Black Hills, SD Expedition No. 132 – Copper, Odakota & Bear Mountains (6-7-15)

SPHP postponed Black Hills, SD Expedition No. 132 by one day due to the threat of rain.  A big storm did hit Hill City and flooded the highway.  The next day was a gorgeous early summer day.  Lupe was eager to go.  The highway was no longer flooded, although the creeks and streams were still running high and out of their banks.  At 8:27 AM, SPHP parked the G6 just off USFS Road No. 301.1A about 100 yards from its junction with USFS Road No. 301.  It was 57 °F with a slight N breeze and a few clouds around.

Lupe still near the G6 at the start of the day. Photo looks SSE towards Medicine Mountain.
Lupe still near the G6 at the start of the day. Photo looks SSE towards Medicine Mountain (6,878 ft.)

Lupe’s peakbagging goals for this Expedition included Copper, Odakota, Bear and Green Mountains.  All four of these mountains are in the west central Black Hills along the E edge of the high ground of the Limestone Plateau country.  Approaches from the W involve very little elevation gain, but to the E there are cliffs or steep slopes.

Copper Mountain (6,920 ft.) was only about 0.5 mile to the W of where the G6 was parked, so Lupe headed there first.  Lupe circled around to the SW side of Copper Mountain before climbing up on the W ridge.  Once up on the W ridge, it was a gentle climb through a young forest to the summit.  Soon Lupe was posing for photos on the cliffs just S of the summit, and drinking out of water holes in the rocks.  Next stop would be Odakota Mountain, now in view 1.25 miles to the SW.

Lupe on Copper Mountain. Odakota Mountain is the high ridge seen above Lupe's head in the background.
Lupe on Copper Mountain. Odakota Mountain is the high ridge seen above Lupe’s head in the background to the SW.
Another of Lupe's peakbagging goals of the day, Bear Mountain, is the high ridge in the distance. Photo taken looking due S from Copper Mountain.
Another of Lupe’s peakbagging goals of the day, Bear Mountain, is the high ridge in the distance. Photo taken looking due S from Copper Mountain.
The view N from Copper Mountain towards the S portion of Gillette Prairie.
The view NE from Copper Mountain towards the S portion of Gillette Prairie.
Medicine Mountain from Copper Mountain. Photo looks SE.
Medicine Mountain from Copper Mountain. Photo looks SE.
Harney Peak, highest mountain in the Black Hills, is the highest point in the distance. Photo is looking ESE from Copper Mountain.
Harney Peak (7,242 ft.) , highest mountain in the Black Hills, is the highest point in the distance. Photo is looking ESE from Copper Mountain.

Odakota Mountain (7,200 ft.) is the 2nd highest mountain in the Black Hills according to Peakbagger.com.  Lupe had been up there once before on Expedition No. 87 on 5-10-14.  Lupe headed W off Copper Mountain, with only modest elevation loss.  She found the first of many big mud puddles to cool off in on the W side of Copper Mountain.  Lupe and SPHP reached USFS Road No. 301 again and followed it W only as far as the intersection with No. 299, which heads down Bobcat Gulch to the Boy Scout camp.

At the intersection, Lupe and SPHP left the road and started W up the draw to the S of USFS Road No. 301.  SPHP remembered that Odakota Mountain was full of deadfall timber the last time Lupe had been there.  Pine bark beetles were wreaking havoc with the forest.  Despite all the fallen trees, there were still enough dead or dying trees still standing to obstruct the views at the summit.  As Lupe and SPHP climbed Odakota Mountain from the NE, it became apparent the situation hadn’t changed at all in a year’s time.  There was still lots of deadfall timber to contend with.

Instead of going directly up to the summit, Lupe and SPHP climbed to a high point on the ridge E of the summit.  From there, Lupe and SPHP headed away from the summit towards the SE to see if there was any place where there were any decent views.  It was slow going with all the deadfall to work around.  At the very S end of the E edge of the mountain were a couple of rock ledges with open views to the S and E.  This area is less than 100′ lower than the summit and features the only clear views from Odakota Mountain at this time.

