This is the Place! There are about 77,000 wild horses, or mustangs, roaming the western US. To control their numbers, the Bureau of Land Management periodically rounds them up into corrals, like this one on the outskirts of Rock Springs. Horses evolved in North America, spreading to Asia and Europe before going extinct here at […]

Read More »

Crossing the Continental Divide. Passing through downtown Casper, Wyoming, early the next morning. Fort Caspar (yes, slightly different spelling than the town) was the migrants’ last stop before departing the North Platte River, which they had been following for over a month. The small military cemetery at Fort Caspar, Wyoming. Fort Caspar originated as a […]

Read More »

Over Scotts Bluff and Into Wyoming. As we arrived in the outskirts of Scottsbluff, we came across the grave of Rebecca Winters. A Mormon emigrant, age 50, she died here in 1852 of cholera. Her husband Hiram chiseled her name into an iron wagon tire, which still stands over her final resting place. Always good […]

Read More »

Following the Platte River. The Platte River is wide and shallow, and looks like it should be easy to cross. But the waters hide deadly quicksand. The Oregon Trail migrants followed the southern bank, while the Mormons and later transcontinental railroad, joining from Omaha, followed the northern bank. More signs of trouble along the Oregon […]

Read More »

Across the Plains to Fort Kearney. We’ve left St. Joseph and are following the Pony Express – and the Oregon Trail – west across the Missouri River into Kansas. The corn fields of northeast Kansas, along the Oregon Trail. Following the Pony Express into Seneca, Kansas. Asking myself if I need crop insurance. Seneca, Kansas. […]

Read More »

On to St. Joseph. Railroad cars beside a grain elevator outside Kansas City, Missouri. Kansas City has long been a major transportation hub in the center of the country. Before departing it entirely, we paid a visit to the TWA Museum at the airline’s former corporate headquarters at Charles B. Wheeler Airport just outside of […]

Read More »

Starting out from Independence, Missouri. Ready to depart on the Oregon Trail? In August 2021, this was the route my 11-year-old son followed (with the exception of a short trip up to St. Joseph, the other starting point for the Trail), on a road trip that took two weeks. The county courthouse in Independence, Missouri […]

Read More »

Today is a two-fer. For my next MSFS trick, I’ll be flying the classic British WW2 fighter, the Spitfire. But not just any Spitfire, mind you, the one-of-a-kind “Black Spit” of the Israeli air force. I’ll explain the story behind the 57 Black Spit in a second, but first, let’s get this thing started. Starting […]

Read More »

Today in Microsoft Flight Simulator I’ll be flying the Fouga CM.170 Magister, the world’s first 2-seat jet trainer, which starting in the 1950s played a key role in transitioning several air forces from piston to jet aircraft – and also fought in a number of “brush wars”. I’ll start the story here at Toulouse’s Blagnac […]

Read More »

I knew Eddie Rickenbacker was an American flying ace in World War I, and won the Medal of Honor, but I didn’t know that much about the rest of his life until now. Rickenbacker grew up in poverty. His parents were struggling immigrants from Switzerland. His home had no electricity, plumbing, or heat. He ran […]

Read More »