A timelapse of driving our RV, a Tiffin Allegro Bus motorhome, 132 miles from Badlands, South Dakota to Hot Springs, South Dakota. With a fun picture-in-picture of the view from our truck being towed behind our coach.
Travel from Badlands to Hot Springs, South Dakota
We drove our coach 132 miles, about 2 hours of driving, from Badlands, South Dakota to Hot Springs, South Dakota.
Here’s the map route, heading west then south:

An interactive map:
As mentioned yesterday, I added a mount for my 360 camera to the truck; it’s a magnetic mount, but I also secured it with three tethers, out of an abundance of caution:

The camera mounted on the truck; I thought it would be fun to record the view from the truck on travel day:

The truck connected to the coach (aka toaded); ready to go:

After leaving the campground, crossing White River:

Badlands:

Cowboy Corner in Interior, South Dakota:

Badlands:

A prairie dog town:

Bison:


Roadworks:






I caught a stowaway wasp:



Leaving Badlands National Park; the Badlands was good:

The roads were not so good (using my max-zoom technique to show the bumps):

Big sunflower field going to seed:

Dinosaur:


Travel center lunch stop:

The camera was still there (I took it inside to secure and charge it during our lunch stop; check out today’s travel video for the fun footage):





Questionable food choices:

Onward:

The Mammoth Site:

The city of Hot Springs has some nice historic architecture:



Our destination:

Our site:

Our coach:

Again, check out the travel video in the next post for a combination of the usual coach dash cam footage plus the 360 cam perspective from the truck. An unusual view!
(And if you haven’t yet subscribed to the Sinclair Trails YouTube channel, please do so. It doesn’t cost anything, but will help me build my channel, which will let me do more with it.)
Video: Badlands National Park timelapse
A series of clips of timelapse video from my 360 camera as we explored Badlands National Park.
360 camera mount on truck
I have an Insta360 X3 action camera, that you may have seen footage from in previous posts. When capturing video or a timelapse of a drive, I’ve previously held the invisible selfie stick out the window, which is a bit awkward.
So I thought I’d get a mount to attach it to the roof of the truck.
I opted for a magnetic mount, since our truck is often a bit dirty after being dragged behind our motorhome, or driving on dirt roads, so I thought a suction cup mount may not work well.
To avoid risking losing the camera if the magnets fail, I secured it with three safety tether cords; I initially only used one, but added a couple more when I wanted to use the camera on a travel day, since I would be in the coach and wouldn’t be able to keep an eye on it. (I removed the camera during a lunch stop, both so nobody steals it, and to recharge it for the remainder of the trip.)
Here’s the camera mount and tethers on our dusty truck:

One of the tethers was secured to the side mirror:

And the other two were secured to back seat ceiling grab handles:

Another angle:

The 360 camera on the mount, oriented sideways for reduced wind resistance:

I don’t leave the mount and tethers there all the time, though they’re pretty unobtrusive, and fun for recording scenic drives and coach travel days. I might try variations on this placement in the future.
Stay tuned for a travel day video tomorrow, with a picture-in-picture of the back of the coach from this camera!
Wall Drug
Near Badlands National Park is the town of Wall, South Dakota, and a famous roadside tourist attraction called Wall Drug Store, or simply Wall Drug. (Wikipedia.)
Billboards along I-90:





Map:







We had lunch in the cafe:



A special gravy-smothered sandwich:

The “backyard”:












Their first attraction, free ice water:




Cheesetastic.
Minuteman Missile National Historic Site
“World-wide delivery in 30 minutes or less, or your next one is free.”
The Minuteman Missile National Historic Site features a visitor center, Delta-01 missile control center, and Delta-09 missile silo of the Minuteman II nuclear missile system.
Visitor Center:








We did a ranger-guided tour of the Delta-01 Launch Control Center (which requires an advance reservation):



A small elevator down:




A big door:


















A video of a simulated missile launch:
Delta-09 Missile Silo:











Badlands National Park
We visited Badlands National Park several times while staying nearby. Badlands was good lands; we enjoyed exploring the park.
Here’s a map; most of the scenic stuff is in the North Unit:
An interactive map:

Relief map in the visitor center:

Exhibits in visitor center:

Pressed penny:

Badlands:














The Stronghold Unit visitor center:



Back to the North Unit:






RVers camping on the top of the wall:





Big horn sheep:




Cows on the road:



