Lupe up on the E edge of Odakota Mountain. Photo looks back to the NE at Copper Mountain (Center) where she had just come from. The rock ledges she had been standing on there are visible toward the R.
Lupe at the SE end of Odakota Mountain. Photo looks ESE towards Medicine Mountain (6,878 ft.) in the foreground and Harney Peak in the distance.
Lupe at the SE edge of Odakota Mountain. Bear Mountain is the high ridge in the distance to the S.
Lupe at the SE edge of Odakota Mountain. Bear Mountain is the high ridge in the distance to the S.
Lupe still at the SE edge of Odakota Mountain. Photo looks SE towards Peak 6680 seen as the first hill in the foreground directly above Lupe. The pond at the Boy Scout camp is visible to the R.
Bear Mountain to the S from the SE end of Odakota Mountain.

From the viewpoints, Lupe and SPHP worked their way back to the NW to the true summit of Odakota Mountain.  At the summit, SPHP was surprised to find a 2.5 foot high cairn made of limestone.  It hadn’t been there the first time Lupe had climbed Odakota Mountain on Expedition No. 87.  Lupe headed W off Odakota Mountain in the direction of Long Draw.  She could have gone a couple of miles NNW to Green Mountain (7,164 ft.) at this point, but SPHP was more interested in exploring Long Draw first.

Lupe at the summit cairn on Odakota Mountain the morning of 6-7-15. Photo looks N.
Lupe at the summit cairn on Odakota Mountain the morning of 6-7-15. Photo looks N.

USFS Road No. 693 comes within 0.25 mile NW of Odakota Mountain and goes SW for 3 miles or so to Spring Creek where it turns W.  Lupe and SPHP headed SW down Long Draw sometimes on the road, but often off of it just traipsing through the fields.  The bottom of the draw was mostly meadows with scattered aspens and pines.  Lupe romped her way through Long Draw sniffing this way and that.  She returned to No. 693 now and then in search of mud puddles to get a drink from and cool off in.  SPHP is pretty sure Lupe gets plenty of minerals in her diet from all the murky mud puddle water she drinks.

Upper end of Long Draw not far from Odakota Mountain 6-7-15.
Upper end of Long Draw not far from Odakota Mountain 6-7-15.

Close to Spring Creek, USFS Road No. 693 turned and headed W up the canyon following Spring Creek upstream.  Instead of heading W, Lupe and SPHP left the road here and headed down to cross Spring Creek.  Even with all the recent wet weather, Spring Creek was only a few feet wide this close to its source.  The water was amazingly clear and cold.  Lupe cooled off in the stream and had a better drink than the mud puddles offered.  A short distance downstream, Lupe came to the intersection of Long Draw and Grand Vista Draw.

Lower portion of Long Draw before reaching Spring Creek.
Getting close to Spring Creek in Long Draw. The creek is at the edge of the trees on the R. Grand Vista Draw goes up around the R side of the hill ahead.
Cooling off in the clear cold waters of Spring Creek in Long Draw.

USFS Road No. 291.3A headed up Grand Vista Draw.  Lupe followed it S up Grand Vista Draw as it gradually turned SE.  Spring Creek had continued on down the canyon to the E and there was no water other than scattered mud puddles in Grand Vista Draw.  A spur off No. 291.3A headed E to the scenic overlook at the edge of the limestone plateau about a mile WSW of the Boy Scout camp.  The overlook is a block of limestone about 20′ below the rim of the high country.  There is a trail leading down to it.  At this scenic overlook, Lupe and SPHP rested for a bit.  Lupe was kind of hungry by now and ate some Taste of the Wild.

Wild Irises were abundant in Grand Vista Draw.
Wild Irises were abundant in Grand Vista Draw.
This block of limestone along the E edge of the limestone plateau country is the Boy Scout camp overlook.
Lupe on the Boy Scout camp overlook. Photo looks back to the N towards Odakota Mountain at the left and Copper Mountain, the lower ridge just beyond and to the right where Lupe had just come from.
Lupe on the Boy Scout camp overlook. Photo looks back to the N towards Odakota Mountain at the left and Copper Mountain, the lower ridge just beyond and to the right where Lupe had just come from.  Peak 6680 is the kind of striped hill at the right side of the photo.
Harney Peak is the highest point in the distance. View from Boy Scout camp overlook looking E.
Harney Peak is the highest point in the distance. View from Boy Scout camp overlook looking E.
Now looking S from the Boy Scout camp overlook towards the E end of Bear Mountain, Lupe's next peakbagging goal.
Now looking SSE from the Boy Scout camp overlook towards the E end of Bear Mountain, Lupe’s next peakbagging goal.

