Skip to Main Content
South Dakota/North Dakota

Best of the Dakotas

Program No. 22815RJ
Watch for bison along winding roads in the Black Hills and take in moonscape views in the Badlands as you explore the history and heritage of the Dakotas from the Ice Age to today.

Enroll with Confidence

We want your Road Scholar learning adventure to be something to look forward to—not worry about. Learn more

Protecting the Environment

We offset a portion of the emissions created by your travel. Learn more

At a Glance

The 60-foot faces of four U.S. presidents gaze out over the Black Hills. Recognized worldwide, Mount Rushmore stands as a symbol of American democracy. Experience this national icon and more as you explore the best of North and South Dakota, from the winding roads of the Black Hills to the other-worldly moonscapes of the Badlands. Visit national and state parks, memorials, monuments and museums as you discover the history and heritage of the Dakotas, from the Ice Age to the American Indian Wars. Learn about the influence of people like Lewis and Clark, Theodore Roosevelt, Sacagawea and Crazy Horse, and take in the splendor of the wide-open spaces of the western frontier.
Activity Level
On Your Feet
Walking up to two plus miles a day on mostly flat terrain, some climbing stairs and in and out of the motor coach numerous times a day.

What You'll Learn

  • Visit world-renowned parks, memorials and monuments like Mount Rushmore, Custer State Park, Theodore Roosevelt National Park and Devil’s Tower.
  • Learn about the history, culture and people of the Dakotas as you visit both states’ capitals, and find out more about the native and presidential history of the Badlands.
  • Appreciate the massive metal art sculptures along the Enchanted Highway, and attend the Greatest Show in the West, The Medora Musical, featuring real horses, cowboys, song and dance.

General Notes

Select dates are designated for small groups and are limited to 24 participants or less.
Visit the Road Scholar Bookshop
You can find many of the books we recommend at the Road Scholar store on bookshop.org, a website that supports local bookstores.
While we make every effort to ensure the accuracy of our published materials, programs are typically advertised more than a year prior to their start date. As a result, some program activities, schedules, accommodations, personnel, and other logistics occasionally change due to local conditions or circumstances. Should a major change occur, we will make every effort to alert you. For less significant changes, we will update you during orientation. Thank you for your understanding.
Print All
Map details are not available for this location.
10 days
9 nights
22 meals
8 B 7 L 7 D
DAY
1
Check-in, Orientation and Welcome Dinner.
Rapid City, South Dakota
D
Holiday Inn Rapid City-Rushmore Plaza

Activity note: Hotel check-in from 3:00 p.m. Remember to bring your name tag and name tag lanyard (sent by Road Scholar to your mailing address on file).

Afternoon: 5p.m. Program Orientation followed by dinner. After you check in and have your room assignment, join us in the designated hotel meeting room for registration and orientation. If you arrive late, please ask for your Road Scholar schedule at hotel the front desk.

Dinner: At our designated hotel meeting/dining room, following orientation.

Evening: Orientation. In our private meeting/dining room, the Group Leader will greet everyone and lead introductions. We will review the up-to-date program schedule, discuss roles and responsibilities, logistics, safety guidelines, emergency procedures, and answer questions. This is a Road Scholar On The Road (OTR) program. OTR journeys take participants to multiple study sites within a region number of overnight stays. Lectures, talks, discussions, field trips, and on-board commentary enhance the program theme. Some journeys involve great distances and may take hours, others are much shorter. Long or short, On the Road journeys are learning experiences that make the most of our time together. There will be numerous opportunities for self-directed exploration to see and do what interests each of us most. Participants are responsible for carrying their luggage to/from the motorcoach. Periods in the schedule designated as “Free time” and “At leisure” offer opportunities to do what you like and make your experience even more meaningful and memorable according to your personal preferences. The Group Leader will be happy to offer suggestions. Program activities, schedules, personnel, and indicated distances or times may change due to local circumstances/conditions. In the event of changes, we will alert you as quickly as possible. Thank you for your understanding. Continue getting to know your fellow Road Scholars, settle in, and get a good night’s rest for the day ahead.

DAY
2
Mount Rushmore, Crazy Horse, Rapid City
Rapid City, South Dakota
B,L,D
Holiday Inn Rapid City-Rushmore Plaza

Activity note: Getting on/off a motorcoach; driving about 65 miles throughout the day, approximately 2.5 hours riding time. Walking up to 2 miles; level sidewalks, mostly even ground, slight inclines, boardwalks. Elective 1/2 mile Presidential Trail at Mount Rushmore, 140 steps each way.

