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Fort Peck dam is the result of what many might call "wasteful
big-government spending", but it is difficult to ignore that
that is exactly what got the US out of its twelve-year-long Great
Depression. Where big business had failed to pull the nation out of a
deep and prolonged economic downturn, large federal projects such as
the construction of Fort Peck Dam got things going again.
Everything at
Fort Peck Dam—and I do mean everything—has
a bold and streamlined art deco design about it. |
By now
the westerly winds have resumed their relentless assault on the nose of
the Westy; as we struggle to make headway we leave a dense trail of
diesel smoke across the eastern third of the Big Sky State, and it can
probably still be seen today.
Somewhere between Fort Peck and say, Malta, Mont., we make a wrong
turn. It's not that we don't intend to go there, but simply that we
will later regret it. |
It had been highly recommended by a handful of tourist
guidebooks—always a dubious distinction—so we pull off the hot and
windy highway to pay a visit. I won't mention the name or precise
location of the place, for fear of spoiling the surprise should you
find yourself in the neighborhood someday, but suffice it to say that
we soon vacate the premises for fear of contracting some dreaded
bacterial infection or unsightly dermatological condition. But having
loitered for a few minutes and chatting with the lonely gnome-like
proprietor before politely declining his services, we feel compelled to
buy something, so we leave with a pair of badly freezer-burnt Klondike
Bars and hit the road.
With the afternoon sun beating directly through
the Westy's windshield on us, the ice cream treats begin a rapid
descent to their natural liquid state and are soon on the verge of
spontaneous combustion, so sitting in the passenger seat I hurriedly
slurp mine down without too
much fuss. For Lorie however, being behind the wheel, it is entirely
another matter, and as her foil wrapper develops a catastrophic leak
and the white foamy mess begins dripping out at an alarming rate, she
thrusts the dribbling thing at me and tells me to toss it outside.
Not wanting to discard the wrapper along
with it, I thrust the oozing mass into the slipstream outside my open
window and have just grasped one corner of the foil betwixt forefinger
and
thumb when Lorie cries, "Wait, not now! There's a cop!" Grimacing, I
hastily bring my hand back
inside, clutching the mess, where it proceeds to enthusiastically drip
into my lap.
| "OK,
now!" Lorie says as the state trooper whooshes past, so I thrust it
back out and unfurl the fluttering wrapper. The rapidly disintegrating
Klondike Bar falls away, globules of warm airborne foam trailing behind
like the tail of a soft-serve comet. I squish the foil wrapper into a
ball and toss it onto the floormat, where it continues to quietly ooze.
And here is where the diligent care and maintenance of one's Vanagon
can be taken too far. |
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Worried
that I have soiled and sullied the shiny flanks of my beloved Vanasazi
with splatters of ice cream, I next thrust my head out into the
slipstream to survey the extent of the mess, whereupon my eyeglasses,
along with a very nice pair of clip-on UV Blue Blocker sunglasses, are
immediately sucked off my head and follow down the path of the
ice-cream meteor into the hazy distance.
"Stop! STOP!" I cry, and Lorie brings the Westy
to a sudden halt along the roadside. I leap from the cab and run back
along the shoulder of the road, squinting and searching for my wayward
specs.
I must admit that while blessed with many
admirable qualities from my mother's end of the gene pool, hawklike
vision is not one of them, and I am damned near blind without some
pretty hefty chunks of glass in front of me. My squinty eyes now scan
the blurry green swath of
roadside sagebrush and grass, searching for a glimmer or a glint which
might reveal the location of my vital eyewear, and I am inutterably
struck by the prime paradox: looking for my eyeglasses while nearly
unable to see anything at all without them. Think about it.

