It all started with a phone message left on our
answering machine Saturday, Aug 28,
1999. It went something like two horses,
lost near Lost Lake. Sounds like a good
excuse to go riding up in that area and oh yeah,
theyre hobbled. Sunday evening after I
returned home from camping and riding in the
William O. Douglas Wilderness, I listened
to the phone messages. First thought was,
oh well, itll teach that person a lesson; the
horses will have to turn up at Packwood Lake,
back toward the trailhead. Id assumed
theyd come from, the other ways to get to Lost
Lake arent for the faint of heart due to
snow, steep narrow trails, etc. Id just
been there the week before cutting out several
blow down with a crosscut just to get there.
So not much more thought given to it that
night.
Monday morning I show up for work at the
Forest Service in Randle and there is a
message on our email about these two horses
from Carol Pitts, the receptionist at
Packwood. Well, I returned some derogatory
remark about how you shouldnt depend on
hobbles to keep your horses around. All
the time this little scenario is staring to weigh on
my mind, especially when someone at work says
cant horses get hurt with hobbles on
and couldnt a cougar get them? All valid
questions of which I answered yes they could.
Monday evening I called the phone number on
the email message and talked to the person
(Ken) who had lost the horses. He had
turn two horse loose with hobbles on to graze
while three were left on the highline and being
camped where theyd be noticed if they
tried to leave. When Ken and partners
checked on the horses sometime Friday they were
nowhere to be found. Looking over the
break of the hill Ken thought too steep; theyd
never go down there. They must be above
the Lake, but no luck there. Ken and partners
had to leave on Saturday, leaving much of their
gear behind because they were two horses
short. A riding horse and a pack horse
who later became known as Joe and Pete. After
talking to Ken it was easy to tell he was really
concerned about his horses and felt bad
about not being able to get away
from work to look for them until the next Saturday.
Ken had made arrangements with a
couple of friends to go in on Tuesday to pack
his gear out and look for the horses. It
snowed on Monday (late August) so Kens friends
had some tracking snow when they
checked the large open, grassy glades above
Lost Lake, but no sign of horses.
Id told Ken in a previous conversation
that if he needed help to give me a call.
The call came Wed. morning after hed talked
to his friends and no sign of the horses.
Again, Id just got to work where a message
was waiting to go look for Joe and Pete. It
was a much nicer day then it had been earlier
in the week, so now was a good excuse to
go for a ride and try to solve the mystery of
where the hobbled horses had gone. Off from
work I went, grabbed my horse, rain gear, map,
something to eat a chunk of lead rope and
headed for the Packwood Lake Trailhead and eventually
to Lost Lake. It is about an eight
mile ride one way. At Lost Lake around
1pm I highlined my horse and started tracking
old horse tracks and
eventually found some that headed down over
the hill on an old game trail. This ground
is steep and the trail narrow so I figured this
isnt where any normal person would be
riding for pleasure so I was sure I was on the
right track (five-day-old tracks following
rain and snow). Joe and Pete came upon
a windfall that blocked the trail they were
merrily going down and to get around it they
headed straight down a 60% slope.
Needless to say, it wasnt hard to follow them
in this type of terrain; they were tearing up
some ground. So follow them I did for
a few hundred yards until the ground mellowed
out and was quite nice to walk on. At
some point after going down the hill, it seemed
they were bent on going down the canyon until
they got out of this mess. The terrain got
rather bad again with more windfalls until finally
they got squeezed between a tag alder
patch and a creek where they tore up a good
little patch of ground obviously one or both
got slightly hung up here. Well, thinking
I knew where I was and where the horses might
end up I headed down along the creek toward
a nice meadow next to Beaver Lake where
I expected the horses to be held up. After
20 minutes of walking and no meadow it
dawns on me that the creek flowing into Beaver
Lake is small and And not nearly as big
as the one Im following. Time to get
out the map and see how lost I am. I discover I
must be in Lost Creek appropriately named
I guess. At least theres a road downstream
a mile or two, so the horses, probably crossed
the creek back where I last saw their tracks
and would be down on the road somewhere.
Not a problem, just head back get my horse
and pick them up along the road tomorrow.
Things never turn out to be as simple
as one would hope. Half an hour later Im
back to the tag alder patch where Id last seen
the tracks. Hmmm, they didnt cross the
creek; they got themselves untangled from the
brush pile, and are working their way back
up the creek. Its 4:30 OR 5pm now and
I tell myself Ive got to be back to my horse by
6pm or Ill be riding in the dark. Still
got some time to look but its a good-sized area
with lots of broken ground and hiding places.
Tracks are hard to follow but I find some
along a dried up pond that look pretty fresh
and it looks like ole Joe and Pete are feeding
on some huckleberry brush. Times run
out but I get the feeling that theyre still in the
drainage somewhere. Too many obstacles
to go down stream to far, to steep to go back
up the hill where they come from so theyve
got to be here somewhere. Its after 6pm
when I finally crawl out of that hole and back
up to the Lake where my horse is tied. Im
beat; we take a few minutes to let him eat some
grass and me to eat a sandwich. Its a
good feeling to know Joe and Pete are close
and from all the sign Ive seen they seem to
be okay. Its time
to go were going to be pushing to get back
to the trailer by dark.
Its dark when we get back to the trailer
and I see Cal Slocums horse trailer is
gone and no note on my window. That morning
I left a note on his pickup window that I
was looking for two horses near Lost Lake and
Id give him a call that evening to see if
hed seen any sign of them. That night
I called Cal and we must have just missed each
other up at the Lake, he said he didnt leave
a note cause he couldnt find a pencil. Now
Cal knows the country around Lost Lake as well
as anyone in East Lewis County, hes
hunted and rode in it for years so I knew hed
be a big help if I could talk him into going
along.
