Time to go home

Well, it’s our last day in the Hills, and we don’t want to leave!  Lucas comes ALIVE when he’s away from home.  We’re convinced it’s because he’s free of the television, vcr and computer.  But of course, we need to get back to civilization, which includes all those things.

We said goodbye to our friends Dallas and Mary Deitrich, and Lucas bid farewell to Rattlesnake Jake.  I promised myself that I would focus my “Parenting an Autistic Child” article for September on their amazing Meeting The Need endeavor.

 We left the hills on the 22 of August, driving across South Dakota through the day.  We camped just south of Sioux Falls that evening.  We had been around Sioux Falls before, but had never explored it (it was just another place we went past on our way to our Black Hills!)

In front of the Falls.

I had read that the city was named after the waterfall that the town was built up around.  So after dinner, we decided to drive into town and see the actual “Sioux Falls”.   As usual, the people of South Dakota were more than happy to give us directions, and at dusk we beagn to travel through the city in search of “Falls Park”.

When we got the Falls Park, it was full dark.  But the park was alive with people!  Families were riding bikes along the lighted paths and couples young and old were out strolling, enjoying the balmy summer air.

A nice lady who worked at the park told us about a show they were having later; the history of Sioux Falls was told with laser animation on the side of a building next to the falls.  This “history lesson” was accompanied by an ever-changing light show on the falls themselves, and was narrated over loud speakers.

Lucas LOVED the show!  This was the Wild West, and the story was rife with fist fights, saloons, ladies of ill repute and even kids with pea shooters!  The whole show was done with an eye towards entertaining folks of all ages, using actual letters and news clippings from those times.  I wish whoever put this together would do the same for school history curriculums!

This will be our last night in South Dakota.  We’ll be home in a few short days now, stopping on our way to see Lucas’ big brother Robert.  My birthday is in 2 days, and I hope we’re in Pitstburgh, where Robert is now living, in time to have my birthday dinner with him.

I think Alan and I are both a little sad to be heading back to the East, with its crime, traffic, litter and problems.  But for now it’s home, and we know it’s where we need to be for Lucas.  So we’ll continue to head east, towards televisions, vcr’s, school and work, and keep our dreams of living in the Hills close by, just in case…

Visiting a Mammoth Site

Lucas at the Mammoth Site 

We traveled south today, to the town of Hot Springs.  It’s named for the amazing springs that run through the town, and the people who live (and visit) here can take their water bottles to the springs andd fill-r-up!  The water is about 90 degrees, and delightful. 

We’ve been here before, and enjoyed both the beautiful waterfalls in town, and swimming at Evan’s Plunge, an indoor swimming pool made from the hot springs.  They bubble up from the river rock covered bottom of the pool, keeping the water warm and clean year round.

Today, however, we were headed to the outskirts of Hot springs, to a place called the Mammoth Site.  This is a giant pre-historic sink hole where many giant Mammoths lost their lives, going in to drink the water and then being unable to get out of the hole.

The whole place is inside a huge building, and it has a tour that lasts about 30 minutes.  The partially excavated sink hole is in the middle of the room, with cat walks over and around it for us to walk on.

The giant sink hole has lots of Mammoth skeletons in it.

Lucas really liked the tour, because as we moved from place to place, we had to put on earphones at the various stopping points to hear our tour guide.  The moving around combined with the wearing of headphones seemed to keep his interest (not to mention the giant skeletons!)

I suspect Lucas feels a bit like Indiana Jones on these excursions, and that’s another thing he likes to relate to.  He’s seen Indy finding “bones”, hiking through the woods, dealing with snakes (like Lucas did at Reptile Gardens), etc.

A Surprise for Lucas

Yesterday we toured wind Cave, which Lucas liked.  It was a quiet day, with the afternoon spent at our campsite just enjoying the scenery (and the cookout!)

We DID see a buffalo up close, on our way back from Wind Cave:

This buffalo was all alone. 

