Highlighting the Theodore Roosevelt Wilderness (even if the National Park Service won’t)

By Kevin Proescholdt

Kevin

This fall, my wife Jean and I visited Theodore Roosevelt National Park in western North Dakota. Though we had driven through the area on I-94 in the past, we had never explored the park, nor visited its designated Wildernesses. We had a wonderful time visiting and hiking in the park, and exploring the Theodore Roosevelt Wilderness.

 

We found that the National Park Service (NPS) itself does very little to highlight the Theodore Roosevelt Wilderness within the National Park, and it was very difficult to find information about the Wilderness from the NPS. That needs to change, but that situation also unfortunately reflects the NPS’s generally lackadaisical and cavalier attitude toward Wilderness across the nation.

 

Theodore Roosevelt National Park honors its namesake conservation-minded president who first came to the Dakota Territory in 1883 to hunt bison, and later ranched these rugged, eroded badlands. The park has two main units, the South Unit near the town of Medora, and the North Unit, located a staggering 68 miles north of the South Unit.

 

The park also contains 29,920 acres of Wilderness, designated by Congress in 1978. In the North Unit of the park, two Wilderness units total 19,410 acres, separated only by the paved road that runs 14 miles from the east entrance to a dead-end overlook in the west. In the South Unit of the park, there is one 10,510-acre Wilderness unit in the western end. All three units are known collectively as the Theodore Roosevelt Wilderness. The Little Missouri River runs adjacent to the Wilderness in the South Unit and through the more southwesterly Wilderness in the North Unit.

 

One day, Jean and I hiked the Caprock Coulee Trail in the North Unit of the park, a 4.1-mile loop that took us in and out of both Wildernesses in that unit. We started at the road, climbed steeply up into the southwesterly Wilderness, and came out at a high elevation with stunning views down into the wild Little Missouri Valley. The trail then took us out of the Wilderness, past the River Bend Overlook just off the road, and then back across the road into the more northeasterly Wilderness unit. We hiked high up on a ridge, with fabulous views down both sides of the badlands landscape. On our north side, we looked deep down into a valley with one lone bull bison. Little did we know then that we would encounter that same bison after the trail dropped us down to that valley floor. All in all, we enjoyed wonderful glimpses into the wild Wildernesses of the North Unit.

 

The next day, we hiked in the South Unit of the park beginning at the far western edge of the park. Here again we hiked in Wilderness, including grasslands atop a plateau past wild horses, before we dropped down into an eroded valley full of the petrified stumps of an ancient forest. This petrified forest is believed to be the third largest petrified wood area in the United States after Petrified Forest National Park and Yellowstone National Park. The 60-million-year-old petrified stumps provided a vivid example of what Wilderness Act author Howard Zahniser may have meant when he once wrote about Wilderness projecting the ‘eternity of the past into the eternity of the future.’ An amazing place, to be sure.

 

There are certainly some wilderness stewardship challenges at Theodore Roosevelt. About 200 feral horses, descendants of escaped ranch horses in the area, live in the South Unit of the park, including that Unit’s Wilderness. They are classified as non-native livestock and can negatively impact the park’s natural resources, but are popular with many park visitors. The NPS is now trying to decide what to do with these horses. In the North Unit, the NPS maintains a small “demonstration herd” of about nine Longhorn steers as a reminder of the badlands ranching history. Should this non-native species also remain in the designated Wilderness, with all the negative impacts that cows inflict on Wilderness? These are just two wilderness stewardship issues that should receive more public attention at Theodore Roosevelt National Park.

 

Despite these amazing designated Wildernesses, the NPS has virtually no information available about them. I asked at all three visitor centers for information about the Wildernesses, but no brochures were available. No wilderness management plan. Nothing in the park’s tabloid newsletter. No text in the park’s brochure, though the maps in that brochure do show the Wilderness boundaries. Nothing in the Superintendent’s Compendium of rules and regulations. The Wilderness was mentioned in the separate brochure for the petrified forest, and there was a wilderness sign at the park boundary leading to the petrified forest, but many park visitors would never know that the park contains nearly 30,000 acres of special, Congressionally-designated Wilderness.