Lupe’s next Peakbagging goal was Bear Mountain (7,166 ft.), the 3rd highest mountain in the Black Hills.  Bear Mountain is about 4 miles S of Odakota Mountain, but Lupe’s route through Long and Grand Vista Draws had taken her over 1.5 mile W before working back to the E.  Bear Mountain was still 2 miles SSE from the Boy Scout camp overlook.  There was no road.  From the overlook, Lupe and SPHP just went S along the rim of the high country until almost to the ranger tower on Bear Mountain.

Instead of going directly to the ranger station, SPHP led Lupe E along the Bear Mountain ridge.  From the Boy Scout camp overlook, it had appeared the highest point on Bear Mountain was at the E end of the mountain.  This wasn’t strictly true.  The highest point really is where the ranger tower is located.  Still, it was worth a bit of exploring to see what the views might be like from the E end of Bear Mountain.  The best view proved to be towards the N back toward Odakota and Copper Mountains where Lupe had just come from.

Lupe arrives at the E end of Bear Mountain. The best view from here is shown. It looks N back at Odakota and Copper Mountains. Lupe has already climbed them once this day and would return to climb each of them again before the day was out.
Lupe arrives at the E end of Bear Mountain. The best view from here is shown. It looks N back at Odakota (highest ridge) and Copper Mountains. Lupe has already climbed them once this day and would return to climb each of them again before the day was out.

After exploring the E end of the mountain, Lupe went back W to the summit at the ranger tower.  Lupe and SPHP climbed up the tower.  Three steps from the top, Lupe decided it was a bit scary and started turning around to go back down, but SPHP urged her onward.  A ranger was on duty and Lupe got to go inside the ranger’s station at the top of the tower.  She laid on the floor listening to the radio chatter while SPHP talked to the ranger.

Approaching the ranger tower on Bear Mountain.
Lupe climbed the Bear Mountain ranger tower and spent a while relaxing up there while SPHP chatted with the ranger.
Lupe climbed the Bear Mountain ranger tower and spent a while relaxing up there while SPHP chatted with the ranger.  On a very clear day (not today!) Laramie Peak in Wyoming can be seen from Bear Mountain.

The ranger had been working this job at various towers in the Black Hills region for 13 years.  He described the Bear Mountain tower as the Cadillac of ranger facilities in the Black Hills.  The station at the top of the tower was roomier than at any of the other towers.  The ranger said he had seen two tornados from ranger towers in his 13 years on the job.

The 360° view from Bear Mountain at the top of the tower was really great!  SPHP had been told once before that Laramie Peak (10,272 ft.) in Wyoming can be seen from Bear Mountain when conditions are clear.  The ranger confirmed this, but said it wasn’t that clear very often.

Harney Peak as seen from Bear Mountain. Photo looks E.
Harney Peak as seen from Bear Mountain. Photo looks E.
Lupe S of the ranger tower on Bear Mountain.
Looking E on Bear Mountain from S of the ranger tower. The end of the Bear Mountain E ridge is one more hill E beyond the high spot pictured.
Looking E on Bear Mountain from S of the ranger tower. The end of the Bear Mountain E ridge is one more hill E beyond the high spot pictured.

The most immediately useful of the interesting things SPHP learned up in the Bear Mountain lookout tower was that it was 3:30 PM.  It was time for Lupe to head back N!  Lupe and SPHP bid adieu to the ranger and headed down off the ranger tower.  Lupe went W on USFS Road No. 293.  (No. 293 goes right to the top of Bear Mountain, approaching it from the SSW.  Bear Mountain is easily accessibly by car.)  At the first hill to the W was a big tower.  There Lupe and SPHP left the road and went along a forested ridge descending towards the NW.

The forested ridge ended in a meadow where there were some pretty aspen trees with light green new leaves shining in the sunlight.  Beyond the meadow was USFS Road No. 291.3A, the same road that Lupe had followed up Grand Vista Draw earlier before taking a spur E to the Boy Scout camp overlook.  SPHP intended to follow No. 291.3A back to Grand Vista Draw, but at a little pass shortly before getting there, took a side road labeled No. 2 North with an orange marker.

