Day 6. July 26, 2012 Last Day on
the Road. . . I’m going to do it! I woke
up in Sheridan, Wyoming. I’ve overlooked
the fact in the past when I’ve zoomed by this town on the Interstate that it
has one of the best rodeos going in the west, and this year, I just missed
it. http://www.sheridanwyorodeo.com/ This town was home to Buffalo Bill
Cody, he lived right down near the tracks at the big old hotel.
http://www.sheridaninn.com/history.html It’s a big town, a cowboy town. But today, I have the northwest corner of
Montana on my mind, and I gotta scoot.
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You can't see this from an airplane |
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Beauteous |
A lot of the pavement on I-90 is a reddish color in the big
wide west, and it makes the roadway all the more scenic. Yesterday I saw
antelope drinking at cattle watering tanks.
Too far away for a good shot from the road, but nice to see we still
have some antelope out here, those white-butted creatures in the song, Oh, give
me a home where the buffalo roam. No
roaming buffalo to be seen, though.
Today. . . saw a few more of the antelope on my ride, the
first destination: Billings.
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I love the red pavement |
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The sky is blue blue blue this morning with no
clouds, which makes the landscape more stark, no shadows. I pass the Tongue
River and the water’s still flowing, a good sign. There’s a mountain range to
the south, and a lot of the landscape is just scrub and hills and gullies up
here.
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see? you can't see the cattle. they're up there, though. |
The black cattle dot the landscape like
pepper. But the “summer pasture” up here looks like slim pickings. In about 25
miles, I hit the state line into Montana from Wyoming. . . There is a big blue
sign that says, “White crosses indicate highway fatalities.” If you die on a Montana highway, you get a
white cross. Also a big sign: Welcome to Crow Country. We’re on the res. I have
a question for the Montana Highway Depatment. . . what type of grass is planted
along the side of the highway that is stays greener. At mile 546, for instance. Or is it greener because the cattle can’t get to it due to the barbed wire
fences?
Soon I’m seeing the
signs for the Custer Battlefield and all the accompanying attractions. I
have visited the scene of the Battle of Little Bighorn, and it is a sobering
experience. It all happened not so long ago.
The Little Bighorn River meanders back and forth across the valley, so
very like it did then in the 1870’s, and the railroad runs along the road here
for miles. I’m down in the lowlands now, and every creek or river is surrounded
by cottonwood trees, and sage trees where it’s a little dryer.
Pix
I get a call on my cell about a family matter, and I decide
not to do anything. Then the red tail hawk totem flies right over my car, so I
pick up my cell and make a call. I leave a message hoping it will do some good.
Maybe it will, and maybe it won’t but I obeyed the hawk. Back up onto the high
plains, and then down again, into Billings: a large city with refineries and
the accompanying smell. I’ve only come about a hundred miles, 500 to go.
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Billings, MT |
And the
Yellowstone River starts running along the highway. A sign says: Butte 225
miles, so I go for that. A mindless hour later, I pull into a rest area, and
see smoke form a lightining fire in the Beartooth Mountain Range. Planes flying
over it, to support the firefighters on the ground.
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Fire! Lightening is wicked. |
It’s a brand new fire,
started last night, so says the radio. I go by Livingstone, and wonder what it
would be like to live there and write. They say it’s a writer’s town.
Before Butte is Bozeman, and that’s a big university town. I’ve
only gone 269 miles, many more to go. It’s
lunchtime, and I pull in to get some chicken for lunch. Kentucky Fried. I do
pull off the fattening skin, honest. And Yoko is in heaven, chicken is her
absolute favorite thing to live for. Yoko and I sat there eating. I have the
air-conditioning on in my car. There is a homeless man begging at the stop
light, sitting on the green lawn. He is hot.
I walk over to him and give him a Dixie cup full of quarters that I didn’t
have to use on tolls (I have E-Z pass now, remember?) and a cold bottle of
water. You’d think I had given him a new house on that reality show on TV. I leave, wondering what the rest of his day
would be like. I feel bad for Bozeman, a lot of their forests have turned
red. What a tinder box. The pine beetle
has been hard at work, thanks to the much warmer climate. It is not cold enough
long enough to kill them in the winter. Ahead. . . wheat Montana. Yes, there are lots of golden wheat fields
here.