This isn’t all that unusual in the Black Hills, since the Hills are home to one of the largest herds left.  But we thought it was kind of strange to see one lone bull just grazing next to the road.

Today we had to go into town to get our groceries.  As we arrived in town, we heard a “peep, peep” that sounded REALLY familiar.  We looked around, and much to Lucas’ eternal pleasrue, Thomas the Tank Engine was pulling into the train station, with his coaches!

Lucas sees the REAL Thomas the Tank Engine!

WOW!  A full sized Thomas, caught being a Really Useful Engine here in the middle of nowhere, South Dakota!  Needless to say, Lucas had his picture taken with Thomas.  He just wanted to look, though, not ride (I think he was afraid that if we took a ride, maybe we’d miss eating all the cookout food we had just bought…)

Snakes, why does it have to be snakes…

Keeping Lucas entertained on vacation means finding something different to do each day.  Today it was a trip to the Reptile Gardens.

Boas hanging from the trees at Reptilel Gardens.

Yes, it’s just like it sounds.  It’s a garden full of reptiles.  MOST of them are behind glass, but there’s this large “sun dome”, and the idea is to walk around in it, enjoying the thousands of orchids and hundreds of tropical birds.  Of course, you must also come to grips with walking under trees where boa constrictors hang.

In spite of those boas, this place has become one of our “must visit” placse when we come to the Black Hills.  We attended the “alligaor Show”, and it was educational, thrilling and funny.

One guy in a fenced arena, with about 40 alligators (recently fed, I’m guessing), telling us all about alligators, and crocodiles.  Crike!

After the show, Lucas got to “pet” a miniataure crocodile, and thought that was pretty cool:

Lucas pets a miniature crocodile 

Then we drove up to Deadwood, to show Lucas this one hotel that had movie props from Indiana Jones, Terminator, the Mummy and others. 

Here he is with the Mummy, MUAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAH!

Lucas with THE MUMMY!!

Trains!

Many people in the world of autism LOVE trains.  Personally, I think it has something to do with them knowing exactly where the train will go, since it can only travel on the track.  That has to be reassuring to an autistic person, with their need for samenesss.

Lucas rides an 1880's steam train.

We spent the morning riding an 1880’s steam train through the Black hills.  This isn’t the first time we’ve taken this trip, and from start to finish, Lucas loves it.

We get to hang out in the train yard before we depart, looking at the various engines and cars.  Our train this morning was pulled out of the shed by a diesel engine, and then hooked up to the steam engine that would pull it on our jouney.

We traveled from Hill City to Keystone and back, winding our way through narrow granite passes, past abandoned tin and gold mines.  Along the way, the conductor told us stories about the country we rode through, from the boom towns during gold rushes to the ranches that currenlty border the tracks.

Lucas was in heaven, and the morning passed quickly!

After lunch, it was time to visit another amazing place.  The toured Meeting The Need, an old tin mine that our friends Dallas and Mary Deitrich have converted into a vacation place for people with disabilities.  They’ve done a tremendous job, and we’re so glad we got to see it!

The Simpsons and Crazy Horse

We spent most of today in Rapid City, hunting for a train for Lucas.  You see, he’s traveled all the way across the country with his model DeLorean from Back to the Future 3, in hopes of finding a train that can push it, just like in the movie.

Unfortunately, the car is in “car scale”, and the trains are all made in “train scale” and they just don’t mesh.  Try explaining that to an autistic kid who’s just brought a car 2000 miles for a train!

Of course, we saw lots of great train models and he DID find a small engine that he wanted.  Luckily, we bought tickets this morning for a ride on an 1880’s steam train that runs through the Black Hills, so he’ll enjoy that like he always does.

Another thing we gave up to afford children was going to the movies.  What we didn’t know at the time was that saving them for vacation helps Lucas, because it gives him a little bit of “movietime” without him being obsessed by it.  We saw “The Simpson’s Movie”, which he throughly enjoyed.

