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I continued east from town and shortly turned north
following the carved wooden signs that say Pawnee Buttes. About a mile
out of town is an interesting study in history and present
day caring. There is an old cemetery here that still is in use
although infrequently. The head stones date from the late 1800's to
2002. Many young people and small children are buried here which I
think shows the hard life that people in this area endured trying to
make it work.
The one unusual feature was that ever headstone or
marker no matter how crude had a stuffed animal beside it. The ranged
from daffy duck, elmo, dogs, cats elephants and just about everything
else imaginable. Some were very new and showed they were recent
additions. The wind must play havoc with them yet they are still
there. I don't know who or how many people are involved, since there
is nothing in sight except the Koeta water tower, but someone cares
and it is evident.
About another 15 or 20 minutes and you arrive at
the buttes. There are two parking areas on to the west is the upper
parking and the one to the east is the lower parking area. These are
my descriptions not theirs. The upper parking area is at the trail
head and observation point where you can view down from the northern
buttes or start the main trail down into the flats and continue
between the buttes to the base of the furthest butte east. The trail
ends at the base of the east butte. This trail is 4 miles round trip.
On this day I took the lower parking area and
started off cross country around the east side of the butte. I spent
about 5 hours walking exploring, meditating and enjoying the suns
warmth from the rocks. Walking across country is not trail walking and
is much rougher on my old body but sometimes it's worth it for the
quiet and solitude that it offers. There was not another human in site
all day and sometimes that can be a great joy.
If you are a walker or hiker and have not explored
the Pawnee it is very different and very enjoyable. Written and
photographed by Dan
Keating
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