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Roads Less Traveled
Sep 21, 2016
Bernie Hunhoff took a 212-mile trip from the Nebraska border to the North Dakota border on dirt and gravel roads. Read the complete report in our Sept/Oct 2016 issue. Here are a few photographs that you won’t find in the magazine.
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A Presbyterian cemetery was established by Czech settlers in Bon Homme county in 1878. Its corresponding
church was moved to nearby Tyndall in 1953, but a waist-high stone border surrounding the cemetery remains.
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A Scottish Highlander poses near Fedora.
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A farm cat slinks by an old DeSoto.
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The United Methodist Church is the only functional building in the otherwise-ghostly town of Esmond in Kingsbury County. The church doubles as a museum, with historic photographs hanging on the interior walls.
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The atlas indicated that this was a passable road.
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Sticking to non-paved roads became difficult as Hunhoff maneuvered the ponds and potholes of northeastern South Dakota's glacial lakes.
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The shiny tin siding of a grain elevator creates the skyline for the little town of Kidder in Marshall County.
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The trip ended in Marshall County at the juncture of 422nd Avenue and 100th Street.
The two seasons collide in the Black Hills.
Wildflowers are adding a splash of color to the granite and pines of the rugged Black Hills.
Spearfish Falls framed by snow-covered branches. Photo by Josh Lien
South Dakota provides the perfect backdrop for toy photography.
The annual Dakota Marker game brought thousands to Brookings.
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