While Buffalo Roamed: The Wild West History of Colorado

Jonathan Summer Publishing

     History of Colorado’s (Old West) frontier days, western history, wild west, with the introduction to the remaining landmarks (while the buffalo and native Americans ruled the plains).      Once gold is discovered in west Kansas Territory, the western adventurers, settlers, miners, bandits, gamblers, farmers, ranchers, city builders and politicians stopped in Denver; from there these pioneers spread like ants into an unknown wilderness that would evolve into  the state of Colorado.      Hero’s and villains, trials and hangings, escapes and adventure, fortunes made and lost - murder, poetry and even song - from the initial evidence left for us...      This podcast is produced locally, high in the Rocky Mountains where this history - and these stories originated.      The show is best enjoyed by listening to the episodes in order, and while not necessary, the full wild western experience is gained in this manner - full immersion - the history (stories) are in chronological order.     Our podcast will entertain and enlighten, the listener will notice much quotation from the mid to late 1800s; think of the quotations as the guests of the show.  At first the language and vocabulary of the frontiersman and women will seem awkward, trust me: YOU WILL ABSORB the cadence and character and learn some new words - it will quicken your thought (I believe that - give it a solid try and see for yourself).     The episodes together form a rounded story of frontier life.  The stages of civilization of the mid 1800s also translate to California, Montana, Nevada, Oregon, Utah, Arizona, Mew Mexico, Wyoming and more.  Starting from campers, gold miners, ranchers…      Colorado is wonderful example of western frontier settlement.  Its relative youth helps the historian or enthusiast, as does the general gold excitement which attracted so many from all over the world.  Those involved in Colorado’s settlement felt that is was quite a special event in American history, which it was, and thankfully many early arrivals wrote copious notes - there’s a mountain of first hand primary source evidence.  We don’t want to lose these stories, and while Colorado history is easy to obtain and read, it’s shuffled so that the storytellers or historians who didn’t have the benefits of modern research techniques, naturally missed some details we can (and have) recover(ed) today.  Combine this with the author who has first hand knowledge of the particular locations and you can't help but learn a little something along the way - we shoot for “total immersion” - or something like that!

  1. May 21 ·  Bonus

    SE6 - The Redwoods of Colorado

    Redwoods in Colorado? What if the pine trees and deep snow of the Colorado Rockies are sitting right on top of an ancient, tropical jungle? 35 million years ago, the heart of Colorado's South Park basin and the Florissant Valley looked more like Central America than the high altitude country we know today. Giant, 150 foot tall redwoods choked the humid valleys, while rhinoceros sized "thunder beasts" crashed through the underbrush. But these massive trees carried a strange evolutionary secret from a past life in the ice free high Arctic - and their mountain paradise was about to meet a violent, volcanic end. In this short episode, we chart the epic 65 million year-old Odyssey of the Redwood family tree. We explore their massive migration down the continent, the catastrophic volcanic mud flows that trapped them in stone, and the mind blowing 1943 plot twist that proved a branch of this prehistoric forest never actually went extinct. In this episode, you'll discover: The Backyard Monster - How the Guffey Volcanic Complex created a world class fossil goldmine. The Arctic Secret: Why an ancient Colorado redwoods drop their needles in the winter time, unlike California redwoods. The Botanical Time capsule: How the catastrophic mud flows of Lake Florissant perfectly sealed away a prehistoric world. Hiding in Plain Sight: The jaw-dropping 1943 "rediscover" of China's living "dinosaur" tree. Hit play and travel back 35 million years into Colorado's hidden tropical past!

    7 min
5
out of 5
9 Ratings

About

     History of Colorado’s (Old West) frontier days, western history, wild west, with the introduction to the remaining landmarks (while the buffalo and native Americans ruled the plains).      Once gold is discovered in west Kansas Territory, the western adventurers, settlers, miners, bandits, gamblers, farmers, ranchers, city builders and politicians stopped in Denver; from there these pioneers spread like ants into an unknown wilderness that would evolve into  the state of Colorado.      Hero’s and villains, trials and hangings, escapes and adventure, fortunes made and lost - murder, poetry and even song - from the initial evidence left for us...      This podcast is produced locally, high in the Rocky Mountains where this history - and these stories originated.      The show is best enjoyed by listening to the episodes in order, and while not necessary, the full wild western experience is gained in this manner - full immersion - the history (stories) are in chronological order.     Our podcast will entertain and enlighten, the listener will notice much quotation from the mid to late 1800s; think of the quotations as the guests of the show.  At first the language and vocabulary of the frontiersman and women will seem awkward, trust me: YOU WILL ABSORB the cadence and character and learn some new words - it will quicken your thought (I believe that - give it a solid try and see for yourself).     The episodes together form a rounded story of frontier life.  The stages of civilization of the mid 1800s also translate to California, Montana, Nevada, Oregon, Utah, Arizona, Mew Mexico, Wyoming and more.  Starting from campers, gold miners, ranchers…      Colorado is wonderful example of western frontier settlement.  Its relative youth helps the historian or enthusiast, as does the general gold excitement which attracted so many from all over the world.  Those involved in Colorado’s settlement felt that is was quite a special event in American history, which it was, and thankfully many early arrivals wrote copious notes - there’s a mountain of first hand primary source evidence.  We don’t want to lose these stories, and while Colorado history is easy to obtain and read, it’s shuffled so that the storytellers or historians who didn’t have the benefits of modern research techniques, naturally missed some details we can (and have) recover(ed) today.  Combine this with the author who has first hand knowledge of the particular locations and you can't help but learn a little something along the way - we shoot for “total immersion” - or something like that!

You Might Also Like