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Terrible flight crew that skipped our row for service multiple times.
Entertainment
Food
Comfort
Crew
Boarding
Overall
Reviews
Terrible flight crew that skipped our row for service multiple times.
Entertainment
Food
Comfort
Crew
Boarding
Overall
Reviews
Terrible flight crew that skipped our row for service multiple times.
Entertainment
Food
Comfort
Crew
Boarding
Overall
Reviews
Terrible flight crew that skipped our row for service multiple times.
Perhaps the most famous reason millions of travellers board flights to South Dakota every year is Mount Rushmore, where the faces of George Washington, Thomas Jefferson, Theodore Roosevelt, and Abraham Lincoln are sculpted into the mountainside. It took 14 years to construct this mountain masterpiece and today, more than 20,000 tourists visit the South Dakota landmark daily. But before people were booking flights to South Dakota to see Mount Rushmore, there were prairies, plantations and the peace-loving Sioux Nation (made up of the Dakota, Lakota and Nakota tribes).
South Dakota has long been a land of outdoor beauty. First-time visitors booking flights to South Dakota might find it resembles one of America’s best loved novels and television shows, “Little House on the Prairie.” Laura Ingalls Wilder grew up in South Dakota in the late 19th century and her admired stories took place among the backdrop of the South Dakota landscape.
Visitors booking flights to South Dakota should not miss the museums and monuments that proudly display the native arts and culture inherit in the state.
As a Great Plains state, South Dakota has an interior continental climate with hot summers and cold winters. Summer temperatures can reach the high 20s (C) and winter can be below zero and lower. Sioux Falls averages 104cm of snowfall annually, but there is less snow further north, and the northwest can get less than one foot of snow.On the northern fringe of tornado alley, South Dakota’s twisters are mostly in the eastern part of the state, sometimes in the central region, and rarely in the western part of the state. Spring is the peak tornado season.
You will need a car to get around South Dakota, or, if you are going to the more popular destinations, consider joining a tour group. There is limited bus service in the state, and the historic trains just run short routes. Driving is also your best bet even in Sioux Falls, and parking is plentiful.
Hiking, biking, and horseback riding are other ways of getting around, along with boating on the Missouri River, and motorcycles.