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Yoko snoozing in the jump seat |
Exit 241, Pipestone.
This means I am going up onto the Continental Divide now. . . and up up
up we go, though the rocky fields called pipestones. I get up to the top to the
rest area, and get Yoko out to pee, so she can water both sides of the
country. And then, I bend over to pick
her up and put her in the car. I am
three minutes away from the rest area, heading down the mountains when my Blue
Ant tells me that no mobile device is connected. Where is my phone? Shootsky.
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Up and over the Continental Divide. Three times. |
I go down the mountain, take an exit, come back up the
mountain (eastbound), wave at the rest area on the other side of the divided
highway, go down the mountain, take an exit and go back up the mountain (westbound),
pull back into the rest area, and get out, looking for my phone, It is under my
car. I have driven over it. I pick it up and it works. Thank you, God! Thank you,
Goddess. I have put an extra 20 miles on
the car, and driven over the Continental Divide 3 times. It’s actually funny.
I go through Butte, the copper mining town, (PICTURE). I
hear on the radio that it is Evil Kneival days, and one of the Wallenda’s is
going to do something tricky. Evil was
from Butte. Exit 127
Now 114 miles to Missoula, my next destination. Deer Lodge
flies by. I’ve stayed there before. It’s
the old prison town of Montana with a creepy old prison from the 1800’s.
But not staying there tonight, too many ghosts, plowing on.
Yoko is snoring. It’s the chicken, it puts her to sleep. I’m going through beautiful rolling hills.
The Little Blackfoot River is there with me.
I go by Exit 170, Phosphate! Exit
154, Drummond. Clark Fork River, joins us,
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Clark Fork River |
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and then I pass the Bear Mouth
RV Park, and then a little waterfall coming out of the cliffs with townspeople
under it, getting cooled off. I think I want to stay at that campground
sometime, you can fly-fish right there in the river.
And now, finally, Missoula, I am 2 hours from Bigfork. But I miss the exit for 93 north and I go ten
miles before I realize. I see a sign for Idaho, and then I know I’m on the wrong
track. Turn around, go back. And take
the proper route north. Gas up, too. This is my third fill up today. And now. .
I am heading up through the Flathead Indian reservation, and I love it. I love
the signs they put up, because they are in English and also in Indian language.
In the Evaro area, an actual animal bridge has been built for the wildlife to
pass over. Not a tunnel, a bridge. The sign says, "Animal Bridge."
It is late, after 8. But it’s still light here. Sunset is
about to happen in an hour. Then I’m in Lake county, in Arlee. I see they have
done lots of work on their sidewalks. Looks good. I come to the National
Buffalo Range, and of course, the Buffalo are not near the highway. Good news. . . the grass here looks
green!
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Mission Mountains |
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Not yellow, like in the high
plains I’ve been crossing, but green! Northwest Montana has it made in the rain
department. I pass Saint Ignatius, and then the Nine Pipes Museum. Aha! Sunset over the Nine Pipes Wetlands area. Bugs
all over the windshield, a big hatch going on. I come to the People’s Center,
the museum for the tribe. http://www.peoplescenter.org/ A sign across the street, “Meth Sucks.” Right on.
I’ve traveled 571 miles. Another 30 or 40, and I’m there. I
stop at the Mission Mountain rest area. It’s too beautiful to pass up.
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Add caption |
The setting
sun is right there. And I come up over a rise, and I see it there before me. .
it’s always so startling. The Flathead
Lake with its southern islands.
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Dead ahead through my buggy windshield: Flathead Lake |
I am almost home.
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My house the next morning. . . green grass! |
I go through Polson, up the west side of the 30 mile long
Flathead, and then I’m crossing over the top of the lake, into Bigfork, and out
to my western home, and my daughter, and my granddaughter. Trip accomplished.
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Nita telling her Grampie Jim: Yup, Nana's here. |
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My field's are green Unbelievable after what I've seen. |
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So I'm here, and I'll update as soon as I take a ten hour nap. I did over 600 miles today, a record for me, for sure.