The Badlands are a work of art still in
progress. Water and wind continue to sculpt
the pliant soil into sharply eroded buttes,
pinnacles, and spires that resemble medieval
castles made of sand. It's in the golden
light of sunrise or sunset that the artistry
is on full display, when the duff-colored
soils glow in shades of red, pink, and
purple.
Hikers, backpackers, cyclists, and casual
wanderers can explore this Byzantine
labyrinth of shifting sands and experience
the vast expanse of azure sky and forbidding
land that greeted—and ultimately
defeated—the earliest settlers. Each
panorama offers a glimpse into millions of
years of geologic history, paleontology, and
the inevitability of a changing earth.
Hike 35 Million Years into History
The park's seven short trails sufficiently
penetrate the diverse terrain found within
the Badlands—easy loops through wooded
prairie give way to steep hikes along
precipitous Badland formations. The Fossil
Exhibit Trail is a quarter-mile loop that
allows visitors to see fossils dating from
the late Eocene and Oligocene
epochs—often
referred to as the Age of Mammals. The Door
Trail allows visitors to break on through to
the other side—the "door" is a break in the
wall of wickedly eroded Badlands.
Ride Herd with
Buffalo
It's hard to miss the massive 2,000-pound
bison that graze on prairie grass in the
Badlands—with a herd 600 strong, chances are
good that you will see American Buffalo (as
they're popularly called) if you drive along
Sage Creek Rim Road. And there's always a
chance that you will catch a rare glimpse of
the 25 to 30 black-footed ferrets living in
the park. They're the most endangered mammal
in North America.
Backpack with the Baddest
To relieve the unbearable urge to explore,
which overtakes many Badlands visitors, try
backpacking the backcountry. You can camp
anywhere on this 244,000-acre expanse so
long as you're at least a half-mile away
from any road or trail. The Sage Creek
Wilderness in the park's northern region
provides 64,250 acres of remote wilderness
where backpackers can get lost and found
with the aid of topographical maps.
Bad-to-the-bone backpackers can test their
limits in this parched terrain where other
living creatures barely survive by
subsistence.
Cycle the Badlands
Although forbidden on hiking trails,
cyclists can ride along the park's paved
loop road. Get someone to shuttle you up to
Pinnacles Overlook and you can cruise
downhill for 22 miles to the Ben Reifel
Visitor Center. The closest thing to
off-road action is gravel—the Sage Creek Rim
Road along the northern boundary of the park
snakes its way from the Pinnacles Overlook
past a prairie dog town, and on to wonderful
views of the Badlands Wilderness Area. |