Day 24 05/25/18
Our last day in Great Falls and we are compelled to see where the name came from. Back in the car and out to the middle of nowhere to see one of the friggin falls. Seems the Louis and Clark expedition found this falls. However in the early 1900's the city fathers thought it would be a great idea to build a dam and make electricity. Here is a pic of their efforts.
From here we went to the First Peoples Buffalo jump. This remarkable geologic area has been used for thousands of years by local tribes to drive buffalo up and over the hills to kill them for food and their hides. One of the interesting facts we learned was that the natives for thousands of years were barefoot. The horse was not introduced to North America until the 1700's. It was said that native tribes from all over the area came to use the buffalo jump. Supposedly there is 18' of buffalo debris still buried beneath the hill.
Not much to see at this distance but the native americans drove the buffalo up and around to the top of this hill and then ran them over the side. The drop is only about 30' so some of the buffalo survived the drop but were then killed so they would not survive and let other buffalo know what happened. True story.
By this time it was early afternoon, so I dropped Sue and Gracie off at the trailer and had the oil changed on the Infiniti. I have been noticing a cold coming on so back to the trailer and started sucking on Cold-Eze. Seems to work.
We have been getting continuous announcements on our radio of flash floods occuring in the next day or two. We are hoping to beat the afternoon thunder storms and head out tomorrow morning for Billings, MT.
Our last day in Great Falls and we are compelled to see where the name came from. Back in the car and out to the middle of nowhere to see one of the friggin falls. Seems the Louis and Clark expedition found this falls. However in the early 1900's the city fathers thought it would be a great idea to build a dam and make electricity. Here is a pic of their efforts.
From here we went to the First Peoples Buffalo jump. This remarkable geologic area has been used for thousands of years by local tribes to drive buffalo up and over the hills to kill them for food and their hides. One of the interesting facts we learned was that the natives for thousands of years were barefoot. The horse was not introduced to North America until the 1700's. It was said that native tribes from all over the area came to use the buffalo jump. Supposedly there is 18' of buffalo debris still buried beneath the hill.
Not much to see at this distance but the native americans drove the buffalo up and around to the top of this hill and then ran them over the side. The drop is only about 30' so some of the buffalo survived the drop but were then killed so they would not survive and let other buffalo know what happened. True story.
By this time it was early afternoon, so I dropped Sue and Gracie off at the trailer and had the oil changed on the Infiniti. I have been noticing a cold coming on so back to the trailer and started sucking on Cold-Eze. Seems to work.
We have been getting continuous announcements on our radio of flash floods occuring in the next day or two. We are hoping to beat the afternoon thunder storms and head out tomorrow morning for Billings, MT.


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