We agreed it was an auspicious way to celebrate our 45th wedding anniversary!

The Overland Trail Museum kept Mona busy with her book while I rambled through the buildings. Guess: How many 150 year old schoolrooms, stores, and homes have I photographed since we left Douglassville on June 8th? Mona's answer: Maybe enough? My answer: But there's one more in the next town!

Mona read in the car and I walked the lonely, beautiful prairie, back to the scene of Buffalo Bill's final Indian war battle. General Carr and his 300 5th US Cavalry and Pawnee scouts, with Bill, surprised the 450 Cheyenne Dog soldiers and their families camp in the early dawn hours of July 11, 1869 in a hollow 30 miles south of what would become the town of Sterling. The Logan County Seat, a rail stop on the Santa Fe Line, and most recently a rest stop on I-76.

The statistics don't prove the super human power of American military might, though General Carr was an accomplished Civil War and Indian fighter, and the 5th was a veteran of other Indian campaigns. Rather they show the bravery and willingness to defend the families of the renowned Dog Soldier. He fought sometimes with hard to get rifles, and then only if he could get rare ammunition. These brave Indians fought with mostly bows and arrows until the last arrow had flown. And the families were saved that day, for Carr would allow no rampage by his Pawnee Scouts, longtime enemies of the Cheyenne.
From here we turned west again under darkening skies to find rest and peace in our new camp, Silver Spurs, along the placid South Platte River a mile north of Fort Morgan. What we found was a RODEO! Sort of.
OK. Not QUITE a full rodeo. But the pic to the right sort of tells it the way it was last evening.
You see, unbeknownst to us we had camped in a traveling workers community. Roustabouts. All pipeline and well drilling men with their wives and girlfriends living full time in their RV's. We didn't see any kids; just dogs.They travel the west wherever the jobs appear. Many losing track of friends for years at a time only to meet up with them again on another job states away, or on Facebook.
And they had their trucks circled up in the camp road so all headlights pointed at the straw bale calf cowering in the center of all that attention. 'Cause some of these guys had been actual rodeo pros in younger years and they were teaching others how to rope.
And guess what... they tried to teach us!
And darned if I didn't rope that sucker with my first toss! And my last. Never tempt fate, I sometimes say.
THEN we finally went to sleep by the light of the silvery moon.
-Ken
Happy Anniversary! We missed you at VBS.
ReplyDeleteHappy Anniversary! Sounds like you are really enjoying your retirement. Good for you! Happy Trails to you...
ReplyDeleteHi Ruthie and Desiree!
ReplyDeleteYes, this life is agreeing with us pretty well so far. I do miss VBS. Nan Horn says it would have been the perfect venue for my certain special talents.