May 17, 1805
Friday 17. We set
out early and proceeded on very well; the banks being firm and
the shore bold we were enabled to use the towline, which, whenever
the banks will permit it, is the safest and most expeditious
mode of ascending the river, except under a sail with a steady
breeze. At the distance of ten and a half miles we came to the
mouth of a small creek on the south, below which the hills approach
the river, and continue near it during the day: three miles
further is a large creek on the north, and again six and three
quarter miles beyond it, another large creek to the south, which
contain a small quantity of running water of a brackish taste.
The last we called Rattlesnake creek from our seeing that animal
near it. Although no timber can be observed on it from the Missouri,
it throws out large quantities of driftwood, among which were
some pieces of coal brought down by the stream. We continued
on one mile and a quarter, and encamped on the south, after
making twenty and a half miles.
The country
in general is rugged, the hills high, with their summits and
sides partially covered with pine and cedar, and their bases
on both sides washed by the river: like those already mentioned
the lower part of these hills is a dark rich loam, while the
upper region for one hundred and fifty feet consists of a whitish
brown sand, so hard as in many places to resemble stone, though
in fact very little stone or rock of any kind is to be seen
on the hills. The bed of the Missouri is much narrower than
usual, being not more than between two and three hundred yards
in width, with an uncommonly large proportion of gravel; but
the sandbars, and low points covered with willows have almost
entirely disappeared: the timber on the river consists of scarcely
any thing more than a few scattered cottonwood trees. The saline
incrustations along the banks and the foot of the hills are
more abundant than usual. The game is in great quantities, but
the buffalo are not so numerous as they were some days ago:
two rattlesnakes were seen to-day, and one of them killed: it
resembles those of the middle Atlantic states, being about two
feet six inches long, of a yellowish brown on the back and sides,
variegated with a row of oval dark brown spots lying transversely
on the back from the neck to the tail, and two other rows of
circular spots of the same color on the sides along the edge
of the scuta: there are one hundred and seventy-six scuta on
the belly, and seventeen on the tail. Captain Clarke saw in
his excursions a fortified Indian camp which appeared to have
been recently occupied, and was, we presumed, made by a party
of Minnetarees who went to war last March.
Late at night we were roused by the sergeant of the guard in
consequence of a fire which had communicated to a tree overhanging
our camp. The wind was so high, that we had not removed the
camp more than a few minutes when a large part of the tree fell
precisely on the spot it had occupied, and would have crushed
us if we had not been alarmed in time.
May 18, 1805
Saturday 18. The wind
continued high from the west, but by means of the towline we
were able to make nineteen miles, the sandbars being now few
in number, the river narrow and the current gentle; the willow
has in a great measure disappeared, and even the cottonwood,
almost the only timber remaining, is growing scarce. At twelve
and three quarter miles we came to a creek on the north, which
was perfectly dry. We encamped on the south opposite the lower
point of an island.
May 19, 1805
Sunday 19. The last
night was disagreeably cold; and in the morning there was a
very heavy fog which obscured the river so much as to prevent
our seeing the way. This is the first fog of any degree of thickness
which we have experienced: there was also last evening a fall
of dew, the second which we have seen since entering this extensive
open country. About eight o'clock the fog dispersed, and we
proceeded with the aid of the towline: the island near which
we were encamped, was three quarters of a mile in length. The
country resembles that of yesterday, high hills closely bordering
the river. In the afternoon the river became crooked, and contained
more sawyers or floating timber than we have seen in the same
space since leaving the Platte. Our game consisted of deer,
beaver, and elk: we also killed a brown bear, who, although
shot through the heart, ran at his usual pace nearly a quarter
of a mile before he fell. At twenty-one miles is a willow island
half a mile in length, on the north side, a quarter of a mile
beyond which is a shoal of rapid water under a bluff: the water
continued very strong for some distance beyond it: at half a
mile we came to a sandbar on the north, from which to our place
of encampment was another half mile, making in all twenty-two
and a quarter miles. The saline substances which we have mentioned
continue to appear; and the men are much afflicted with sore
eyes and imposthumes.
May 20, 1805
Monday 20. As usual
we set out early, and the banks being convenient for that purpose,
we used the towline: the river is narrow and crooked, the water
rapid, and the country much like that of yesterday: at the distance
of two and a quarter miles we passed a large creek with but
little water, to which we gave the name of Blowingfly creek,
from the quantity of those insects found in its neighborhood.
They are extremely troublesome, infesting our meat whilst cooking
and at our meals. After making seven miles we reached by eleven
o'clock the mouth of a large river on the south, and encamped
for the day at the upper point of its junction with the Missouri.
This stream which we suppose to be that called by the Minnetarees
the Muscleshell river, empties into the Missouri two thousand
two hundred and seventy miles above the mouth of the latter
river, and in latitude 47° 0' 24" 6 north. It is one hundred
and ten yards wide, and contains more water than streams of
that size usually do in this country; its current is by no means
rapid, and there is every appearance of its being susceptible
of navigation by canoes for a considerable distance: its bed
is chiefly formed of coarse sand and gravel, with an occasional
mixture of black mud; the banks abrupt and nearly twelve feet
high, so that they are secure from being overflowed: the water
is of a greenish yellow cast and much more transparent than
that of the Missouri, which itself, though clearer than below,
still retains its whitish hue and a portion of its sediment.
Opposite
to the point of junction the current of the Missouri is gentle,
and two hundred and twenty-two yards in width, the bed principally
of mud (the little sand remaining being wholly confined to the
points) and still too deep to use the setting pole. If this
be, as we suppose, the Muscleshell, our Indian information is,
that it rises in the first chain of the Rocky mountains not
far from the sources of the Yellowstone, whence in its course
to this place it waters a high broken country, well timbered
particularly on its borders, and interspersed with handsome
fertile plains and meadows. We have reason, however, to believe,
from their giving a similar account of the timber [222]where
we now are, that the timber of which they speak is similar to
that which we have seen for a few days past, which consists
of nothing more than a few straggling small pine and dwarf cedar,
on the summits of the hills, nine-tenths of the ground being
totally destitute of wood, and covered with a short grass, aromatic
herbs, and an immense quantity of prickly pears: though the
party who explored it for eight miles represented low grounds
on the river as well supplied with cottonwood of a tolerable
size, and of an excellent soil. They also reported that the
country is broken and irregular like that near our camp; that
about five miles up a handsome river about fifty yards wide,
which we named after Charbonneau's wife, Sahcajahweah, or Birdwoman's
river, discharges itself into the Muscleshell on the north or
upper side. Another party found at the foot of the southern
hills, about four miles from the Missouri, a fine bold spring,
which in this country is so rare that since we left the Mandans
we have found only one of a similar kind, and that was under
the bluffs on the south side of the Missouri, at some distance
from it, and about five miles below the Yellowstone: with this
exception all the small fountains of which we have met a number
are impregnated with the salts which are so abundant here, and
with which the Missouri is itself most probably tainted, though
to us who have been so much accustomed to it, the taste is not
perceptible. Among the game to-day we observed two large owls,
with remarkably long feathers resembling ears on the sides of
the head, which we presume are the hooting owls, though they
are larger and their colors are brighter than those common in
the United States.
Next Journal
Entry
|