
The osprey were doing quite well along the lower James River.
We have them out here as well but not so many.

The osprey were doing quite well along the lower James River.
We have them out here as well but not so many.

“Highway 50 is known for its stark, open landscapes, but there’s not much on the road besides wide-open country. Fortunately, about halfway through the state, there’s a charming mountain town with a wide range of activities and amenities for travelers. The Greater Austin Area Chamber of Commerce is proud to welcome you to Austin, NV.“
A trail was blazed in 1851. By 1855, cattle were driven from Salt Lake to the gold fields of California through here. Being close to 300 miles and two weeks shorter than the Humboldt River route to California, by 1858, the army surveyed the route for use as a military road. In 1860, the Pony Express mail used this route and became obsolete in 1861 when the first transcontinental telegraph followed the route.
With the approaching war, the stage mail route was moved north to this now called “Central Route”. Passengers, mail, and light freight could get from the Missouri River – usually St Joe or Westport (now Kansas City) – to California in 25 days or so; much faster than the 3-4 months it once took a wagon train to cover the distance.
Still, out here there was only the Reese River stage relay station, its employees, and …. nothing else except sagebrush and Indians.
Until spring 1862 when a former Pony Express rider living in the area discovered a quartz vein rich in silver. By summer, the Reese River mining district had been formed and by Jan 1863, thousands of hopefuls had arrived at what was then known as Reese River Station. Two camps were established, Clifton down on the flats, what would become Austin on the slopes. The people of Clifton, figuring they had it made, ran prices up for lots and goods; they also drove new-comers up the hill to Austin. By the end of 1863, Clifton had been abandoned and the town of Austin was established.
Although remote, the town sat on a major highway making it relatively easy to reach. It cost $63 to get to Sacramento from Reese River Station via Dayton and Virginia City – a 70-hour trip with meals costing $1 each.
By the summer of 1863, the town had 2000 residents, with bakeries, breweries, a hotel, a weekly newspaper, and four stamp mills – and a population of 7000 by the end of the year. Because of its location, Austin also became a staging point for those travelling to the new mines being discovered throughout central Nevada. At its peak, the population of the area exceeded 10,000.
In 1864, one of the town merchants, Reul Gridley, launched a fund-raising event that ended up raising over $250,000 by auctioning off a sack of flour. Gridley was a Democrat and made a bet with a Republican friend (that was possible then) where the loser would carry a 50lb sack of flour through town. Gridley lost the bet but made the payoff an event with the town band playing as he walked through town. It was suggested the sack be auctioned off to raise funds for the US Sanitary Commission. That raised $250 but the winner donated it back to be auctioned again. Virginia City heard of the event, invited Gridley to auction the sack in Virginia City, and eventually to San Francisco and back east cities. Mark Twain wrote of the event in “Roughing It“. Gridley moved to Stockton in 1866 and died in 1870. His store still stands on the east edge of town right off US50.
In 1962, the TV show “Death Valley Days“, season 11, episode 2 told the story as “The $275,000 Sack Of Flour“

Having become the county seat, Austin was incorporated as a city in 1864. Police and fire departments were established, buildings were built of brick, gas lighting became available, the newspaper became a daily issue. The mines were stable producers, a railroad was built north to the transcontinental line at Battle Mountain – times were good in Austin.
By 1887, most of the major mines had played out after $20M worth of silver had been produced
(figured at 1968 price of 91¢/oz. Silver is now priced at $60-70/oz)
By 1881, the town was dis-incorporated.

One of the major mine developers in the later years was Anson Stokes. He built a 3-story summer home modelled after a castle tower in Italy. Built on a hillside overlooking the vast Reese River Valley, constructed of hand-hewn granite blocks, each hoisted with manual winches, and fastened by wedging with clay mortar. the kitchen and dining room were on the first floor, living room on the second, with two bedrooms on the third. Each floor had a fireplace, the second and third floors had balconies.
The family spent a month in the home in summer 1897, a few days in fall 1897, came back in 1898 to sell their holdings and never returned. It sit abandoned (except probably by teenagers on nightly escapades) until 1956. It was sold again, listed as a Historical Place in 2013s; the owner died in 2018, and the castle is now owned by the Austin Historical Society.
US 50 runs through the town. Sitting at 6500 feet, it is no longer incorporated, it is no longer the county seat, and has a population of only about 170 people. Modern times have come to Austin though. There is now a gas station in town … used to be when I was riding motorcycles along US 50, I had to plan for gas when running at night – there wasn’t any available between Fallon and Ely – 260 miles. Long run on one tank of gas.
The “Loneliest Highway In America” isn’t so lonely anymore.

