Monthly Archives: September 2015

South Dakota weirdness, part 2

DSCF8539After Mt. Rushmore, Wall Drug and the Prairie Dog God, we wondered if there could be even more weirdness in western South Dakota.  Yes, there most definitely can.

We visited Delta-09, a Minuteman II silo, where we saw an actual nuclear missile.

DSCF8547

DSCF8540

It’s a weird place – a chain-link fence enclosure in the middle of the prairie, where they leave the gate open so you can enter and look into the silo.  There is a phone number you can call on your phone, and then punch in various numbers to get information about it.  We tried to do that, and couldn’t get it to work, and then realized we had just called an unknown phone number from a nuclear missile site, and the NSA now had our number, and ever since we’ve been seeing some suspicious vehicles in the rear-view mirror.

We quickly moved along to Mitchell SD, for a viewing of the Corn Palace.  It is undergoing one of its regular refurbishments, where new murals are made out of corncobs. DSCF8637

It was cool to see the underlying layout sketched out before the corncobs are added, as in this picture, which seems to be of Willie Nelson:

DSCF8649

We were a little more perplexed by this mural, until we realized it was a portrait of Michael Jackson, an attempt by the Corn Place to appeal to a younger audience through an homage to a 30-year-old pop tune.

DSCF8644

But that is only the beginning of the weirdness in Mitchell. Right across the street is “Valticoty”, a gift shop in a castle, with a “kids jungle playground” and a “walk-thru ancient bible world.”  When we were perplexed by the name, the owner, apparently an eastern-European fundamentalist, told us it was from the initial syllables of the names of the Three Wisemen.  We moved along quickly.

DSCF8651

While the Corn Palace gets most of the attention, one should certainly not miss the Tire Palace

DSCF8632

nor the Cone Palace:

DSCF8633

We left the Twilight Zone and drove to the Twin Cities.

Badlands

DSCF8590Perhaps the man-made weirdness of western SD was evoked by the strange natural landscapes. The Badlands are in stark contrast to the rolling prairies of the state.  I remember approaching them for the first time in 1978 when traveling from the east – they were the first western desert landscape I’d ever seen, and remarkably weird.  Travelling from the west, the contrast isn’t as strong, but you later realize that they are the last desert landscape you’ll see for a long time.  DSCF8559

Greta loses interest with big, long views, so we abandoned the drive-by tourism and hiked up a small canyon trail to the flat area at the top of the wall.  You can see our trailer near the road in this photo.DSCF8568

The erosion of the clay has left some big boulders behind.DSCF8569

We took a 5-mile hike on a trail with few other people, observing the interactions of the geology with the flora (sunflowers, cacti, tumbleweeds, prickly pear) and fauna (bighorn sheep).DSCF8580

Greta caught her first tumbleweed, and effected a catch-and-release.DSCF8582

We think we have arrived at the source of the local indigenous religion.  All hail the Prairie Dog God.DSCF8585

There seem to be waterfalls of rocks in the clay.DSCF8587

A small canyon with a strange little butte in the center was the source of all the tumbleweed blowing through the area.DSCF8600

A tumbleweed-catcher, a gully that lays across the prevailing wind.DSCF8599

Kitsch, high and low

DSCF8533On Monday we were in western South Dakota, which must have the greatest concentration of kitsch in North America.  We’re all familiar with Wall Drug, the fabulously irrepressible, over-the-top apotheosis of western tourist culture kitsch, which evinces a degree of naivete and guilelessness that is rare in today’s corporatized, polished, marketed-to-death tourist environment.  It is a reminder of an earlier era of tourism, when one person’s particular, antic vision drove the enterprise, and it has a unique character that differentiates it from the bland sameness of the mass culture tourist habitat.  Greta was psyched to enter the world of the jackalope, and was not disappointed by its manifestation (although we did think they had missed some good jackalope opportunities).

DSCF8512

The juxtaposition of jackalope trophies with weird fantasy/erotic imagery.

DSCF8521

Riding the giant jackalope.

DSCF8511

The trophy wall. Greta wisely decided we should not bring one back to Eugene.

