Vol. XVIII Issue 7 August 2005 James McGill, Editor / Cell HOT NEW TRAIL RUTS: ONE BENEFIT OF WILDFIRES

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Vol. XVIII Issue 7 August 2005 James McGill, Editor jwmcgill@pobox.com 208 467 4853/ Cell 250 6045 HOT NEW TRAIL RUTS: ONE BENEFIT OF WILDFIRES Editor Anyone with good sense has an aversion to out-of-control fires, anywhere! But some years ago when fire burned a large amount of old-growth timber and brush in Yellowstone Park some people almost lost control of good sense and got personally and emotionally involved! When all was over and composures were back under control it was discovered, as some wiser people had contended during the fires, fire was one of the best things that could have happened for the overall good of the land. No one had pleasure in the loss of some animal life, but most people finally arrived at the truth that fire has ever been a part of the cycling of time and weather, the natural control of some geographic situations and extremely beneficial. In most instances rutnuts could also claim that fire is very good for historic trail preservation! During the Reno, NV, OCTA Convention many people from across the country had the pleasure of seeing, hiking and experiencing some of the California Trail that had been lost or hidden for a long time. A forest fire had cleared a ridge upon which emigrants had passed many years ago, and trail enthusiasts were able to mark the discernable trail that probably would never have been discovered otherwise! Others with little interest in historic trails and preservation may argue that the loss of timber and game habitat was not worth the cost, but sometimes providence allows some exclusive benefits even for rut-nuts. Yes, there are other benefits also! A range fire in early summer, 2005, at Glenns Ferry, ID, did a big favor for the beginning of the South Alternate Trail, going west from the point along the south side of the Snake River. When Wally Meyer had originally marked that route as a BLM employee, some 15 years ago, he had marked parts of the main route close to the river where this later fire occurred. In 2003, when some I-OCTA members replaced markers and remarked that route great care was taken to discover parts of a variant some distance back from the river. All parts were not found in the dense foliage. A question remained even then about the main route. Only about a quarter mile from where the trail dropped down a steep grade to the river s edge, as the trail began to turn from NW around a river bend and land extension on the bank, it disappeared. About 150 yards to the west the trail reappeared. In both places it was obvious that part of the river bank had fallen into the river. The question arose whether this had occurred after emigrant travel ceased! The fire answered that question! McGill UPPER RIDGE ROUTE NEWLY EXPOSED TRAIL RUTS During the marking in 2003, it was evident that next to the area where the trail had fallen into the river was an extremely rocky and steep side-bank, with no sign of a variant that could be found that would have connected the ruts ends (top photo next page). The fire had exposed part of a ramp down the steep bank going to the west end of the original ruts that remaine--a connector. New ruts

SATTELITE PHOTO OF THE EASTERN END OF REMAINING SOUTH ALTERNATE A LATER FIRE CLEARED THE AREA were made visible from the SE, a junction connecting the upper and lower routes. (Satellite photo.) The bank had probably washed away sometime late during the great migration because the ramp and connector from the SE had quite shallow ruts compared to the main trail! Some carsonite markers were burned to a crispy greyblack bacon strip! The fire ruined from 6-7 older and Bill Wilson, Jane and Gill Wiley, and this Editor and wife, Patti, started the day across some ruts north of Bennett Mt. Rd., not having been visited for many years. The first hike of almost one mile found a few old markers in place, but most needing new decals. They stretch from Bennett Mt. Rd., NW toward Alkali Cr., contain Class #1 ruts, and are easily followed. From a power line road that intersects the trail where some members drove the vehicles, the trail was driven upon for a short distance before the ruts began a parallel run. These were very deep swales going mostly down-hill, northerly to Alkali Creek. McGill rather new carsonites that must be replaced, and several only singed and discolored. A few needed only new decals. But with the exception of a few short sections where the trail has disappeared, now all the remaining ruts can be marked and locations mapped accurately! MEANWHILE, TRAIL MARKING.... The regularly scheduled field trip to complete some more marking of the Oregon Trail, NW of Glenns Ferry, on the Alkali Creek sections of ruts, fell on the nicest day! One day between several hot days of mostly clouds and cooler temperatures allowed some comfort during the trail marking on July 9, 2005. Wally Meyer, leader, WIDE-WORN CROSSING AT ALKALI CREEK HALF WAY Near Alkali Creek a connector to the North Alternate Trail almost 4 miles to the NE, and connecting at Blair Trail Reservoir allowed cross trafficking. In some places on to the NW the Alternate was better trail than the Oregon Trail, and some trains may have chosen to follow that part of the younger route. A hike up the O. T. ruts from the northern side of Alkali

