Today we started with a teacher meeting. It gave me lots of ideas and fun new things to teach, but it isn't exactly interesting to read about. Usually these things are very long, and quite honestly kind of boring, but today's was a lot of fun. After the meeting we went out to Buffalo Jump State Park. A buffalo jump is a cliff where Native Americans would lure bison onto a grassy plain near a cliff. Once they got them where they wanted them the Indians would surprise the bison by charging them dressed as wolves or coyotes. The herd would begin to run and a few indians dressed as bison babies would start running for the cliff. At the last minute the indians would scramble down the cliff into pre-determined hiding holes while the herd of bison ran over the cliff to their deaths. The tribe then had food for a few months or up to a year. I will fill you in later on how they did the luring. The first thing I thought was that the cliff couldn't have been more than 6 feet high. I had forgotten about an optical illusion. Most people from areas where there is not a lot of flat open space have a hard time gauging distances once on an open plain. The hill was about 400 feet above the prairie. The cliffs anywhere from 30-80 feet high. Once I saw some people standing on top I got a sense of how big the place was. Then again when I hiked up the hill I got a real sense of how big if drop was. After the buffalo jump we drove to a town called Fort Benton. This fort was built after Lewis and Clark in the 1840s. It has the oldest still-standing structure in Montana. It was one of the first forts in Montana and the town boasts that it is the birthplace of Montana because the business they did there was what put Montana on the map. On the way back in to Great Falls we stopped at two of the falls. When Lewis and Clark came through here there were 7 cataracts. The Missouri river drops 600 feet in 17 miles and the area around Great Falls has some truly great falls. In the early 1900s they were all dammed up to create electricity, but they are still there. The first fall we saw was at Morony dam. There has been a lot of water this year and the spillway on the dam was releasing water at an enormous rate. In the picture the water flowing over the spillway is about 10 feet deep as it drops down. We finished the day at Ryan's Island which is an island in the river right below Ryan dam. This island is accessed by a cable bridge that sways ominously once you get about 1/3 of the way out, but the island really puts you in the middle of the waterfall action. The falling water cools of the air and fills it with water spray. It is always windy under the falls as the air gets rushing with the water. Since it got up to almost 90 degrees today this air conditioning provided by nature felt great. Unfortunately the sun was directly behind the falls, so my pictures aren't exactly award winning.
Thursday, June 23, 2011
Tuesday, June 21, 2011
Day Two
As we left Dillon Montana this morning we stopped to climb a small rocky outcrop at the north end of town. William Clark (Of Lewis and Clark) climbed this hill (he said so in his journal). There is a little marker there that says he stood at that spot to survey the valley and look for a good place to climb the continental divide.
After that quick stop we drove up to Butte Montana. We met an Episcopalian priest who took us on a tour of the city. His church was very pretty with $2 million worth of stained glass windows. This priest/hippy was also a Free Mason, and he took us on a tour of the Masonic Lodge in Butte. This place had a real wierd feel to it like no one had entered the place in years.
We toured around the city and visited a home that was owned by another man named William Clark. This guy was a "copper king" he ran a copper mine in the city and at the height of his career he was making $17 million a month. And that is in 1884 dollars. He built a mansion in the city that we toured I even stood in his shower.
The guy had a daughter who died just a few months ago she was 104 years old and hated her family. She refused to live in any of her family's mansions and lived close to 40 years in an old folks home in New York.
The drive from Butte to Great Falls was beautiful. Lots of mountains and high forests, but Great Falls itself is the far western edge of the great plains. If not for the Missouri River carving a river channel in the area the land would be very flat.
We took a short tour of the portage route that the Lewis and Clark expedition took. They had to carry all of their stuff 18.5 miles overland around a series of waterfalls in the Great Falls area. It was a nightmare. They had 4 one-thousand pound canoes, rifles, extra ammo, food, supplies, surveying equipment, and lots more. They made the round trip 4 times to get it all. The climb away from the river was very difficult (we hiked it too, without any stuff). The ground back then was covered in prickly pear cactus (there isn't nearly as much now, but still plenty).
Meriwether Lesis had a great idea for an iron frame boat. He had the men carry all of the pieces up the Missouri River. His hope was that theyh could cover it with animal skins and use it on the higher part of the river. Unfortunately they could never get the animal skins to stop leaking, and the boat was too flimsy. It would flex when it began being loaded. This is a replica of the iron frame.
Day One
As I sit here writing this entry for day one I am in Great Falls Montana it is almost 10:00pm on day two. The last two days have been a marathon of things to do. The actual trips, and copious amounts of pictures tell the true story of how much "touring" we have been doing. This blog is just a few highlights.
It was a relatively short ride to the sprawling metropolis of Pocatello Idaho. I had better not make fun because this is the probably the largest "city" on the entire trip. We went to a replica of Fort Hall. This is not the original place, but this is about how it looked. The original site sits on private sacred indian land (more on that later).
Some things to notice. This little beast is pointed at the doorway. Any guesses...
The Cannon was there to blast anyone who busted through the front door. They wouldn't even have wasted a tiny iron cannon ball, they kept it loaded with gravel from the ground which was more effective (shotgun style) anyway. Here it is again covering the entryway.
Inside the County Museum next door to the relica of Fort Hall I came across this dentist office exhibit. Notice the blood-red color in the spit bowl. That was in case the patient got woozy at the site of blood they would not be able to see it in the bowl. Pretty smart, eh?
Inside the County Museum next door to the relica of Fort Hall I came across this dentist office exhibit. Notice the blood-red color in the spit bowl. That was in case the patient got woozy at the site of blood they would not be able to see it in the bowl. Pretty smart, eh?
After the replica we went onto the Shoshone-Bannock Indian reservation. This flag illustrates the feelings of many of the Indians. It's pretty thats for sure, but I'm not sure how I feel about it. By the way the Eagle represents the Shoshone Bannock tribe.
We spent some time listening to "the truth." Then the very kind indians took us down into the river bottoms to see the original site of Fort Hall. You can't see anything there except a few overgrown corner stones right next to the Snake River.
Our tour was hosted by Randy L. Teton. You might know her. She was the actual model for the Sacagawea dollar coin that came out in 2000. She did the modeling in the mid 90s. She was very kind, but once again wanted to tell us "the truth." If you are wondering about the baby hung over her soulder on the coin, it was a doll that just happened to be lying around in the photographer's studio.
Monday, June 20, 2011
You always forget something
It is a very late night in Dillon Montana and there will be little rest since they want the teachers on the bus at 7:00 am. Whats more, I forgot my camera cord, and can not connect the camera to the computer. So no pictures, and no update. Sorry y'all, I will try tomorrow.
Wednesday, June 15, 2011
We'll see if this works
I've never been great at keeping up on things like this, but I have a perfect opportunity to start a blog for my fifth grade classroom. Next Monday I'm going on a week long trip up into Montana. My trip will study Lewis and Clark's Corps of Discovery Expedition. I'm starting the blog so my family and students can check in on how things are going.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)