“Ensconsed in”
Cardwell MT.
Not much here, a proverbial wide spot in the road.
We are 19 miles west of ‘Three Forks’. Which is located at the ‘Head waters’ of the Mighty Missouri. It’s called three forks because the Jefferson, the Madison, and Gallatin rivers combine together to make the Missouri River.
Lewis and Clark followed the Jefferson River.
We had supper at a local steakhouse, located about two miles from our campsite. It was surprisingly busy for a Sunday, in the middle of nowhere.
Pictures:
1. The view from our campsite.
2. A pretty little valley next to the restaurant where we supped. A bend of The Jefferson River can be seen with cattle grazing on the other side. It’s a narrow valley, where Lewis and Clark camped and traveled through on their journey west.
“Ensconsed in”
Hardin Montana.
We are in another ‘Loves’ RV spot. This one is an actual campground.
We drove by ‘The Little Bighorn’ battlefield. It’s about 25 miles east of us. It’s off of US 85 on the Crow reservation. We’ve been there before.
Tomorrow we head to Caldwell MT, our last stop prior getting to our Summer quarters, which we will get to Monday.
Picture: big sky country
Tom Shillue is on the panel on "The Big Weekend Show" on FoxNews on Sat night. Probably will be on Sunday, too.
“Good food, new friends”
Sugar coated mountains…
We met the lovely @DakotaGal at ‘Guadalajara’s Mexican Restaurant’. A favorite of mine, MBB and I discovered it 9 years ago while taking my ‘New’ little black truck, towing a flatbed with my gunsafe, and his ‘new’ (new to him’ Harley trike to his place in Eastern Washington.
The ‘Right’ side of the state in more ways than one.
I went off diet and ate Mexican, sort of. I had Carne Asada (steak), a chicken burrito, with two and a half Chiles Rellenos. The chile peppers and the tortilla on the burrito were my only carbs.
I took two pictures of the ‘Black Hills’ dusted with snow. They look as though they were dusted with sugar.
They are called the black hills because Ponderosa pine trunks are black when they are young, making the hill sides appear black.