This never gets me anywhere, but I keep thinking 'up your creek without a paddle' and 'come hell or high water.' Sorry if I got those songs stuck in your head like they are in mine :)
It didn't take me long to realize that choosing a location where the home of Brown was fish or elk or bears, was just so ambiguous......there are several hatcheries for brown trout, on several different rivers, and several different lakes where brown trout are found. And putting in below them is way out there in imagination trying to choose where that spot might be. Same goes for Bear and for Elk. Putting in below Bears or Elk is just as ambiguous...like that could mean so many different places. So, I was left with plan A, and that was consider that the home of Brown was simply that...somebody's house or the town they were from. But then again....putting in below a house, or putting in below a town is also hard to fit into the poem's first two clues. I was really stuck with Fenn's choice of words for the third clue. Put in...those two words got me every time in my quest to determine an actual location. All i had to go off was the fact that immediately after i "put in", I was gonna have to deal with the fact that I might get my feet wet from the sound of the following clues. So for me it meant that if you werent willing to get your feet wet, or go into the river or something...the rest of the search was NOT FOR YOU. So after I narrowed down where a couple of possible warm water destinations might be, immediately finding that location to be near or in a canyon area...I needed to realize it was better to stay in the car and keep on driving to try and get to the bottom of the canyon. Take it in the canyon down, not far, but too far to walk...so he drove down to where the warm waters halted, and then drove down in the canyon perhaps where he could park the car right next to the water. I found one of those possible places to be Joe Brown's Put In. This is a place down in a canyon where the boiling river(hot water), fed into the firehole river(not so hot), which then fed into the Gardner river where the water was cooler, so it definately fit all three requirements. And, you could park your car at the Joe Brown Put In boat ramp...Perfect.
my money is on the dry creek bed for a few reasons. first is that it's a great place to find arrow heads and such, then there the no paddle. but we also can add that forrest said that its not on a man made trail, so leaves dry creek bed as logical deduction. also how bout big bolder that make creeks (i've heard bolders called that). for waters high, just maybe encouraging you to venture up the dry creek to find the blaze.
The brown trout belongs to a different genus than our native trout species. They evolved in Europe and western Asia and were introduced to North America in 1883 and to Montana in 1889 in the Madison River (home of the brown?)
You were right wwwh is sulfur springs..if you flip the map of the valle caldera trail map with the map of wyoming....there exact..thats why they say wyoming...the mountains are called toledos, he said everything arted at 13...13 trails..a preserve, highway4, highway 501, 105..he flips things
I like the way you ladies aren't afraid to say you don't know something when you don't know. As for the meek, I think it's the fishing reel which is specialised for certain types of fishing.
Wait! The poem says there WILL be no... Makes me think something has to happen for the two-line clue to be true. Like rain or a train or pain (went for a third ryhme). I wonder if water running along a power line can be considered a creek. Imagination, but not very straightforward so probably not. Also, does BOTH heavy loads and water have to be high? My head hurts when I think.
Others have used power lines in their solution. I always think the heavy loads are high, but maybe they are not. My head is hurting too! Thanks, MrBonzai21!
@@thehoosiersisters1420 i really dont want to give to many hints cuz i think i know wheree it is an all the clues match up on my location yo a T. But make sure u go in order.
He also said to keep it simple. Don't read into it. Step into his generation of thought and outdoorsy perspective. I thought if he had a cell phone in 2010, the phone company may keep phone records from 2010 and the GPS location on his phone back then. I think his treasure is under a covered large rocky outcrop. It may be covered by wood/leaves by now. The blaze would point the way.
This never gets me anywhere, but I keep thinking 'up your creek without a paddle' and 'come hell or high water.' Sorry if I got those songs stuck in your head like they are in mine :)
Maybe those songs were stuck in Forrest's head!
It didn't take me long to realize that choosing a location where the home of Brown was fish or elk or bears, was just so ambiguous......there are several hatcheries for brown trout, on several different rivers, and several different lakes where brown trout are found. And putting in below them is way out there in imagination trying to choose where that spot might be. Same goes for Bear and for Elk. Putting in below Bears or Elk is just as ambiguous...like that could mean so many different places. So, I was left with plan A, and that was consider that the home of Brown was simply that...somebody's house or the town they were from. But then again....putting in below a house, or putting in below a town is also hard to fit into the poem's first two clues.
