Redetotry wrote:Good Afternoon, The day is slipping by and everyone must be busy. It's warmer here today up around 86 which after the cool spell seems hot, but compared to some I should be grateful. . . I've been lazy and spent way to much time on the Oregon Trail with my book.. . I'm heading back to my book they are only half way there and they are having to lighten their loads as the oxen are having a hard time. It is hard to imagine how so many people actually did survive.
Sandi I also sent you a PM/
Sandi, I sent you a PM also.
BJ, when I drove to Yellowstone in 2018 I stopped at a rest stop along the interstate somewhere, quite a ways past the back of beyond. Rolling, uneven country - one tall rocky bluff a few miles ahead of me in the distance that I would soon be climbing, another one (just as tall, and just as rocky) that I had driven up and over several miles back.
It was a fine, blue-sky day, at one of those places that it seemed a person could just about see forever.
At the back of the restroom, overlooking this terrain, was a small overlook that had been constructed out of the local rocks (took a LOT of them to build this thing, and looking around I could see that there were still rocks without number lying around to spare).
This overlook had a small sign that said that this had been part of the Oregon Trail, and that many wagon trains had passed through this area on their way to Oregon.
I tried to imagine it. . . and really just couldn't. Blew my mind, just thinking about it taking days to go just a few miles, slow oxen pulling heavy wagons (with many people probably just walking to help lighten the load) when I was taking just seconds to drive those same number of miles.
Standing there, I was in absolute awe.
86* is definitely a nice temp for October 5, which in most places would probably be considered the soothing crisping days of early Autumn.
Just now, at 3:19 p.m., my weather station is reading 107*.
I'm thinking it might top out at 110* or so today.
Toasty.
Anne