DSCF8514

The innocence and manic silliness of this low culture kitsch contrasted with the truly horrifying, high-culture kitsch of Mt. Rushmore.  I remember the Mt. Rushmore of 30 years ago – a simple parking lot adjoining a plain terrace, from which you could gaze up at the sculptures, ponder the meaning of carving large representations of your culture’s prior canon of greatest leaders on a mountain in the center of the sacred hills of the indigenous culture whom we had subdued, and then go back to your car.

Dan and Norman on our epic 1978 cross-country drive.

It too represented a certain innocence, a time when we believed in the rightness of empire and manifest destiny, but it was what it was, a curious relic of an earlier time and sensibility.

DSCF8440

Mt. Rushmore as I remember it

I didn’t recognize the Mt. Rushmore I found on Monday.  A confusing array of roads and ramps leading to parking garages, a very high parking fee to the concessionaire, and an extended axis of pomposity and grandiosity which rivals Mussolini’s modifications to St. Peters. I wandered confused through this landscape, wondering if somehow I had forgotten what it was like, until the truth was revealed by an endless series of inscriptions detailing the generosity of the corporate sponsors.

At some point in the 80s, the triumphalist, end-of-history jingoism of the Reagan-Thatcher era intersected with the neo-classisist pretensions of bad postmodernism, to produce an environment that called to mind the Nazi Reichsparteitagsgelände of Nuremberg, where the scenographic design was used to reinforce the power of the state.  In contrast to the informality of the hills and the intentional asymmetry of the sculpture, a rigid axis crossed by a seemingly endless and repetitive series of screen colonnades had been constructed to contain one’s view, and focus all attention on the end of the axis, which is actually diminished and belittled by the bombastic banality of the surroundings.

DSCF8483

The axis begins.

DSCF8482

and goes on

DSCF8481

and on

DSCF8477

and on

DSCF8463

and on

DSCF8458

and on

finally.

You reach the end of the axis and looking over the low wall, discover an amphitheater sunk below, doubtless for the enactment of patriotic rituals. The echo of fascism seen in the formal design is reinforced by the omnipresent celebration of corporate sponsorship, and the union of oligarchic government and global capitalism is enacted in a manner that is eerily familiar; it appears that Albert Speer Jr. was employed as the architect.  Right at the end of the axial movement there is a juxtaposition of elements that could not be clearer in its meaning – one can only hope that a subversive designer put it there to make sure that we understood the meaning.

DSCF8457

culminating in..

After this deeply depressing exposure to an image which captured what is most hypocritical and corrupt in our society, the carefree kitsch of Wall Drug was a breath of fresh air, a reminder that outside of the military-industrial-corporate hegemony, there are simple human impulses towards showmanship, entertainment and hucksterism.

DSCF8535

Meanwhile, back at Wall Drug

2020 update:  Five years after this post, its prescience has, alas, only been borne out too clearly.  The difference between the US and Germany is simply that there the dictator and his followers constructed elaborate stage sets for the performance of their dominance, whereas here, the stage set was constructed by an earlier generation of oligarchs, and the tin-pot dictator could simply stroll in and claim it.  

Devil’s Tower

September 21 – Sunrise today at our campsite.  Greta had never seen Close Encounters, so we watched it last night under the stars (they show it here every night).  Much speculation on how the commodification of experience in mass media validates our own experiences, making them seem more authentic.  Can any American of a certain age actually see Devil’s Tower?  Walker Percy would have been amused.DSCF8422

Elk Chili

After eating canned soup for two nights previously, the Grant’s Village Restaurant near our campsite in Yellowstone was a welcome treat. When I walked in and saw a sign saying that the night’s special was elk chili, I immediately knew what I was going to get. It turns out, I made a great choice. Unlike Campbell’s, the chili was not too thin, nor was it gloppy. It was advertised as having “just enough cayenne pepper to heat up a cool fall evening,” and they were right. I didn’t even notice the spice until I paused for a second to let it sink in. It was enough to make me reach for my water, but after a minute it didn’t even bother me. If no one had told me that it was made of elk, I don’t think I would have even realized that it wasn’t beef. But because I was paying attention, I could tell that the meat was slightly more tangy.

The bowl was large enough that I couldn’t finish it, and kept some for lunch the next day. It was still good, although the beans became a bit rubbery. The warmth obviously fades, but the heat doesn’t.