Breakfast: Enjoy a self serve breakfast at the hotel.

Morning: We will be joined at the hotel by a local expert who will give us a “rock talk” lecture on areas we’ll explore. Next, we’ll board a motorcoach for our field trip to iconic sites. At the Mount Rushmore National Memorial, the majestic 60-foot faces of four U.S. presidents gaze out over South Dakota’s Black Hills. Recognized worldwide, they stand as a symbol of American democracy. This national treasure tells the story of the United States’ rich history, rugged determination, and lasting achievement. From the Grandview Terrace, the views of George Washington, Thomas Jefferson, Theodore Roosevelt, and Abraham Lincoln, are spectacular. We’ll learn why these four presidents were selected, see how the mountain was carved, and learn about sculptor Gutzon Borglum and the workers who brought Mount Rushmore to life. There will also be an opportunity for an elective walk along the half-mile Presidential Trail that loops around the base of the mountain and back to the viewing terrace. At the Information Center learn more about history and watch a short movie narrated by Tom Brokaw.

Lunch: Mount Rushmore cafeteria.

Afternoon: Next, we’ll ride to Crazy Horse Memorial, where a fifth granite face has emerged in the Black Hills. In 1939, Lakota Chief Henry Standing Bear invited sculptor Korczak Ziolkowski to carve an Indian memorial in the Black Hills. Though Korczak died in 1982, the sculptor’s family continues the nonprofit project where the colossal mountain carving is now in progress. Crazy Horse is the largest sculptural undertaking ever, on a scale with the Egyptian pyramids. When completed, it will tower 563 feet high and 641 feet long. Self explore the Native American Museum, sculpture's studio, and original log home. Returning to Rapid City, we will make a short stop at South Dakota School of Mines and Technology Geology Museum.

Dinner: Enjoy dinner in our private dining room at the hotel.

Evening: At leisure. You might like to use the fitness center, take a dip in the indoor swimming pool, soak in the hot tub, spend time with fellow Road Scholars, or just relax.

DAY
3
Stave Kirke Chapel, Custer State Park, Mammoth Site
Rapid City, South Dakota
B,L
Holiday Inn Rapid City-Rushmore Plaza

Activity note: Getting on/off a motorcoach; driving about 139 miles throughout the day, approximately 3 hours riding time plus stops. Walking up to 2 miles; sidewalks, generally flat terrain.

Breakfast: Enjoy a self serve breakfast at the hotel.

Morning: We’ll set out via motorcoach to the Chapel in the Hills in Rapid City. Built in 1969, the chapel is an exact replica of the famous 843-year old Burgundy Stavkirke of Laerdal, Norway. The structure combines Norse dragon heads, Christian symbols, fancy roof shingles, and a pegged-timber construction. There also is a grass-roofed Stabbur welcome center and Log Cabin Museum. Deer and wild turkeys roam the chapel grounds. A member of the staff will give a presentation in the chapel about its history, construction, and significance. Next, we’ll ride to the Custer State Park Visitor Center. En route, the Group Leader will provide commentary on the area while traveling through the park. Upon arrival, we’ll watch a film about the park followed by time for some independent exploration of the exhibits. Custer State Park covers 71,000 acres, making it one of the largest state parks in the nation. From its northern sector in the shadow of 7,242-foot-high Harney Peak to the forests, meadows, and prairies of its southeast corner, feature pigtail bridges, granite tunnels that frame the faces of Mount Rushmore, and curves winding along a road experts said couldn’t be built. We’ll watch for bison that may be present, part of one of the largest publicly owned bison herds in the country. Other wildlife we may see include pronghorn or antelope, mule and whitetail deer, burros, coyotes, wild turkeys, elk, mountain goats, bighorn sheep, and golden eagles.

Lunch: Lunch at the historic State Game Lodge in Custer State Park.

Afternoon: Next, we’ll ride to the Mammoth Site in Hot Springs, South Dakota. The site is an in situ (bones left as found in their original place) Ice Age museum containing the largest concentration of Columbian and Woolly Mammoths found in their primary context in the world. Imagine walking around the edges of a 26,000-year-old sinkhole where mammoths, short face bear, mountain lions, and wolves once trod. The Muller Exhibit Hall features fascinating exhibits including a full-sized Columbian mammoth replica and skeletons of now-extinct carnivores, the giant short-faced bear, and the American lion. We’ll also get a glimpse of the scientific work conducted downstairs in the state of the art lab. The Mammoth Site has been featured on Discovery Channel, CBS and NBC Evening News, Today Show, BBC Television programs, and in many magazines, including National Geographic. The site has co-hosted international symposiums and conferences, as well as published scientific Quaternary research books.

