University of Virginia Library

[Clark:]

23rd.. of April 1805

A cold morning at about 9 oClock the wind as usial rose
from the N W and continued to blow verry hard untill late in
the evening I walked on Shore after brackfast in my walk
on the S Side passed through extensive bottoms of timber intersperced
with glades & low open plains, I killed 3 mule or
black tail Deer, which was in tolerable order, Saw Several
others, I also killed a Buffalow calf which was verry fine, I
struck the river above the Perogus which had come too in a


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bend to the L.S. to shelter from the wind which had become
violently hard, I joined Capt Lewis in the evening & after
the winds falling which was late in the evening we proceeded
on & encamped on the S.S. The winds of this countrey which
blow with some violence almost every day, has become a serious
obstruction in our progression onward, as we cant move when
the wind is high with[out] great risque, and [if] there was no
risque the winds is generally a head and often too violent to
proceed

Course & Distance 23d. April

           
S. 25° E  2 1/2  miles to a point of timbered land on the Starboard Side 
South  mile on the Sd point, of wood land a high Bluff opposit. 
S. 78°. W.  miles to a copse of woods under a hill to the Sd. Side in
a bend 
S. 14°. E.  4 1/2  miles to a point of high timber in a larboard bend,
passing the enterence of a little bay to S.S. 
S. 25°. W.  1 1/2  miles to a point of woods on the Ld. Side 
miles  13 1/2