Mountain men declare it too late to cross
Such was old Bill Williams - he who was destined to be our guide at this time. But it was not without some
hesitation that he consented to go, for most of the old trappers at the pueblo declared that it was impossible to
cross the mountains at that time; that the cold upon the mountains was unprecedented, and the snow deeper than they
had ever known it so early in the year. However, Old Bill concluded to go, for he thought we could manage to get
through, though not without considerable suffering.
On the 26th of November [1848] we entered the Rocky Mountains, which had been for days looming up before us,
presenting to view one continuous sheet of snow. The snow already covered the mountains and was rapidly deepening.
I have frequently since called to mind the expression of one of the men as we rode along before entering Hard
Scrabble. As we looked upon the stormy mountain so portentous of the future, he said, "Friends, I don't want my bones to bleach upon those mountains." Poor fellow, little did he dream of
what the future would be!
In the evening, from our first camp, eight miles in the mountains, several of us climbed to a high point to take a
last look at the plains. The sight was beautiful; the snowcovered plain far beneath us stretching eastward as far
as the eye could reach, while on the opposite side frowned the almost perpendicular wall of high mountains.
Laboring through the deep snow
We entered the mountains on foot, packing our saddlemules with corn to sustain the animals. We traveled on,
laboring through the deep snow on the rugged mountain range, passing successively through what are called White
Mountain Valley and Wet Mountain Valley into Grand River Valley. The cold was intense, and storms frequently
compelled us to lie in camp, from the impossibility of forcing the mules against them. A number of the men were
frozen; the animals became exhausted from the inclemency of the weather and want of food, what little grass there
was being all buried in the snow. As we proceeded matters grew worse and worse. The mules gave out one by one and
dropped down in the trail, and their packs were placed upon the saddle-mules. The cold became more and more
intense, so many degrees below zero that the mercury sank entirely into the bulb. The breath would freeze upon the
men's faces and their lips become so stiff from the ice that it was almost impossible to speak; the long beard and
hair stood out white and stiff with the frost. The aspect of the mules was as bad as that of the men; their
eyelashes and the long beard about their mouths were frozen stiff, and their breath settled upon their breasts and
sides until they were perfectly white with frost. The snow, too, would clog under their hoofs until it formed a
ball six inches long, making them appear as though they were walking on stilts. With the deep snow around us, and
the pendant frost upon the leafless trees, Nature and ourselves presented a very harmonious picture. Two trappers,
Old Bill informed us, had been frozen to death here the year previous.
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