Aug. 12, 2025
Next part of South Dakota Hiking Trip
I wasn't sure that I was going to post every day, but there are a lot of good photos!
Tuesday (Aug. 12)
We had reserved tickets for the Fairgrounds Tour at Wind Cave National Park at 9:00am and then reserved tickets for the Scenic Tour at Jewel Cave National Monument at 12:20pm. After that, we did a hike near Jewel Cave in Black Hills National Forest. It was a bit of a long day!
Wind Cave National Park
The attraction at Wind Cave are the cave formations called "boxwork". They are filamentary spider-web-looking lattices that are visible mostly on the ceiling. Our tour was 90 minutes and had about 40 people. It was a good tour. The photo shows a section of boxwork on the ceiling of one of the caverns, maybe a 10 ft x 10 ft section.
Jewel Cave National Monument
The main attraction is Jewel Cave is the calcite crystal formations on the walls and ceilings of the caves. Comparing Wind Cave and Jewel Cave, the individual "rooms" in Wind Cave were generally smaller and not as tall. The facilities (path through the cave, stairs, lighting) was more modern in Jewel Cave, so a better experience with that. The photo shows some calcite stalactites that the ranger guide lit up with her flashlight - the biggest ones were may 8 inches long. Our tour was 80 min and had about 40 people; another good tour.
Hiking: Hell Canyon Trail in Black Hills National Forest
- time: 2:16:50
- distance: 5.62 mi
- average pace: 24:19
- elevation gain: 998 ft (corrected)
- comments: This was a spectacular hike! The hike was a long, skinny loop. The first half of the hike went down the floor of the canyon, which was pretty and pleasant. The rock walls were interesting, and the canyon got pretty narrow. We saw three female bighorn sheep near/on the trail and waited for them to move off (one photo shows them).
- comments: Then when we got to the far end of the skinny loop, the trail climbed up the wall of the canyon, and we spent most of the rest of the hike on the canyon wall looking down. A little thrill from the exposure, but if you were paying attention, it wasn't dangerous. It reminded me of the Highline Trail in Glacier National Park, except we saw ZERO other people the whole time. Excellent views!
