LAKE CARLOS, MINNESOTA

On my way to my next campground, I nearly had a catastrophe. I have a bad habit of taking pictures out the car windows as I drive: this time, a sudden gust of wind tore the phone out of my hand and sent it tumbling to the road. To make matters worse, there was a car on the side of the road just turning around. I pulled the car and camper over as fast as I could and sprinted back down the road, yelling “Don’t run over my phone!”. Goodness knows what the occupants of that car thought as they saw a wild-eyed woman racing after them, but they left in a hurry. Miraculously, I found my phone undamaged except for a scuffed case. 

I arrived at Lake Carlos State Park in Minnesota without further incident. Shaded, secluded, my site has electricity but no water, but water taps are nearby. The route that Apple Maps sent me on was lovely; quiet roads with wide shoulders through the Minnesota farming/lake country. I forwarded it to Russ as an alternate. He should catch up with me tomorrow.

Restless dogs woke me at dawn the next morning. Once I’d let them out and fed them, I was awake enough to check out some of the trails and do some birding. Of course, I forgot my phone, so I can only write of the beauty of a blood-orange red sun rising above a misty slough. We wandered down to the big lake, curved up around Hidden Lake (damn right it’s hidden—I couldn’t even see the lake over the cattails), and then headed back along the Maple-Basswood trail. Just as the sun made it over the trees, I came to an open area alive with birds busily feeding. More familiar birds greet me now—black-capped chickadees, hairy woodpeckers, a red-breasted nuthatch, clusters of cedar waxwings. Then—ooh! A black and white warbler! A catbird burst out of a hedge covered with rose hips. Empid flycatchers (Least? Willow? Alder? God only knows). A yellow warbler, so bright against the green of summer, now nearly camouflaged against yellow aspen leaves. I stood, binoculars to my eyes, while Scooby furiously tried to pull me back to camp. I haven’t been this excited since I saw nighthawks in Jordan, MT. On the trail, one more sighting—a female wood duck on a little pond. Back at camp, the boys drank their water bowl dry, and I finally had my breakfast. 

After breakfast, I got another birding surprise, when an ovenbird strolled through the campsite. Normally, these ground-feeding warblers are hard to spot (but not to hear) as they are shy and well-camouflaged in the leaf litter. This one was calmly walking not 12 feet from me, which gave me a good look at his bold dark brown and white streaked breast and rufous crown, bordered in dark brown stripes. 

SAILING THE SEA OF GRASS TO CLAUSEN SPRINGS

I stayed behind in Bismarck after Russ left, to pick up a shipment of bike tires at a local bike shop. Even though I’d booked an extra day at Fort Abraham Lincoln, I decided to leave a day early, hoping that would help me find an open spot at one of the campgrounds near Kathryn, North Dakota—three days ride from Bismarck for Russ. I was worried about getting a space for the Labor Day weekend.

I wasn’t at my best the day I left—Scooby kept me up all night before, with diarrhea and vomiting. Then, about 8:30, he woke me again, this time because he was having a seizure. (Not really a seizure, although it looks like one, as he flops about, unable to get his balance. They call it Old Dog Vestibular Syndrome, and it’s actually more like a violent attack of vertigo.) There was nothing I could do but hold him until it passed.

So it was 10:30 before I even got breakfast, and plans to take a nice shower got cancelled. I got on the road, picked up Russ’s tires and headed out. At a gas stop, I grabbed two bottles of Dr. Pepper, in case I encountered Russ on the road, and got a BLT for me.

If North Dakota is part of “the great sea of grass,” then I was sailing on a calm day. The North Dakota hills roll along in long, low waves. Russ described it as “riding forever toward the horizon.” The monotony was significantly lifted by the sudden appearance of lots of ponds covered with waterfowl. Most didn’t have any pullover areas, but one that I managed to stop at had Coots (hundreds of Coots!), Ruddy Ducks, Black Ducks and Mallards, Gannets, and even a Northern Shoveler or two. Not sure where all this water came from. (Later, I found out this is the “Prairie Potholes” region, where low-lying areas collect rainwater and snowmelt into thousands of small ponds.)

Just outside of Gackle (duck hunting Mecca of North America) I met Russ, and pulled over to hand him a cold Dr. Pepper, which he was thrilled to get. I can imagine it was a welcome sight, as he’d been riding all day in the ‘90s and full sun. After making sure he had enough water, I left him to finish the ride into Gackle, where he had a Warm Showers host waiting. 

I was late getting to Clausen Springs Recreational Area, and couldn’t find a camp host or information area, so I spent some time fruitlessly searching for an open campsite until I found an amiable couple who helped to point me in the right direction. They even headed out on their ATV to help me scope out sites. The only places with electric hookup we could find were pretty squished, not to mention in full sun. I settled instead for a large, private, grassy campsite, fully shaded, above the lake. 