 

This lackadaisical attitude toward Wilderness by the NPS goes way back. As long ago as 1957, NPS Director Conrad Wirth testified against passage of what became the 1964 Wilderness Act in its very first Congressional hearing. Wirth, in essence, didn’t want any new law that impinged on the NPS’s prerogatives; the NPS felt it could manage National Park backcountry just fine without the restrictions that the Wilderness Act imposed, thank you very much.

 

Though the NPS eventually supported passage of the Wilderness Act in the Kennedy and Johnson administrations, the agency’s begrudging attitude toward Wilderness continues to this day. The NPS often appears to feel that the meaning of Wilderness is quite malleable, and should be open to wide NPS discretion to do whatever the agency wants to do. And there is often a subtle arrogance in the NPS about the agency itself and hubris toward Wilderness on the part of the agency—other federal agencies may cut down trees or drill for oil and gas, but the NPS is better than that and knows how to protect national park lands, without the interference of the Wilderness Act. Hence, we see the NPS today often illegally authorizing helicopter use in Wildernesses for routine work or allowing permanent monitoring stations for research projects because the NPS wants it and, besides, which other federal agency protects its lands any better?

 

And some of that attitude seems to have manifested itself even in Theodore Roosevelt National Park, with the agency’s lack of almost any information to highlight the Theodore Roosevelt Wilderness. That Wilderness is indeed quite special, as this essay hopefully may have begun to show. Here’s wishing that with this essay and future involvement, Wilderness Watch can help highlight the Theodore Roosevelt Wilderness, even if the National Park Service won’t.

 

Kevin Proescholdt is the conservation director for Wilderness Watch.

 

Photos from top: 

  1. Looking down into the Little Missouri Valley from the Caprock Coulee trail in the southwesterly Wilderness in the North Unit of the Park.
  2. Jean and a massive petrified tree stump in the Petrified Forest, located in the Wilderness in the South Unit of the Park.
  3. Looking north into the northeasterly Wilderness of the Park's North Unit from the Caprock Coulee Trail, with the lone bison bull in the lower center.

 

Theodore Roosevelt National Park by Kevin Proescholdt

 

Theodore Roosevelt National Park by Kevin Proescholdt

 
Theodore Roosevelt National Park by Kevin Proescholdt

 

 

 

 

Editor's note:

“Wilderness Experienced” is a platform to share stories of recent experiences in Wilderness. Stories focus on the virtues of Wilderness and/or challenges facing the National Wilderness Preservation System.

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We encourage readers to engage the authors and other commenters through the comment feature. Please be respectful and thoughtful in your response, and focus your comments on the issues/experiences presented. Please refrain from personal attacks and harassment, using rude or disruptive language, providing misinformation, or promoting violence or illegal activities. We reserve the right to reject comments. Thank you for your cooperation and support.

 

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Comments 33

Guest
Guest - Jennie Gosche on Tuesday, 05 December 2023 15:44

Thank you, Kevin for this informative article. I am interested in the Wilderness designation because I am hoping some day the 1002, Coastal Plain, of the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge will be permanently protected as a Wilderness or Monument. I am a polar bear photographer and have visited the Refuge twice. Politicians, oil companies, and conservationists have been fighting over the use of the 1002 for decades. During the Trump presidency, leases were sold in the 1002 for the first time in history, on January 6th while our US Capitol was being attacked. Luckily, for all the wildlife there and Alaska Native people who hunt in the 1002, President Biden nullified those leases. We must protect wild places before it is too late.

Thank you, Kevin for this informative article. I am interested in the Wilderness designation because I am hoping some day the 1002, Coastal Plain, of the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge will be permanently protected as a Wilderness or Monument. I am a polar bear photographer and have visited the Refuge twice. Politicians, oil companies, and conservationists have been fighting over the use of the 1002 for decades. During the Trump presidency, leases were sold in the 1002 for the first time in history, on January 6th while our US Capitol was being attacked. Luckily, for all the wildlife there and Alaska Native people who hunt in the 1002, President Biden nullified those leases. We must protect wild places before it is too late.
Guest
Guest - Katherine Fligg on Tuesday, 05 December 2023 15:32

Hello! I was surprised to read this comment at the end of your post, "reflects the NPS’s generally lackadaisical and cavalier attitude toward Wilderness across the nation." Would you mind expanding on how NPS takes the lackadaisical approach to wilderness and, more importantly, what they should be doing? I hadn't heard this before but I'd like to learn more. And thank you for highlighting this park. You are right - it is difficult to find information about it, which we discovered when planning a cross-country trip.