This chili was fantastic, especially compared to Skyline.

Yellowstone

September 18-20.  We arrived in Yellowstone in the middle of a thunder snowstorm, and ended the day pulling a trailer over the Continental Divide and on to a dark, potholed road covered with slush and monster RVs creeping along at 5 mph.  We crawled into our bunks and awoke to 25 degree weather, a pattern which persisted for our whole time there.  Since our trailer probably has an R-value of 1.3, we started keeping our clothes in our beds, pulling them on in the morning, and then jumping into the truck to find a warm restaurant until the sun heated the park.

Greta was amazed by the variety of things and experiences at Yellowstone – big landscapes, wildlife (bison everywhere, often causing traffic jams), geysers, waterfalls, tourists, architecture – but no bears (although a grizzly had been spotted in our campground the day before we arrived).

The snowstorm as we drove in on September 18.

The snowstorm as we drove in on September 18.DSCF8063

Isa Lake, which sits right on the Continental Divide, and which drains to both the Atlantic and Pacific

Isa Lake, which sits right on the Continental Divide, and which drains to both the Atlantic and Pacific

Old Faithful

Old Faithful

Geyser field by Old Faithful

Geyser field by Old Faithful

Practicing safe bison selfies

Practicing safe bison selfies

Castle Geyser

Castle Geyser

Dunraven Pass

Dunraven Pass

Bison everywhere

Bison everywhere

Lower Falls

Lower Falls

The famous Honda Hot Springs

The famous Honda Hot Springs

Yellowstone Lake at sunset

Yellowstone Lake at sunset

Very large elk, which we pleased was behind a big log fence.  However, the next day we saw him hop that same fence quite easily.

Very large elk, which we pleased was behind a big log fence. However, the next day we saw him hop that same fence quite easily.

Hayden Valley, where many wildlife enthusiasts with big telescopes gather to watch animals very far away across the river

Hayden Valley, where many wildlife enthusiasts with big telescopes gather to watch animals very far away across the river

Norris Geyser Field

Norris Geyser Field

Norris Geyser Field

Norris Geyser Field

Norris Geyser Field

Norris Geyser Field

Elk in the center of Mammoth Hot Springs.

Elk in the center of Mammoth Hot Springs.

Mammoth Hot Springs from above.

Mammoth Hot Springs from above.

Mammoth Hot Springs

Mammoth Hot Springs

below Gibbon Falls

below Gibbon Falls

Old Faithful Inn

DSCF8151September 18 – Old Faithful Inn.   I saw this building when I was twelve and loved it, but I didn’t realize how good it was until now.  A simple pure shape enclosing tremendous spatial complexity, detailing, order, imagination.  It’s Piranesi Goes Western.DSCF8091 DSCF8137 DSCF8141 DSCF8160 DSCF8172 DSCF8179 DSCF8182 DSCF8187 DSCF8191 DSCF8199 DSCF8204

Craters of the Moon

Greta in the Indian Tunnel

Greta in the Indian Tunnel

September 17 – Craters of the Moon National Monument in Idaho.  Or as Greta put it, Camping in Mordor.  A volcanic landscape with stunning variety – visual, geologic, experiential.   The caves were unexpectedly amazing – lava tubes which have partially collapsed and so are accessible.  We analyzed and parsed the differences in our individual claustrophobias – I refused to go into the Boyscout Cave – too tight; Greta was uncomfortable in the Beauty Cave – too big, but we both loved the Indian Tunnel.  A butte way in the distance could only be Uluru transported to Idaho.  And as we were leaving the cave area, Greta spotted what has to the entrance to the Bat Cave.

In the Beauty Cave, which I found okay, and Greta feared.

In the Beauty Cave, which I found okay, and Greta feared.

Greta discovers what is clearly the entrance to the Bat Cave,

Greta discovers what is clearly the entrance to the Bat Cave,

Climbing out of the Indian Tunnel

Climbing out of the Indian Tunnel

DSCF8009

It looked like Uluru in the distance to us.

DSCF8005 DSCF8003

A cinder cone we climbed

A cinder cone we climbed

DSCF7994