Showing posts with label Sioux Falls. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Sioux Falls. Show all posts

Tuesday, September 20, 2011

Taking Care of Business....

Reminds me of that "Taking Care of Business" song by Bachman Turner Overdrive...There are so many song titles that would be great on a blog! (BUT--you'd drive everybody crazy, Sparky!)

It's been a long time since I've moved...one year to be exact...I've spent much of my life in South Bend/Mishawaka, IN (about 26 years), then moved to Angola, IN for 7 years, and now, when somebody asks, "Where are you from?" I can be a smarta** and say, "From all over!"  Or, I can say, "South Dakota". Sparky is officially a South Dakota resident! But I'm not gonna live there....It's just that South Dakota has ZERO state income tax, low sales tax (3%), lower insurance rates for health, car, and home, no personal property tax, no intangible tax on investments and much cheaper rates for licensing. Last year we saved over 1500.00 (!) by getting the motorhome plated in South Dakota. My Indiana plates would have been 265.00 this year. In South Dakota, my plates will be about 71.00. Woo-hoo! So that's why you see many full time RVers with South Dakota plates. I have to wait on my plates, they have to send for the title first, so I'm still running Indiana plates on the Honda CRV...they don't expire till October, so hopefully, the new plates will come in before the old ones expire. 

(Photos today are all from the annual Sculpture Walk held in downtown Sioux Falls)
(E. says, Sparky can be such an egghead at times!)
While we were conducting our business, we stayed at the Tower Campground in Sioux Falls. This campground is VERY centrally located to everything, malls galore, restaurants, (10 minutes to the license branch) and you get a discount for staying there if you have business with Alternative Resources, a mailing service that we use for our mail delivery. Alternative Resources helps you with licensing, referrals to other agencies, and they are REALLY helpful to RVers in a lot of ways. We stayed one night for 27.50 a night with full hookups in a nice, shady campground. Sites are about average as far as distance between the sites. It's a great overnight or two destination, and the office people are so nice and really friendly. They even remembered us from last year even though we were only there three days! 

What did we do in the one day we were here besides get Sparky's license? We got an oil change for the car, that is, Eldy got the oil change while Sparky explored downtown Sioux Falls and the 2011 Sculpture Walk.  Lots of statues with interesting explanations of the artist's viewpoint on why they made what they did...It was fun walking around downtown Sioux Falls...There is lots to see in other parts of town and check out the waterfalls the city is named after! We did that last year, so the annual Sculpture Walk this year is all we had time for.....Sioux Falls is a nice, clean town and very pretty...There is everything you could possibly want in Sioux Falls, should you stop for a few days...(except for an Apple Store, says E.) Being that we both have Macs, it's always nice to find one in case we have a problem...

I walked into an interesting shop and gallery on Phillips Street in downtown Sioux Falls that advertised all native American artists. Just about everything was made by a tribal member. I talked to the shop owner for a little bit. She said the shop, Prairie Star Gallery, had been open for 14 years. She mentioned the poverty level for native Americans is much more severe than for average Americans, that the native American Indian income poverty level is about $4,000 for a family of four compared to 22,000.00 for white Americans. This is why they started their shop, to provide a base of support for native Americans to sell their wares and help their families survive.  There are nine tribes in South Dakota, and it was cool to see this store promoting Northern Plains and Southwest Indian authentic arts and crafts. The shop's managers personally know every artist and trader represented in the shop. 

There were beautiful rugs, dolls, feathers, music, sage, sweetgrass, paintings, clothing, jewelry, books, and many many other kinds of arts presented there. One of my favorite things in the shop was the "talking stick." The talking stick was like a peace pipe, a decorated stick with feathers and beads. The stick is used in discussions, moments of crisis and interventions, for families, etc. Whoever holds the stick, holds the attention and respect of everyone else, and the person who holds the stick, gets to speak. Everyone else remains silent until the stick is passed. It reminded me of a "koosh ball" that I used to use in my classroom, using the same principle. You couldn't talk unless you were holding the koosh ball. At least, that was the principle of the thing!

I learned that the term "Sioux" Indian  was a term generated by the U.S. government, and it really applies to three tribes--the Dakota, the Lakota, and the Nakota. The term comes from the French and Ojibwa, and is believed to be a derogatory term meaning "Little Snakes". The Sioux Nation really prefers to be called by the Dakota, Lakota, or Nakota names instead.  More than 62,000 native Americans live in South Dakota, and the evidence of that is everywhere you travel in this state....There are lots of reminders for you to respect them as you travel...to ask before taking photos, video, audio, etc. You might come across pipes, bundles, ties, flags of different colored  material, food offerings and other items at sites you visit, like we did in Bear Lodge (Devil's Tower) or on hikes, or other places, which are considered sacred by native Americans. 

The owner gave me a wonderful book put out by the state of South Dakota, called Native South Dakota, A Travel Guide to Tribal Lands. I'm really looking forward to learning more about the tribes of our lands.......But before we go, I have to show you one of my favorite sculptures from the Sculpture Walk. It's called "Hey, Mary Lou/Blindside".
"Skinny but enthusiastic third stringer gets distracted on his sprint along the sideline. A study in "achieving your dreams one second and launched into the second row the next".
It's "On the Road Again" for Eldy and Jeannie tomorrow...We're heading east towards Minnesota and Wisconsin.......see you on the road!

Sunday, October 17, 2010

Water Falls in South Dakota

Sioux Falls
Oh, yeah! These beautiful falls are in downtown Sioux Falls. You can see its beauty at Falls Park, right in the center of downtown. There is a wonderful cafe, Falls Overlook Cafe, that serves great food, and you can sit outside and eat and enjoy the falls. The stone walled cafe is a former hydroelectric plant, and I think it's made of pink granite or jasper. (The state stone is jasper, so I bet that's what it is!) Whatever it is, it's beautifully colored pink blocks of stone. The waterfalls are a 100 foot drop, and the surrounding rock piles look like a gigantic bulldozer came through the plains and unearthed all these beautiful granite rock piles and then just left them behind. You can clamber all around the rocks and get extremely close to the falls. There are no railings to hold you back, which makes for some great camera  shots. The entire park is very pretty. After we checked out the falls, I went to a local Farmer's Market at the bottom of the hill and saw these really cool pumpkins. At first I thought they had a fungus or something, and that's why all the growths on them, but no, these are called "knucklehead" pumpkins, that's a particular kind of pumpkin grown from seed. Interesting!

Later in the day, I went for a bike ride on the bike trail around town. It's about a 20+ mile ride if you do the whole loop. It's a totally open paved bike path that follows the river as far as I can tell. It's just wide open spaces all the way with an urban landscape to view and a few parks sprinkled along the way. You see very little nature on this trail and it's completely out in the open, at least the ten miles that I did were. The trail was blocked off in several locations for bridge work, but that didn't stop hardcore bike enthusiasts from going on through anyway. Something very cool that I saw while out biking was a rock wall sculpture at Sherman Park. This was part of Sioux Falls' Sculpture Walk a few years back and it remains for people to enjoy. An Indian is hunting buffalo.  The buffalo's body is a large craggy boulder to simulate his hide. The artwork is entitled "Sacred Buffalo". Very cool! Today we finished out our sightseeing with the Sculpture Walk downtown, and a round of disc golf--We did 18 holes at beautiful Tuthill Park. If you are not familiar with disc golf, I'll tell you all about it tomorrow while Eldy is driving to first Mitchell, S.D., home of the Corn Palace, and then on to the Badlands!