My campsite is huge!

I actually double-checked to make sure I hadn’t taken a group site by mistake. The only drawback is the oak trees and the acorns—you take cover when a breeze comes through. Most of the campsites are well spread out (with the exception of the electric hookup sites) and shaded, there is a small, pretty lake, with a two-mile hiking trail around it, and there are delicious wild plums!

As in New England, the nights here are getting cooler, even though the days can still be in the 80s or above. Most mornings find us in our sweatshirts.

Saturday, September 3 was my birthday, and Russ spared no expense in taking me to the finest eatery around. 

As always, town residents were interested in hearing about our trip, and we learned the area’s history.

I finally figured out how to work the water stanchions here (after three days) and refilled my water jugs, and Russ got one day of total relaxation before heading out again on Monday. I have one more day of North Dakota before heading to Minnesota and Lake Carlos.

FORT ABRAHAM LINCOLN STATE PARK

Just outside of Bismarck, North Dakota, lies the reconstructed Fort Abraham Lincoln cavalry post, now a really nice state park. Lying at the confluence of the Heart and Missouri Rivers, the park has lots to see and do—a lovely riverside view, miles of hiking trails around the 1873 cavalry post and the 1872 infantry post, and a reconstructed Mandan Indian village.

The infantry post was created to protect surveyors and later workers from Indian attacks during construction of the Union Pacific Railroad. Unfortunately, infantry were of little use against the mounted and well-armed native tribes. So a cavalry post was quickly added downhill from the infantry post, and both posts operated together during the 1870s and 1880s. They were abandoned early in the 1890s, after the railroad was completed and the danger of native uprisings had been eliminated (generally, by eliminating the natives).

Fort Abraham Lincoln is best known as the post from which George Armstrong Custer led his 7th Cavalry to the ill-fated Battle of Little Big Horn. Today, a few of the buildings (barracks, stables, grainary, and Custer’s home) have been rebuilt as they would have appeared in 1875, when Custer was base commander. You can visit the buildings, and take a guided tour of Custer’s home. The tour guide kept mentioning all the materials that were ‘repurposed’ from the buildings after the Army abandoned the post. According to the guides, a number of older homes in Bismarck and nearby Mandan were built with materials from the barracks and officers’ homes. (They are still looking for the custom-built bannister that Custer had installed so that he could slide down the bannister and out the front door of his house, but no one has fessed up.)

Equally interesting was the reconstructed Mandan village. The Mandan culture wasn’t one I was familiar with—they were very successful river bottom farmers, and lived in large villages of well insulated, earth covered mound structures. They raised the ‘Three Sisters’ crops of corn, beans, and squash, and traded excess crops within a wide network of other tribes. They also hunted buffalo and other game. Unfortunately, their story is a common one among native tribes—first decimated by smallpox in the 1790s, they were nearly exterminated when the paddle wheel riverboats came up the Missouri, bringing Norway rats. The rats, who could burrow deeply into the soil as the local mice did not, destroyed their underground caches of food. Many starved to death. Finally, of course, they were driven from the river bottomlands into reservations on the dry prairies, where they could not farm as they had.

Russ caught up to me after I’d been there a couple of days, so I saw some of the sights before he came, but I saved the best for last, and we spent a hot but very interesting day touring the forts, climbing up the restored blockhouse fortifications at the infantry post, visiting Custer’s home and the park museum in the CCC-built visitors center, and strolling the Mandan village. They even have very good coffee and a nice bookshop in the old commissary building.

All in all, a highly recommended visit!

MAKOSHIKA STATE PARK

Just outside of Glendive, on the eastern edge of Montana, lies Makoshika State Park, and i am here to tell you, if nothing else, this was the most spectacular view from a campsite of the whole trip!

But there was a LOT else to Makoshika—amazing badlands formations and an awesome trail network. Before I decided on the picture I did, I nearly bought anither watercolor by Deb Schmit of Makoshika, and I was determined to see what she saw. Words can not do this place justice, so I will let the pictures speak for themselves.

Russ and I took two short hikes, one to see the natural bridge, and then Moe and I headed out on a longer trail that snaked through the heart of the park back to our campsite, while Russ took the car and Scooby back. We both nearly died in the heat, and Russ had to come pick me up in the car only half a mile from camp because I could no longer walk, but it was TOTALLY WORTH IT.

JORDAN, MT AND HELL CREEK AGAIN

Russ found the RV park I was camped in about 4 pm. He’d originally estimated arriving at 1 or 2, but as clouds rolled overhead and the wind picked up, he had to revise that optimistic estimate. He showered and stowed his bike, then we headed out to one of the two bar/restaurants in town for dinner.

