed there for two days and on the second day we decided maybe it was less snowy in South Dakota. We drove 3 miles east of Sundance to find dry roads and no snow,excellent for sometime outside. We traveled to Spearfish on I90, took exit 10 and turned right onto Jackson. Travel through town and turn left on Canyon St. The fish hatchery is at the end of the road on the right. DC Booth Fish Hatchery is managed by the US Fish and Wildlife Service and is a Historic site.

Spearfish Creek, most of the snow was gone from days of warm temperatures.
 Bridges over the pools of fish.
 There were so many fish. Bring some quarters to buy food to feed the fish, they go crazy.

 Each of the ponds have fish in them in a variety of sizes. There are many pathways to follow and places for a picnic.There are a few trails that travel to the top of the cliffs.
 This pond has the biggest trout and you can view them underwater.
 These trout are really big
 There is a campground called
 This railcar is a replica of the one that once carried fish across the country.
 Next to the fish hatchery is City Park that has access to Spearfish Creek, pavillons and a large play structure.