62 Parks Traveler聽started with a simple goal: to visit every U.S. national park. Avid backpacker and public-lands nerd聽聽saved up, built out a tiny van to travel and live in, and hit the road. The parks as we know them are rapidly changing, and she聽wanted to see them before it鈥檚 too late.
Pennington has returned to traveling and is committed to following CDC guidelines during the COVID-19 pandemic to ensure the safety of herself and others. She鈥檚 visiting new parks while closely adhering to best safety practices.
It was cool and quiet when I arrived at Wind Cave in South Dakota, a sunset glow kissing the grassy hillsides. I parked my van at a picnic area near the park鈥檚 visitor center and ambled down a short gravel path into a shallow canyon. At the end of聽my聽brief stroll, I held my palm gingerly over聽a gaping hole in an otherwise solid rock wall. As if by some ancient wizardry, a chilly breeze blew out of the rocky ground, dancing between my fingertips鈥攖he famous wind of Wind Cave.
Long before a gust聽knocked Jesse Bingham鈥檚 hat off his head while hunting here in 1881, prompting him聽and his brother to stumble upon聽this聽vast cave system, the cave鈥檚 natural opening had been regarded as a sacred site for the Lakota people. It鈥檚 the place from which they believe they , a legend that has been passed down for centuries. Today聽the site聽is known to modern Lakota as Maka Oniye, or 鈥渂reathing earth,鈥 a portal to the spirit world.
Usually park visitors can see聽the system by taking an elevator down into the caves聽or hiking through the natural entrance with a ranger. Unfortunately, it聽closed in July 2019聽due to , and now remains closed because of the COVID-19 pandemic. So this small, historic opening was all that I could see of the park鈥檚 namesake caverns. There would be no in my immediate future. Ever the resourceful traveler, I took the closure as a challenge to explore the unsung wonders of this national park鈥攏otably its 30-plus miles of hiking trails through one of the largest remaining mixed-grass prairie ecosystems in the country.
The next day, I set an alarm and got an early start to hike the , a 4.5-mile trek through rolling green hills, prairie dog towns, ponderosa pine forests, and craggy, creekside canyons. As a California hiker unaccustomed to聽big game on the聽trail, I found myself tremendously anxious about the prospect of bison encounters. I had never seen one in the wild and only had a vague idea about聽what I should do if I came across a bison jam en route.
As with most things in life, Mother Nature tends to sort out our fears with a hearty dose of immersion therapy.聽Just ten minutes into the hike, I rounded a corner to find a 2,000-pound bull casually grazing in the middle of the trail. I stopped dead in my tracks and began laughing. Of course this is the first thing I see today,聽I thought.
Taking a deep breath, I carefully scanned the ground for prairie dog holes and tiptoed as gracefully as I could in a wide semicircle around the fuzzy beast. I felt invincible.
After my death-defying run-in with an ice-age-era mammal, the rest of the hike was a snap. I dodged thick poison ivy as I cruised downhill through the forest and hopped across the lush, riparian landscape surrounding Highland Creek, passing rugged, rust-colored limestone cliffs and smiling all the way back to my van.
The day may not have featured the thousand-foot cliffs of Yosemite or the rocky alpine peaks of Glacier, but sometimes an unknown hike doesn鈥檛 need the usual fanfare to make you feel accomplished. Sometimes聽all it takes is a welcome surprise.

62 Parks Traveler Wind Cave Info
Size: 33,847 acres
Location: Southwestern South Dakota
Created In: 1903 (national park)
Best For: Caving, night-sky viewing, hiking, scenic prairie drives
When to Go: Spring (23 to 67 degrees), summer (49 to 84 degrees), and fall (23 to 75 degrees) all provide proper weather for roaming聽the park鈥檚 vast trails and prairies. Winter (13 to 41 degrees) is chilly, and snow sometimes forces park roads to close. The cave system鈥檚 temperature remains a steady 54 degrees year-round.
Where to Stay: Wind Cave is located a short drive from Hot Springs, South Dakota. For those not looking to camp at the park鈥檚 , is a great budget option full of clean rooms. Breakfast is聽included.
Mini 国产吃瓜黑料: Hike the easy聽one-mile Prairie Vista Trail, and check out Wind Cave鈥檚 natural opening. Along the way, learn about the history of the Lakota people, and experience the amazing biodiversity of a mixed-grass prairie landscape.
Mega 国产吃瓜黑料: Go spelunking. Once the cave聽reopens (a date has yet to be announced, but you can ), the park will begin offering its famous tours once again. The most adventurous of the bunch is the four-hour , in which visitors crawl through tight passageways and explore its聽undeveloped areas.