Tuesday, September 23, 2014

"... when it was wild." (Or: A Recent visit to the barren Bechler region of YNP)



"Of all these passers-though, the species that means the most to me, even more than geese and cranes, is the upland plover, the drab plump grassland bird that used to remind my gentle hunting uncle of the way things once had been, as it still reminds me.  It flies from the far northern prairies to the pampas of Argentina and then back again in the spring, a miracle of navigation and a tremendous journey for six or eight ounces of flesh and feathers and entrails and hollow bones, fueled with bug meat.  I see them sometimes in our pastures,standing still or dashing after prey in the grass, but mainly I know their presence through the mournful yet eager quivering whistles they cast down from the night sky in passing, and it always makes me think what the whistling must have been like when the American plains were virgin and their plover came through in millions."

     Our last pack trip of this summer season, was a 5-day, 4-night trip into the Bechler region of Yellowstone National Park.  I was quite looking forward to it as I had not been on a Park trip yet this year... and what better place to see wildlife and experience nature than YNP?  Touted for it's opportunities to view wildlife, catch wild trout, and generally immerse yourself in the past, it is the vacation destination for millions every year.  

"To grow up among tradition-minded people leads one often into backward yearnings and regrets, unprofitable feeling of which I was granted my share in youth - not having been born in time to get killed fighting Yankees, for one, or not having ridden up the cattle trails."

     Rising ridiculously early on Tuesday a.m., (3:30.. ugh), we packed up food boxes, caught & saddled 15 horses & mules, loaded up & headed out.  A 3.5 hour drive south, brought us to the entry, west of Ashton ID.  We unloaded the stock from the trailers & then got all our gear loaded up on them, the guests on the horses & started into the Park.  Six guests, all men (mostly retirement age or older except for the son of one of the guys), Tim, Jeff and me.. Yes, I was the only woman in a group of 9 people.
 

"But the only such regret that has strongly endured is to not have known the land when it was whole and sprawling and rich and fresh, and the plover that whet one's edge every spring and every fall."

Our first night was spent on Mountain Ash creek.  The Park actually requires that you sign up for your campsites ahead of time, and as stock users, we must use the sites assigned for horses.  It was a fairly nice location although the guests were disappointed in the fishing as they had very little luck.  And, Tim had forgotten the wire for the portable electric fence so we didn't have a good way to enclose the mares. (Info note here:  This method is actually a somewhat old-school way of containing stock.  The idea is that you have only one or two mares and the rest of the herd, especially the mules but the geldings as well, will bond to those mares.  So, as long as you have the mares, you have everyone else.  If you can't restrain the mares, you may well lose your stock if they decide to go home or whatever).  We tried using a rope corral and it worked for a bit till my mare, Jasmine, discovered that it was just rope.. not electric (her special gift is finding "holes" in pens.. whether it's opening gates, finding gates you've missed, etc.)  And, one of the new geldings in the herd decided to leave one morning and took most of the rest with him (everyone except those that were caught for that days ride) so Jeff & Tim had to race down the trail to catch them... nearly a mile down trail! 
We were, of course, hoping to see some wildlife - or at least some signs of such.  Alas, no live animals, no scat, no prints... nothing.  There were some old signs of bear activity in the camp, but nothing recent.

 In recent decades it has become customary - and right, I guess,and easy enough with hindsight - to damn the ancestral frame of mind that ravaged the world so fully and so soon.  What I myself seem to damn mainly, though, is just not having seen it. 

 On the third day, we moved camp from Mtn Ash Creek down closer the Beckler river.  It was a cold & blustery day with some snow flurries.  So, we were glad to get into camp & get set up.  That night was bitter cold (it was 26 degrees when we got up at 7am).  But, the next day was beautiful.  I stayed in camp that day while everyone else took a ride up the trail to view the many falls & enjoy some of the natural hot springs in the area.








 









See the rainbow?



Yes, it was that cold in the a.m., that the mist from the falls caused frost on the surrounding greenery
My day in camp consisted of meeting with the very young Park ranger who came to check our camp.  (Shout out to Eli here, nice young man).  We were his first ever camp review for the Park - we got a glowing report. :)  Then, gathering fire wood, preparing for dinner, cleaning myself up, kicking horse poop... all the fun stuff.
That night in camp was beautiful, and several of our guests took advantage to go fishing.  Jim, especially. was stylish!

The horses enjoying evening grazing
Dinner around the camp fire


 Without any virtuous hindsight, I would likely have helped in the ravaging as did even most of those who loved it best.  But God, to have viewed it entire, the soul and guts of what we had and gone forever now, except in books and such poignant remnants as small swift birds that journey to and from the distant Argentine and call at night in the sky." 

The fifth and final day, we packed up camp again & headed out to the trail head.  We'd had a great time with mostly great weather and amazing vistas.  But, in our final tally, STILL had not seen any wildlife.  We did spot one set of moose tracks, found one clam, and spotted one duck.  That's it.. in five full days of riding, fishing & camping in that area.  Thanks Park Service for that wolf reintroduction... now the only place to see any large animals are in their new "natural habitat" - the green lawn around the buildings in Mammoth & West Yellowstone, where they are safe(er) from the wolves.

The ride out:










Accidentally took this picture, but like it so much I kept it!



























Final thoughts on our trip... how wonderful that we had leaders, when it counted, who were visionary enough to put into place things as majestic, crazy, amazing and enduring as our National Parks.  How sad that we've allowed an un-ending series of knee-jerk decisions to heap consequences one upon the other until we are no longer able to see even a shadow of the greatness that once lay upon these mountains. 