We talked it over but no commitments were
made that night. Early Thurs.
morning, theres a knock on the door; I jump
out of bed, still tired from yesterdays hike
and ride. Its Cal and hes been scoping
the situation out since daylight. Hes been up
Coal Creek Rd where wed need to walk in from
if we were going to walk up Lost Creek
from below. Cal said there was a horse
trailer blocking the road and we couldnt get the
horses by it. After some discussion we
decided that would be the shortest way into where
Id seen the fresh horse sign. This meant
a 2½-mile walk in on the road, then about 2
miles cross country up Lost Creek where Cal
thought there was an old trail. If there was
a trail, we didnt find much sign of it.
We finally reached the tag alder patch that stopped
the horses several days earlier. Cal and
I decided to split up here so we could cover more
ground Cal took higher up on the hill and
I stayed closer to the creek. I told Cal there
was a couple of ponds up the drainage where
wed try to get together again. As I worked
up the creek I noticed a lot of things that
looked familiar from the day before. Many
thoughts run through a persons mind in situations
like this, like will these horses be wild
after a week without any human contact, what
if theyre hurt, what if ones down or hung
up in a mess of blow down, what if, what if
Do you call out their names hoping to get
a response or just sneak along hoping to catch
a glimpse of them? No real answers just a
lot of what ifs, hoping this ordeal has a good
ending. Before I know it Im back at the
ponds looking at the sign Id seen the day before
looking for some new clues and
checking little hollows Id missed the day before.
Sure enough, over a little ridge about
50 yards below a small meadow Id missed yesterday
and it looked like it had been torn
up pretty good. Could it be the horses
or elk better go down the hill and look. Good
news, it was horses and it looked like they
were still hobbled. Even the brush around the
meadow looked freshly beaten down, theyve got
to be close. Continuing up the creek in
waist deep huckleberry I found a couple trees
near the creek where theyd spent the night.
Continuing on around another small ridge there
they are, a butterscotch dun along the
edge of the creek and reddish colored horse
on an island in the middle of the creek.
These guys looked alert and not real spooky,
but just to make sure I didnt spook them, I
slipped off my day pack, got out a little grain
and a piece of cotton rope. Neither made a
move while I talked to them; in fact I think
they were glad to see a human. They still had
their halter and hobbles on and didnt seem
to be any worse for wear. I slowly walked
over to the butterscotch and gave him a hand
full of grain, put a lead rope on him and
took his hobbles off. I tied the one up
and yelled to Cal that I had them.
After catching Joe and Pet, checking them
over for cuts, etc. it seemed these guys
had done all right for themselves in an area
strewn with blow down, steep ground and
boggy areas to name a few of the hazards.
They did have a little trouble learning to walk
normal again after being hobbled for a week.
Now which way to get them out of here.
Up the creek and hill to Lost Lake or
down the creek the way Cal and I had come in
that morning. After a short discussion we
decided on the Lost Lake route, too many big
wind falls the way wed come in. It was
about 12:30 when we decided to split up.
Cal would go back down the creek and pick up
his pickup, go home and get his horse trailer,
and meet me at the Packwood Lake
trailhead by 4 oclock. I led the butterscotch
horse and let the other follow as we made
our way up to Lost Lake. I let them graze
a little on the way up the hill as I caught my
breathe, my legs were still a little heavy from
the day before and they were pretty eager to
eat some grass. Apparently the huckleberry
brush was okay to keep them from starving,
but obviously theyd rather eat grass.
It was a pleasure leading these guys up the hill, not
once did they come close to stepping on me,
even as steep as this hill was. After making
it to Lost Lake I figured were home free, nothing
but 7 or 8 miles of trail ahead. Things
went well for the next mile until I stopped
to let them graze in a small meadow north of
Mosquito Lake and some how the red horse (Pete,
I think) decided he needed to be the
head horse and got in front of me and the butterscotch
(Joe). Old Pete must have
recognized the trail he was on and the way home
cause he was stepping out checking
once in a while to see if we were still coming.
This went on for another mile or so until I
knew of a short cut where I could get in the
lead again, not knowing what Pete would do
when he hit Packwood Lake. As we approached
the Lake a family with a couple of kids
wanted to pet the horses. So we took a
little break and I put a lead rope on Pete, they
even gave them an apple from their lunch.
I was getting a little tired of walking
so I decided to see if Joe, would let me ride
him bareback for the next 4 miles. After
fashioning some reigns out of the lead rope and
letting the wilderness guard at Packwood Lake
hold Pete, I found a log and jumped on
and waited for the rodeo. Well, we went
around a couple of time but Joe didnt seem to
mind all that much and after all, wed built
up quite a repore in the last three hours.
Bidding the guard good-bye I grabbed Pete and
off we headed for the trailhead. All went
pretty well on the way out; even the bicycles
that came up behind us didnt seem to phase
Pete and Joe. I guess I stirred up a bees
nest and one of the cyclists got stung. I slipped
off old Joe going up the short cut trail to
the parking lot - to steep and a roach mane.
There was Cal, right on time and I gotta tell
ya, my butt was glad to see him and that cold
beer. Cal was gracious enough to keep
the horses at his place until Saturday when Ken
could retrieve them. Bar and I has already
made plans to be at the Club gathering at
Green River Horse Camp so I didnt get to meet
Ken, but to show his appreciation he
gave Cal and I a nice reward and two half gallons
of Black Velvet.
I intend to drop by someday and check
in on Joe, Pete and Ken and to let him
know that it was reward enough for me just to
have the experience of finding these two
horses and having this tale end as well as it
did. Special thanks to Cal Slocum for helping
me out and to Barb, my wife, for her enthusiasm
and support. Writing this story let me
relive this truly wonderful experience