Crazy Horse mountain

Our campground also offers nightly busses to take campers to either the Crazy Horse memorial or Mt. Rushmore.  We visited Crazy Horse tonight to see the new laser light show we had heard about.

We toured the spacious facilities, seeing the short movie about the making of this enormous monument to the American Indian, and visted the museum and gift shops.  Then we found a seat on the veranda, and prepared to be amazed.

We weren’t.  Amazed, that is.

This place has always held a special place in our hearts,  as I’m sure it does for most people who have seen learned about Crazy Hourse and how this mountain came to hold his likeness.  It just didn’t seem the right setting for brightly colored, neon looking lights shooting across the sky, prefaced by several ads for the sponsors fo the show.

We’ll come back during the day sometime, when all the native American artists and craftsmen are here.  Maybe that will help us feel back in tune with the place.

The Black Hills

We got to our “base camp” in the Black Hills today, where we’ll stay for the next week.  Or campground is above Mt. Rushmore, and we always get the exact, same site so that Lucas feels a sense of sameness and comfort there. (It’s important when traveling with autism to have some routines that offer that sense of sameness, and this is one of  ours.)

The granite spires of the Black Hills

Our campsite is on the edge of a very large campground.  This place is incredible!  It has a heated pool and hot tub, a water park and water slide, mini golf, horseback riding, and you can rent recumbent bicycles.

There’s live entertainment nightly at the outdoor stage (a cowboy band, native american dancers, or a family friendly comedy act), and a movie in the rec hall each night, too.  They even offer an “all you cna eat” pancake breakfast every morning, which Lucas loves.

We’re surrounded by the pursest mountain air you’ve ever breathed, and thanks to the lack of city lights, on cloudless nights you can actually SEE the Milky Way.  I love getting up around 2 a..m. and just walking.  All is quiet; I can see the stars and smell the pines.   I feel truly alone except for God, and my soul is at peace.

As I said, our campsite is off to the side in this campground.  There are six that are separated from the rest of the campground by a babbling brook, and on the other side of us is the Black Hills National Forest.  We’re somewhat segregated from the hoards of vacationers, but still close enough to enjoy everything.

Lucas helped to set up camp, turning the crank to raise the camper and helping open the windows on it.  He likes the lack of bugs here (I think we’re too high up at 5,000+ ft. above sea level.)

We spent the afternoon visiting Rattlesnake Jakes, a little store that’s Lucas’ favorite place in the Black Hills.  We’ve become friends with the owners, Dallas and Mary Dietrich, and Lucas loves the lifesized figure of Rattlesnake Jake, who “talks” to him, thanks to a microphone manned by Dallas.  Jake has called Lucas by name since the first time he enterd the store, and Lucas gets such a kick out of him!

The Dietrichs introduced us to some shop owners who hadn’t been there last time we visited, and I sold 3 of our LucasWorks Autism Awareness Bracelets to 2 of them, both of whom had a connection autitsm (yes, it’s everwhere these days!)

Evening brought Dad Burgers back at the camp site, and then ghost stories around the campfire, with Lucas telling his version of “the Hook”:

Telling ghost stories around the campfire. 

He got the version from that Ernest Goes to Camp movie we saw the other night, and did his best to do it justice.  Of course, we acted terrified!  Again, I can’t help but remember that this is the child who “professionals’ said would never talk…

The Badlands

We visited the Badlands National Park this morning, and as usual felt like we had dropped onto another planet:

The Badlands of South Dakota

This place is like no place I’ve ever seen before.  It’s amazing that things actually live out here, like deer, antelope, coyotes, eagles, and even praire dogs.  There are also rattle snakes, so we always wear closed  shoes and long pants, just in case.

This entire park is open for hiking and camping, and much of it is within the Pine Ridge Indian Reservation.  We’ve camped there, and heard the lonely cry of the wind and the coyotes at night.

We came opon a very large prairie dog town (so large the Park service gave them their own sign!)  Those critters are the bane of farmers and ranchers, leaving holes big enough for a horse or cow (or person) to break an ankle in, and making it hard to run irrigation systems.

