Travel

Voyageurs National Park

Voyageurs National Park is located about a two-hour drive almost due north of Bemidji, Minnesota. It is one of the few national parks where you need a boat to reach the bulk of the area, as most of it is not drivable. The land area of the park is contained within the islands of the […]

Towards Voyagers

Over 700 miles separate Medora, North Dakota and Voyageurs National Park in International Falls, Minnesota. I made three stops along the way.  The first stop was in Jamestown, North Dakota. It is on I-94 and is home to the world’s largest buffalo statue. I spent the  day there. The statue is in Frontier Park, which

Three Badlands in 30 days

My third Badlands in 30 days. First, I didn’t know there was more than one Badlands. To me, the only Badlands I had ever heard of was South Dakota’s National Park. I’d been there a couple of times. They were interesting colors, and stark rocks with striated hues showing the different geological formations that had made

The Badlands of North Dakota!

The drive (almost due north) from South Dakota to North Dakota was anything but straight. I zigged and zagged around towns, farms, and outcroppings of rocks (bigger than hills, but not exactly mountains). Along the way, I started seeing a crop that didn’t look familiar. I had to look it up. It turned out to

The Badlands of South Dakota

The South Dakota Badlands are about 50 miles from Rapid City, South Dakota. The significant town is Wall. In the 1930s, Wall Drug Store was just a small shop on the main drag. They started giving away free ice water as vehicles came across the South Dakota prairie. It was hot, dry, and generally miserable

Getting back to the TNGypsy!

From Calgary, we pushed toward Winnipeg. Doug and Cheryl had friends to see in Minnesota, and I had a plane to catch in Winnipeg. There wasn’t much to see — mostly just prairie and the occasional eerie sky caused by nearby smoke. We stopped in Moose Jaw, Saskatchewan, and then in Winnipeg, Manitoba. At this

Cowboys and Dinosaurs!

After several long days on the road, we finally arrived in Calgary, Alberta. Here, we met up with Cheryl’s friend, Jen, again, and she was gracious enough to play tour guide. On the first day, we went to downtown Calgary. I specifically wanted to see this city, home of the games dubbed the Calgary Stampede.

Our Lucky Day

Cheryl had told me that between Watson Lake and Fort Nelson, we would have our best opportunity to see wildlife.  Not long after we left our motel, Doug pulled into a parking area. I wasn’t looking at the road, and as I looked up, I was a bit confused. There were numerous signs nailed to

North Pole!

We spent three days in Fairbanks. One day was spent going up the Dalton. The last day was spent taking care of some mechanical work and finding out the truck needed new tires. We were lucky we had gone up the Dalton without any problems, given how bad that road was. The road might have

Riding the Dalton

I have watched TV shows about Alaska and Canada for a long time. One I watched for several years was Ice Road Truckers, and I repeatedly heard about Dalton Highway, one of the ice roads. The Dalton Highway spans 400 miles from Prudhoe Bay, where the Alaska pipeline starts, and follows the pipeline all the

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