Joseph Plains
is an area directly west of Grangeville, Idaho, although the best access (and possibly the only)
to the area is down the Graves
Creek Road out of Cottonwood,
north of Grangeville. If you look at a
road map you will see no roads in this area.
There may be access from the Hammer Creek area near White Bird but I’m
not sure. I know there were settlers in
this area in the late 1800’s but for some reason it didn’t grow. There are now just a few scattered cattle
ranches in the area. The elevation of
the plain is about 4,400 feet.
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEibbSUm819-3-Q1AhRF0VnOIJlfqCWEI0uBN10zTfyEavNaJw5UYx_8xsa2jTwk6Xs7aakne70gohX-s8TZ49a0foh8tQFYil8sdgPrlmEGE-2J_32ii5pDUtGOtjUgF6OAnGzS4olGjKI1/s200/Ye+Royal+Crapper.jpg)
The cachers who
found it are a husband and wife team in Lewiston
who are friends of mine and also are the owners of the other two caches in the
area. While up there they also checked
their caches and put them in good shape.
I had been wanting to get back up there to find those caches so as we
were returning to town for a couple of days I decided it would be a good time
to make the trip.
After crossing the
bridge the pavement ends so I stopped to deflate my tires some to better
accommodate the twisty gravel roads.
While I was doing this an old timer in a hay truck stopped and asked me
to retrieve his mail for him at the nearby mailbox. He said he was a lifelong resident of the
area and asked what I was doing. He had
never heard of Geocaching so we got into quite a discussion. I showed him a map of where I was going and
he warned me to watch out for logging trucks.
If you are
familiar with the Lewiston grade at Lewiston, Gilbert grade
at Orofino, Greer Grade at Greer or Seven Mile Grade at Kamiah, they are all in
the area of 1,800 to 1,900 feet in elevation gain. In comparison the Rice Creek Grade rises over
3,100 feet and is a twisty gravel road.
You can be sure I was taking those sharp hairpin curves very slowly. There was a logging truck in front of me so I
stopped a couple of times to avoid catching up with his dust trail. I passed him at the top where he had stopped
and I thought that was unusually polite for a logger to worry about my eating
his dust.
The other cache
was just over six miles further and I passed through a logging operation on the
way. I saw some great firewood
opportunities in their slag piles but you would have to live up there to make
it worthwhile. The cache which required
a short hike down a sloping meadow was called “Joseph Plains View” and it lived
up to its name. It was a little hazy but
it gave a view all the way to the Seven Devils.
I made it back
down the Rice Creek Grade with only one minor slip on one of the hairpins. It was a really hot day and you could feel
the temperature rise as you descended the grade. After crossing the Salmon
River bridge I found some shade on the Graves Creek road and
stopped to inflate my tires for the pavement.
I made it back home around 4:00 pm having covered a little less than 200
miles. As far as I know I didn’t lose or
break anything. (The second picture is going down Graves Creek) M/W
7 comments:
"Back in the day" when I worked for the Idaho Land Dept., in the summer I would often hear of a fire in the Joseph Plains. Difficult country to get to and fight fire in. Thanks for the pictures!
My goodness, what a remote area. That must have been a thrill, just to go off so far from "civilization." A grade of 3100 ft. Yikes!
I'll bet those caches mean more to you because of the remoteness. Things that are harder to get have a higher value, don't they?
Why is the date on some photos and not on others?
I don't know about the camera dates unless it has to do with the scene setting.
What's strange about this area is in spite of it's seemingly remoteness it's really not very far from civilization.
I AM READING A BOOK BY AUTHOR TERRY C. JOHNSTON CALLED "LAY THE MOUNTAINS LOW" THE SAD FLIGHT OF THE NEZ PERCE AND I WANTED TO FIND OUT MORE ABOUT PRESENT DAY JOSEPH'S PLAINS AND THE TERRITORY. BEAUTIFUL COUNTRY!I AM AN EASTERN GAL BUT MY HUSBAND WAS BORN AND RAISED IN THE WEST AND I SAW ALOT OF THAT BEAUTIFUL COUNTRY.
Thank you for your comment. If you're interested in Joseph Plains history, a must-read is Eyewitness to Idaho History by Marion L. Shinn.
As a resident of up on Joseph Plains, I can tell you there is a Doumecq Road access from White Bird. a quick check of a map could tell you that.
Thank you, Kat Kradle, for your tip.
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