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Thursday, August 31, 2017

North Unit, Theodore Roosevelt National Park

The sun is round. I ring with life, and the mountains ring, and when I can hear it, there is a ringing that we share. I understand all this, not in my mind, but in my heart, knowing how meaningless it is to try to capture what cannot be expressed, knowing that mere words will remain when I read it all again, another day. 
Peter Matthiessen


Dawn, Theodore Roosevelt National Park, North Unit
October 2012 photos by Lillian Crook

Dawn, Theodore Roosevelt National Park, North Unit, October 2013, 
by Lillian Crook

Everyone I see these days asks me if I saw the solar eclipse and we eagerly share our experience with one another.  Last night I looked at the moon over my backyard with different eyes than ever before.  What glorious orbs in this universe!

On the top of the list of "glorious": the North Unit of Theodore Roosevelt Park is one of the most glorious places in North Dakota, if not the most.  I've stood on the rim of the canyon there, at River Bend Overlook, with my father, and he has said, with some authority, that it is as beautiful there as the Grand Canyon.

I've camped there fifty times or more.  I've hiked all of the trails and bushwacked plenty of my own trails. The solitude is one of the elements that make it special, even more so than the more frequently visited South Unit.  It is off the beaten path, off the interstate.

Juniper Campground is very peaceful, and the scenic drive is chock-a-block full of stupendous views, wildlife, prairie vegetation, and stellar examples of the geological forces that shape the Bad Lands.

The conservation group I founded, Badlands Conservation Alliance, keeps a close watch on this place, along with the Dakota Prairie Grasslands as a whole.  The North Unit is an important refuge for North Dakotans, and all visitors.

So it is with consternation that I absorb the news that yet another oil & gas lease sale is proposed that will impact the boundary of this relatively small place. You can read more about that proposal here.

I'm also furious about the NDDOT proposal to build a new bridge, replacing the Long X bridge on Highway 85, right up against the North Unit.  The sound of only the birds and the cottonwood leaves stirring will be invaded by the maddening hum of a bridge.  NDDOT could do it differently, and many excellent suggestions have been made to them, by BCA, and others, to preserve this treasure.  The evidence to date is that they are ignoring this input.  Watch for notices about public meetings to come this fall and attend these meetings, to let them know that you also are concerned and to tell them that they must do better. Call or write NDDOT and request that they schedule one of the upcoming hearings in Bismarck.

Another action item you can choose is to become a member of BCA.  This is easily done on the website.  Another tiny, ridiculously easy thing you can do is to share this blog posting widely, with the knowledge that each voice speaking for TRNP makes a difference.


Full moon setting, Dawn, Autumn Cottonwood, TRNP North Unit
by Lillian Crook

Cause, folks, when it is gone, it is gone.  Poof.  How will we explain to future generations that we just let it go without a word of protest?


Dawn, North Unit Campsite, October 2012, by Lillian Crook

Fog on the Little Missouri River, TRNP North Unit
 October 2012, by Lillian Crook

Full moon, Theodore Roosevelt National Park, North Unit
by Lillian Crook

Achenbach Trail, TRNP North Unit
by Lillian Crook


Jim Fuglie on the Achenbach Trail, TRNP North Unit
by Lillian Crook


Thirty-foot pour-off causing a detour on a bushwacking hike
Theodore Roosevelt National Park North Unit Wilderness area
October 2012 by Lillian Crook

Mountain lion print?, TRNP North Unit by Lillian Crook


Jim Fuglie, bushwacking in the North Unit Wilderness area
October 2012 by Lillian Crook

Finally, back to the Little Missouri River TRNP North Unit
October 2012 by Lillian Crook

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