But they’re very willing to come right up to a car, looking for food:

A prairie dog in the Badlands.

Lucas seems to really enjoy driving through the Badlands, and even getting out of the car to hike some of the short trails that are strategically place along the way.  Maybe it has something to do with the quiet, or maybe he likes the huge sky, but it seems to calm him.

And of course, he loves watching the prairie dogs.

Wall Drug

Today we drove into South Dakota, and later in the day, we crossed the great Missouri Rover.  They say that the Missorui is where you take off your John Deere cap and put on your cowboy hat, and it shows! 

The eastern bank is all corn fields and trees, and as soon as you cross that amazingly blue water, you’re surrounded by cattle and prairie grasses.

Everyone who has gone through South Dakota in the past 70 years has seen the signs for Wall Drug, and I bet most of them have stopped.  Wall, SD in a town on the edge of the Badlands, and has about 800 citizens.  It also has the strangest, most entertaining and amazing “drug store” you’ve ever seen.

The store began as a small town drug store, and when the new druggest couldn’t get people to stop in during the Great Depression, his wife suggested they offer free ice water to the travelers going by.  As soon as he put signs up on the highway, people began to stop.  The next year, they needed 8 local girls to help run things, and it’s just grown and grown.

We stop every time we go to the Black Hills, enjoying the pie, the terrific western art gallery that lines the walls of about 50 different shops joined to the original drug store, and Lucas especially likes the life size T Rex that “lives” in the back yard, and comes alive every 11 mintues to roar at the crowd and swipe at people:

The T Rex at Wall Drug

Lucas enjoys browsing the different stores, which include ones with toy dinosaurs, toy cowboy and indian weapons, rocks, western clothing, camping gear and just plain weird souveniers.  There are so many different things for him to see and hear, and then there’s PIE!

We also camp right next to the train tracks, and Lucas loves to see the big engines come and go.  He got to see two large deisels move a long freight train today, and was in his glory (what is it about trains?)

Lucas enjoys the trains in Wall, SD

The Bridges of Madison County.

At the Bridges of Madison CountyWe’ve been through Madison County, Iowa about 8 times over the years, and have never gotton off the interstate.  So today, we decided to try and find those covered bridges made famous by the book, “The Bridges of Madison County”.

The little town in the middle of Madison County, Winterset, is also the birthplace of John Wayne!  So of course we had to take Lucas’ picture in front of The Duke’s house.  Lucas discovered John Wayne in the outtakes from “Back to the Future”, and was very happy to see something with Mr. Wayne’s name on it.

Lucas at The Duke's birthplace

We had great fun tracking down the Roseman Bridge, which played an important part in the book.  I called my aunt from it, and she got a huge kick out of getting a call from the Bridges of Madison County!  Lucas liked the way it looked, too.

As we were leaving the bridge, a local gentleman asked us if we had seen “Freedom Rock”.  I guess the looks on our faces told him that we hadn’t, so he explained that “the Rock” is a large boulder in the middle of nowhere, Iowa, that a local artist has painted each year since the late ’90s as a tribute to patriotism.

I had read an article about this rock, and since we were already in the middle of nowhere, of course we went to see Freedom Rock:

Freedom RockFreedom RockFreedom RockFreedom Rock

What an awesome tribute to our armed forces.  I was truly humbled by both the effort this young man made in painting this rock each year, and by the sacrifices portrayed on it, sacrifices that have been repeated throughout the long history of our country, and that have kept us free.  God bless America!

We encountered a very large and strong storm tonight, so opted to stay in a motel.  When traveling with autism, one does not take lightly the idea of setting up camp in a thunder storm!

Lucas was excited that he would get to watch TV.  Ironically, out of over 100 channels, including Disney, Nickelodean, the cartoon channel, etc. (things he doesn’t get at home), he chose to watch “Ernest Goes to Camp”, in honor of our camping trip!  (I did switch to “Hill Street Blues” during commercials, though!)  So ends a very full day on the road.