Lupe nears USFS Road No. 291.3A NW of Bear Mountain.
Lupe nears USFS Road No. 291.3A just beyond the aspens NW of Bear Mountain.

The side road went W then N and then turned back to the S.  SPHP didn’t want to go S.  Lupe needed to go N, so SPHP abandoned No. 2 North in favor of a trek through the forest continuing N towards Grand Vista Draw.  It all worked out just fine and soon Lupe reached No. 291.3A again in Grand Vista Draw as anticipated.  Lupe now started retracing the path she had followed earlier in the day.  Lupe and SPHP halted upon reaching Spring Creek just S of USFS Road No. 693 in Long Draw.

Lupe returns to Spring Creek near the junction of Grand Vista Draw and Long Draw.

Lupe got a big, cold clear drink from Spring Creek and finished her Taste of the Wild.  SPHP studied maps.  SPHP had intended to take USFS Road No. 693 W to No. 291 and then head N to the Four Corners Well.  From there the plan had been to go on to Green Mountain (7,164 ft.) via a short stint to the E on No. 301 and then taking USFS Road No. 691 NNE to Green Mountain.  However, it was too late in the day to do all that.  As usual, SPHP had bit off more than could be chewed.  The fastest route to Green Mountain was going back up Long Draw.

So Lupe headed back up Long Draw on No. 693.  SPHP saw a couple of elk along the way.  Lupe barked at chipmunks and squirrels, and didn’t even notice the elk.  As Lupe and SPHP neared the high point on No. 693, SPHP decided Lupe may as well go and hit the summit of Odakota Mountain again since it was only 0.25 mile away to the E.  Lupe found the cairn at the high point again and had her second picture of the day taken there.

Lupe’s 2nd ascent of Odakota Mountain on 6-7-15. Photo looks S.

Lupe and SPHP left Odakota Mountain and headed back to USFS Road No. 693.  Although there was still probably time to reach Green Mountain before it got dark, a large cloud was now hanging around in that direction.  It had already been a long day.  SPHP didn’t really think the cloud was going to cause any problems, but used it as an excuse to shorten the trip back to the G6.  SPHP decided Lupe would just go back and have another look at the world from the top of Copper Mountain.  Green Mountain would just have to wait for another day.

Lupe didn’t care.  She was just as happy going to Copper Mountain again.  Lupe and SPHP followed No. 693 back to No. 301.  At the high point on No. 301 near Copper Mountain, Lupe and SPHP left the road and started the modest climb up Copper Mountain along the W ridge.  Earlier in the day, SPHP had wondered if there were good lookout points along the N side of the W ridge, but hadn’t gone over there.  Now Lupe and SPHP headed over to the N side of the ridge.

Pine bark beetles need to kill more trees for there to be much of a view to the N.  Glimpses of Gillette Prairie were frequently available as Lupe and SPHP followed the N edge of the ridge heading E towards the summit of Copper Mountain, but there just weren’t any unobstructed views anywhere.  It wasn’t until Lupe was very close to the E edge of Copper Mountain that there were views off to the N.  Even then they were only partial views.

Lupe also climbed Copper Mountain a 2nd time on 6-7-15. This photo looks NE towards the S portion of Gillette Prairie from Copper Mountain.
Lupe also climbed Copper Mountain a 2nd time on 6-7-15. This photo looks NNE towards the S portion of Gillette Prairie from Copper Mountain.

Lupe tagged the summit of Copper Mountain for the 2nd time this day.  The sun was still up, but getting low.  The big cloud to the WNW over by Green Mountain was still hanging around.  Most of the rest of the sky had only scattered clouds.  The views to the E and S from the SE edge of Copper Mountain were still the best.  Sometimes slanting sunlight broke through the clouds to the WNW and illuminated the scene.  Lupe and SPHP stayed for a while on Copper Mountain, taking a break from the long day’s trek and enjoying the moment.

Then it was time to go.  Lupe and SPHP left Copper Mountain heading W, but soon turned SW and then S to reach USFS Road No. 301 more quickly.  SPHP then followed the road the rest of the way back to No. 301.1A and the G6.  Lupe wasn’t quite done though.  While SPHP walked the road, Lupe dashed in and out of the forest still sniffing madly and exploring.  It was 8:10 PM and 58°F out when Lupe and SPHP reached the G6 again.  The sun was still up for a bit longer and shining on some of the mountain tops.  Lupe laid down by the G6.  She didn’t want to hop in.  Nearly 12 hours on the go wasn’t enough!