Hello! I was surprised to read this comment at the end of your post, "reflects the NPS’s generally lackadaisical and cavalier attitude toward Wilderness across the nation." Would you mind expanding on how NPS takes the lackadaisical approach to wilderness and, more importantly, what they should be doing? I hadn't heard this before but I'd like to learn more. And thank you for highlighting this park. You are right - it is difficult to find information about it, which we discovered when planning a cross-country trip.
Guest
Guest - Indee Brooke on Tuesday, 05 December 2023 14:29

FYI, the NPS has been chronically and severely underfunded for decades. While I agree a lot more needs to be done to maximize the experience for visitors to our national parks, NPS cannot possibly address this issue without a significant budget increase along with funds to hire and train rangers and staff. NPS also has to wrestle with the problem of "over-love." As more wilderness and public land is encroached upon by licenses issued to mining, lumbering and oil interests, among other commercial interests, and the biosphere / ecosystems needed to support a healthy biodiverse plant and animal population shrink, increasing numbers of people from our nation and the world are drawn to the healing energies of nature. They clamor for entry to our national park spaces. Standing in Yosemite, Yellowstone, or the Sequoias, you hear languages from across the globe. I'm certain it's the same for other parks. Right now, so short-staffed, the NPS can barely cope with garbage removal and providing toilet paper for basic lavatories, let alone a proper stewardship that will sustain these parks and public lands into the future. Helicopters are definitely intrusive and abort the wilderness experience - I suspect their use may be part of an attempt to gain the funds for basic maintenance. Your photos are gorgeous, thank you for sharing. I know being there was exquisite. If you want to see the improvements you suggest, help drum up the monetary, staffing, and legislative support needed to achieve these goals and to incorporate strong safeguards for the wise, integrative, and far-seeing stewardship of these national treasures.

FYI, the NPS has been chronically and severely underfunded for decades. While I agree a lot more needs to be done to maximize the experience for visitors to our national parks, NPS cannot possibly address this issue without a significant budget increase along with funds to hire and train rangers and staff. NPS also has to wrestle with the problem of "over-love." As more wilderness and public land is encroached upon by licenses issued to mining, lumbering and oil interests, among other commercial interests, and the biosphere / ecosystems needed to support a healthy biodiverse plant and animal population shrink, increasing numbers of people from our nation and the world are drawn to the healing energies of nature. They clamor for entry to our national park spaces. Standing in Yosemite, Yellowstone, or the Sequoias, you hear languages from across the globe. I'm certain it's the same for other parks. Right now, so short-staffed, the NPS can barely cope with garbage removal and providing toilet paper for basic lavatories, let alone a proper stewardship that will sustain these parks and public lands into the future. Helicopters are definitely intrusive and abort the wilderness experience - I suspect their use may be part of an attempt to gain the funds for basic maintenance. Your photos are gorgeous, thank you for sharing. I know being there was exquisite. If you want to see the improvements you suggest, help drum up the monetary, staffing, and legislative support needed to achieve these goals and to incorporate strong safeguards for the wise, integrative, and far-seeing stewardship of these national treasures.
Guest
Guest - Steev Beeson on Tuesday, 05 December 2023 13:43

ps. Good article Kevin. Keep it up. Thank you.

ps. Good article Kevin. Keep it up. Thank you.
Guest
Guest - Sandy Lee on Tuesday, 05 December 2023 13:42

Thank you for posting about this wilderness area. We have so much in the US that is unknown or not appreciated. It is very sad to see that our NPS does almost nothing to promote these areas. Our current administration has been a disappointment in handling these areas and wildlife issues in general. I hope we can find a way to improve communication and news about these locations.

