Saturday, August 20, 2011

Tecumseh's Trading Post

This is a small museum in Cody, WY. It is just great. Has one of the largest collections of arrow heads I have seen. And it is free!!!

Tiny buffalo driven over the edge of a cliff are suspended in mid-fall. Mountain men fight and throw tomahawks at the Green River Rendezvous. A stockade trading post, first known structure built by whites in Wyoming, is besieged by Sioux. Chief Joseph retreats from the Army through the mountains. Indians communicate with smoke signals. Little Big Horn swarms with hundreds of people. A homestead is burned by Indians, with prisoners marching in front of their captors.
A train winds through the scenes, and visitors can push a button to operate it. Recordings and a map will help guide you through this unique exhibit.
Jerry Fick spent his lifetime collecting and making the figures. Portrayals are historically accurate, though not necessarily to scale.
The museum section of the complex includes thousands of Western and Indian artifacts.  Including full size wildlife mounts, guns of the Frontier and fur trade artifacts.
An 1882 issue of Harper's Weekly details the death of Jesse James. A beaver hat, pre-1840, was made from grinding beaver fur and mixing it with mercury.
The oldest piece of Indian pottery dates from about 1200 AD and was excavated in Pennsylvania in the 1920s.
The Old West Miniature Village and Museum is located with Tecumseh's Frontier Trading Post, which produced clothing for the movies "Tombstone" and "Son of the Morning Star."
The museum is open daily 8 a.m. to 8 p.m. mid-May through mid-September. During the winter season, hours vary, please let us know you are coming!




















Thursday, August 18, 2011

Cody Dam

We have spent the last month in Wyoming, three weeks in Cody and one week in Gillette. It has been hot, up to 97 but is cooling down today. Cody has many interesting things to see. Cody was founded by Buffalo Bill Cody in 1901. Buffalo Bill was the most famous person in the world in 1901. He had toured the world and across the United States with his wild west shows. One site I enjoyed visiting was the Cody dam which was completed in the winter of 1910.
Visitors Center - Cody Dam

Top of the Dam
Looking Down From The Top of the Dam

The dam was built only during the winter because of the high waters on the Shoshone River from snow melt and summer rains. The dam was originally called Shoshone Dam but was renamed Cody Dam in 1924 to honor Buffalo Bill. When completed in 1910 it was the tallest dam in the world. The dam supplies irrigation water to 93,000 acres of land in the Bighorn Basin. I bought a "Dam t-shirt" to remember my visit.
Buffalo Bill Cody
Cody is most famous for the Buffalo Bill Historical Center, a museum of several parts. Western Arts, Buffalo Bill, Firearms, Greater Yellowstone Natural History, Plains Indian History are the main parts of the museum. Also there are traveling exhibits during the year.  My favorite was the Western Art section with its Remington bronze statues and paintings. This is a world class museum and should be on everyone's list of places to visit.
Buffalo Bill Historical Center

Bear Claw Neck less

Nature Center
 Cody is also known for its deer that run free in the city.
Running Free









Saturday, August 6, 2011

Wall, SD

At the end of the prairie where the hills begin, there is "the Wall," a strip about nine miles long with spires, ridges and gullies. The town of Wall is named for this rugged wall.
Wall is the home of Wall Drug advertised from far and wide and worth a visit. Wall Drug was purchased by Ted and Dorothy Hustead in 1931 and they gave the business five years to become a success. This was in the Depression and no one had any money and for four years they lost money and thought they would have to give up. Then Dorothy thought about all the travelers going to Yellowstone and the newly completed Mt. Rushmore passing by on the highway and not stopping in the drug store. She came up with the idea to offer free ice water. Ted put up signs on the highway and the first summer they had to hire eight shop girls to help with the customers. From that time forward the drug store has offered free ice water and nickel coffee. It now covers a city block with lots of customers. It sells everything from original art work to tee shirts to a meal, morning, noon and night and outback you can ride a Jackalop. You never know who you could run into in Wall. Evan Oscar Mayer Weiner visits Wall.



Get your picture in a covered wagon

Old Prospector

Dinosaurs

A city block building

More Dinosaurs

Ride the Jackalope

Wall of Pictures
Signing Cowboys
Oscar Mayer Weiner

Wednesday, August 3, 2011

Badlands National Park

Badlands National Park entrance is about six miles south of Wall. The Badlands starts in South Dakota and ends in Arizona. (I was informed that the Badlands start in North Dakota) We have been to both ends and sure like the weather in the north the best. The Badlands are interesting to see because they are bleak but because of a wet season there is green in the area. The yellow color in some of the pictures is the bottom of a salty sea millions of years ago. Most of the grey colors are from the ash deposited form the many volcanoes in this area. 




Badlands

Yellow Mounds
There is prairie bordering the badlands with a neat sign before a boardwalk.

Boardwalk
Fossil Exhibit Trail was a boardwalk with glass topped boxes enclosing skulls of local dinosaurs. People were allowed to climb anywhere but over the ledges of the main visitor areas which were paroled by park rangers.

Green Grass
Ash