Day 975: Fort Smith NHS, Crater of Diamonds SP

This morning we crossed into Arkansas and visited Fort Smith National Historic Site:

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Fort Smith was initially built in the early 1800s to provide a US presence in the area and tasked primary with preventing warfare between local Indians and Eastern Indians forced by US policy to resettle in this area.  By the 1870s, the main building was being used as a jail and courthouse:

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The Fort Smith courtroom:

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The gallows.  79 people were hanged here between 1875 and 1896:

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I didn’t get to see much of the site, as I spent most of our visit speaking with the ranger, a part-Lenape Indian, about the repeated relocations that caused his New Jersey-based tribe to end up with scattered holdings in northeastern Oklahoma.

The kids completed their Junior Ranger workbooks and received their badges:

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Our next stop was Crater of Diamonds State Park, the world’s only diamond mine open to the public:

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The visitor center was interesting:

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I had a few phone errands to run, so I stayed in the RV while Trish and the kids went out to the dig area:

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With an average ore richness of one diamond per 45 tons of mined earth, I suppose it’s not too surprising that after a couple hours of work they came up empty:

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Back at the RV, one of the tires wasn’t quite round.  I suspect a belt broke within the tire, so we swapped it out with the spare:

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From here, we drove north to the Bear Creek Campground, an Army Corps of Engineers campground on Lake Greeson.  As far as I can tell, we’re here before the start of the fee season for the campground.

Good Shabbos from Bear Creek Campground!  See the trip map for today’s drive and our current location.

Day 974: Washita Battlefield NHS, Oklahoma City NM, Oklahoma State Capitol

Our first stop of the day was Washita Battlefield National Historic Site:

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This site interprets the surprise attack in which Cheyenne Chief Black Kettle and his band of Indians were killed.  Despite a previous unprovoked attack on his people at the Sand Creek massacre four years earlier which left over 100 Indians dead and his wife badly injured, Chief Black Kettle continued to sign treaties in an effort to peacefully coexist with the US government:

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We walked a nature trail adjacent to the visitor center:

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The kids completed their Junior Ranger workbooks and received their badges:

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We continued east to Oklahoma City, the capital of Oklahoma:

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We had lunch in the RV:

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We left the RV at the Capitol and drove over to the Oklahoma City National Memorial:

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It was at this site that in April of 1995, 168 Americans were killed in the Oklahoma City bombing.  The road in front of the building site was replaced with a reflecting pool, and building’s former location, to the left of the pool, is now the site of the memorial:

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The bomb destroyed the building at 9:01AM:

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The building site now contains 168 chairs, one for each victim.  They are placed in the approximate locations where the victims were found:

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Especially heartbreaking are the small chairs memorializing the 19 child victims, 15 of which were in the building’s day care center:

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Portions of the building’s rear wall remain:

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Rescue crews left their mark here:

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The rescue response began at 9:03AM:

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Adjacent to the memorial is the Oklahoma City Memorial Museum:

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The kids completed their Junior Ranger workbooks.  M tried to get out of doing the Junior Ranger pledge, complaining that they were outside in public.  The ranger asked M if he was too cool to do the pledge and he said yes.  The ranger told him to “suck it up”.  They did the pledge and received their badges:

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Returning to the RV, we walked through the underground tunnel that connects the parking lot to the capitol building:

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We visited the Oklahoma House of Representatives chamber:

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Ceiling detail:

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The Senate chamber:

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After leaving the Capitol, we continued east to overnight at the Walmart of Sallisaw, Oklahoma.  See the trip map for today’s drive and our current location.

Day 973: Lake Meredith NRA, Alibates Flint Quarries National Monument

Today we continued east to visit the ranger station for Lake Meredith National Recreation Area.  There were no visitor displays there, but we did pick up the Junior Ranger book for the site.

We drove to the adjacent Alibates Flint Quarries National Monument, which preserves flint quarries used by Native Americans:

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To protect the quarries, the park only allows visits to the quarries on a two-hour ranger-guided walk.  We decided to skip the tour and instead learn about the site through the park film and the visitor exhibits:

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The ranger showed the kids various implements made from parts of a bison.  The kids handed in their Junior Ranger workbooks and received their badges:

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They also handed in the Lake Meredith National Recreation Area workbooks here:

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This site also had workbooks for the National Park Service’s centennial, so the kids completed those workbooks as well:

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We continued east and crossed into Oklahoma.  This is our first visit to the Sooner State:

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We ended today’s drive at Skipout Lake, a USFS site that allows dispersed camping:

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See the trip map for today’s drive and our current location.

Day 972: Capulin Volcano National Monument

Today we drove east across the San Luis Valley towards the eastern edge of the Rockies:

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We crossed into New Mexico and arrived at Capulin Volcano National Monument, a well-preserved cinder cone volcano:

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We watched the visitor center film and checked out the exhibits:

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Next we drove up the access road that winds around the volcano.  The parking lot is along the rim of the volcano.  Looking down into the caldera:

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From the rim, we could see other cinder cones in the distance:

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The kids completed their Junior Ranger workbooks and received their patches and badges:

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We continued east, entering Texas:

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They don’t call it the Great Plains for nothing:

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As we continued east, we were engulfed by a dust storm:

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We continued on to overnight at the Walmart of Dumas, Texas.  See the trip map for today’s drive and our current location.

Day 971, Flying Monument Valley, Visiting Hovenweep NM and Valley of the Ancients MN

I got up this morning and reached the airport before dawn:

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The air was variable and chaotic at the airport.  I did manage to take off, and found that once I climbed above the mesa to the south of the airport, the air became smooth.  Despite a weather report showing winds from the south at 4MPH, it turns out the wind was more like 11MPH from the south.  The airport was engulfed in rotor from the mesa.

I flew east towards the monuments:

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In light of the strong winds, I decided to stay high to avoid rotor from the monuments.  I also avoided flying over the monuments, as some members of Navajo law enforcement erroneously believe that Indian sovereignty extends to the air above their land, and that Monument Valley Tribal Park is a “no fly zone”.  The reality is that the FAA has sole authority over US airspace, but that’s of little comfort when Indians illegally confiscate one’s RV and paramotor.  I didn’t want that to happen to me, so I stayed away:

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I came back to land, having to re-enter the rotor coming off the mesa above the airstrip:

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The landing was dicey and I ended up not quite sticking the landing, but I was fine and so was my gear.  Here’s the flight track:

This video shows this morning’s flight, as well as yesterday’s two flights:

Back at the RV, M was photographing his R/C car:

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On our way north out of Monument Valley, we stopped to photograph the monuments:

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We again photographed Monument Valley from the northern approach:

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Continuing east, we crossed from Utah into Colorado and visited Hovenweep National Monument, another Ancestral Puebloan ruins site:

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We hiked out to view the ruins:

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The ruins here were built between 1150 and 1350:

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Hovenweep features square towers, a feature not found at other Ancestral Puebloan sites:

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The kids completed their Junior Ranger workbooks and received their badges:

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We continued east to visit the Anasazi Heritage Center, the visitor center for Canyons of the Ancients National Monument:

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The museum was very impressive:

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M used the loom:

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The basket collection was extensive:

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This basket is 800 years old:

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This basket is estimated to be over 6,000 years old:

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The kids completed their Junior Ranger workbooks and received their pins:

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We continued east into the foothills of the Rockies:

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We continued east to overnight at the Walmart of Alamosa, Colorado.  See the trip map for today’s drive and our current location.