Dinner: This meal has been excluded from the program cost and is on your own to have what you like. The Group Leader will be happy to offer suggestions.

Evening: At leisure. You might like to take a stroll through historic downtown Rapid City, spend time with fellow Road Scholars, or just relax. Prepare for check-out and transfer in the morning.

DAY
4
Wall Drug, Badlands Nat'l Park, Minuteman Visitor Center
Pierre, SD
B,L,D
ClubHouse Inn & Suites

Activity note: Getting on/off a motorcoach; driving about 210 miles throughout the day, approximately 6.5 hours riding time plus stops. Walking up to 2 miles; sidewalks, boardwalks, generally flat terrain.

Breakfast: Enjoy a self serve breakfast at the hotel.

Morning: We’ll check out of the hotel and begin our journey from Rapid City to Pierre, South Dakota via the town of Wall and the vast open spaces of Badlands National Park. We’ll stop first at Wall Drug Store and learn from our Group Leader about the ingenious marketing campaign that started the multi-million dollar business. As a testament to their success, Wall Drug signs can now be found all over the world. We’ll have some time to view the extensive Western Art collection in the restaurant section with many originals and actual brands of local ranchers embedded in the wood walls. Moving on, we’ll enjoy the beautiful scenery as we drive through Badlands National Park with commentary by our Group Leader and stop at points of interest. The Lakota Indians knew the place as “mako sica” while early French trappers called the area “les mauvaises terres a traverser”; both mean “bad lands.” A conservation writer, Freeman Tilden, described the region as “peaks and valleys of delicately banded colors-colors that shift in the sunshine...and a thousand tints that color charts do not show.” Palaeontologist Thaddeus Culbertson had another reaction: “Fancy yourself on the hottest day in summer in the hottest spot of such a place without water — without an animal and scarce an insect astir — without a single flower to speak pleasant things to you and you will have some idea of the utter loneliness of the Bad Lands.” This area is one of the richest in fossils in the world ranging from the massive rhinoceros, Metamynodon, to a small squirrel-like rodent called Ischromys. Architect Frank Lloyd Wright said this: “I’ve been about the world a lot, and pretty much over our own country, but I was totally unprepared for that revelation called the Dakota Bad Lands...What I saw gave me an indescribable sense of mysterious elsewhere-a distant architecture, ethereal..., an endless supernatural world more spiritual than earth but created out of it.”

Lunch: Enjoy lunch en route.

Afternoon: For our next field trip, we will explore the Visitor Center of Minuteman Missile National Historic Site. We will learn more about the Intercontinental Ballistics Missile System “hiding in plain site” and the role it played in the Cold War. We’ll then continue traveling across the wide open spaces of South Dakota and learn from our Group Leader along our journey. We expect to arrive in Pierre, the capital city, in the late afternoon and check in to our hotel.

Dinner: Group Dinner at local restaurant

Evening: At leisure. You might like to take a walk along the Missouri River just a couple of blocks from the hotel or just relax at the hotel and enjoy its amenities.

DAY
5
South Dakota Capitol, Oahe Dam, Welk Homestead
Bismarck, ND
B,L,D
Hampton Inn Bismarck

Activity note: Getting on/off a motorcoach; driving about 200 miles throughout the day. Walking up to 1 miles; sidewalks, building interiors, stairs at dam.

Breakfast: In the hotel hospitality room.

