Journal Entry

Lewis: April 24, 1805

April 24, 1805
Missouri River near Yellowstone approach

Wednesday April 24th The wind blew so hard during the whole of this day,
that we were unable to move. notwithstanding that we were sheltered by
high timber from the effects of the wind, such was it’s violence that it
caused the waves to rise in such manner as to wet many articles in the
small canoes before they could be unloaded. we sent out some hunters who
killed 4 deer & 2 Elk, and caught some young wolves of the small kind.Soar
eyes is a common complaint among the party. I believe it origenates from
the immence quantities of sand which is driven by the wind from the
sandbars of the river in such clouds that you are unable to discover the
opposite bank of the river in many instances. the particles of this sand
are so fine and light that they are easily supported by the air, and are
carried by the wind for many miles, and at a distance exhibiting every
appearance of a collumn of thick smoke. so penitrating is this sand that
we cannot keep any article free from it; in short we are compelled to eat,
drink, and breath it very freely. my pocket watch, is out of order, she
will run only a few minutes without stoping. I can discover no radical
defect in her works, and must therefore attribute it to the sand, with
which, she seems plentifully charged, notwithstanding her cases are double
and tight.

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