KAREN LAND

Mushing, Running, and the Great Outdoors!

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Lifestyle

The World Is Your Oyster

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Leonard Llewellyn always wanted to fly - since he was just 5 years old and living with his parents and brother in the Musselshell valley.

“The tops of the mountains all around in the Crazies and Little Belts had those red rotating beacons - I’d see those old DC-3’s flying,” he explained. “At all of the little fairs, like Harlow or Livingston, they’d give rides on crop dusters. I cornered a guy into giving me a ride for $2 – I don’t even remember if I paid for it or someone else felt sorry for me. My parents didn’t know or they never would’ve let me go up. I just wanted to fly.”

Leonard, who jokes that he’s 133 years old, was actually born in Martinsdale, Montana in 1933.


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Domestic Wilderness

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I don’t think any of my family or friends have ever used the word “domestic” and “Karen” in the same sentence. I feel way more comfortable mushing a team of dogs across Alaska than I do making the main entrée or dessert for a party. So when a friend of mine invited me to join a group of women who prepare dishes from the popular “Cooking Light” magazine and then gather for dinner one evening each month, my entire body shuddered with anxiety.

I was guarded, and with good reason.

Several years back, I met a very outgoing woman from Great Falls who invited me to a “big party” at her house. I was new to the area and spent all my days training sled dogs, so I decided it might be good for me to meet some new folks.


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The Bair Museum

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I must have sped past the “Bair Family Museum” signs off of Highway 89 and Highway 12 at least a dozen times on my way to train sled dogs up in the mountains. On every single occasion, I looked around at the sagebrush and the cottonwoods and the endless, breath-taking ranchland and thought to myself, “What kind of museum would be out here, literally, in the middle of Montana?”

I often asked friends traveling with me, “Have you ever been to that museum?”

Never, they all said.

When you’re out on a road-trip and operating in 100 per cent fishing or hunting or dog mushing mode, stopping for a tour through a local museum can seem like a waste of precious play time. But, actually, I’ve found it’s the perfect way to gain a better appreciation for the history of the landscape I’m traversing, making whatever I’m doing in the Montana backcountry a little more meaningful.

 


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Little House

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As I drove across the unusually green, rolling prairielands of eastern South Dakota, the “Little House on the Prairie” theme song played round and round in my head. I could practically see the three Ingalls girls – Laura, Mary, and Carrie – running down a hill through a meadow of golden grass.

And, of course, I could picture Michael Landon, the dreamy actor who went from playing Little Joe Cartwright in “Bonanza” (1959-1973) to Charles Ingalls in “Little House on the Prairie” (1974-1983). During the 9 seasons the popular television series aired, almost every girl in my grade school shared a serious crush on “Pa” (Charles) Ingalls.

Last Friday, my mom and I just happened to stumble across the small town of De Smet, South Dakota - the “Little Town on the Prairie” of the Laura Ingalls Wilder books - on our way west after 3 weeks on the road giving Iditarod library presentations. It was an exciting accident that our path crossed with the Ingalls Homestead Site; watching “Little House” was a ritual we enjoyed together throughout my childhood.


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Carmin The Garmin

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Carmin would not stop talking.

“In one mile, exit right,” her emotionless voice proclaimed loudly over the Houston rush hour report blaring from my car radio. “Exit right, exit right.”

“Easier said than done,” I snapped back at my new, know-it-all traveling companion.

All five lanes of traffic were bumper to bumper. More than one time in Houston, I was tempted to abandon my vehicle on the interstate right then and there. It would have been faster to hike the few miles back to my hotel.


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