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ITINERARY
ITINERARY
MONTANA HIGH COUNTRY CATTLE DRIVES
JUNE CATTLE DRIVE
This is what you typically could expect on each day of the
June cattle drives. This is of course all subject to change. One of
the hardest things we have found in doing these drives is in getting
the cattle to read and follow the schedule.
- Monday: We will meet you at the Bozeman airport
between noon and 1:00 p.m. We will then travel to Townsend where
we host a lunch buffet and you will have the opportunity to purchase
a fishing license if you want to fish, liquor (we do not provide
alcohol, but we do pack it), or any other last minute items that
you might have forgotten. We will then go into a tent camp on lower
Dry Creek. Guests have two options for lodging. Guests may stay
either in wall tents, segregated by gender or group, or in small
dome tents. The small dome tents provide more provacy but the wall
tents can be heated. In both instances, we place a ground tarp on
the floor of the tent and then provide guests with a foam pad upon
which they can place their sleeping bags. After a prime rib dinner,
we do a general orientation and have introductions of wranglers,
guests, in-laws, outlaws and hangers-on. We usually finish this
evening off with a sing-along around the campfire. We specialize
in quantity rather than quality singing.
- Tuesday: After breakfast, you will meet with
your wrangler (we assign one wrangler to 4 or 5 guests) and he or
she will introduce you to your horse (we try to have guests matched
prior to the drive with a horse commensurate with their riding ability).
We then have a short horsemanship clinic about the do's and don'ts
of cattle driving. We then do a trail ride to assess that horse
and rider are well matched and to make sure that tack fits and everyone
is comfortable in the saddle. After lunch, we start the roundup.
The cattle we will be moving consists of cow/calf pairs, yearlings
and a few bulls. The cattle will be scattered throughout a six or
seven square mile pasture. This pasture is in foothill country just
off the Missouri River Valley and the terrain consists of rugged
ravines filled with juniper pockets and slopes dotted with yucca
and sagebrush. We will divide into several groups and ride every
nook and cranny of this pasture and by late afternoon we'll have
gathered the cattle into a 100-acre pasture where they will spend
the night. The entertainment this evening will usually be cowboy
poetry followed by campfire singing.
- Wednesday: We start the herd east into the Big
Belt Mountains. We'll follow a narrow canyon most of this day. We
will gain altitude and the vegetation will change from juniper and
sagebrush to the lusher and greener vegetation of a fir and lodge
pole pine forest. Some of this country was burned during the forest
fires of 2000, and you will be able to abserve first hand some of
the effects. You also sould see an abundance of wildflowers this
day and probably some deer and elk also. We will place the cattle
into another holding pen in the afternoon. The entertainment this
evening should be a talk about the history of ranching in the west
and this area in particular.
- Thursday: This will be the longest day in the
saddle. We will take the herd all the way from the Upper Dry Creek
to the Battle Creek pasture. As we gain altitude, the country will
open up and guests will have great views of some stunning vistas.
We will be riding past Wall Mountain and the Stewert Basin which
country was the backdrop for Ivan Doig's novel, "This House
of Sky." We will drop the cattle in the Battle Creek Pasture
and then ride about three more miles to the Battle Creek Homestead.
This ride will take us through the scenic rock ledges of the Battle
Creek Canyon, which will five you the feeling that an outlaw or
Indian warrior may be waiting in ambush around any corner. The Battle
Creek Homestead itself is a step back in time. The log homestead,
bunkhouse and huge pole barn have been restored to their original
condition and guests should find this site quite interesting. After
dinner this evening, guests may fly fish in Battle Creek or join
the jajority of us on a bus ride to the small community of White
Sulphur Springs, Montana where we will visit a natural sulphur hot
springs. Guests and wranglers will have a chance to soak some sore
aching muscles. The sulphur water is rumored to reverse the aging
process. We make most guests get out before their age drops below
16. The ride to the hot springs is usually marked by high jinx and
badly sung show tunes. The ride from the hot springs is much more
subdued with more than one guest nodding off on the way back to
camp.
- Friday: We ride back to where we dropped the
herd and re-gather and bring the cattle into the corrals at the
Battle Creek Homestead. After lunch, weather permitting, we brand
the late calves. Guests may take part in the calf wrestling or branding
or may just choose to sit on the corral fence and take photos. If
branding in not their cup of tea, Battle Creek may be fished. This
stream is an excellent place to learn to fly fish because there
aren't many willows or other brush to hook your back cast. On this
evening we have a barn dance. We usually have some of the locals
in for this. Typically you can see three dogs, four toddlers and
two octogenarians on the dance floor at any one time.
- Saturday: We move the cattle from the Homestead
a few miles to the pasture, which will be their home for the first
few weeks of summer. On this afternoon, guests have several options,
fish, nap, hike, etc. After dinner, we have a talent show and awards
banquet in which we honor noteworthy achievement or lack thereof.
The award presenters readily admit to being bribable. This time
is usually a lot of fun. After the banquet, guests with really early
morning flights may leave to to to a motel in Bozeman.
- Sunday: This is just a departure day to transport
guests to the airport. Any guests left over are put to work fixing
fence.
AUGUST CATTLE DRIVE
The intinerary for our Auguest cattle drive varies from
year to year and is dependent on range conditions and other variables.
One difference between the June drives and our August drive is that
we are staying at one campsite for the entire week and we trailer
guests and horses to the cattle each day. The good news about using
the one campsite is that there are shower facilities available each
night of the August drive. On our June drives shower facilities are
not available the first two nights of the drive but are every night
thereafter.
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