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I
walk nearly a quarter-mile of that seemingly endless sunbaked highway,
cars and trucks roaring past unconcernedly, stepping in the tiny
puddles of ice cream which dot the edge of the pavement, before Lorie
shouts and I
can vaguely make out her distant and blurry figure excitedly waving
something at me.
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I hurry up to where she has indeed found my eyeglasses, perfectly
intact but for a tiny stone chip, and she points to the spot right in
the middle of the road where she discovered them. It is a miracle they
haven't been crushed by a passing pickup. Sadly,
the clip-on sunglasses have met a more deadly fate, and have bravely
given their life that my glasses might live; their hundreds of
glittering golden shards now lay strewn across the asphalt, and there
is no evidence whatsoever of their silver frames.
Solemnly, we hike back up to where the Westy
sits at the roadside with emergency flashers going and prepare to
resume our journey, when my newly re-spectacled gaze happens to fall on
the side of the van. And you know what? It turns out the ice-cream
spatters aren't all that bad
after all.
As we make our way to the west and the landscape grows even more open
and horizontal, we begin to catch dusky glimpses of the front ranges of
the Rockies. On May 26, 1805, Meriwether Lewis climbed to the top of a
riverside bluff and "from this point I beheld the Rocky Mountains for
the first time ... these points of the Rocky Mountains were covered
with snow and the sun shone on it in such manner as to give me the most
plain and satisfactory view … but when I reflected on the
difficulties which this snowey barrier would most probably throw in my
way to the Pacific, and the sufferings and hardships of myself and
party in them, it in some measure counterballanced the joy I had felt
in the first moments in which I gazed on them."
I've always greatly admired Lewis' sense of
pragmatic optimism, even in the face of "sufferings and hardships", and
I think that every Westy traveler would do well to inscribe on their
dashboard Lewis' next line: "As I have always held it a crime to
anticipate evils, I will believe
it a good comfortable road untill I am compelled to beleive
differently."
Late
in the day, near Havre, Mont., I notice the fuel gauge getting, oh, a
tad low. Though I resolve to get fuel at the very next chance, I say
nothing, but just grip the wheel a little tighter, lean forward
hopefully, and push on into the stiff prairie headwind.
Turns out this is yet another geographical
region which bears little resemblance to the maps which represent it.
Usually, a tiny dot with a name next to it indicates a town or a
village of some sort, with some houses and people and trees. And the
opportunity to purchase fuel. |

This is all you need to know about most of the so-called 'towns' along
the Great Northern Highline. This is actually a relatively metropolitan
one …
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But
along this lonely stretch of the Highline through the vast spaces of
eastern Montana, there are really only about three or four actual
towns. All the other dots on the map—Devon, Chester, Dodson, Hinsdale,
etc.—are in truth little more than a grain elevator and a railroad
siding, perhaps a dilapidated mobile home, and an ambiguous sheet-metal
shed, none of which seem to be open for business.
As I watch these little dots fall back behind
us, and the fuel gauge needle fall ever closer to the much-feared
orange zone, my concern grows to alarm, and my alarm to a festering
sense of internalized panic. Town after town roll by, none appearing to
boast running water,
let alone diesel fuel. My shorts are really starting to get bunched up
when finally, gratefully, a cloud of dust billowing up around us, we
pull into a tiny cluster of gas pumps in Hingham. Only to discover that
they serve only gasoline.

The old Great Northern Highline—now the Burlington Northern Santa Fe—is
our near-constant traveling companion from Lake Superior to the
Continental
Divide, the two often separated only by a narrow strip of grass and
sage.
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Desperate,
I dash into the combination bar-general-store-and-gas-station, a smoky
and noisy place filled with the scents of beer and food-service
antiseptic cleansers, and the sounds of country music and burly guys
with sunburned necks discussing the finer points of combines and
various other farm implements. And it all comes to a grinding halt as I
belly up to the bar and stand there in my retro silk bowling shirt and
khaki shorts. But I think it is my sandals-and-socks ensemble that
really make them swallow their cigarettes and stare. I may as well be
wearing bib overalls and red sneakers to an evening at the symphony. |
After
waiting for what seems an eternity while the bartender generates a
customer's lottery tickets on the electronic dispenser, furtive gazes
and disapproving stares making the backs of my ears burn, I am finally
able to ask him if he knows someplace nearby where I might find diesel
fuel at this hour.
"Hey Roger," the bartender says to one of the
now-silent crowd seated along the bar, "they got diesel over in
Kremlin?"
A tightly wired guy in a plain white T-shirt
and agri-business ball cap considers the matter for a moment.
"Rudyard," he replies gruffly. "I think they got onroad diesel at the
Cenex in Rudyard. Six miles west."
"Thanks," I say, turning for the door. "Thanks
a lot."
"But don't take my word for it," Roger warns.
"Don't come back here mad."
"Don't worry," I say, clapping him on a dusty
shoulder in a friendly way, "if they don't have diesel in Rudyard, I
won't make it back."
The crew along the bar erupts in laughter, and
I think that for a brief shining moment these sons of the soil
empathise with me, identify with my plight, recognize our common
humanity across a vast cultural chasm.
Perhaps even like me. Even
with my ridiculous footwear.
We limp the final six miles to Rudyard, the
next grain-elevator town along this lonesome stretch of Route 2, where
the card-lock pumps at the Cenex farmers cooperative indeed offer
diesel. In the shadow of a
westbound grain train flying past on the Highline, I gratefully deliver
fuel to the thirsty Westy and, for good measure, half-fill the
five-gallon fuel can in the rooftop luggage bin.
We cross the tracks, turn right, and chase the
train across the golden prairie into the setting sun.
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