Morning: We’ll check out of the hotel and board the motorcoach for a field trip to South Dakota’s state capitol building where a local expert will lead us through the impressive Greek Ionic structure built in 1910 at a cost of just under $1,000,000. The elaborate interior includes marble wainscoting and columns, a terrazzo tile floor, Victorian leaded glass, and glass door fixtures that create a grand and distinguished look. Adjacent to the grounds sits Capitol Lake, an artesian lake that serves as a resting place for thousands of migratory geese each fall. Nearby stand the World War II, Korean, and Vietnam Memorials, and a flaming fountain that glows perpetually as a memorial to all veterans. We’ll walk past the Fighting Stallions Memorial, built as a lasting tribute to eight South Dakotans who lost their lives in a 1993 plane crash. For our next field trip, we will ride to see and hear the power of water at Oahe Dam, one of the largest earth-rolled dams in the world that creates the fourth-largest artificial reservoir in the United States. Its primary purpose is supplying hydro-electric power to many Midwestern states as well as providing irrigation, recreation, conservation, and flood control. Oahe Dam was dedicated on August 17, 1962 by President John F. Kennedy. The word “oahe,” although it was once the name of a Christian mission, is actually a Sioux Native American word meaning “a foundation” or “ a place to stand on.” We’ll watch a short introductory film along with an expert led talk about the dam at the Visitor's Center. .

Lunch: Enjoy a sack lunch

Afternoon: We’ll travel from Pierre, South Dakota to Bismarck, North Dakota. En route, we’ll learn from our Group Leader about the land, agriculture, cattle, and people who live and work here. Afternoon stop: The Welk Homestead State Historic Site offers a glimpse into early 20th century life on the North Dakota Prairies. Walk through the house Ludwig and Christina Welk built in1899 along with a summer kitchen, outhouse, granary, barn, and blacksmith shop. Their livelihood depended on selling eggs and cream for groceries and clothes while the cash crop consisted of spring wheat. Crops of oats and barley were used to feed their cows, horses, hogs, and chickens. Music provided much needed entertainment and socialization for the family and community. The sixth Welk child eventually left the farm in 1924 to pursue a career in the music world. Lawrence learned to play the accordion from his father and played throughout the mid-west before making his debut on national television in 1955. The rest is history, he became a household name and The Lawrence Welk Show of “Champagne music” was produced and aired on television for twenty-six years. The show was the longest-running prime-time musical program in television history. Today, one can still watch reruns of the show that continue to be viewed throughout the country as well as internationally. Lawrence Welk is a true success story starting from a humble beginning in North Dakota to having two STARS on Hollywood Boulevard, the Hollywood Walk of Fame.

Dinner: Enjoy a group dinner at a local restaurant

Evening: At leisure

DAY
6
ND Heritage Museum, ND Capitol, Fort Mandan, Fort Lincoln
Bismarck, ND
B,L,D
Hampton Inn Bismarck

Activity note: Getting on/off a motorcoach; driving about 125 miles throughout the day. Walking about 2 miles; generally flat terrain, stairs at Custer House.

Breakfast: In the hotel breakfast/lobby area

Morning: We will board the motorcoach and ride to the North Dakota Heritage Center Museum where the Corridor of Time gallery depicts life during the Late Cretaceous and Early Paleocene periods along with paleontological exhibits. Museum staff will greet us and provide an overview of the museum, followed by time for independent exploration of the exhibits. A First People’s section describes and answers who the first people in the area were and how they arrived here. Other galleries focus on the introduction of Euro-Americans to the area, agricultural methods, sociopolitical influences, Native American history, and natural history. Next, we will walk across the parking lot for a guided tour of the capitol and learn why it is considered the “Skyscraper of the Prairies.” The 19-story structure was built in the early 1930s for just $2 million and, as such, it ranks as one of the nation’s most practical and economically built state capitols. This art-deco structure is enhanced by a unique blend of raw materials, including Indian limestone, Montana Yellowstone, Belgian and Tennessee marble, Honduras mahogany, East Indian rosewood, laurel wood, English brown oak and Burma teak. The State Capitol grounds also offer a unique opportunity to view the statue of Sakakawea (local spelling) and her baby, Jean Baptiste Charbonneau.