I was reading a series of essays by Rick Bass while in camp, and came across this quote he used in his book. The above excerpts were taken from that quote, which he used to introduce his 3rd & final essay in the book.  The final two sentences resonated deeply with me.  Are we each honest with ourselves & can we admit that we would likely have participated in the ravaging, many times BECAUSE we loved it so much? Rather than the commonly put forth notion that it was ignorance, greed and self-satisfaction that caused the ruin?  All I can say, is to repeat John Graves' words:  "God to have viewed it entire, the soul and guts of what we had and gone forever....."

(Here is the excerpt in it's entirety)
"Of all these passers-though, the species that means the most to me, even more than geese and cranes, is the upland plover, the drab plump grassland bird that used to remind my gentle hunting uncle of the way things once had been, as it still reminds me.  It flies from the far northern prairies to the pampas of Argentina and then back again in the spring, a miracle of navigation and a tremendous journey for six or eight ounces of flesh and feathers and entrails and hollow bones, fueled with bug meat.  I see them sometimes in our pastures,standing still or dashing after prey in the grass, but mainly I know their presence through the mournful yet eager quivering whistles they cast down from the night sky in passing, and it always makes me think what the whistling must have been like when the American plains were virgin and their plover came through in millions.
To grow up among tradition-minded people leads one often into backward yearnings and regrets, unprofitable feeling of which I was granted my share in youth - not having been born in time to get killed fighting Yankees, for one, or not having ridden up the cattle trails.  But the only such regret that has strongly endured is to not have known the land when it was whole and sprawling and rich and fresh, and the plover that whet one's edge every spring and every fall.  In recent decades it has become customary - and right, I guess,and easy enough with hindsight - to damn the ancestral frame of mind that ravaged the world so fully and so soon.  What I myself seem to damn mainly, though, is just not having seen it.  Without any virtuous hindsight, I would likely have helped in the ravaging as did even most of those who loved it best.  But God, to have viewed it entire, the soul and guts of what we had and gone forever now, except in books and such poignant remnants as small swift birds that journey to and from the distant Argentine and call at night in the sky." 
- John Graves, Self-portrait with birds

Saturday, September 20, 2014

The Week Ben Left

Well, Bendigo left for Basic Training on Wednesday the 3rd.  But, the week before he left & the week after he was gone, we took the opportunity to spend lots of time with him and his grandparents.  It was a great time.

When Jim & Jan arrived on Monday the 25th, Jeff & I were in camp doing an overnight.  

Picture of Lone Peak as we drove over Jack Creek to start our overnighter

So, Bendigo picked them up at the airport late that night & they all got a motel room.  The next morning, Tuesday, Bendigo had to meet up with his sargeant to sign his ship papers. After that, they made their way to the ranch where Jim & Jan got settled into the guest cabin.  Jeff & I arrived home late that afternoon.  For the next several days we played tourist, visiting Virginia City, Ennis, the Madison River, etc.  Here's some of our fun:


One of the first nights, we headed down to the Madison River for a picnic dinner & so the guys could get in some fishing.



Ben putting his Fly Fishing 101 class to use


On Saturday, Jeff had to leave for a 4-day pack trip. 

Some pictures of the trip Jeff was on in Yellowstone National Park, at a camp on Slough Creek

So that left Bendigo and I to entertain Jim & Jan.  We had a fantastic time visiting Louis & Clark Caverns, going to church in Big Sky, going out to dinner, shopping in Ennis, checking out the fishing festival, playing Cribbage (I taught Jan the game and she beat ME) and just generally having fun.


One of the fish in Ennis where the "Population: Population 872 people, 11,000,000,000 trout"

lunch at the Pit Stop before Jeff left

Virginia City Pics (before Jeff left, obviously)



Jim's a huge J.W. fan!

Good pic, huh?  I staged it. :)


Is it just me, or does Jeff look the part for V.C.?

something was interesting

Bendigo "El Bandito"

3 Hombres, 3 Generations

Drinks at Wells Fargo Steakhouse before dinner... and no, I don't THINK Ben was in that much pain

Bendigo playing for his g.p.'s


A piece a the fishing festival.. all made out of old metal parts.. very cool

Here are some of the Louis & Clark Cavern pics... the ones I could tell which way was up.  It was a great time and Jeff & I hope to go back for the Christmas Torchlight Tour.

Quite a hike up ... not steep but it takes awhile


Fossils in the rocks on the way

Yay!  She made it all the way up!!

We were the last of our group to arrive, so obviously we made them wait a little longer while we took a pic!




a polished step.. pretty huh?


I forget what they called him.. grim reaper maybe?  But I see a Samurai




Loved this pic of the g.p.'s






The evening Jeff returned coincided with Bendigo's ship date.  That evening, Jeff met us at Olive Garden in Bozeman, where we had dinner. I then said my good-byes to Bendigo (easier to do that eve in the Olive Garden parking lot than at the airport the next a.m.!) and took Jeff's load of horses on home to Ennis to unload & unsaddle.  Jeff stayed & had dessert with them and then they took Ben to his hotel room, and then headed back to the ranch.  Early the next a.m., Ben's sargeant met him at the airport & escorted him for his flight.

We were able to take a few days off that week & spend a little more time with Jim & Jan.  We knew we had to work Sat & Sun & they were leaving Monday a.m.  So, the guys fished a day or two and we took a trip over to Big Sky to show them our new digs.
our bedroom (a separate little cabin from our main living quarters)


chandelier in our bedroom

our main living quarters "the great room"

more of the great room

one of the views out the windows

After visiting Big Sky, we went over to the Corral Bar & Steakhouse for lunch & then wandered down to the Gallatin River so the two guys could fish while Jan & I read.  This little fella came & visited me while I reading.


Well, that's a lot of what we did... very busy couple weeks, and it was tough to send Ben off... but at least we had some distractions the rest of that week. :)