The NFC B-Day Chat Thread

So, jest wonderin' ...... do people who work in golf resorts get to take vacations? If so, there's a ton of great stuff to do up here in NW Wyoming too.....come on up and I'll let you help me clean the chicken coop, then we can have a barbeque on the deck. We'll set up Motel 5 1/2 for ya, and the next morning we can head for Yellowstone, or the Wild Horse Range (that's just a few miles from us) go fossil hunting in the Pryors, spend the day up on the Big Horns.....you pick!! All of those places are day trips from Oleo Acres.

Okay, a few interesting facts about my adopted state:

Firsts, for women:

Wyoming's first territorial governor, John Campbell, signed a bill granting women the right to vote, own property, sign legal documents and make that signature as binding as a man's, and hold public office. That was in 1869.

First woman Justice of the Peace in South Pass City, 1870

First all-woman jury, 1870, in Laramie.

First woman court bailiff in the entire world, 1870, Albany County

First woman state official - Superintendent of Public Instruction, 1894

First town governed entirely by woman, Jackson - Mayor, Town Council and town marshall.

First woman governor in the US, she served from 1925 until 1927, then in 1933 President Roosevelt appointed her as the first woman to head the US mint, which she held until 1953.


Other Firsts:

1st US Forest Ranger Station
1st. National Park (Yellowstone)
1st National Forest (Shoshone)
1st National Monument (Devil's Tower)
1st National Wild Horse Range
1st Business west of the Missouri River (Laramie, 1834)
1st State to have a county library system
JC Penney's opened his first store in Kemmerer, Wyoming.
1st Evening interscholastic football game to be played under artificial lights.

Interesting facts:

The Red Desert in South Central Wyoming doesn't drain either to the east or the west. The Continental Divide splits there and runs around the desert on all sides, so the Basin has no drainage.

The Wind River and the Big Horn River are actually the same river with two different names, and it flows through the Wind River Canyon south of Thermopolis, Wyoming. The point where the river widens slightly and changes names is known as "The Wedding of the Waters." It is one of the few rivers in the world which changes names midstream.

Thermopolis, Wyoming, is almost as thermal an area as Yellowstone Park. It boasts the largest mineral springs, and admission is free to all. There are even a few cones formed by mineral deposits as hot water bubbled up from the earth dotted throughout the town, and they still have hot water coming out of them, adding to the height of the mineral cones.
http://www.wyomingtourism.org/things-to ... -Park/2507

The rock on top of Heart Mountain, just outside of Cody, is 300 MILLION years older than the rock formation it sits on. Geologists are still trying to figure out how that happened.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Heart_Mountain_(Wyoming)
 
What a fascinating place. Blooie, your link to Heart Mountain has issues - the closing parenthesis isn't blue, so the link doesn't work right.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Heart_Mountain_(Wyoming)

Some of the things that have happened geologically just boggle the mind, don't they?
Oh, I noticed that after I posted and couldn't seem to get it to come up right, so thank you so much for fixing it for me! I find it so fascinating how far ahead of the times Wyoming was with regard to opportunities for women - and this was all well before women had any rights at all in the rest of this country!
 
Impressive places breed impressive people? I notice that the first woman governor was recognized well beyond the borders of her home state, at a time when the whole country was in turmoil. Impressive lady, indeed!
 
Blooie, your offer is mighty tempting but might have to wait a bit. Getting this place shaped up is consuming all our time. We started at 5am this morning and other than lunch (and a nap for me), we're just now wrapping things up for the day. If the snow doesn't catch us, we'll have a chance to play once the course closes for the season in October.

I've been to some of the parks here...WY was always a big draw for our annual vacation when we were kids. We were lucky enough to have some wonderful trips to Yellowstone and the Tetons.

Have you ever been to Seminoe State Park? It's really close to where we are and looks like a great place to check out as soon as we get a chance!
 
I haven't been there. Maybe next road trip to Rawlins we can see you AND the park! Not too far from you (in Wyoming distances) is Register Cliffs and The Oregon Trail Ruts. That is really something to see. It's near Guernsey, and what a beautiful and historically fascinating place! I could have stayed much longer and explored it a bit more, but it was starting to snow. We went there for the first time the day before Ken's sister's services down there, and we all know how THAT turned out. Never, NEVER thought I'd see a mini van being pulled out of the snow with a casket winch!
 
Good morning BertS, Phil and everyone else

Hope the day is starting off reasonably well - but its probably too early to tell in your respective necks of the wood.
 

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