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ITW Into The West 2010 final post
ITW Tracks of the StoneBear ITW= Into The West. A Journey of crossing the continent
An Odyssey into the Abyss of Time and Life. Threw some gear in the car, took off again on another RT RoadTrip for 6 months, Trekked back roads to see what's out on the edge. Left B'ham/ Leeds, AL early Spring, returned late Sept. Plan was West to Arizona, then North through the Rockies to Glacier. Ride along on this ITW =Into The West RT to see the best back roads and scenic byways,12,000 miles in all. Just because you wander doesn't mean you're lost. Copyright MCMLXIII ALL Rights Reserved
ITW Into The West 2010 final post
The cowards never started.
The weak died along the way.
Only the strong survived.
That is the synopsis I've heard that sticks... that holds true.
Crossing the continent was not the primary objective of this journey; it turned out that was what happened.
I stand in awe of the pioneers that supplied up - loaded up... "don't worry about the mules Son, just load the wagon"... loaded up everything/ possessions they had,... and left St Louis heading west in a wagon train. My God I love those people; they are my kinda folks!
Public school allowed the basics of Lewis and Clark and the Corps of Discovery, and little of the westward pioneers. Upon this journey, coming to the realization of what it actually took to cross this North American continent... these are my heroes. Traveling across in a modern vehicle, with supply depots, with gas stations for fuel, with modern bridges across rivers.... I do not see how the pioneers did it! These were some rugged hearts in people with a ton of courage and guts.
Women especially. It takes a certain kinda cat to sign on to a plan to go into the unknown and make due with all the hardships. Women did this while raising kids and holding everything together on the frontier.
I waded in and fished many rivers and streams and know the strength of the current. Think of your family and children in a wagon foraging these rivers, a major undertaking; I don't see how they did it.
Going up the river to Independence / St Charles, MO... The final post going on into the west... last chance for supplies, then heading west, going into the unknown.
An axe was the primary tool. it would be needed to cut lodge-pole timber for a homestead in the promised land... when we got there. A knife, personal weapon to thwart threats if need be or skin hides. A gun, a long rifle to hunt for meat,... or preferred for protection if need be.
Tracks on the prairie meant; meat,... or war.
Oxen were the team of draft animals to make this journey. Horses were good for short 15 to 20 mile day rides, but wouldn't hold up pulling a wagon on a long haul.
The trail, mostly virgin prairie at first, then mountains-- then the Rockies-- was littered with the abandon wagons with skeletons of horses where they frothed at the mouth and dropped in place.
If you were lucky, another sympathetic wagon would take you in,... or take the children... usually to the next town / outpost. Then , you were on your own to survive.
ITW 98
Monday August 2, 2010
Biggs, Oregon / Maryhill, Washington
It's been months on this journey. A lifetime by some measurements.
This was a Journey; an expedition. Most days were a see saw / wandering route and not a beeline. The purpose was to see it.
... to breath it.
... to seek it.
.... to walk it and hike it.
to leave the rat race to the rats.
.... to revel in it. ....and know that you did it.
Just because you Wander doesn't mean you're Lost.
After months of traveling the back roads of the west, criss-crossing the same exact routes and trails the pioneers used.
The Oregon Trail.
The Santa Fe Trail.
The California Trail.
The Morman Trail.
The Bozeman Trail.
... there's a greater respect for the Pioneer families; Those were some hearty folk. I worry about the country sometimes, .... then think of the stock we come from; we'll endure the hard parts. Think Covered Wagon and team of Oxen.
Later traveling North in Utah and Wyoming Trout fished in snow-pack rivers and Glacier Lakes.
Been in thermal Hot springs in Arkansas, Wyoming, and Montana.
Stood at the headwaters of the Missouri river, where Lewis and Clark's Corps of Discovery camped.
Awakened to 34* mornings in August. Awakened to 24* mornings in July up high in the Big Horn Mountains. ... and actually seen Bighorn Sheep.
After a time... you lose any sense of "Home". At times you've lost the memory of just exactly what IS home. At times,... there is No Direction Home.
You wade into the river and you can taste the salt in the brackish water of the Columbia River...
We have crossed the North American Continent and lived to tell it. Closing w/ the Pacific.
Lord, imagine the excitement of Lewis & Clark after crossing the continent,... knowing they were closing w/ the
This was an Odyssey into the Abyss of Time and Life.
You never drink twice from the same stream.
Thank you for the Abundant Blessings.