What’s the coolest thing you found in the back country

Joined
Feb 23, 2021
Messages
447
Location
Montana
Ran across a tornado track high up in the Crazy Mountains in MT. Took me a while to figure out what I was looking at- 25-30' wide swath where every tree was completely uprooted, broken and thrown in every direction. Couldn't figure out what kind of machine could do that, or why. Then it hit me (never seen a tornado or been in areas that have them). Went across the heavily treed hillside as far as I could see in both directions. Amazing amount of force to do that much damage. I'll try and find a pic or two and post them.

I guess I only took a short video and I can't post a vid here so here's a pic from the video.
View attachment 749232
I was in a micro burst in the crazies about 7 years ago. It was unbelievable. Trees you couldn’t wrap your arms around snapped off half way up. Dozens and dozens of them.
 

Prest0npage

FNG
Classified Approved
Joined
Oct 2, 2024
Messages
14
Been with buddies who’ve found arrowheads likely dating back over 1000 years.
 

Slickhill

FNG
Joined
Aug 21, 2024
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30
That’s pretty awesome. My uncle ran an excavator digging pipeline ditch for years. He said several times out in eastern WY and western NE he dug into a herd of buffalo skeletons. He even had an intact skull from some kind of ice age bison he dug up, had horns 3 1/2’ wide.
We have a creek we walk after big rains and find buffalo skulls, they’re mostly the ones that were bigger than the current species but not the huge ice age ones. Always a thrill to find an intact one peeking out of the cutbank.
 

tuffcrk14

Lil-Rokslider
Joined
Feb 11, 2015
Messages
143
In the 70s and 80s my dad used to pack an elk camp with his brothers and a few friends into a wilderness area that a particular Native American tribe has considered sacred to them for hundreds of years. From my understanding, they would frequent this large area for religious/cultural purposes. The campsite they almost always packed into was 30 miles into the mountains and tucked away in a narrow valley bottom between two small converging streams. One side note to this area is that it can get windy. Like 60mph or more at times. He said it would often times be blowing like a bastard on the trail and once they dropped down into their campsite a couple hundred feet, it would be calm with hardly even a breeze. The one particular time they camped there, he said he tasked himself with digging some holes in the ground for setting the lodgepole A-frame in so it made the frame of their wall tent sturdy. He dug down 16” and hit a rock on one of the holes just before he decided it was deep enough. He bent down and dug out what ended up being the top half of a flint spear point. He dug around some more to try and find the other half, but never did find the rest of it. He donated it to a museum along with some other neat artifacts he has found out around our farm/ranch and its surrounding area. In that same wilderness area on a different hunting trip, a friend of his was hiking on a mostly unused/beaten down hiking trail and found an old black powder cartridge (can’t remember the exact caliber) laying in the trail and a few steps after that found an arrowhead in the same manner. In the foothills leading into that same area, Native Americans would sometimes hide some of their extra tools or other small items under big flat rocks that they arranged under a distinct tree on a ridge top for safe keeping. He took me to one such spot just off of the trail that had been shown to him, but like you’re probably thinking; I had to check and see if there was anything under them. Of course there was nothing. You used to be able to access these areas on four-wheeler/motorcycle, but it’s all shut down to motorized vehicles now. This thread is by far my favorite to keep up on and I have enjoyed reading each story. Cheers!


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