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We have the mountains causing us the same kind of issues here. Breathing in all that smog is awful.

When I went to the "Little Bighorn National Battlefield", my overwhelming impression was "What a lonely place to die!"
It still is in the middle of nowhere and you really have to be going there to see it. My brother and I spent about 4 hours there walking the ground. We also went and saw what was left of the "Rosebud" battlefield - not much there, just a state marker,
For those that don't know, The Rosebud happened about a week before Little Bighorn and Crazy Horse and Co stopped the US Army cold -didn't destroy them, but forced them to retreat back to there starting point.

I want to go see Mt Rushmore. And Arches National Park. The Four Corners monument.
I recommend Fort Ross in California. A little Russian history on the West Coast.
Alcatraz is totally worth visiting too. And I loved the Statue of Liberty.
A west coast road trip where you visit all the lighthouses is fantastic fun, Point Reyes is a highlight!

I bought an on-line course a few weeks back which covers this event as well as many others around Native American culture & history. Im fairly up with European History but this is my first real venture into the Americas outside of the Aztecs & the AWI
https://www.centreofexcellence.com/co...


Though, I want to go back to New Mexico and see Acoma Pueblo. And I want to go back to see Canyon de Chelly National Monument which is on Navajo land. Lots of history at both of these places.

The course I mentioned I got waaaaay cheaper than full price btw, no way i'd pay £129 for it :) I got it reduced to £29 (there are lots of offers currently) & having done one on The Celts I'd say they're a good introduction for anyone who wanted some resource material to then go & study further/deeper in their own time.
The NA course covers a lot of topics Dawn & worth a looksee if only for the areas of study summary


https://www.mysterytribune.com/24-bes...
Tony Hillerman series comes up in a lot of searches too as well as being listed a few times in the above.

There are several, but I really enjoyed James D. Doss Charlie Moon books.
https://www.goodreads.com/series/4096...

The first few books, it's Charlie's aunty who is the main character...then, according to Doss, Charlie moved in and took over!

Thank you, Dawn. I look forward to this one, also!



Be well! Stay safe!!

I can see how that would happen with that plain tucked in there surrounded by mountain ranges. I also wondered, does it ever flood? It looks like a flood plain.

Argh. How sad that they only came for Custer's body and left the others.

Wow. That must be breaking a lot of hearts.

Actually it's the bottom of a lake bed from about 10,000 yrs ago. When you look at the mountains you can see were the shore line was (about 400 feet (125 M) above my house.
We have major floods about every 30 - 40 yrs or so - so we're due. There has to be a combination of heavy snow pack and warm spring so all that snow melts quickly. The last really bad floods were in '84 and '85. They were so bad they turned the main street in downtown SLC in to a stream for about 5 or 6 blocks - made the national news.
I was in the Army at the time and when I came home for lunch one day and flipped on CNN, they had lifted about 10 minutes from SLC's Local News and was rebroadcasting it (without the CNN logo). I was stunned for a minute - got transported back home


Quite frankly most of the bodies were unidentifiable - with mutilation, being out in the hot sun for 3 days etc. Plus the muster roles were with the 1st SGTS who died on the hill, so they didn't actually know just who was there. IRRC they also took a couple of others to reburied - members of Custer's family.
There is also a national military cemetery there that I found interesting. As the Army closed the frontier forts they disinterred the body's from the closing base cemeteries and moved many of those from the Dakotas, Montana, Wyoming bases and reinterred them there. Lots of sadness in that place - esp children and their mothers who died within days of each other. Just a sidelight - The Cemetery is also the final resting place of Major Marcus Reno, Custer's second in command. He died in the 1880s and was moved there sometime after his death. IRRC I don't thing there are any other LBH survivors buried there.




The Rugby moved this year from the Cable tv service we had, to a streaming service. At first we weren't too phased because we already subscribed to that service. But this week I discovered you have to pay an extra $10 a month to get the Rugby! So angry at Rugby Australia for leaving cable, which is a service that the most amount of viewers can access, and moving it to one of these random streaming services where people have to pay above the usual plan to access the rugby. Not happy.








I am hoping we get a lot of the stuff on the UK version here. A lot of it is stuff that doesn't get repeated, like the BBC Play of the Day and all of the BBC Shakespeare recordings from the 1970s.

I love it, Dawn. I binged on the series "Loch Ness" a couple of weekends ago. The plot might have been ridiculous, but the scenery was superb. It was shot entirely on location around Loch Ness.


That's been a bit of a ding dong for the past 3 days..... now dont let me put anyone off having the vaccine as i have a few underlying conditions along with being on some strong meds so i'm not A typical but if that's the reaction to the antibodies Id hate to be getting the real COVID.
Take that vaccine folks when it's offered to you!!

Books mentioned in this topic
The Berry Pickers (other topics)Fortune's Child (other topics)
Hild (other topics)
Sharpe's Command (other topics)
Edenglassie (other topics)
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Authors mentioned in this topic
Amanda Peters (other topics)Nicola Griffith (other topics)
Bernard Cornwell (other topics)
Bernard Cornwell (other topics)
Allan Hands (other topics)
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Goodness, May, you have a lot more patience than I.