Lunch: Enjoy lunch at the ND State Capitol

Afternoon: We will travel from Bismarck, ND to Washburn, ND to the Lewis and Clark Interpretive Center in Washburn where we will get an overview of the Expedition from staff with special emphasis on displays that include Native American artifacts including a buffalo robe that visitors can try on, a cradleboard, and an original "hasp." The Center's Bergquist Gallery, one of only four galleries in the world to house a complete collection, rotates the prints of Karl Bodmer on a seasonal basis. Bodmer's watercolors and Maximilian's written descriptions are considered the most complete and reliable eyewitness account of the Upper Midwest Indian Cultures At Fort Mandan, we’ll learn even more about the journey of Lewis & Clark from a historical reenactor. This site is particularly important because Lewis & Clark spent more days in North Dakota than any other place on their journey and Sacagawea, their interpreter and wife of French-Canadian trapper and guide Toussaint Charbonneau, joined the expedition at this site. As we walk around, we’ll notice that this site offers a reconstruction of the 1804-1805 winter quarters built by the Corp of Discovery out of cottonwood lumber cut from the riverbanks. It was triangular in shape with high walls on all sides and a gate facing the riverbank. The men started building the fort on November 2, 1804, and remained in the area until April 7, 1805. When the Corp passed back through the area in August 1806 on their return journey home, the fort had burnt to the ground; the reason is unknown. Back aboard the motor coach, we'll ride to and explore the 75-acre Ft. Lincoln State Park that contains reconstructions of General Custer's home, infantry blockhouses, a commissary, and On-A-Slant Village. A local expert will tell us about the history of the Mandan Indians and we'll go through the on-site Indian earth lodges. We'll hear the real story of General and Mrs. Custer on the plains while visiting a replica of Custer's house.

Dinner: Group dinner at a local restaurant

Evening: At leisure. Prepare for check-out and transfer in the morning.

DAY
7
Enchanted Highway, Chateau de Mores, T. Roosevelt Center
Medora, ND
B,L
Rough Riders Hotel

Activity note: Getting on/off a motorcoach; driving about 190 miles throughout the day. Walking about 2 miles and standing indoors and out.

Breakfast: In the hotel breakfast/lobby area

Morning: We’ll check out of the hotel and enjoy the beauty and vastness of the croplands and prairie as we travel along the way to see North Dakota’s Enchanted Highway, 32 miles of soaring, metal sculptures that qualify as some of the largest in the world. As unusual as they are enjoyable, these monstrosities are unquestionably must-see Americana Road Art. We will stop at points of interest where our Group Leader will provide commentary as we continue on to Dickinson State University, North Dakota.

Lunch: Lunch in Dickinson

Afternoon: Enhance your knowledge of the 26th President at the Theodore Roosevelt Center located on the campus of Dickinson State University in Dickinson, North Dakota. Listen and learn as the staff explains how and why the Theodore Roosevelt Digital Library was formed in 2007. Discover why it serves as a storehouse for all TR related documents, photographs, and other short-term paper collectibles. And strive to understand how through partnerships with the Library of Congress, Harvard College Library, Theodore Roosevelt Association, and the National Park Service the Center has created the most comprehensive and accessible collection of President Roosevelt’s documents available anywhere. To date, more than 165,000 items have already been digitized and are available online. We will continue on to the town of Medora and the Château de Mores which memorializes the life of the Marquis de Mores and his wife Medora, who the town is named for. We will see many of the original furnishings and personal effects of the family in the two-story, 26-room home built in 1883 and used only as a summer residence. We’ll learn about the many enterprises of the Marquis and the history of the area at the visitor’s center before returning to the hotel. The remainder of the afternoon is free to explore the authentic, small, historic, western town of Medora.

Dinner: Dinner on your own tonight. There are several choices within a few blocks of the hotel.

Evening: At leisure. Take a walk around this quaint western town of Medora, spend time with fellow Road Scholars, or just relax.

DAY
8
Theodore Roosevelt Park and Medora Musical
Medora, ND
B,D
Rough Riders Hotel

Activity note: Getting on/off a motorcoach; driving about 50 miles, approximately 2 hours riding time plus stops. Walking about 1 mile; generally level terrain, some gravel paths.

Breakfast: Breakfast at the hotel.

Morning: We’ll capture the spirit of the West during an expert-led field trip to the Theodore Roosevelt National Park, the Visitor’s Center, and TR’s Badlands ranch cabin. In 1884, after the death of both his wife and mother, future 26th President Theodore Roosevelt went out to his North Dakota ranch to rebuild his life. The wild lands were a catharsis to him; for about two years, he ranched in the area and noted his experiences in pieces published in eastern newspapers and magazines. Returning east and into politics, Roosevelt would forever associate himself through his extensive writings and memoirs with the vanishing frontier and the life of the cowboy and rancher. The Little Missouri Badlands were explored early in 1924 to determine possible park sites but it wasn’t until 1947 that this area became the Theodore Roosevelt National Memorial Park and finally a national park in 1978. The Maltese Cross Ranch cabin was originally located south of Medora. At Roosevelt’s request, the one-and-a-half story cabin, complete with a shingle roof and cellar, was built. Constructed of pine logs, the cabin was considered something of a “mansion” in its day with wooden floors and three separate rooms (kitchen, living room and Roosevelt’s bedroom). The steeply pitched roof, an oddity on the northern plains, created an upstairs sleeping loft for the ranch hands.