We enjoyed the badlands.
Badlands / White River KOA Holiday
We stayed at Badlands / White River KOA Holiday in Interior, South Dakota. (Campground Reviews listing.)
Yet another KOA, quite nice, right outside Badlands National Park.
Dates:
- Check in: 2023-09-03
- Check out: 2023-09-17
- 14 nights
Weather:
- Everything from sunny to thunderstorms
- High temps ranging between 67-99°F, lows around 50-67°F
- Afternoon gusts up to 33 MPH
Noise:
- Occasional road noise, not annoying
- No train noise
- Negligible neighbor noise
Site:
- #20, pull-through, gravel
- Needed to disconnect toad; parked behind coach
- Fairly level
- Gravel driveway about 60 feet long by about 8 feet wide
- Patio and grass on passenger side about 42 feet wide
- Grass between driver side and next site about 20 feet wide
- Some big trees
- Table, chairs, charcoal grill, and weird fire pit on concrete patio
- Clean site
Utilities:
- 50 amp power, conveniently located
- 55 PSI water, conveniently located
- Good sewer connection, conveniently located (1 10-foot pipe needed)
Internet (in usage priority order):
- Starlink: 78-133 Mbps down, 10-14 Mbps up, 78-138 ms ping
- Campground Wi-Fi: 36-42 Mbps down, 21-32 ms up, 56 ms ping
- AT&T: negligible service
- Verizon: 13-23 Mbps down, 8-11 Mbps up, 35 ms ping
- T-Mobile: 2 Mbps down, 0.06 Mbps up, 70 ms ping
Amenities:
- Pool
- Garbage pickup from site
- Package delivery to office
- Cook shack food
Our review on Campground Reviews:
Cook Shack and close to Badlands NP
What’s not to love about a park that has food service onsite? I definitely appreciate it, especially when other options are few and far between. We had a deluxe patio site, which was located at the end of a row. The site had a few trees for afternoon shade, which was nice. The site was not huge, however, and we had to park our tow vehicle perpendicular to the coach; I still worried about our bumper getting clipped as the roads are pretty narrow and there are some tight turns. It was pretty quiet, and the proximity to Badlands NP can’t be beat. We camped at Badlands / White River KOA Holiday in a Motorhome.
Tip for Other Campers: Stock up on bottled water before arriving. The local water is very alkaline and hard, which made it pretty much undrinkable (unless you like that sort of thing; our three-stage filter and water softener still didn’t improve it). The mosquitos are voracious, so ensure you have repellant if you want to sit outside. Plan ahead and get tickets for the control room tour at Minuteman Missile NHS. You get a pretty personalized tour and a good feel for what it was like to serve there.
The campground map:

We stayed in site #20, which we had site-locked as what looked like the best site when we booked. Once here, and after walking around the campground, I can confirm; it is definitely the best site. There are some very long sites towards the back of the campground, but they are buddy sites (i.e. living areas facing the neighbor), which we hate.
An interactive map:
Our site, on the end of the row:

Using the Starlink on the flagpole:



Our patio:

The patio came with a wacky fire pit thingy, and a charcoal grill, though we didn’t use either, but did use our Blackstone griddle:

The RV park is near Badlands National Park, so we were able to add that sticker to our coach, starting another row (I’ll need a stepstool to add them soon!):

Sunset:

We normally drink water from the dispenser on our fridge. But not here — even the five filters the water passes through weren’t able to make the water here taste good; our test strips indicate that the water has very high pH and alkalinity, which the filters can’t help with:

We did our full suite of test strips; everything else was fine:

Early in our stay the air was rather unhealthy due to wildfire smoke from Canada:

Smoke map (a blue dot near the middle is our location):

We also had lightning and heavy rain nearby (blue location dot off to the right; the weather heading that way):

We got a bunch of packages delivered here; I used my folding cart to collect the heaviest of them:

The office and camp store:


A nice feature of this campground is the cook shack (or “kookhouse”) that was open for breakfast and dinner every day:

Menus:

The next door pavilion for eating and activities:

A tasty breakfast:

A dinner:

There were a lot of flies buzzing around, so I took the dinner back to our site and ate on the patio:

A strange historic artifact; kids, ask your parents:

Swmming pool:


Dog park:

Dog shower, with mini golf in the background:

Path:

Lots of tent sites:



Cabins:



Other sites:











Entrance sign:

Video: Spearfish to Badlands, South Dakota motorhome travel timelapse
A timelapse of driving our RV, a Tiffin Allegro Bus motorhome, 127 miles from Spearfish, South Dakota to Badlands, South Dakota.
Travel from Spearfish to Badlands, South Dakota
We drove our coach 127 miles, about 2 hours of driving, from Spearfish, South Dakota to Badlands, South Dakota.
Here’s the map route, heading southeast:

An interactive map:
Leaving our site, in a cloud of dust from the gravel:

Leaving the campground:

Heading east on I-90:

Rapid City exit:

A fuel stop at Flying J; we don’t get a discount there, and have to go in to pay, but it was more convenient to our route:

Almost 82 gallons of diesel, a bit over half a tank:

We parked our coach, with the generator running so the ACs would keep it cool, and went in to have lunch:

At the Country Market restaurant in the Flying J:

Menu:

Breakfast for lunch; a little underdone:, but tasty enough:

We had a choice between continuing on I-90, or going on SD-44; we opted for the highway, since we generally prefer them to freeways:

A sea of sad sunflowers, done blooming and going to seed:

Entering Badlands National Park:



Roadworks; driving on gravel isn’t particularly enjoyable in our coach, so we kinda regretted our choice to come this way (we knew that there was roadworks, but didn’t expect a lack of paving):


A prairie dog town (one visible by the fence):

An old cabin and pond:



Interior, SD, population 94:



White River:

Our destination:

Guided to our site:

On his recommendation, we untoaded (unhooked our truck from our coach) before reaching the site, then followed separately:

Parking in our site:

