I80TRU_140715_14
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Wadsworth
That First Drink of Cold Water
The Truckee River you can see on the other side of the Interstate highway provided the first drink of life-saving water California-bound emigrants had after crossing the Forty-Mile Desert. Emigrants and animals staggered to the Truckee, half dead and crazed with thirst, about three miles east of here near the point where I-80 crosses the river. The clear, cold water, flowing from the Sierra Nevada to the west, was a welcome change from the alkali-tainted water the travelers had been forced to drink for several hundred miles.
This portion of the California Trail along the Truckee River represents a transitional area for the emigrants -- the end of relentless dust and heat, but the beginning of the last great challenge -- crossing the Sierra Nevada. Going up the Truckee River canyon was not an easy task. The wagons would have to cross the river more than 30 times along a rough route with steep banks and fast water before the travelers reached the meadows near present-day Reno. Those who had opted for the Carson River route at [the] beginning of the Forty-Mile Desert had an easier time for wagons, with only a few crossings of the Carson River and gentler terrain. As years went by, the Carson River route became the favored route for an emigrant's final push to California.
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