Deadwood, South Dakota
Yee haw kids! Time to go over yonder into them thar hills
and tell ye a tale about the rootinest, tooitinest city west of the mighty
Mississippi: Deadwood, South Dakota!
That was exhausting and I apologize.
I was booked to speak to a bunch of high school freshman in
Deadwood, the same Deadwood the HBO show was named after. I never subscribed to
HBO but from what I could surmise it was a show about cowboys and the
prostitutes who pretend to love them.
To get there you must fly into Rapid City which is a tiny
regional airport. It’s also very expensive to fly into because there are only
2.5 flights that come in per day. How expensive was it? It cost the same to fly
to Amsterdam. The kind folks who booked me put me in touch with a local travel
agent to help sort it out.
Allow me to speak about travel agents for minute. I never
used one because I have the internet and a credit card. I had my doubts until
the agent was able to find me flights for half of what I would’ve found on my
own. Since then, I book all of my international flights with my agent. She can
do magical things like reserve 3 flights at once, hold them for 24 hours, and
not pay a thing. She also charged a ridiculously low amount of money to pull
this off.
If you must use a travel agent, pick one that does not live
in a big city. If they live in a big city they have more overhead and they are
gonna charge you more for the service. They have access to the same deals so it
doesn’t matter if they are based out of New York or Kalamazoo.
Anyway, back to Deadwood. I flew into Rapid City in the
middle of a snowstorm. Mind you, this was late April. While booking the trip I
noticed a return flight that left at 5pm. I was done speaking at 3:30pm so I
asked my travel agent if she thought I could drive back and make the flight.
She said it would be risky because it might be snowing. I thought, “You’re full
of shit but whatever” so I booked a return flight for early in the am the next
day. Basically, I’m an asshole.
Luckily I had the perfect motor vehicle to handle the rough
conditions: a KIA hatchback. The drive to Deadwood is a straight shot up the
highway then a trip down a winding road that cuts through the Black Hills. When
you get off the highway you are in Sturgis. As in the motorcycle festival. It used
to be a “hardcore biker rally” but now it’s more of a, “accountants who bought
Harley’s to deal with their mid-life crises rally”.
I cruised through and it was a ghost town. This town
definitely lives and dies with the bikers. Everything was closed except the bar
that was promoting an appearance by the Vince Neil Band the following weekend. Other
than that, nothing was open. Most buildings were boarded up for the winter, and
I didn’t bother to stop.
From Sturgis you shoot directly west to Deadwood. The drive into
the Black Hills was mildy treacherous. It wound through small towns
occasionally making sharp turns with steep drop offs into a canyon. Though it
was much shorter than the highway section, it took almost as long to get through.
It was scary but it looked rad. The hills were filled with
evergreen trees that stuck out amongst the fresh powder trickling down like
God’s dandruff. I arrived at the Deadwood Lodge with a couple hours to spare. Most
times I book my own lodging but if someone wants to hook it up, I’m all about
that life especially if it calls itself a “lodge” and not a “murder motel”.
The Deadwood Lodge is fancier lodging than I’m used to. It’s
built to look like a giant log cabin. Inside there is a hotel, restaurant, and casino.
This was not a Vegas level casino. It wasn’t even Reno but they had an
assortment of slot machines and a high roller like myself was attracted to the
$5 blackjack tables. Exhausted, sweaty, and hungry, I grabbed a quick shower
and got out of the room ASAP. If I would’ve sat down on the bed it would have
been game over.
I got in the car to venture into
downtown Deadwood. The snow had not stopped but it wasn’t building up. The
flakes disintegrated upon touchdown leaving the roads slick but navigable. The
main drag is a bricked street lined with brick buildings restored to preserve
some of their historic value. The main drag would have to wait till later: I
had work to do.
