A quick update. I was out of town. Not out West, but 300 miles east of here, towards Toledo.
Now, back to the Chase.
What is it about those frogs?
(Just for fun.)
It’s been a little quiet on the western front. Maybe the searchers have boots on the ground. Only so many weeks before the snow flies again. . . .
Color Plate A from Favorite Flies and Their Histories – Mary Orvis Marbury, 1892 (Photo credit: Wikipedia)
So, until the next Today Show clue from Forrest Fenn, you might want to visit Dal’s blog and see the latest video interviews he did with Mr. Fenn. There are several under the heading “Gone Fishing”.
They are not all related to the sport, but I especially enjoyed watching Forrest tie a Woolly Worm. He made it look easy.
I have, rather, will have, some of the raw materials, when this guy and his cousins grow up.
I’m just not sure how (or IF) it’s going to go from A to B, so to speak.
When I was a child, the 4th meant an outdoor fish fry at my grandparent’s and a contest for the biggest fish caught in the backyard pond. I won once with an ugly bullhead.
I went on to bigger and better fish stories. One, How Not to Catch a Muskie. Short version: I caught one, but was by myself without a camera. (My husband agreed to watch the baby so I could get out early.) It’s a good thing, however, that no one in the far off boats had a video camera. It might have shown up on America’s Funniest. I had it in and out of the boat a few times while I looked up the regulations, tried to measure it, put it back. A bit excited, I started the motor to roar back to the cabin before I remembered to pull up the anchor.
That was a while ago. Later on I found fishing a bit frustrating. I’d be baiting hooks for one child or untangling knots, while the youngest, (Intrepid, remember her), would be tossing toys, and then the worms, over the side of the boat to watch them disappear.
And then, oh, joy, in Minnesota, my husband got a fish finder. After he’d get tired of criss-crossing the lakes and complaining about the lack of fish biting, I’d suggest a spot to stop and drift across.
“No, hon, please don’t even use the trolling motor.”
It kinda bugged him when I would then pull in a northern or two. {Not complaining. Really. He’s a keeper!}
That picture at the top is my dad and grandpa, and my grandma’s shadow. I come from a long line of fishermen. Some of my earliest memories are of camping in an already ancient army umbrella tent, and having to pee in the minnow bucket when our family of 5 was way out on a big lake in a rowboat with a tiny Johnson outboard. Those were my mom’s years of untangling kids’ fishline.
I’ll have to look for a picture of the tent. It’s one my great-grandmother used when she went to Traverse City to escape the pollen down here. I remember the smell of the old canvas. One of my first memories is of lying on the floor of that tent during a dark and stormy night watching my mom hold the center pole upright in the wind, thunder and lightning. I asked her later where Dad was. Out watching the storm, she said.
He knew things. Like, “Put your back to the wind. The storm will come from the left.”
I mentioned the Nimrod in an earlier post. It occurs to me that many readers might be clueless, so here is a photo when it was 8 yrs old. Out west. You pull out the sides, prop them up, and pull out poles and snap the tent to the sides, and Voila! The boys got one side, my folks, the other. I got the convertible bench seat/dining table/bed that my carpenter father built in.

Hmm. The Utah side of the park is out of the Thrill of the Chase search, but that leaves the Colorado side. . . .
That was it’s second trip out west. There was one big loop out east, swinging through Detroit, Canada, Maine, Niagara Falls, and back to a great beach on the Canadian shores of Lake Huron. Still a great site. About the only place my husband will camp. (Cabins are okay, but someone has to do housework…..People pitch in when you camp.)
Oops. I mentioned a couple of my favorite places. At least I didn’t put too fine a point on it. That’s one reason I never wanted to be travel writer—didn’t want to attract a crowd and spoil the peace and quiet of special places.
Not a long post. Just wanted to mention the 2 new pages on this site: Flywater, filed under The Book, and Idaho, filed under The Diagrams. (A great and future destination.)
