Vancouver Sun

Where buffalo herds once roamed

Follow the trail where the great herds were hunted and saved in North and South Dakota

- JAMES NORD

From historical details of native peoples’ final great wild buffalo hunts to tales of the animal’s rescue from near extinction, a new self-guided tour across 10 sites in the western Dakotas tells the story of the Bison’s last stand.

The trail, which is accompanie­d by the tour book Buffalo Trails in the Dakota Buttes, oriented toward history and nature enthusiast­s, officially opened June 11.

Starting in Hettinger, N.D., the route runs — at times across gravel or pasture roads — into South Dakota before returning north with an opportunit­y to see the Standing Rock Sioux’s tribal bison herds.

“They’re authentic places, and not only that, but most of them are unspoiled,” said Francie Berg, the tour book’s author.

“There’s one place where it’s good to be able to roll under a fence.”

Tens of millions of bison, also known as buffalo, once thundered across a range stretching from Central Canada to northern Mexico.

After a century-long slaughter driven by commercial hunting for buffalo pelts, the population dwindled to a thousand or fewer near the end of the 1800s.

At the tour’s second stop in North Dakota, visitors see the valley near Hiddenwood Cliff where the “Great Buffalo Hunt” began in June 1882 on the Great Sioux Reservatio­n.

According to the book, for the previous 15 years those grasslands were empty of buffalo as white hide hunters had pushed them west, and most herds had been killed.

But Indian agent James McLaughlin describes in his memoirs a herd that summer estimated at 50,000, with roughly 600 native hunters on horseback and others taking 5,000 buffalo.

“The story of the buffalo — that powerful, resilient, magnificen­t creature — is an American story,” Berg writes.

“In large part it is an Indian story. For thousands of years, they flourished together, and as is fitting, Native Americans were in charge of the final hunts.”

The tour’s fifth site, with a view of the south fork of the Grand River in South Dakota, tells the story of Pete Dupree and other families honoured as critical to saving the buffalo from extinction.

By Dupree’s death in 1898, his herd had grown to more than 80 buffalo, according to the tour book.

North Dakota tourism director Sara Otte Coleman said the new experience tells the story of the history and preservati­on of the buffalo in the Dakotas.

The 10 stops are marked with signs for visitors, and Berg recommende­d taking two days to traverse the entire route.

“I think people get a taste of what it really was like, and of course you can see buffalo herds here, too,” she said.

They’re authentic places, and not only that, but most of them are unspoiled. There’s one place where it’s good to be able to roll under a fence.

 ?? BLAKE NICHOLSON/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? A new self-guided tour across 10 sites in the western Dakotas tells the story of the Bison’s last stand against near extinction.
BLAKE NICHOLSON/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS A new self-guided tour across 10 sites in the western Dakotas tells the story of the Bison’s last stand against near extinction.

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