A sample of some obscure – and maybe not obscure – tunes from my strange and off-the-wall collection.
Today’s selection: Frank Zappa – “Montana” 1973
“Gonna be a dental floss tycoon …“
The last track on Zappa’s “Over-Nite Sensation” album. Tina Turner & the Ikettes provide backing vocals in the middle section.
Ike Turner’s response? “What is this ….?“


The Transcontinental Railroad passed by within a few rods of this watering hole in 1868 … which the railroad improved to serve both the station that once stood here as well as the locomotives heading either way into the deep deserts of northern Nevada and Utah. Lucin, Utah grew into a town of sorts, mostly railroad maintenance workers and their families. Then it stopped being anything …
My blessing upon all you fine people on this fantastic summer day:
May you outlive your pets

first published by Jean Oct 6, 2009

Morning’s pink mist nightgown
lifts slowly,
uncovering the beauty
of the coming day.
Joe recently sent me a copy of an article highlighting the British-supported atrocities uncovered by Rupert Lowe MP (Chair) and Inquiry Panel. For those interested, the report is available here.
The article Joe referred to is “Hell on Earth … in Britain” at onthenorthriver.com
Coming soon to a society near you.

There’s a tidal pond (or half dozen) on Jamestown Island. As far as I was able to tell, this guy and some of his pals ran things around the pond. Goes where he wants, does what he wants, doesn’t let a little mud get in his way.
I’d head out there and watch the wildlife shift as the tides came in and went out. Got to the point I was watching the tide tables to figure the times I needed to be on the island to get the pictures I wanted.
Update: Courtesy ghostsniper:
I came in the house and yelled up the stairs to my wife, “I lost a snapping turtle in my vehicle!” She came around the corner and asked how someone loses a turtle in their vehicle.
I was coming across the causeway last week at Lake Lemon where the 2 lane road has water up to the edge on both sides and no guardrails and there it was. I didn’t know it was a snapper yet, but I knew I had to save it before someone came by and ran over it.
I picked it up and the aggressive little skudder stretched his neck out and back and tried to get me. Whoa. I quickly got back in my Blazer, sat him on the passenger seat and took off.
He immediately tried to climb between the seat and the console but there was very little room. None the less, he got through. I got back to the house, hoping the whole time that he wouldn’t come over by my feets and bite me.
I looked high and low, even got a flashlight, but he was not to be found. I was stymied. My 2 dr, 4×4 Blazer is small and there was nothing in it but my small jumper box on the back floor. I looked everywhere, 2, 3 times and he was just not findable. So I left both doors open and went in to tell my wife.
She looked in the back and there he was, bigger than Stuttgart, under the rear seat, staring at me with a severely pissed off look on his face and his mouth wide open ready to clamp down. I latched onto him and brought him out to the light of day.
My wife took this pik and then I released him down by the crick at the rear of our property. I’ve looked a couple times since but have not seen him again.
His shell was about 6″ long and 4″ wide. A yung-in.

Heading up west of Ouray, Colorado is the road to Camp Bird Mine, the townsite of Sneffels (1875 – 10,600 ft – once home to 2,000 people), the Revenue Mill, the Virginius, Ruby Trust and other mines on the upper slopes of Mt Sneffels.
Unlike the road coming down from Engineer Pass, this road has a pretty much, mostly, usually not too bad surface. Just left of center, you can make out traffic on the Sneffels road.

Unlike the Engineer Pass road, the Sneffels road is even passable in winter

Sneffels: A town of 2000 people in the late 1880s, the Revenue Mill was the big employer, 600 men to process the vast quantities of silver ore coming from the mines around: “workers at the Revenue mill enjoyed favorable living conditions for the day. The three Revenue boarding houses had electric lights, indoor plumbing, steam heat, and the men were well-fed, reportedly off of china plates.“
But no one lives up there anymore …
Use whatever tools you want but no computers or CAD machinery
Is it even possible to do such work today?
