Tall prairie grass, wind-swept and burnished gold, whispers with the long-dead voices of all who passed on this trail in their dream voyage to Oregon, or California, or who died, disease-ridden, exhausted, to be buried just off the rutted trail under a lonely stretch of sod or cairned atop a barren lava bed.
A bone-white wagon tongue, its carriage long ago disintegrated and fallen into splintery planks, laps thirstily at the dry sod along the edge of the trail, finding only parched earth and no water, burrs and beetles instead of hydration. More prairie than desert but still more a place to leave behind, only insects, lizards, hawks and the curious chickadees seem to make it home, this dusty stretch of history.
Hawks hover, then spiral effortless high above, as they did so many years ago, dark against a soft patchwork of azure blue sky and creeping clouds. The occasional click of grasshoppers is barely audible in the billowing prairie grass shaken by the incessant wind. Dry bones of beasts and luckless humans hug the edges of the trail, mute testimony to the brutality of the westward rush and the following of the Oregon Trail.