Bling, Bling |
I did my presentation with
students in the next town over. The city of Lead was another throwback to the
heyday of mining and mountaineering but less famous because they didn’t have
their own TV show. Afterwards I chatted it up with some of the teachers. One of
the teachers was surprised I made it out because of the weather. When I told
her getting in wasn’t so bad she told me, “The getting in is fine. It’s the
getting out that is tricky.” She went on to inform me that if the snow gets too
bad they shut down the road connecting Deadwood to the highway. If that
happened the only way to Rapid City would be through mountainous terrain which
is shockingly not recommended for driving on in a KIA.
This news threw me directly into
twitchy traveler mode. I honestly considered just driving back to Rapid City
right then and there and sleeping in the airport. I convinced myself that it
was a dumb idea. I don’t know if you’ve ever been in the Rapid City Airport but
I think it’s best described as “sparse”. Even though the snow was starting to
stick, I reasoned that it wouldn’t get too bad and if it did, staying in the
Deadwood Lodge an extra day wouldn’t be the worst idea.
There would be more time to fret
later. Now that I was free from my speaking obligations, I had to go see the
wild man.
Wild Bill Hickok was a gunslinger, gambler, drunk, and lawman.
I’ll be honest, I get all the Wild West guys mixed up. It’s hard to keep track
who was a lawman and who was a thief. Most of them are a mix of both. I only
remembered who Wild Bill was because I used to play a lot of poker. Wild Bill
was shot in the back of the head during a poker game and he had a pair of aces
and a pair of 8’s AKA “the dead man’s hand”. Go to a local poker game and by
the end of the night some asshole will get the Dead Man’s Hand and explain the
legend to you incorrectly even though you never fucking asked.
Wild Bill is buried in Mt. Moriah Cemetery, a mountainside
cemetery that overlooks Deadwood. The visitor Center was closed but there’s a
donation box that collects a $2 admission and for that you get a map that shows
you exactly how to get to Wild Bill. Or, if you’re a garbage person, you could
just take it and not pay. I parked my car and hoofed it up the mountain. Wild
Bill’s grave isn’t too far from the entrance and easy to spot. His bust rests
atop a 3 -4 ft pillar and is surrounded by a wrought iron fence.
Wild Bill's Grave |
Next to his grave is some poor bastard named Potato Creek
Johnny and another Wild West legend, Calamity Jane. Why she’s buried next to
him isn’t exactly clear. Supposedly Wild Bill couldn’t stand her when he was
alive so the dudes in charge of her funeral thought it would be funny to bury
them next to each other for eternity. Sick burn cowboy bros. Sick burn.
I am a sucker for an old timey Main St. Show me a storefront
specializing in artisanal jams and I am will fawn over it. An old-fashioned
fudge shop? Count me in. Deadwood’s downtown looks cool but once you dive in
it’s kinda cheap. Playing off its Wild West reputation, there are plenty of bars
and “casinos” which are just old storefronts with video poker machines. Toss in
a couple souvenir shops and that’s pretty much it. There are some historically
significant buildings that offer insight to the town’s past but they were long
closed by the time I hit the strip. I was left with the tourist trap leftovers.
Though touristy, there was one spot I had to check out: Old
Saloon #10 aka the murder site of Wild Bill Hickok. Okay, it advertises itself as the murder site
of Wild Bill but the original spot burned down on a different site so I don’t
know how they pull off the advertising. Though the authenticity of the spot was
suspect, I wanted to visit because they claimed to have the chair Wild Bill was
sitting in when he was shot.
Saloon 10....kinda |
If you ignored the blips and bloops from the video poker
machines, it had an authentic “old as shit” vibe. They had creeky wooden floors
and a long bar that you’d expect in a saloon. There was memorabilia all over
the walls, lots of stuffed deer heads, and even a stuffed 2 headed calf named
“Cheeseburger”.
I didn’t ask to see the chair because I figured I’d se it
right away and I didn’t want to look like an impatient asshole. I didn’t see it
in the main room so I ordered the house cola and sauntered into the next room.
