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Public Radio's Environmental News Magazine (follow us on Google News)

Lewis & Clark Trail

Air Date: Week of

Thousands of Americans are visiting spots along the Lewis and Clark trail this summer in honor of the 200th anniversary of the exploration. Producer Barrett Golding bicycled the length of the trail, and created a series of audio postcards.



Transcript

[RUSHING STREAM, CROAKING FROGS]

MAN: Paddle. C’mon harder. Paddle.

KNOY: We continue now with our series Lewis and Clark: 200 years later.

[DRUMBEATS]

WOMAN: One, two, three.

[SOUND OF GUNSHOT]

KNOY: Producer Barrett Golding bicycled the trail and sent us a series of audio postcards along the way.

[MUSFROGS AND CRICKETS]

   (Photo: Josef Verbanac)

KNOY: Like this one of archeologist Ken Karzmiski, who collects evidence from the Captains’ campsites in central Oregon. Ken Karzmiski works at the Discovery Center, near the Dalles Dam in central Washington. Interstate 84 is on one side, a railroad is on the other, and in between lie thousands of lost historical artifacts.

[FOOTSTEPS]

KARZMISKI: We’re standing at a ledge right now, at the edge of the river, basically at the salt wall and we’re looking down about 30 feet at the river’s edge. There’s a big bend in the river here, and we’re about to enter the Columbia River Gorge. The dams – there are dams built all the way up the Columbia, and many of the Lewis and Clark campsites would be underwater here.

But even beyond the Lewis and Clark campsites, Lewis and Clark –if you look at their maps, they map village after village after village, up and down the river here. All of those villages have been flooded, as well. Any sacred place that they may have seen – and they saw burial sites – those have been flooded.

(Photo: Josef Verbanac)   

Almost everyone who is thinking about Lewis and Clark – always thinks about the aspect of trade. They could be trading knives, they could be trading beads. As they’re coming back up the Columbia River, they’re trading skins. Lewis and Clark are trading skins for beads. They’re getting beads from the Indians, which the next day they may trade for dogs, which they’ll use as food. On the Missouri, they could get firewood because of the cottonwoods alongside the Missouri River. Here, they had to buy firewood. Now that’s a shocker. I mean, you think of Lewis and Clark as guys who were out exploring the wilderness.

[TRAIN WHISTLE BLOWING]

KARZMISKI: But along the Columbia they are with a different group of people almost every night that they are out here. When Lewis and Clark passed down this river, there were 23 native languages being used; today there are two. The challenge is: can we keep those two? And is there any way that we can recover any of those other 21 that have been lost? If, for instance, people used the Lewis and Clark bicentennial to fund the preservation of the Umatella language – and there is a preservation effort going on right now and it is one of the two languages left. By itself, that would be worth having a bicentennial. Languages that they recorded then, 200 years ago, we can’t, today, because they’ve disappeared. There’s a direct connection. They were interested in languages. We ought to be. That would be a good piece of commemoration for a bicentennial.

[TRAIN NOISES]

KNOY: Barrett Golding's portraits of the Lewis & Clark Trail: 200 Years Later are part of the Hearing Voices series, funded by the Corporation for Public Broadcasting. For more audio, images and interviews from the trail, go to our website, livingonearth.org.

ANNOUNCER: Funding for Living On Earth comes from the World Media Foundation. Major contributors include the Ford Foundation, for reporting on U.S. environment and development issues, and the William and Flora Hewlett foundation, for coverage of western issues. Support also comes from NPR member stations and the Noyce Foundation, dedicated to improving math and science instruction from kindergarten through grade 12, and Bob Williams and Meg Caldwell, honoring NPR’s coverage of environmental and natural resource issues, and in support of the NPR president's council. And Paul and Marcia Ginsburg, in support of excellence in public radio.

 

Links

Columbia Gorge Discovery Center

 

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