For a few minutes SPHP let Lupe rest on the ground.  Then SPHP lifted the reluctant Carolina dog into the G6.  Lupe wasn’t tired.  She didn’t curl up on the passenger side seat like she often does after a long expedition.  Instead she stood up with her paws on the dash still looking for adventure.  SPHP lowered the windows so she could ride with her head out the window of the G6.  She loved the wind rushing past her face.  She barked at cows and horses as she flew on by.

Lupe on Copper Mountain towards the end of the day.
Lupe on Copper Mountain towards the end of the day.

At a couple of points along County Road No. 309 before reaching the highway there were quite a few cows and their calves right on the road.  Greeted by a hysterical dingo, they looked quite puzzled at what all the excitement was about. Finally they got the idea that the crazy dingo was trying to be big and scary and the cows all moseyed off the road.  Lupe continued to stand up and bark at every opportunity all the way along Deerfield Road to Hill City.  With no cows or horses in sight in Hill City, she was finally content to curl up on the seat and pant for a while.  It had been another great day to be an American dingo in the Black Hills of South Dakota!

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Warren Peaks, WY (7-15-14) & Porphyry Peak, MT (7-16-14)

SPHP came to at 6:15 AM on July 15, 2014.  A very late beginning for Lupe’s 2014 Dingo Vacation to the Canadian Rockies!  Despite the occasion, SPHP just felt lazy and spent another half an hour summoning the energy to roll out of bed.  In truth, SPHP felt somewhat unprepared.  Other than go to the Canadian Rockies, SPHP really didn’t have any specific idea what was going to happen over the next few weeks.  Unlike SPHP, Lupe was bright-eyed, expectant and ready for action!

Lupe waits in the G6 for SPHP to get a move on! Dingo vacations are supposed to get off to an early start!
Lupe getting bored waiting in the G6 for SPHP to get a move on! Dingo vacations are supposed to get off to an early start!

The house and yard were in as good shape as they were going to be, and the G6 was half packed the previous evening.  At 8:00 AM, Lupe got her heartworm medicine.  At 9:40 AM the G6 was finally rolling out of the driveway.  It was hazy out and a rather cool day for mid-July.  Lupe and SPHP headed W on I-90.  All day it felt like weather was building up farther to the W where Lupe was going.

Now we're talking! Lupe arrives at the lookout tower on Warren Peaks.
Now we’re talking! Lupe arrives at the lookout tower on Warren Peaks.

Lupe’s first stop was a little side trip up to Warren Peaks (6,650 ft.) in the Bear Lodge mountains in NE Wyoming.  Warren Peaks became Lupe’s first peakbagging success of her 2014 Dingo Vacation to the Canadian Rockies & Beartooths.  It didn’t seem like much of an achievement, since a road goes all the way up to the lookout tower and SPHP just drove the G6 up there.  Still, the view was pretty, and just being up there further lifted SPHP’s rising enthusiasm for the glorious days ahead that were now just beginning.

Lupe's first peakbagging success of her 2014 Dingo Vacation to the Canadian Rockies and Beartooths was Warren Peaks in NE, Wyoming.
Lupe’s first peakbagging success of her 2014 Dingo Vacation to the Canadian Rockies and Beartooths was Warren Peaks in NE, Wyoming.
View to the SSW of Warren Peaks in the Bear Lodge Mountains of NE Wyoming.
View to the SSW of Warren Peaks in the Bear Lodge Mountains of NE Wyoming.

It had only been 62°F at Warren Peaks at 11:35 AM, but it was 81°F by the time Lupe reached the Powder River two hours later.  Things cooled off again just E of the Bighorn Mountains where Lupe encountered the first rain shower of the day.  The rain was harder and steadier in Montana.  At Billings, MT, SPHP was glad to leave I-90 and all its road construction.  Lupe headed N on Hwy 3 to Lavina and turned W on Hwy 12 following the Musselshell River.

