Going Places

Summer 2013

Issue link: http://digital.canadawide.com/i/125316

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Continued from page 41 gentlemen, start your wagons Topped with canvas, the hundred-year-old wagons are flare-boxed and their wooden wheels rimmed with iron. Designed to carry 150 bushels of grain, they were the vehicles of choice for Dakota pioneers because they could be used on the farm when the family was settled. For the Fort Seward trek, the wagons are fitted out with bench seats and passengers take turns riding up front with the teamster. The matched teams of horses are welltrained Belgians and Percherons. The wagons and horses are locally owned. Delno Kleinknecht (pictured above), one of the original wagon train crew and head honcho of the outfit (in wagon terms, the Ramrod) for the last 43 years, owns five wagons, as well as the chuckwagon, keeping them and a couple of teams of Percherons at his farm outside Pingree. He talks about retiring, to let the younger folk take over. But his wagons and horses and, I suspect, his heart and soul, will always be on the Fort Seward wagon train. —L.B. GO WITH CAA • Hit the 20th-Century Wagon Trail: relive the road history of the '40s, '50s and '60s on route 66 by visiting some of the famous drive's iconic spots. This 15-day, 14-night trip from Chicago to Los Angeles includes convenient hotel bookings from DriveNorthAmerica. Priced from u.s.$796. GOING PL ACES p36-43_North Dakota.indd 43 >> s u m m e r 2 0 1 3 43 13-04-12 1:11 PM

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