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Mount Rushmore, Crazy Horse and the Badlands: Expanding Horizons |
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Program Number: |
4752RJ |
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| Start
and End Dates: |
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| Duration: |
5 nights |
| Location: |
Mount Rushmore, South Dakota
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| Price starting at: |
$958.00 - Price may vary based on date, departure city |
| Program Type:
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Family Programs; National Parks; Intergenerational Family
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| Meals: |
13;
5 Breakfasts, 3 Lunches, 5 Dinners |
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| Meal
Options: |
Vegetarian |
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Program intended for grandchildren from 10 - 18 years of age.
Enjoy the fun of shared time as you explore Mount Rushmore, Crazy Horse Memorial, Badlands National Park and the beautiful Black Hills. Saddle up for a Western trail ride and discover ancient fossils and lunar-like deposits in the Badlands. Share stories around an open fire while you learn, laugh and create memories with your multi-generational family.
Highlights
• Go horseback riding, splash in a historic warm water spring, visit a mammoth sink hole and learn how to pan for gold like Potato Creek Johnny. • Experience Custer State Park’s “wildlife loop” in search of buffalo, pronghorns, begging burrows and big horn sheep. • Take a chair lift up to a ridge for a special view of Mount Rushmore and feel the wind in your hair as you zip down on the Alpine slide.
Activity Particulars
Walking on uneven ground up to two miles; hilly terrain. Elevations above 5,000 feet.
Coordinated by Black Hills Educational Institute.
Mount Rushmore
Massive granite faces overlook the forested treetops of the Black Hills, representing the first 150 years of American history in the sculptural representation of four U.S. presidents: Washington, Jefferson, Roosevelt and Lincoln. Mount Rushmore and the gateway town of Keystone attract visitors to this beautiful, storied region of the state.
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Accommodations
Luxury lodge with a view of Mount Rushmore on 45 forested acres with large meadow that is often a wildlife playground.
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| Road Scholar Instructors | | These instructors are participating on at least one date of this program. Please note that changes may occur. | Robert Yellowhawk
| | Robert Gerald Yellowhawk is a native South Dakotan, born in Rapid City. His goal as a youth was to graduate from high school, and now he is a sophomore at Oglala Lakota College in Rapid City, majoring in business administration. A participant as a sixth-grader in the Ateyapi Program, he is now a fulltime mentor helping youths understand traditional Native American dance, values, regalia, ceremonies and the Lakota language. Robert worked two summers at Crazy Horse Memorial. | | | | Erin Woods
| | Erin Woods is an elementary teacher in the Rapid City School District. With a keen interest in Mount Rushmore history, she enthusiastically relates how Mount Rushmore was carved and how the architects and carvers were able to keep the head of George Washington in proportion to Lincoln, Jefferson and Roosevelt. Erin has a master’s degree in curriculum and instruction, with an emphasis in math and educational technology. | | | | Kristine Reed
| | Kristine Reed has been wildlife biologist and technical services director of the Intertribal Bison Cooperative for the last five years. She has extensive experience as a range-management specialist, wildlife biologist and post-secondary educator in many tribal communities in the fields of natural resources. She is certified by The Wildlife Society as a certified wildlife biologist and actively participates in committees representing Tribal interests in bison and natural resource issues. | | | |
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