Free Republic
Browse · Search
General/Chat
Topics · Post Article

To: Sundog

Morning Doggie. I see you had a great birthday party up in the mountains. You folks really know how to live. ;)

Nooo.. I have to buy all these things or find lots of freebies to use. The program itself comes with some stuff of course, but most of it has to be searched out, and be the right kind of object files for each proggie. It can get confusing.

How's the weather down there? Is most of the snow left the mountains yet?


55 posted on 06/12/2006 8:47:56 AM PDT by grannie9 (Between slobs, dogs, and Englishmen, I'm always in hot water.)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 54 | View Replies ]


To: grannie9

I'll get you some fresh pics when I get home.

Did you see the pic of the dam?

Interesting story there. The Spaniards were mining the mountains for gold adjacent to the dam in the 1700s, and were traveling south periodically with 100 mule teams laden with gold. When they were between teams, they would cache the gold in the ground (Question: How many pounds of gold can 100 mules carry?)

One of the back hoe workers hit one of those caches, filled up the bed of his pickup with the ingots, (5 lbs each) and disappeared off the face of the earth. I heard this story in 1990, right after becoming involved in a ranch nearby.

In 2004 I heard the finale -- someone from the ranch was visiting the Carribean, and happened to meet the fellow in a bar, recognized him, and asked what had happened -- big surprise to find him alive and obviously well. The fellow now has a big spread on an island there, living out the rest of his natural life in ease.

You can still find ingots in the mountains there, on old mule trails where they fell out of the bags and landed on the ground. I have heard of 2 such finds.

The mine itself -- That is shrouded in secrecy. Brigham Young contacted the Ute Indians for permission to extract 100,000 ounces of gold, enough to setup the Mormon mint in SLC, that produced gold coins from 1849 on, for the settlers to do commerce. The gold covered Moroni statue on the temple in SLC, that really is a gold covered statue.

When Brigham had his 100,000 ounces, the Indians sealed the mine, and to this day it has never reopened. It is on tribal lands up there. I talked to one party that searched on Tribal lands for other caches like the one found, and they apparently located a second but were not allowed to dig it up. Now the Indians keep armed patrols up the canyons and on the mountain tops, and I have encountered them. They move you along and escort you back to public roads if you are off them.

Apparently the elders won't tell the young bucks where the sealed entrance is, or so the story goes. Brigham left a cannon up there, and it was possible to find it through the 1990's, but I suspect it has been moved by now.


70 posted on 06/12/2006 10:27:56 AM PDT by Sundog (cheers.)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 55 | View Replies ]

Free Republic
Browse · Search
General/Chat
Topics · Post Article


FreeRepublic, LLC, PO BOX 9771, FRESNO, CA 93794
FreeRepublic.com is powered by software copyright 2000-2008 John Robinson