W of Harlowton, Hwy 12 goes up into the Little Belt Mountains.  Neither Lupe nor SPHP had ever been to the Little Belts before.  Lupe saw lots of pretty country on this day’s drive, but other than the glorious Bighorn Mountains which Lupe didn’t enter, the Little Belt Mountains were the best.  The Little Belts were gently rolling and forested with meadows in the valleys.  They were quite beautiful and sparsely populated.  Lupe and SPHP turned N on Hwy 89 just N of White Sulphur Springs, and went as far as a big parking pullout up at King’s Hill Pass (7,393 ft. elevation).

By the time Lupe reached King’s Hill Pass, the sun was close to setting.  SPHP parked the G6.  For 45 minutes Lupe got to romp around in the wet woods while SPHP explored a bit too.  It felt good to be out of the G6 and moving, but with all the clouds around, darkness started coming on fast.  Soon after retiring to the G6 for the night, rain and fog rolled in.

By morning on July 16th, the skies were clear.  The first order of business was for Lupe to climb Porphyry Peak (8,192 ft.), which was a couple of miles W of Hwy 89 at King’s Hill Pass according to the map.  Lupe and SPHP started up a road that skirted the S side of the King’s Hill Campground.  Lupe dashed around in and out of the wet forest, very pleased with the way this day was starting out.  Soon she was a very soggy doggie, but it didn’t bother her in the least.

Soggy doggie Lupe up on Porphyry Peak on the morning of 7-16-14
Soggy doggie Lupe up on Porphyry Peak on the morning of 7-16-14.  Porphyry Peak was Lupe’s 2nd peakbagging success of this American dingo vacation.

The road wound around all the way up to the summit of Porphyry Peak where there was a lookout tower plus a couple of ski lifts and a few other facilities connected with the Showdown Montana Ski area.  A sign at the bottom of the lookout tower said to shout for permission to climb the tower.  SPHP shouted, but there was no answer.  The tower went unclimbed by Lupe and SPHP.  The views were pretty nice even without climbing the lookout tower.  After wandering around the top of the mountain by the ski lifts where the views were best, Lupe and SPHP headed back down to the G6.

The ranger tower on Porphyry Peak, MT
The ranger tower on Porphyry Peak, MT
Lupe on Porphyry Peak where the Showdown Montana ski area is located.
Lupe on Porphyry Peak where the Showdown Montana ski area is located.

From King’s Hill Pass, Hwy 89 lost elevation for many miles.  It was a pretty drive, and SPHP was convinced the Little Belt Mountains are the most scenic route through this part of Montana.  Near the bottom of the range was a picnic area close to a little creek.  SPHP stopped there long enough for Lupe to sniff around a bit and get a drink.  Then it was back in the G6 and onward to Great Falls, MT.

The Little Belt Mountains in Montana looking NNE from Porphyry Peak.
The Little Belt Mountains in Montana looking NNE from Porphyry Peak.
The wet, green forest on Porphyry Peak.
The wet, green forest on Porphyry Peak.

W of Great Falls, the air was no longer clear and clean.  The mountains farther W were in a haze, which eventually proved to be smoke.  SPHP stayed on Hwy 89 all the way through Choteau and Browning to St. Mary just E of Glacier National Park.  It was all new territory to both Lupe and SPHP.  Lupe happily barked at cows and horses along the way.  In Choteau was a pretty neat statue of a dinosaur.  Later on, SPHP regretted not stopping there to get a picture of Lupe next to the dinosaur.

A soggy Lupe in the G6 ready to leave Porphyry Peak, MT for more dingo adventures in Canada.
A soggy Lupe in the G6 ready to leave King’s Hill Pass, MT for more dingo adventures in Canada.

From St. Mary, SPHP took Hwy 2 N to Hwy 12, which led Lupe to the Canadian border.  At the drive up window, there was no one else in line to get into Canada.  SPHP presented a U.S. passport and the Canadian border agent asked a bunch of standard questions.

SPHP must have been somehow suspicious, or perhaps it was just a dull, boring day on the border.  SPHP was asked to park the G6 and go inside the main building while Lupe waited in the car.  There SPHP presented the exact same passport, different Canadian border patrol personnel asked the exact same questions, and SPHP gave the exact same answers.  Somehow this cleared up all difficulties or misunderstandings, whatever they may have been, and Lupe was free to proceed into beautiful Canada!  Her 2nd Canadian Rockies adventure was now truly underway!

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