Creek allowed the checking and marking of the trail and some short variants over a low ridge. And then the hike back down, totaling another mile or more before lunch, made the reasonable weather very much appreciated! his wife have belonged to the Chapter for about 2 years, having gotten acquainted with this Editor during one of our trail presentations to a college class, at Hagerman. Marley and Gary Shurtleff of Renton, WA, who have maintained a membership with the Idaho Chapter, drove to Idaho to be involved. They were both raised in the Weiser and Payette areas. They also brought along Gerri Coombs of Boise, her 12 year old daughter, Maille, and 10 year old son, Connor. Two years ago the Coombs older son worked with I-OCTA, and completed a scout project in marking some of the South Alternate trail in Owyhee County. McGill AN OLD MARKER, A MUCH OLDER WIDE SWALE, AND A NEW TRAIL DECAL DOWN TOWARD WALKER ROAD Backtracking out to the south the touring/marking crew drove around to near the south end of Walker Road and began marking back the opposite way from where the private land across that road intersects that trail. There several years ago the public had started an open trash dump along the trail. Wally Meyer was instrumental in getting the BLM fire crews to clean that area, and the ruts have returned to nearly Class 1 trail! Unfortunately there still remains close by a little scattered trash and a couple of old refrigerators! This area, with a branching of the trail on the southern end, required mostly new markers. Finishing the day four members hiked southeasterly on the southern branch of the trail, away from Walker road and to the area that had been reached across Alkali Creek, and then turned back northwesterly on the second branch, both branches terminating at the private property fence. This hike was about 1.5 miles on, first, some good ruts and then some great, deep ruts on the second branch. Only two short sections of the Oregon Trail remain to be remarked between Glenns Ferry and Mountain Home. GOODALE NORTH VARIANT TRIP The regular scheduled field trip to share the trail on the Willow Creek and Crane Creek vatiant of the Goodale Cutoff north of Emmett was on Saturday, July 30, 2005. Six I-OCTA members shared the experience with your Preservation Officer. Because of the high grasses and dry conditions the only route that was available to travel without high fire dangers was the central route of the Boise Goodale trail system going north of Emmett. The improved roads that run parallel with much of the trail made that drive and some short hikes possible. All of those that enjoyed the trip were members that rarely get to go along on the Idaho outings. The very first timer was Jim Vance of the Boise Valley. He and GARY (R. to L.), MAILLE, GERRI, & MARLEY ON A TRAIL HIKE UP FROM HAWE CR. CONNOR BEHIND MOTHER The day was very warm, but air conditioned vehicles and a good breeze when participants got out at times to hike and to look at the ruts made the day pleasant. Even a nice sized rattlesnake crossing the road at Sucker Creek, which everyone got out to see, raised more curiosity than temperatures or fear! A second medium length hike on the trail across Little Willow Flat, 10 miles south of Crane Creek Reservoir, involved some good ruts that are, in places, ingrown with sage brush, but still very visible across the flat. When the Shurtleff vehicle eventually turned back toward Boise, Jim Vance was taken on north to an area where a present road follows the ruts for about a mile NNE, before turning NW across an unexplored valley. This is one of the areas that was mentioned in the reports of the Cambridge trip in May, when this variant was followed in part back to the south from the Salubria site. A round-trip hike of a couple of miles across a tallgrassy area and up the entrance to the unexplored valley failed to locate the connection of that part of the trail in an area where obvious erosion has change geography. Later, during a trip to terraserver.microsoft.com on the internet, to maps and photos of that valley, the satellite photos did portray the remaining trail beyond our hiked area. The trail runs for about 4 miles exactly where the old land plats indicate the road ran in the 1800s, before disappearing in the farmland along Crane Creek.