The next day, I took him out to Hell Creek, so that he could see the fantastic rock formations. He was suitably impressed, and probably took much better pictures than I did (they really have improved the iPhone cameras since my iPhone 6). Check his blog.

We took our time going out and back, partly because i had to keep stopping to allow for pictures, and partly because Russ complained that the washboard road was ”rattling his brain.” It was nearly one o’clock by the time we got back to town, so I suggested checking out the little dinosaur museum in town. (“Every little town in Montana has a dinosaur museum,” the ranger at Hell Creek told me.)

What we didn’t know was that we would be greeted by, and given a tour by, the woman who found the first nearly complete Tyrannosaurus rex skeleton—Kathy Wankel. “Let me show you the T. rex I found,” she said, and led us to a display replica of the scapula, arm, and digits of a T. rex—the bones she and her husband Tom unearthed just outside of Jordan in 1988. Her discovery led to the excavation of an 85% complete skeleton, the Wankel T. rex, currently on loan to the Smithsonian Museum of Natural History.

There were lots of other bones, fossil imprints, and models of dinosaur skeletons—including a life-size Triceratops—but it also housed a museum of the history of Garfield County, Montana, with a replica schoolroom, collections of World War I and II memorabilia, local ranch brand designs (Tom Wankel told us that Montana is the only state that still uses branding to mark herds), and vignettes of everyday life in the early 1900s, all carefully labeled with ”donated by . …” They even had the original two-cell jailhouse and a collection of early farm implements, including a ”sod-buster” plow. Russ and Tom had fun swapping farm stories inspired by some of the items Russ spotted.

But a storm was brewing, and as thunder rumbled across the sky, we took our leave and headed back to cover Russ’s bike and close up the camper before the rain.

WALKING ON OLD BONES

Early in the day, I gathered up water, snacks (for me and the doggies) and binoculars, and headed up the Jeep road, into the gashed and weathered hills above Fort Peck Lake. Wary of snakes, I sternly commanded the dogs to stay behind me and, surprisingly, they obeyed. As we walked, swarms of grasshoppers exploded like popcorn around my feet. Most make no sound, but there are larger ones, with inner wings of bright yellow or red, that make a harsh clacking as they fly. On either side, sagebrush, coarse grasses, fatbush, juniper, and prickly pear speckled the ground, and stunted evergreens clung impossibly to the hillsides.

A young man at camp told me that, as a boy growing up in Ohio, he dreamed of seeing Hell Creek, where the first T. rex skeleton was found, and where important discoveries of Triceratops and other fossils were made. Even today, new fossils are found as bones literally appear out of eroded hillsides, and I was eager to discover the area for myself.

We walked on, the heat oppressive even in the early morning, and soon the dogs were panting. I didn’t need encouragement to stop frequently, to take in the amazing views. These badlands, I’m told, run all along the Missouri River, and in many other areas where water has carved deep, twisting canyons through the soft sandstone. Wherever harder rock inclusions exist, they form fantastic sculptures. 

We reached the sign telling us of the importance of these fossil beds, and warning us not to disturb the fossils. As we trudged on, now on a single track trail, I looked at the crumbling hillsides on either side.

They were littered with broken rocks, pieces of larger shapes now crushed by the elements. As I sat to water and feed the dogs and myself, I looked down and spotted a thin sliver of rock with the faint outline of a leaf impressed on it. 

That’s when I knew I was very likely walking on the bones of ancient beings. I sat for a while, contemplating the very different planet on which they lived and died. Then we walked—carefully—back down to camp. 

GREAT FALLS TO JORDAN, MT

Russ was very concerned about the next few days—it promised to be hot, and there are very few towns with services along the route—in some cases, he would have nearly 70 miles between places to stay. He was panicky about the cabin he’d reserved in Stanford, the next town, so I promised to stop on my way through and confirm. (No one was there, so I left a threatening note.)

I myself had a 5 hour drive to Jordan and Hell Creek Campground, on Fort Peck Lake. While most of central Montana is dry, flat, and featureless, 

not all of it is. I passed three mountain ranges: the Little Belt, the Great Snowy, and the Judith. Along the way, we also passed mesas (buttes? I’m never sure) that abruptly rose above the flat plains. 

I finally reached Jordan, and turned north onto the twisting, rutted, 25-mile gravel road that leads to Hell Creek Campground. That’s when the landscape suddenly got freaky.

I would have taken more pictures, but I was trying to keep the car and camper from sliding off the road. Late in the day, I made it to the campground, which is on the shores of Fort Peck Lake.

More exploring tomorrow. 

GREAT FALLS ADVENTURES

I found out from a neighbor at the KOA that there was a western art show at the Montana Expo Grounds in Great Falls. I decided that would make a nice break in the hot weather, so on Friday, off I went, with the dogs safely stowed away in the air-conditioned camper. 

