WHEN WE LEFT ZEBULON PIKE at the end of October, 1806, he and 15 men
were camped on the bank of the Arkansas River near present Kinsley,
Kansas, between Dodge City and Great Bend. The days were growing colder
and shorter, with ice in the river.
Pike's party marched along the Arkansas through most of November.
They saw and hunted "cabrie"-- what we call antelope, but are
technically pronghorns. The elk was then a plains animal, and Pike saw
plenty of them, as well as buffalo and wild horses.
On Nov. 2, "we equipped six of our fleetest coursers with
riders and ropes, to noose the wild horses," but after two hours
of chasing, "we could not take them."
"I have since laughed at our folly; for taking wild horses in
that manner is scarcely ever attempted, even with the fleetest horses
and most expert ropers."
Two days later, he "discovered the north side of the river to
be covered with animals; which, when we came to them, proved to be
buffalo cows and calves. I do not think it an exaggeration to say there
were 3,000 in one view." A couple of days later, Pike remarked
that "their numbers exceeded imagination."
On Nov. 7, they "killed three cow buffalo, one calf, two
wolves, one brelaw." What's a brelaw? It wasn't in any of our
three unabridged dictionaries, nor in the editor's notes of our two
editions of Pike's journal, but an Internet search found one reference,
a scholarly article about the diets of trappers, which said a brelaw
was a badger.
Then they once again encountered "the Spanish road" -- a
trail left a few months earlier by a Spanish force under Lt. Facundo
Melgares, who had ventured from Santa Fé to Red Cloud, Nebraska,
to maintain Indian alliances and deter the American expeditions of Pike
and Lewis and Clark.
The hills along the river grew steeper. Two horses gave out; at
first Pike took them along without loads, but then "was obliged to
leave the two horses."
Pike made a major decision on Nov. 11. "Finding the
impossibility of completing the voyage [his orders were to ascend the
Arkansas and descend the Red River] in the time proposed [that year], I
determined to spare no pains to accomplish every object, even should it
oblige me to spend another winter in the desert."
On Nov. 12, 1806, Pike's party entered Colorado. They were not the
first Americans to visit what would become our rectangular state --
trader James Purcell, to name one, had already been to the headwaters
of the South Platte -- but they were the first official expedition.