The drive to Minot (around 90 miles north on Highway 83) passes through the wide agricultural heart of the state — big sky, long sight lines, and a landscape that feels genuinely empty in the best possible way.
Minot is the surprise of the loop. North Dakota’s fourth-largest city has a strong Scandinavian heritage and a cultural confidence that catches first-time visitors off guard. Start at the Scandinavian Heritage Park — a 14-acre outdoor museum that is the only one in the world to represent all five Nordic countries. Full-scale replicas include a 240-year-old Norwegian log house, a traditional Stave Church, a Finnish sauna, a Danish windmill, and a 25-foot Swedish Dala horse. It sounds eccentric; it’s genuinely absorbing. Allow a couple of hours.
Your second day in Minot is free for the Peace Garden day trip — see the suggested itinerary below.
Overnight: Hyatt House Minot (2 nights) — apartment-style suites with full kitchens, complimentary hot breakfast with made-to-order omelettes, and an H Bar for evening drinks and dinner. Ten minutes from the Scandinavian Heritage Park and well positioned for the Peace Garden day trip.
Suggested Free Day: The Peace Garden Loop
This makes a full and varied day from Minot, heading north and returning via a different route.
Rugby (65 miles east on US-2): The geographical centre of North America, marked by a 21-foot fieldstone cairn on a heart-shaped base. A brief but satisfying stop — the kind of quirky landmark that earns its place on a road trip of this calibre.
Bottineau / Mystical Horizons: North Dakota’s answer to Stonehenge — six granite walls forming a functioning solar calendar, aligned to the solstices. The views across the prairie toward the Turtle Mountains are striking.
Lake Metigoshe State Park: A complete contrast — forested hills, clear glacial lakes, birding trails, and easy walking. This is where North Dakota suddenly looks like Minnesota. Lunch at the Metigoshe Drive-In (cash only; call ahead as waits can be long).
International Peace Garden: The main event. Allow two to two-and-a-half hours. Formal gardens straddling the US-Canada border across 2,300 acres of prairie and forest — floral displays, peace towers, walking paths between two countries with no barrier and no fanfare. Bring a photo ID to re-enter the US; a passport speeds things up.
Tommy the Turtle, Dunseith: On the return south, stop for the W’eel Turtle — a 26-foot turtle built from over 2,000 recycled wheels, mounted on the world’s largest snowmobile. Pure North Dakota.
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