Orman Dam Hybrid Letterbox Hybrid
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Nice easy hide with permission of Bureau Of Reclamation. PLEASE TO NOTE WE DO NOT HAVE A INK PAD IN CACHE FOR LETTER BOX,, TOO MUCH COLD/HOT/DRY/WET IN OUR COUNTRY TO KEEP THEM WORKING, PLEASE BRING ONE WITH YOU FOR LETTERBOX STAMPING. THANKS
At the cache’s location the Bureau of Reclamation has done a great job of describing the Orman Dam and Belle Fourche Valley area’s history. The Reclamation Bureau protects and manages land and resources associated with Orman Dam. It is a center for water sports but the primary purpose for the dam is irrigation. This earthen dam is one of our nation’s earliest attempts at turning low-moisture areas into cropland. Theodore Roosevelt’s ranching experience and travel in Dakota Territory led him to the conclusion that the conservation of water to irrigate the so-called “Great American Desert” could be accomplished. Through Teddy Roosevelt’s efforts as president, the Reclamation Act of 1902 was passed which created the Bureau of Reclamation as part of the Department of Interior. The Belle Fourche Irrigation Project was one of the first projects authorized under the Reclamation Act. Floods, inadequate equipment, and financial problems plagued the initial contractors of Orman Dam. And according to records kept by W. W. Patch, construction engineer, there were many day to day problems in building the dam. One of the problems was finding sufficient hay and oats for the several hundred horses used in construction. And during the wet weather it is the characteristic of gumbo soil to “ball up”, and the feet of unlucky humans and animals forced to travel in it seems to grow continually larger. When the gumbo soil is wet it’s a very heavy sticky mud; it is practically impossible to move stock across it. The benefits of this clay soil are that it will hold water like a bucket and it doesn’t erode easily. Therefore gumbo is a good basin for irrigation ditches and the bottom lands of Orman Dam. On gumbo there is no sod. Each spear of grass grows independently from its own root. Compared with sod grass, gumbo grass is sparse; but in content it is much richer. Lack of water is the chief difficulty but dams like Orman are solving that problem. Orman Dam and the water it supplied proved to be a boon to Belle Fourche and the surrounding area. In the early 1900’s irrigation also introduced a myriad of new cash crops to western South Dakota, including cucumbers, sugar beets, onions, pinto beans and even peanuts. Pickling plants were established to process the cucumbers, and in 1927 the Utah and Idaho Sugar Company built a plant at Belle Fourche to process the beets. The type of crops irrigated in the Belle Fouche area has changed; alfalfa and corn are now the primary crops replacing sugar beets and cucumbers. But the benefits from this irrigation project remain the same. More than 90 years after the completion of the Orman Dam project, Teddy Roosevelt’s dream of irrigating the arid western lands is still coming true. In spring, summer, and fall this location may be very busy; people will be enjoying fishing and camping in this area. As always use stealth when finding it, and please re-hide the containers well. When you find the right location, there will be two plastic containers; one is the cache container and the other one is for letter boxing. For the first to find there is a Las Vegas TB. Please be careful when the area is wet; it’s a bad caching day when one is stuck in the sticky gumbo soil. Thanks, and have a great caching day!
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