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On Tue, 29 Dec 2009 08:29:25 -0500, Tom Francis
wrote: 28 this morning in West Columbia, SC. Yesterday was warm enough, but the wind was awful out on Lake Murray - 15/25 mph gusting to 30 for a while in the morning. Very cool I'd say when we started off - about 36, but with that wind - ewwww... It was just about this time in 1864 that Sherman was marching to Columbia. Le Conte was in your parts and southwards, dodging Yankees. On horseback and afoot. Often wading through waist deep water as that was all swampy then. Seldom got near a fire. And yet he never complains of the shivers, of which he must have had many. Different people than we are. Death all about them. I saw written once, can't remember where, of a bird sitting on a tree limb, freezing to death, yet never for a second feeling self-pity. Sums it up nicely. You might read the pages starting from page 185 for some historical perspective of where you're at in relation to Le Conte's scrambling. http://docsouth.unc.edu/fpn/leconte/...e.html#lcon204 I really like doing that when I'm on the road. Had a nice trip out west 35 years ago and camped at the fort on the Missouri river from where Custer and the 7th Calvary marched to the Little Big Horn. I was driving a capped Ford pickup with the wife and our 2 babies. Took me 3 days to get to the Custer battle field on the interstate, and I was tired out. Sure, I like short daily drives, but thinking how quickly the 7th got there over rough terrain, on horseback, is still a marvel to me. When I get cold I often think about these guys of that era, and somehow it makes me stronger, and warms me up. --Vic |
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