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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.
Foggy morning down east Main Street in Butler. Photo by Duane Huwe
South Dakota provides the perfect backdrop for toy photography.
The annual Dakota Marker game brought thousands to Brookings.
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