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no, southside of OKC, i just have family down there. My dad grew up around there he was born in Dequeen Arkansas because that was the nearest hospital to Broken Bow. We go back several times a year to see family or just enjoy the scenery we also go to the fall festivals around those parts. we use to camp on the north side of Broken Bow lake (to avoid the tourists) during the summers, havent done that since i was a kid. But whether or not i was born there doesnt matter its in the blood, it will always be home.
And for those of you who say that there are not any mountains in southwestern Oklahoma, let me roll you down one of em and get back with me afterward
I all but grew up in Rattan. I still have kin in that area too. I've hunted and fished and camped all over that area for almost 50 years now, including 40 years in a row. Since the days before Weyerhauser, when it was Dierks Timber. Back then it was jeeps and 2 wheel motorcycles, and then the 3 wheelers came along. Now the 4 wheelers are here and I just bought a new side by side. Who knows what the next step in that evolution might be? The important thing is that there will be a next step and those roads and trails should be left open for them. Sure, there are a few that spoil things for the larger group, but they should be dealt with individually. To place restrictions on everyone who rides the trails in unnecessary and unfair. As long as they are not doing permanent damage to the environment, I say let 'em ride.
-Stimp-
I grew up in that area before there was a Broken Bow Lake, Pine Creek Lake or Hugo Lake. Our cattle 'free-ranged on Dierks timber and all the locals would round-up the
cattle in big sorting pens and beside Bear Mountain Tower or up at Cloudy Flats and then take your cattle the rest of the way home.
We didn't take Easter or Spring break to go to Florida, we knew we would be in the hills on horseback bringing down the cows.
Grandpa had an Ol' International pickup that would go anywhere and Uncle William would take his tractor. I grew hunting and fishing the area and didn't worry about fences
because the only fences were at someone's house around their barn and paddock areas and you knew everybody and where they lived.
My Grandpaw was mad as ever when they started building the dam on Mountain Fork River to build Broken Bow Lake. So much of that land was Choctaw land and the
government (Corp of Engineers) just took it. Yes, it is beautiful but it was so much more prestine before they put the lake and dam in on the river.
Hi-Jacker