1804 Day of the month |
Thermot. at ☉ rise |
Weather |
Wind at ☉ rise |
thermotr. at 4 P.M. |
Weather |
Wind at 4oC P.M. |
Octr. 1st | 40 | c. | S E. | 46 | c. | S E |
2nd [2] | 39 | f | S E | 75 | C. | N. W |
3rd | 40 | c. | N W | 45 | c. a r & f | N W |
4th | 38 | c a r | N. W | 50 | c. | N. W. |
5th | 36 | f. | N W. | 54 | f | N. W. |
6th | 43 | f. | N W. | 60 | f | N W. |
7th | 45 | c | S. E. | 58 | f | S E |
8th | 48 | f | N. W. | 62 | f | N W |
9th | 45 | c. | N. E. | 50 | c. a. r. | N. |
10th | 42 | f. a r | N. W | 67 | f. | N. W |
11th | 43 | f | N. W. | 59 | f. | N. W. |
12th | 42 | f | S | 65 | f. | S. E. |
13th | 43 | f. | S W. | 49 | c a r | N E |
14th | 42 | r. | S E | 40 | r. | S E |
15 | 46 | r. | N. | 57 | f. a. r. | N. W. |
16 | 45 | c. | N. E | 50 | f | N. E. |
17 | 47 | f | N. W | 54 | f. | N. W |
18 | 30 | f | N. W. | 68 | f. | N W |
19 | 43 | f | S E. | 62 | f | S |
20 | 44 | f | N. W. | 48 | f | N. |
21 | 31 | s | N. W. | 34 | s | N W |
22 | 35 | c. a. s | N. E | 42 | c | N E |
23 | 32 | s | N W | 45 | c | N E |
24 | 33 | s a f | N. W. | 51 | c a s | N W |
25 | 31 | c | S E | 50 | c | S E. |
26 | 42 | f | S E | 57 | f | S E |
27th | 39 | f | S W | 58 | f | S W. |
28 | 34 | f | S W | 54 | f | S W |
29 | 32 | f | S W | 59 | f | S. W. |
30 | 32 | f | S W | 52 | f | S W. |
31 | 33 | f | W | 48 | f | W. |
October | 1st | the leaves of the ash popular & most of the shrubs begin to turn yellow and decline came too this evening near the habitation of a Frenchman— [4] |
3rd | the earth and sand which form the bars of the river are so fully impregnated with salt that it shoots and adhers to the little sticks which appear on the serface it is pleasent & seems niterous.— |
|
5th | slight white frost last night— brant & geese passing to South |
|
6th | frost as last night saw teal, mallard, [5] & Gulls large. | |
8th | arrived at Recare vilage, visited the Chief on the Island [6] | |
9th | wind blew hard this morning drove the boat from her anker, came to Shore, some brant & geese passing to the south, 〈spoke to them recares〉 |
|
10th | had the mill erected shewed the savages its operation, spoke to them shot my airgun. the men traded some articles for robes, the savages much pleased, the French chief lost his presents by his canoe overseting |
|
11th | no fogg or dew this morning nor have we seen either for many days (i e) since the 21st of Septr.— received the answer at the 1st Chief, set out |
|
12th | receved the 〈answer and〉 present of corn from the 3rd Cheif and the answers from both 〈of these〉 the 2d & 3rd. recieved the corn from 2d last evening obtained 20 bush- e[l]s. set out at 2 in the evening. |
|
13th | tried Newman at 12 oCk for mutiny— cottonwood all yellow and the leaves begin to fall, abundance of grapes and red burries— [7] |
|
14th | the leaves of all the trees as ash, elm &c except the cotton- wood is now fallen— punished newman— [8] |
|
17th | saw a large flock of White geese with Black wings, [9] Anti- lopes are passing to the black hills to winter, as is their custom |
|
18th | hard frost last night, the clay near the water edge was fro- zen, as was the water in the vessels exposed to the air. |
|
19th | no Mule deer seen above the dog river [10] none at the recares | |
20th | much more timber than usual— Saw the first black haws [11]
that we have seen for a long time— Pier Crusat shot a white bear left his gun and tomahalk |
|
22nd | the snow ½ inch deep. [12] some Souixs 14 in number came to us on the Lard. this morning— [13] beleive them to be a war party— they were naked except their legings—. |
|
24th | arrived at a mandane hunting camp visited the lodge of the chief |
|
25th | this evening passed a rapid and sholde place in the river were obliged to get out and drag the boat— all the leaves of the trees have now fallen— the snow did not lye. |
|
27th | camp for the purpose of speaking to the five villages, arrived at ½ past 12 at the place we intended to fix our [camp] [14] sent runners to invite them to council tomorrow with tobacco— an article indispensible in those cases— |
|
28th | wind so heard that we could not go into council [15] | |
29th | we Spoke to the Indians in council— tho' the wind was so hard that it was extreemly disagreeable. the sand was blown on us in clouds— |
|
30th |
Capt. Clark visited the island above to look out a place for winter encampment, but did not succeed [16] |
|
31st | this day the Mandanes of the 2nd or upper vilage gave us an answer and some corn |