Thank you for posting about this wilderness area. We have so much in the US that is unknown or not appreciated. It is very sad to see that our NPS does almost nothing to promote these areas. Our current administration has been a disappointment in handling these areas and wildlife issues in general. I hope we can find a way to improve communication and news about these locations.
Guest
Guest - Steev Beeson on Tuesday, 05 December 2023 13:42

I agree with Kevin's assessment of "the NPS’s generally lackadaisical and cavalier attitude toward Wilderness across the nation". They have the same sense of entitlement to do exactly what they want to do across all national parkland in this country, including Alaska. And here I thought that land was put aside for the American people's use.

I agree with Kevin's assessment of "the NPS’s generally lackadaisical and cavalier attitude toward Wilderness across the nation". They have the same sense of entitlement to do exactly what they want to do across all national parkland in this country, including Alaska. And here I thought that land was put aside for the American people's use.
Guest
Guest - Edward Thornton on Tuesday, 05 December 2023 13:37

With our growing population, we need more public lands. We need more diversification of public lands and the species so important to our ecosystems. And we need a climate and atmosphere that are optimized for our continuing to thrive as one of those species!

With our growing population, we need more public lands. We need more diversification of public lands and the species so important to our ecosystems. And we need a climate and atmosphere that are optimized for our continuing to thrive as one of those species!
Guest
Guest - Roger on Tuesday, 05 December 2023 13:29

Thanks for this Kevin. I took my kids, and later grandkids hiking there and yes, its a great though small W. And yes, NPS downplays the W, maybe because its located in redneck country. The W ought to be better known & appreciated, but NPS isn't going to do it.

Thanks for this Kevin. I took my kids, and later grandkids hiking there and yes, its a great though small W. And yes, NPS downplays the W, maybe because its located in redneck country. The W ought to be better known & appreciated, but NPS isn't going to do it.
Guest
Guest - Kenneth Nahigian on Tuesday, 05 December 2023 13:09

I urge the National Park Service to highlight the Theodore Roosevelt Wilderness within Theodore Roosevelt National Park in western North Dakota. It is difficult to find information about the Wilderness from the NPS. Please change this.

I urge the National Park Service to highlight the Theodore Roosevelt Wilderness within Theodore Roosevelt National Park in western North Dakota. It is difficult to find information about the Wilderness from the NPS. Please change this.
Guest
Guest - jean publiie on Tuesday, 05 December 2023 13:08

i think he has the wrong idea. you dont write reams about wilderness. you got there and see what is there. you leave itnatural. you want nycity i think with brochures and dazzle. wilderness is just there. and it should be undisturbed. i certainly dont believe you put cows in wilderness. wild horeses are native to america tgoingm way back tens of thousands of years in america and in north dakota so they are native and lies are toild about non native. i think wildernes shouldstay rugged and notever have brochures written about it. you are looking for disney traila i think

i think he has the wrong idea. you dont write reams about wilderness. you got there and see what is there. you leave itnatural. you want nycity i think with brochures and dazzle. wilderness is just there. and it should be undisturbed. i certainly dont believe you put cows in wilderness. wild horeses are native to america tgoingm way back tens of thousands of years in america and in north dakota so they are native and lies are toild about non native. i think wildernes shouldstay rugged and notever have brochures written about it. you are looking for disney traila i think
Guest
Guest - Kim Hoffman on Tuesday, 05 December 2023 13:08

We need to lavish our national parks especially this one would love to walk through the woods ? ?

We need to lavish our national parks especially this one would love to walk through the woods ? ?
Guest
Guest - David Pisaneschi on Tuesday, 05 December 2023 13:06

I've been to the TR wilderness and NP in ND. It's a hidden gem. President Roosevelt was one our greatest conservation presidents. The 1906 Antiquates Act was created during his administration.

I've been to the TR wilderness and NP in ND. It's a hidden gem. President Roosevelt was one our greatest conservation presidents. The 1906 Antiquates Act was created during his administration.
Guest
Guest - ELIZABETH on Tuesday, 05 December 2023 13:03

VERY NICE PICS! THX!

VERY NICE PICS! THX!
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Tuesday, 16 July 2024

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