Okay. I have mixed feelings about crossing Idaho off my top three TTOTC list, but that’s okay.
There’s so much to be done.
Count all the bees in the hive.
Pick another batch of berries.
“The treasure is not hidden in Idaho or Utah.”—–Forrest Fenn
Here’s the link:
http://www.today.com/news/keep-searching-fresh-clue-released-hunt-n-m-treasure-worth-6C10480482
Well. That narrows it down by 168,469 square miles. I can cross one trip off my list and write about where I was going to look.
Darn. It looked like a lot of fun. Wait. Maybe I’ll still go down that canyon. . . .
Water high!
Even though it was only six feet deep, this unfortunate canoeist got trapped by the power of the Jefferson River. She was pinned against a bridge in the frigid water for four and a half hours.
Rivers in Montana generated by National Atlas, a United States government agency and then annotated by poster in March 2007. (Photo credit: Wikipedia)
Thankfully, she had quick thinking partners and teams of emergency responders who rescued her.
Not that she was a Chaser, but, as others have cautioned, be prepared and respect the power of nature if you’re out there, water high or not.
{Now scheduled for Friday, June 28th at 0505 Fenn Time}
For those of you not familiar with the Chase, Forrest Fenn has been giving out one new clue a month on the Today Show. It was scheduled for June 17th but got postponed. Not for the first time. Last month they made him get up at 3 something in the morning two days in a row. “Truck trouble,” they claimed. (Although I suspect the crew was out searching for the treasure on the extra day.) It’s now scheduled for June 27th (Not the 28th)according to Stephanie (What’s A Blaze) at Chasechat.
So far the clues have been:
Actually, I don’t mind the generality of the extra hints. I don’t want to hear that it’s been found already. I still plan to head West as soon as we get the chance. I say we. I’m waiting on my husband to clear his schedule. He’s mildly amused by my new hobby. Also, I haven’t exactly figured out the poem yet….
Forrest Fenn says all one needs is the poem, which is in the book.
Meanwhile, enjoy the Thrill of the Chase as you search/seek/solve/obsess …..
Some things don’t jump out at you until later.
This chapter of The Thrill of the Chase is about a neighbor and friend of Forrest Fenn’s, a bittersweet story. It put me in mind of many things, the line from Robert Frost’s poem, for one, about having promises to keep.
Another was a woman who lived down the hall in the hospital dormitory. She was old, and frail, and worked in the surgery department, as I recall. She was a refugee from the Sudetenland. Quiet.
I dropped off some cherry tomatoes from my Dad’s garden one day. She couldn’t eat them, but insisted on returning the kindness by preparing blintzes for me. A first and best ever for me.
She also shared a bit of her story. I hope I get this right. I think it was well after the Nazi’s had rescued/annexed/invaded the area, and that it was the Russians coming through much later. Either way, soldiers came to the house and demanded that her mother get up to prepare them a meal. Her mother was quite ill and in bed. They beat her anyway. If I knew anymore than that, I’ve forgotten it.
I also don’t know what happened to the sweet woman who made me the blintzes. They closed the dorm, and I’d moved on. She had a daughter in the area.
There are so many stories out there that we never get to hear. Or is it that we don’t “listen good”?
So, what did I learn from this chapter of TTOTC? I think it was about making adjustments in the face of reality.
Yes, Forrest Fenn was headed for the summit, the usually icy, snowy peak, but the green of the meadows within the ponderosa and aspen seemed the better choice.
And, that’s why I think he may not have hidden the chest where he originally intended. Just speculation on my part. Like he said, “Indecision is the key to flexibility, . . . .”
But then again, he said he “knew exactly where to hide the chest . . . .”
Addendum — June 23, 2013
I just listened to a WGN interview with Forrest Fenn, not sure of the date, in which he said he’d been very certain of where he was going to hide the chest. You can listen to it and find other Thrill of the Chase info at Shaun’s site. (http://www.creationeer.co.uk/forrestfennfacts.htm)
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