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Kirksland Restoration Society |
page 158, James Hector reporting
September 28, 1859
( Spelling as in the Journal: in the country of the Kootanie Indians - old lodge poles, and a well beaten track,
they had camped at some calcereous springs. On the 30th, two Schonswaps joined - location 50 degrees, 47
minutes. This is the latitude of a few kilometers South of present day Brisco )
The open appearance of the country was very pleasant to us, and ever seemed to put new life into
the horses. The ground was dusty, and the bunch grass more sparse than turf, but in other respects it was like
riding through the open glades of a deer park, and if we had only been supplied with a sufficiency of good food
at the time, there are a few spots in the country that would have left a pleasanter impression than the Upper Columbia
Valley...
Elk or wapiti must have at one time been very numerous in this district, as we saw a great many antlers lying on
the ground, and sometimes the Indians had piled them in heaps of 50 or 60 together, but the open nature of the
woods, and the limited range, excepting up & down the valley, must have made them an easy prey to the Indians
as soon as they acquired firearms. We have not seen a single track of an elk yet in the valley, and but only a
few of the smaller deer.
At noon we reached a
succession of open prairies, and passed the
end of the trail from the Vermilion pass, in latitude 50 degrees 29 minutes N.
We found in the evening that we had passed the lower Columbia Lakes where there is a Shonswap camp, without seeing
it, owing to the woods.
The trail now resembles a well-beaten cart road, the parallel horse tracks forming deep ruts like those produced
by wheels.
Page 188: Journals, detailed reports and observations relative to Capt. Palliser's Explorations in BNA
September 25 at 51 degrees 2 minutes N
Break though the heavy timber with soft ground all dry. Encamp in a muskeg, within hearing of a great waterfall
on the other side of the valley: valley here changes to nearly a N & S direction