Part of the trail is being accessed to reach a present day stock pond from the NW. Even with a portion of the ruts now gone, the line of the trail is exact, and where it was expected to be found! Private land permission would be needed before marking any of this segment of Goodale North. The trail has gaps where ruts have disappeared. Rock State Park, this will/could be a notable example for the Secretary's/Director's "4 Cs" being successfully implemented. This is the beginning of the "end" of a five-year plus course of negotiations and acquisition strategy and is proudly the product of a number of critical contributions from our valuable partners. It also represents one of, if not THE, highest percentage overappraisal payments ever authorized by the Washington Office for a property not being the subject of a condemnation action. Clearly, this property has significant national interest values because of this one-of-a-kind cultural resource (the inscription rocks) in a national park. Hope this is good news to you all and that it'll be a fitting prelude for a good weekend! Rick RUT TRACES EVIDENT BEGINING FOUR-MILE SEGMENT WHICH WILL BE EXPLORED IN THE FALL OR SPRING Though Tim Goodale and his train did not travel this variant in 1862, probably because of the excessive road building that would have been required, it immediately replaced the longer route segment to Middle Weiser River that Goodale followed down the Payette River, north through Payette, NE to the Mann Creek valley, and then over Midvale Hill. The March 1863 road report of W. P. Norton, who drove into the Boise Basin, indicated that early wagons were able to travel the Crane Creek route by then. Miners and stagers evidently had done the work that was necessary to open the route to wagons! The information for trail enthusiasts, emigrant history buffs and good old rut-nuts, is that the variant became the primary emigrants and miners route (in both directions) for about 30 years. The great ruts that still remain do mark the route of the best preserved part of the Goodale North along any section north of Emmett. IT S A GOOD DAY! Rick Wagner, NPS I am very pleased to report to you that all acquisition actions, including deed recordation and payment disbursements, have now been successfully completed for the NPS acquisition of the icon CIRO property, Register Rock. MUCH appreciation has to be extended to the IDP&R, the Oregon-California Trail Assn., and The Conservation Fund for coming to the "rescue" with contributions and additional acquisition commitments that supplemented our acquisition funding and overall strategy for this very significant acquisition. When the second round of acquisition occurs for this landowner's property outside the Reserve near the Castle Meet the 2005 convention logo! Utah Crossroads Chapter, your convention host, gets its name from the many emigrant trails that cross the state, a number of them passing through, meeting or ending in Salt Lake City. Our logo calls attention to the roads entering from the East-a branch of the California Trail (including the Hastings Cutoff) and Mormon Pioneer Trail, the Southern Route heading for the San Bernardino country in the Los Angeles Basin, the Hastings Cutoff passing west from Salt Lake across the Great Salt Desert, and north of the city Hensley's Salt Lake Cutoff of the California Trail-a route pioneered by returning Mormon Battalion members but soon used by 25,000 Gold Rushers and a connection to the Oregon Trail. The Old Spanish Trail traversed Utah south of Salt Lake. Remnants of most of these roads can be found in the city and some of the old campsites and routes are just yards from the convention hotel. You'll see lots of the logo during the convention and when you do we hope you'll remember all the trail activity in these parts 150 years ago. Utah is truly a trails crossroads. ---The Organizing Committee Contact Vern-- vergor@wasatchnet.net CONVENTION------Week of August 15-20

A WEEK WITH THE EMIGRANTS: HOT, THIRSTY AND TIRED (From NW-OCTS news, I-OCTA Members invited) Northwest Chapter OCTA members will walk in the footprints of the emigrants, at the same time of year as the emigrants, and surely experience the same emigrant hardships, during our trail marking and mapping outing this August. Starting Tuesday morning, August 23 rd, and finishing on the following Tuesday evening, August 30 th, for eight days, we will travel over three segments of the Oregon Trail, placing Carsonite markers and installing heavy cement posts. The entire trail needs to be GPS mapped and have its features described..... The first trail segment covers five miles on each side of Keeney Pass south of Vale, Oregon. This 10-mile section contains a BLM Interpretative Kiosk and has been marked with Carsonite markers and, many years ago, BLM cement posts. We have one repaired cement post to install, several Carsonite markers to place, and some to reposition. There are many dual and triple parallel ruts in this section. The paved road is close to the trail the entire ten miles. The second trail segment runs from several miles north of Vale to Birch Creek near Farewell Bend on the Snake River. This 20-mile-plus section has some excellent trail ruts, but much of the trail is under the two-track dirt road. We will be installing a