I still didn’t see the goddamn chair. I was definitely in the right place but
no luck. I stuck $10 into a “Deuces Wild” machine, blew it in 5 minutes, and
decided to leave, chair or no chair.
Then I saw it.
The chair is set up in an alcove directly above the front
door. I walked right under it when I walked in and didn’t even notice it. Turns
out displaying an object 8 feet in the air isn’t the best way to get a good
look at it. To get a good look you have to stand about 10 feet away directly in
the path of patrons entering and exiting the bar. I thought it was dumb idea
but then thought about how many jagoffs would try sitting in it if it was on
the ground and I gave them a pass.
The snow was now stacking up on the sidewalks and medians.
Again I contemplated driving straight back to Rapid City. But I was tired and
hungry so I went back to the Lodge. My plan was to eat dinner, go to bed early,
and walk up before day break to give myself more time to get back to Rapid
City. I stuck to that plan. The restaurant at the Lodge is decent and the
waitress recommended a steak sandwich that wasn’t super chewy and seasoned just
right. I was in bed by 8pm and woke up at 2:30am.
That sounds early right? I usually don’t wake up 4 hours
before a flight especially when the airport is less than an hour away. I always
sleep like shit the night before an early flight. I’m afraid I’ll sleep through
my alarm, I won’t get a wake-up call, and I’ll miss my flight. The snow was
freaking me out and I decided to hit the road before it got worse.
The first sign of trouble was when I got to my KIA and
discovered the lack of a brush to wipe off the snow. The lovely folks behind
the counter had about 37 extra ones behind the desk though and hooked me up.
They even offered to let me keep it because the people of Deadwood are sweet
and not corrupted by big city living.
Remember that picturesque drive through the mountains which
I described as “mildly treacherous”? By now it was “super fucking treacherous”.
The road was not plowed or at least it hadn’t been plowed recently. I vice
gripped the wheel as my KIA fought against the snow, the wind, and the road.
Leaving this early was advantageous because there were no
vehicles on the road. Most likely because the residents of Deadwood are not
idiots and know better than to drive willy nilly in a snowstorm. The KIA
struggled to keep traction on some of the turns, the same turns that border
steep drop-offs into an unholy abyss. As I slid ever so close to my death, the
radio was playing a song by the Chainsmokers and I couldn’t let myself die
listening to that shit. Therefore, there were a couple spots where I was
driving a cool 5-10 miles per hour.
It was at this point that I started to play the 1 Hour Game.
The 1 Hour Game is when you are in a super shitty spot and wish you could just
fast forward 1 hour so you don’t have to deal with the shit. Stuck in a meeting
while Dale from accounting answers a question for 10 minutes while never
actually answering the question? Play the 1 Hour Game. Waiting for Lauryn Hill
to perform? Play the 1 Hour Game. Then play it again. Then again. All I wanted
was to be off this road and in the Rapid City Airport. Do you know how bad it
must be to make you long for the cozy confines of the Rapid City Airport? It
was that bad.
My knuckles went from snow white to regular Caucasian white
once I saw signs for the highway exit ramp. The final stretch to the highway
was slick but relatively straight. I eased onto the expressway which was
mercifully plowed and salted. The rest of the ride was smooth and uneventful. I
arrived with hours to spare but I didn’t care. My flight home was on time and
once TSA opened, I was able to watch the guy in front of me take out all of his
nutritional supplements and explain to the officers that they were not drugs or
explosives, they were just for getting fucking ripped, bro.
Would I Go Back?
I would not go back in the winter or early spring. The
weather is unpredictable and it can completely ruin your plans. I would
definitely go back in the summer. The Black Hills are spectacular. Camping
would be cool if you’re into sleeping uncomfortably for nights on end. As for
me, I’d rather go back to the Deadwood Lodge after a long day of hiking novice
level trails and eating soft serve ice cream. The downtown would probably be
more fun too. Mt Rushmore is close by, but if you avoid that monument to white
supremacy you shouldn’t find big crowds unless you go during Bike Week..
Avoid
Bike Week
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