Hill City, South Dakota Destinations

October 14th, 2011 by admin No comments »

Hill City is a quiet place in Pennington County, South Dakota. The city is well known for Mount Rushmore, Custer State Park and the Sturgis Motorcycle Rally and is also considered as the center for the arts in the area. Endless recreational opportunities await as you visit the beautiful Black Hills.

There are many wonderful places to visit and things to do that will surely make your stay in Hill City worth every penny spent. For starter, you can start enjoying the Black Hills of South Dakota by going biking, hiking or fishing. You may also want to visit the places that make this city quite a unique tourist destination:

1880 Train – Experience a relaxing vintage steam train ride you can never forget with the 1880 Baldwin Locomotive. It offers a two hour and fifteen minute rail trip from the scenic beauty of Hill City to Keystone and back.

Teddy Bear Town – Teddy Bear Town is the home of the “Largest Teddy Bear Collection”. Over 7,500 different shapes, colors and sizes of huggable Teddy Bears you could ever imagine are stacked up in tiny cottages. Teddy Bear Town runs on donations and you can visit the wonderful teddy bears for free!

Bear Country U.S.A. – Bear Country U.S.A., the home of the largest collection of privately owned black bears in the world, is just a few miles south of Rapid City. Bear Country offers a three-mile drive where you can almost grasp (or view) Northern American mammals like the black bear, deer, and buffalo, just to name a few.

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Financial Assistance in South Dakota

October 14th, 2011 by admin No comments »

The exodus of qualified college students in South Dakota has reached such proportion that it set up a special program, the Dakota Corp., to address many of its most critical needs, such as educational and medical occupations. This doesn’t mean it covers everything, though. As it happens, the state and private organizations have also stepped in to help.

For starters, all qualified students should look at the state’s version of the Robert C. Byrd Honors Program. To qualify for this national scholarship fund, high school students should have a 3.5 cumulative grade point average and have scored at least a 30 on their ACT. They must also be planning to attend an academic university. If qualified, the student will receive a renewable scholarship of $1,500 per year to any school in the U.S.

There are also a few organizations that may not be national, but do cover as much as a half-dozen or so of the greater Northwestern states, including South Dakota. For starters, there is the Drug & Alcohol Abuse Prevention Essay Contest. To qualify, a secondary school student needs to have a 2.5 GPA. He/she also must complete an essay on drug abuse. It will be published in a major anti-drug magazine, to which the recipient gets $500.

Another such organization is the Minnesota Territorial Pioneers. Unlike many such private organizations, it doesn’t require membership. Applicants should only live in what was considered the old Minnesota Territories (both Dakotas are) in 12th grade and provide proof of acceptance to a college. It also requires an essay and awards $500.

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Perks of Global Warming

September 19th, 2011 by admin No comments »

Marya Mannes once wrote, “The earth we abuse and the living things we kill will, in the end, take their revenge; for in exploiting their presence we are diminishing our future.” Obviously Ms. Mannes preferred the status quo – health, sanity, logic, blah, blah, blah. Why? Green House Roulette is so much more intriguing.

In the country, weather affects everything. For five years Western South Dakota has been gripped by drought. Water and hay are vanishing. Farms and ranches are blowing away. While the government bails out victims from Florida’s Hurricanes and says, ‘South Dawho?’ our cattle are pissing dust mites. Fortunately, things are looking up.

There is some good news! Those pesky glaciers are finally melting off! Last fall an eight-nation report estimated an area of Arctic icepack the size of Texas and Kansas is gone. For those who are geographically impaired, that is an area bigger than a breadbox.

At first, news of devastating global climate change might seem a bit of a bummer. Then I read an LA Times article and had a change of heart. The article began with the usual gloom. Greenland’s ice cap is melting. Our coasts will flood from rising seawater. Inuit hunters are falling through thinning ice. Melting glaciers change ocean temperature and salinity contorting the jet stream, which results in altered weather patterns worldwide. Multitudes of species are dying off . . . It was disheartening.

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