Lunch: Lunch on your own in the quaint town of Medora

Afternoon: At your leisure. Free time options may include: Zip-line, hiking, ND Cowboy Hall of Fame, A "Salute to Teddy Roosevelt" Show. All leisure activities at your own cost.

Dinner: Dinner tonight is the famous western style Pitchfork Steak Fondue. Enjoy the food and music as you look out over the magnificent view of the Badlands.

Evening: We’ll attend the “Greatest Show in the West!” in the outdoor 2,852 seat Burning Hills Amphitheatre surrounded by the splendor of the North Dakota Badlands. This professionally produced, high energy, Western style musical is proudly dedicated to the legacy of America’s 26th President, Theodore Roosevelt, and the time he spent in the North Dakota. The show pays tribute to American patriotism and the Old West way of life. The extravaganza features horses, cowboys, and an array of song and dance routines performed by the Burning Hills Singers and accompanied by the on-stage band, the Coal Diggers.

DAY
9
Center of the Nation, Devils Tower National Monument
Rapid City, South Dakota
B,L,D
Holiday Inn Rapid City-Rushmore Plaza

Activity note: Getting on/off a motorcoach; driving about 330 miles throughout the day, approximately 7 hours riding time plus stops. Walking about 2 miles throughout the day; mostly paved paths. Steepest stretch of elective 1.3 mile hike up Devils Tower is the first 1/4 mile; the remainder is gentle ups and downs.

Breakfast: Breakfast at the hotel.

Morning: We will check out of the hotel, board our motorcoach, and ride across western North and South Dakota. En route, we’ll learn from our Group Leader about the discovery of the Bakken Oil Field that has added another facet to the energy equation of our nation, as well as the Bakken Shale Formation that occupies about 200,000 square miles of the subsurface of the Williston Basin, mainly in parts of Montana, North Dakota, and Saskatchewan. We will get an overview of how this enormous region influences the local economy, employment rates, and the environment with a focus on the differences between technical extraction methods and production.

Lunch: Sack lunch In Belle Fourche, South Dakota, the small town noted for being the “Center of the Nation."

Afternoon: Our next field trip will be to Devils Tower National Monument. From the National Park Service: “In 1906, President Theodore Roosevelt proclaimed Devils Tower the first national monument under the new Antiquities Act. About 60 million years ago molten magma was forced into sedimentary rocks above it and cooled underground. As it cooled, it contracted and fractured into columns... Over millions of years, erosion of the sedimentary rock exposed Devils Tower… The Tower rises 867 feet from the base and stands 1,267 feet above the river and 5,112 feet above sea level. The area of its tear-drop shaped top is 1.5 acres and the diameter of its base is 1,000 feet.” This unique formation, revered by many Lakota tribes, was also featured in Steven Spielberg’s 1977 science fiction film “Close Encounters of the Third Kind.” Those who would like to set out independently on an elective, 1.3 mile Tower Walk (paved path) will be able to look for species of birds such as blue-birds, chickadees, jays, woodpeckers, robins, meadowlarks, vultures, hawks, Bald Eagles, and wild turkeys. Other critters that may be present include white-tailed and mule deer, porcupines, chipmunks and rabbits. After our field trip, we’ll ride on to Rapid City with expected arrival in the late afternoon to check in to our hotel.

Dinner: Dinner in our private meeting room. Share favorite experiences with new Road Scholar friends during our farewell dinner.

Evening: We’ll wrap up with a farewell “fun” night. Prepare for check-out and departure in the morning.

DAY
10
Program Concludes
Rapid City, South Dakota

Activity note: Hotel check-out 11:00 a.m.. For those who need it, contact the hotel front desk to make your shuttle reservation back to the airport. The cost of the hotel shuttle to the airport is NOT included.

Morning: If you are returning home, safe travels. If you are staying on independently, have a wonderful time. If you are transferring to another Road Scholar program, detailed instructions are included in your Information Packet for that program. We hope you enjoy Road Scholar learning adventures and look forward to having you on rewarding programs in the future. Don’t forget to join our Facebook page and follow us on Instagram. Best wishes for all your journeys!






Recommended For You

loading spinner