Now, western art isn’t really my thing (probably because I’ve never been out west), but there was a lot of very impressive stuff there. The show benefits the CM Russell Museum, with its collections of western art (Charles M Russell and Frederic Remington are considered the two great western artists). Interesting, but still not my thing, until I came to the booth of Deb Schmit. Not only was her work distinctly different from everyone else’s, we had a good time chatting. One small watercolor caught my eye, but I would have to make some financial transfers to purchase it, so I promised to return the next day with Russ, who would hopefully agree with my choice.

I was about to head back to the car when I learned that there were TWO MORE BUILDINGS of art, so…

Along the midway, I came across a group of vintage campers, all owned by members of a women’s fly-fishing club called Sisters on the Fly. They were open for viewing, so in I went, and they were adorable! I didn’t get pictures of all of them (one was completely decorated in a Wonder Woman theme), but I chatted with the owners, and nearly forgot about the rest of the show.

The heat finally drove me back inside, though, and that’s when I met Jennifer Solberg, with whom I shared an immediate connection. And her jewelry, journals, and kaleidoscopes were beautiful! I had to have one of her journal necklaces—the perfect place to store some of the most important things I’ve learned in life and on this trip.

She offered to bring me extra leather ties the next day, and, since I’d be returning with Russ anyway, I promised to see her again. We parted with hugs. An instant friend!

Russ had just arrived when I finally returned, and was thrilled to find out that they’d just restocked their ice cream at the camp store. (You can guess where we went next.) The next day, I finally convinced him to come to the show with me, by promising that I wouldn’t be long. In fact, Russ and Jennifer’s husband Troy hit it off almost as well as Jennifer and I had, as he peppered Russ with questions about his trip. I showed Jennifer the messages I’d already inscribed in my journal, as we compared life stories and hard-won wisdom. We stayed with them for almost an hour before I pulled Russ away to confirm my choice at Deb Schmit’s booth. Russ immediately chose the same painting I did, enjoyed talking to Deb, and I happily walked off with a great memento of our trip. (BTW, he also found the vintage campers fascinating, and spent quite a while talking to the owner of one of them. For a guy who doesn’t want to go to craft shows, he can be surprisingly hard to dislodge.)

Russ wanted to see the Lewis and Clark Museum next to the state park I’d visited earlier, so off we went. It was an immersive journey through their expedition, from planning to finish, and we only left when they forced us out at closing. We returned to camp for more ice cream and a good night’s sleep before both of us headed out the next morning. 

GREAT FALLS, MT

Tues., August 18 I drove through sweltering temps to the KOA campground in Great Falls. I decided a little pampering was appropriate (and a long shower was absolutely necessary). The entrance to the campground, beside a Walmart and through an industrial area, wasn’t promising, but the campground itself is well shaded and quiet, except for the occasional helicopter flyovers from the nearby Malmstrom Air Force Base..

After a hot shower, dinner, and a good night’s sleep, I was ready to explore the area. Giant Springs State Park has miles of walking paths and trails along the Missouri River and a Lewis and Clark Trail Interpretive Center. The Great Falls of the Missouri is a short drive away (where Great Falls got its name).The boys and I set out.

The Giant Springs are a shady, cool retreat right next to the river.

After a stroll along the river to look at all the watefowl, we drove downriver to Ryan Dam and the Great Falls. Unfortunately. pets aren’t allowed on Ryan Island, where you get the best view of the dam and falls, so I snapped a few quick photos and returned to the car before Moe and Scooby expired in the heat

GREAT FALLS KOA

We reluctantly left Duck Lake on Tuesday. Russ and Matt had struck up a friendship, and I enjoyed talking with Matt, his wife Sharon, and their grandson Justin, who became a regular visitor to our campsite to play with the dogs. Matt even loaned me a copy of a book of Blackfeet tales of Glacier and the surrounding territory (all part of the Blackfeet Reservation). I felt they deserved something for all their kindness and friendship, so on leaving, I presented Justin with O Bear, the stuffed toy black bear that I had carried with me the whole trip, asking him to take good care of him, and to see that he got to visit Yellowstone again some day.

Now, KOA campgrounds are not my favorites, but heading east across Montana, the campsites are few and far between. And after ??? days where my only shower was a dip in Duck Lake, I was ready for all the amenities. Great Falls KOA is actually pretty nice: shaded, quiet, just outside of town and convenient to shopping.

I was grateful for all of the above (especially the showers) after a long, hot day of driving through the arid Montana grazing lands.

Then i came across these guys!

This isn’t too bad:

I settled in, then got food for myself. I’ll do a bigger shopping trip when Russ gets here on Thursday. In the meantime, I think I’ll check out Great Springs State Park on the other side of town, and the falls that gave Great Falls its name.