The drive is 36 miles, with many turnouts to look at scenery and trails to walk to different views. Unlike Glacier, there are no bear, so walking alone is safe and I took advantage of it.
First, though, within 100 yards of starting the drive I was surprised to see an enormous buffalo walking down the yellow line in the road, looking pretty much like he was taking a sobriety test. I stopped my car and waited, and he walked past not 3 feet from my door. You might notice that I took the picture of him with the window closed.
There are lots of free-ranging bison either munching or resting and several prairie dog towns, some more like cities with hundreds of borrows and squeaking little critters. Bella would like them: they look to be larger than hamsters, blond, and smaller and leaner than guinea pigs. When they squeal they jump, and when they see a car they squeal.
I left Medora after several hours and drove south into South Dakota, expecting to drive two hours or so. Significant underestimation. But 2 things about the trip.
First, my route took me past Sturgis, SD. Back when Matt was a college textbook editor, he did a lot of traveling to college campuses throughout the country. He once found himself between campus visits in a hotel in Sturgis, SD, at the same time as the annual motorcycle rally. Every owner of every Harley had to roar the engine well into the night. The only hotel stay Matt ever described as equal in awfulness to that one was the one that coincided with a national contest among barbershop quartets (who practiced long into the night and had rooms next to his).
The second thing is the pine beetle infestation in this part of the country. We lost a huge double pine to the beetle long ago, and it went from seeming healthy to looking like its needles were turning red to being dead in less than a week. Out here, you can look up a mountain and almost see the beetles doing their work. At the top is a pine tree graveyard, tall black outlines of trees with no needles, looking like the remnants of a burn. Lower on the mountain are trees with reddish brown needles, clearly dying. Still lower on the mountain are healthy trees, but you know it won't be long. It looks devastating. I saw a lot of it between Missoula and Helena, MT, and more here in western SD.