I was really stuck with Fenn's choice of words for the third clue. Put in...those two words got me every time in my quest to determine an actual location. All i had to go off was the fact that immediately after i "put in", I was gonna have to deal with the fact that I might get my feet wet from the sound of the following clues.
So for me it meant that if you werent willing to get your feet wet, or go into the river or something...the rest of the search was NOT FOR YOU.
So after I narrowed down where a couple of possible warm water destinations might be, immediately finding that location to be near or in a canyon area...I needed to realize it was better to stay in the car and keep on driving to try and get to the bottom of the canyon. Take it in the canyon down, not far, but too far to walk...so he drove down to where the warm waters halted, and then drove down in the canyon perhaps where he could park the car right next to the water.
I found one of those possible places to be Joe Brown's Put In. This is a place down in a canyon where the boiling river(hot water), fed into the firehole river(not so hot), which then fed into the Gardner river where the water was cooler, so it definately fit all three requirements. And, you could park your car at the Joe Brown Put In boat ramp...Perfect.
Sounds like a plan! Hope you find it in Montana! We'll be sticking to New Mexico. We really wish you luck, Larry! Thanks for watching!
my money is on the dry creek bed for a few reasons. first is that it's a great place to find arrow heads and such, then there the no paddle. but we also can add that forrest said that its not on a man made trail, so leaves dry creek bed as logical deduction. also how bout big bolder that make creeks (i've heard bolders called that). for waters high, just maybe encouraging you to venture up the dry creek to find the blaze.
We like the way you think, Bk S!
The brown trout belongs to a different genus than our native trout species. They evolved in Europe and western Asia and were introduced to North America in 1883 and to Montana in 1889 in the Madison River (home of the brown?)
You were right wwwh is sulfur springs..if you flip the map of the valle caldera trail map with the map of wyoming....there exact..thats why they say wyoming...the mountains are called toledos, he said everything arted at 13...13 trails..a preserve, highway4, highway 501, 105..he flips things
I like the way you ladies aren't afraid to say you don't know something when you don't know.
As for the meek, I think it's the fishing reel which is specialised for certain types of fishing.
Thanks fins59! The Meek Reel is very intriguing!
Wait! The poem says there WILL be no... Makes me think something has to happen for the two-line clue to be true. Like rain or a train or pain (went for a third ryhme). I wonder if water running along a power line can be considered a creek. Imagination, but not very straightforward so probably not. Also, does BOTH heavy loads and water have to be high? My head hurts when I think.
Others have used power lines in their solution. I always think the heavy loads are high, but maybe they are not. My head is hurting too! Thanks, MrBonzai21!
tHERE,LL BE NO PADDLE UP BYOUR CREEK///////////////////////////////////??HE MIGHT BE SAYING GO UP THE CREEK
Thanks for another great vlog HS! 😊
Thank you, Momma Llama!
Search up finding the blaze on TH-cam
You guys are adorable!
Thanks so much!
Yes, they are a absolutely adorable! I love you ladies!
@@dawnabuchholz8197 Thank you, Dawna!
No paddle up your creek... its a treasure map... its a dry creek bed. Remember this name
Good Luck, Jordan!
@@thehoosiersisters1420 i really dont want to give to many hints cuz i think i know wheree it is an all the clues match up on my location yo a T. But make sure u go in order.
Look up all definitions of those words... will help
@@NotJbus what is your info? Why not go get it? Message me.
@@michaelkatcheech1718was going to this past week but it snowed alot where i think it is.
He also said to keep it simple. Don't read into it. Step into his generation of thought and outdoorsy perspective. I thought if he had a cell phone in 2010, the phone company may keep phone records from 2010 and the GPS location on his phone back then. I think his treasure is under a covered large rocky outcrop. It may be covered by wood/leaves by now. The blaze would point the way.
I agree! It could be a large rocky outcrop covered (buried) by wood/leaves by now!
NO paddle up your creek how a bout he is saying go up the creek???
True! He might be saying go up the creek!!
Mmmm hmmmm.
The treasure was found