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Lace up your boots and head into Colorado's rugged Sangre de Cristo
Mountains to explore this spine of soaring peaks that stand more
than a mile above the San Luis and Wet Mountain Valleys. Here
you'll discover plunging creeks, gorges cut from chunky
conglomerate, and valleys where elk, bighorn sheep, coyote, and
cougar live. Climb Kit Carson Mountain, Crestone Needle, or Blanca
Peak; hike Black Canyon or Wild Cherry Creek. Wander the Great Sand
Dunes National Park, which has the tallest dunes in North America.
Local hiker and outdoor writer Lee Hart will introduce you to these
trails and many more. Inside you'll find: up-to-date trail
information; accurate directions to wilderness trails; difficulty
ratings; topographic trail maps; zero-impact tips. Whether you are
planning a day hike or an extended backpacking trip, you'll find
trails suited to every ability and interest in one of the most
beautiful regions of Colorado.
The University of Kansas (KU) is a public research university and
the largest university in the state of Kansas. Created by the staff
of the KU libraries, KU ScholarWorks is the digital repository of
the University. It contains scholarly work created by KU faculty
and staff, as well as material from the University Archives. KU
ScholarWorks makes important research and historical items
available to a wider audience and helps assure their long-term
preservation. The University of Kansas's KU ScholarWorks Pre-1923
Theses and Dissertation collection was digitized by the Scholarly
Communications program staff in the KU Libraries' Center for
Digital Scholarship. These theses and dissertations range from 1883
- 1921 and reflect topics from Engineering and History to Economics
and Chemistry, including titles like A Study of Terpeneless Lemon
Extracts, English Interest in the Abolition of the Slave Trade, and
Aspects of the Gothic Romance.
No. 7-as Carpenter, the youngest of seven children, called
himself-was born in Missouri in 1854 and moved west with his
family, first to Kansas, then to the settlements near Pikes Peak,
and finally, in 1872, to Texas with his elder brother. From the
time he made his first cattle drive, he wanted no other life but
that of herding longhorns across the free and flat grasslands of
the West. His schooling was the trail, the campfire, the saddle. In
1900, after a full and active life, he retired to his own ranch
west of the Pecos. As the years passed, he sadly watched the fences
go up and the free range disappear. Thus this book came to be
written from the longing memory of a time-stranded cowman. He tells
his story in the hard-punching, gritty language, direct humor, and
attachment to bald fact and frank opinion that characterize the
true Westerner. Elton Miles has provided an introduction that fills
in the details of Carpenter's life and completes a "vivid picture
of the genuine old-time cowman," as Southwest Review observed.
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