News

If you’re after a photo session filled with dramatic landscapes, Theodore Roosevelt National Park in western North Dakota is calling your name. Its three units span over 70,000 acres of jagged buttes, ...
On June 16, 2025 the Dakota Dunes Community Improvement District (CID) held a regular meeting at the Welcome Center on Sioux Point Road. The meeting started at 7 pm with the following on-site: Ken ...
Gene Maffit, South Sioux City parks director, kneels on a section of the city's trail system along 39th Street. The city is applying for a $212,742 grant to replace cracked and broken sections of ...
Building a bridge with the help of 10 mules on North Dakota's Maah Daah Hey Trail A team of U.S. Forest Service packers used a seemingly old-fashioned method to transport building materials for a ...
Authorities in South Dakota say an Audubon man was killed in a shooting at a rental cabin.According to investigators, 59-year-old Larry Peterson was shot during a fight at the cabin in Lead, South ...
The trail offers riders a chance to experience all types of North Dakota landscapes, from grassy flatlands to steep rocky ridges - and be prepared to get wet crossing the Little Missouri River!
Getting to North Dakota’s Theodore Roosevelt National Park isn’t easy, but, after arrival, the geography, wildlife and walking trails create an unforgettable experience.
Out of 20 submitted projects, five have been approved for the North Dakota Parks and Recreation Department Recreational Trails Program (RTP) grants.
North Dakota awards funding for 5 new trail and outdoor recreation projects The Parks and Recreation Department received 20 applications totaling $3.9 million in project fund grant requests ...
The raw ore will come from a mine near Tamarack in north-central Minnesota. It will be shipped by rail to just outside Beulah.
SIOUX FALLS, S.D. (KELO) – Two more South Dakota law enforcement agencies are seeking out hands-on authority to identify and remove illegal immigrants from the state. The Division of Criminal… ...
Landowners in North Dakota can continue their safety-based legal challenges against the Summit carbon capture pipeline, judges ruled.