number of BLM repaired cement posts along the route, as well as placing Carsonite markers. There are a several alkali springs along the route with bad water for animals and emigrants. Emigrants did their best to make the trip from the Malheur River to Birch Creek in one effort, and many traveled at night to escape the heat of the day. We are fortunate that the dirt road is close to the trail all the way. Our modern wagons will have air conditioning and carry lot of cool fresh water for the "emigrants" that need a break! During the several days it will take to complete this second segment, a special team will be needed to repair and construct a fence walk-through at the Van Ornum gravesite just north of Farewell Bend on old highway 30. This site was interpreted by the Idaho Chapter a couple of years ago. The winter weather and range cattle have not been kind to the opening in the fence. The third segment to be mapped and marked is a fourmile, 2,000 foot climb, up Sisley Creek, across the divide, and down 1,700 feet in three miles to Swayze Creek. This is the route around Gold Hill that the emigrants took to avoid the impassable Burnt River Canyon. The trail has three or four Carsonites at the top of the pass, where the ruts are pretty obvious. The route up to the pass is the area where metal detectors may be used to see if artifacts can be found to verify the trail route. Both private property owners have given their permission to mark the trail over their lands. The graveled road is close, but the hike will be tough... - - - - - - Information: Gail Carbiener mcgccarb@cmc.net 541-593-2190 - - - - - - - Patti and this Editor will be with the group for the first three days of the trip, 208 250 6045, and staying at the Bates (Psycho) Motel in Vale. 541-473-3234 THE GOODALE NORTH: Trail Routes Boise to Brownlee Ferry James McGill Now available on CD, with 10 added reports-- colored-photos, 8-12 pages each--word files--of the trail/variants! Reports were written on various dates after traveling the routes, but are listed on the CD with the progress from Boise to the Ferry. The last three reports cover the variant north of Emmett, ID. Under the title above is a documented research paper, 65 pages, on the history of the route Tim Goodale followed across Idaho in 1862 specifically the portion of the Goodale Cutoff NW of Boise to Brownlee Ferry. The documentation also covers one variant route, started in 1863, following along south of the Payette River. (The Goodale Train had followed the north side, bluff route.) Soon many emigrants going on to Oregon followed both of these routes--across the Snake River on Olds Ferry. A second earlier variant, which began as a pack trail in 1862, north of Emmett and on to the Middle Weiser River, was also soon the route of emigrant wagons, and for the next 30 years. A few emigrants and many miners went on to Oregon across the Brownlee Ferry, and many came back to the Boise Basin gold discoveries. This variant replaced part of Goodale s original route, from north of Payette to Cambridge, over the terrible road on Midvale Hill. CD s are available from this editor for $5.00, which included all of the packaging and shipping costs. James McGill 305 Melba Dr. Nampa, ID 83686 The Paper, without the photo reports, can also be accessed at idahogenealogy.com/goodale/index.htm

RENEW I-OCTA MEMBERSHIP---NOW Does the blue date on your label still read Apr. 2005? Last issue TD unless renewed! Please send your $10 (for individuals) to Bill Wilson, Treasurer, 5204 Waterwheel Drive, Boise, ID 83703-3130. Trail Dust subscribers, please send your $10, your name, address, phone number, & email to Bill! REMEMBER THE ABOVE NOTE LAST MONTH? SOME OF YOU MAY HAVE DECID- ED TO END THIS PUBLICATION, AND WE RESEPECT THAT CHOICE. OTHERS WILL BE SURPRISED THAT YOUR LABLE STILL SAYS APRIL 2005! THIS IS YOUR LAST CHANCE TO LOOK DOWN AT THE LABEL NOW!! SOME EXPIRED ADDRESSES WERE MOVED TO EMAIL THIS TIME SO THAT EVERYONE HAS ONE MORE OPPORTUNITY TO GET RENEWED! IF YOU CHOOSE TO RENEW AND ASK, WE WILL PUT YOU BACK ON THE SNAIL MAIL LIST. WE SINCERELY HOPE THAT THIS PAPER IS WORTH YOUR $10, BUT AS A MEMBER THERE ARE MANY OTHER BENEFITS ALSO. MEMBERS, DO PLEASE RENEW NOW! WE APPRECIATE YOU! WE REALIZE THAT SOME MAY NOT, WITHIN THEIR OWN SITUATIONS, BE ABLE TO PARTICIPATE IN MEMBER ACTIVITIES. THIS EDITOR IS MAKING AN OFFER FOR THOSE WHO STILL WANT THE PAPER AS A SUBSCRIPTION. THROUGH SEPTEMBER 2005, ALL SUBSCRIB- ERS WHO WILL SEND AT LEAST $7 TO BILL WILSON, AND INDICATE, SUBSCRIPTION, THE EDITOR WILL PAY THE EXTRA $3 INTO THE TREASURY TO KEEP THE PAPERS COMING. EACH PAPER COSTS ABOUT 60 CENTS TO PRODUCE IN COLOR, AND 37 CENTS TO MAIL, NOT COUNTING ANY LABOR, EQUIPMENT COSTS, OR OTHER. WE MAIL FROM 9-11 TIMES EACH YEAR! THIS IS THE BEST BARGAIN YOU CAN GET THESE DAYS, AND YOU CAN ALSO HAVE YOUR TRAIL RELATED STORIES PRINTED AND SHARED WITH OTHERS FOR NOTHING! DISCOVERY OF THE CHAMPAGNE STAGE STATION and BIG BUTTE STAGE STATION PIONEERS are still available from this Editor, now at cost plus shipping! $20 per set!! Sept. 10-11 Hudspeth Cutoff Marking. Jim McGill. Meet at Lava Hot Springs. (Email or call for details) Sept. 17 Fall Board Meeting 10 AM Arco location TBA James McGill, Editor Idaho Chapter of OCTA 305 Melba Drive Nampa, Idaho 83686