Hey, Let's hit Idaho

So I decided to scoot over to Washington... First I had to get across Idaho.

Pilot Butte view to the North

It might look smooth & level but there are a lot of rugged canyons between here and the horizon. The Oregon trail is about 50 miles up that-a-way.

A bit Northwest of Pilot Butte there are some blue canyons. The one where I was fooling about had a hard strata about halfway down. This created a shelf about 3 to 30 feet wide. Above that layer were smoothy soft eroding hillocks, below was a thrilling 150 foot drop

Distance

Way off in the distance is the Wind River mountain range. Late May & still snow-capped.

This is the gas station just south of Fontenelle, WY. it is a quiet little tow... I think they have two streets.

When I see a gap in the hills like this, and a road running vaguely in that direction, I just can't resist.Unfortunately the road was washed out about 10 miles in.

What do you do when you live in the middle of a junk yard way out in the middle of nowhere? You use your imagination & a mig welder.

I like Montpelier, ID. Not only can they boast of having the last standing bank known to have been robbed by Butch Cassidy. There was a house builder here who seems to be unable to build two houses the same. In fact you can drive down a street and pass 10 houses in a row, each of them distinctly different. Some seeming out of place in a small western town like this.

it is very nice to be under an enormous sky that is threatening to rain.

From Montpelier I was going to head west and find a different way to cross the Divide. I didn't account for the extra wet winter and the recent rains. I actually slipped into the gulley when it ran across the road about 100 yards further. I was unable to go forward and in 100 yards backwards I was not able to get out.

From here I walked about 5 miles until I could get a ride to a place with cell phone coverage. At this spot there was a guy in a Jeep calling for a tow truck... I wasn't the only one that day... He agreed that the tow truck could get us both out when it was here & we could split the cost. As we talked further, he thought that with his knobby tires his Jeep might be able to pull me out (after all, I had taken the commemorative picture already so he knew what he was in for)

He was right, and the Jeep was able to pull me out. He pointed out that I was really lucky to get stuck where I did. Not only would the tow truck not been able to make it, but had I gotten another mile or so deeper into the mountains, it was so wet from all of the rain that I probably would have had to wait a month for things to dry out before anyone would even make the attempt at a pull.

So the lesson here is, no more slick muddy roads until I get knobby tires & a winch.

Yes you are looking right at it. Right there on the right.

More Invisible Mountain

Invisible Mountain a view from the West.

This is a view of Thousand Springs Valley. In 1983 there was an earthquake here that caused the valley floor to drop 7 feet and the mountain behind me to raise a foot and a half. It measured 7.3 on the Richter scale.

Looking south over Thousand Springs Valley from the Dickey Pass

Bayhorse Graveyard

Bayhorse is a ghost town all that is left is the graves of the ghosts.

A Stanley, ID view of the Salmon River

Crossing over from Idaho to Oregon. The seed heads of the grass that covers these hills is a burgundy color before it dries out. So for a few days per year, the hills turn pink.

Lost in the foothills... A view to the south by Richland Oregon. The unripe grasses are turning the hills pink.

Hells Canyon You are looking across the Snake River from Oregon to Idaho. Interesting how the snow line starts at the horizon. Hells Canyon is the deepest canyon in North America, beating the Grand Canyon by about 1300 feet. If you look at the canyon walls you can see multiple shelves. This is not sedimentary rock layers but basaltic lava flows that erupted and flowed one on top of the last over millions of years.


Photography Posts
Washington
Aug 21, 2017
Although I was headed into Washington I drove up through Idaho to enter by Moscow, Idaho. I've heard reports of the areas beauty for years... time to check it out. Moscpw, to Pullman, Wa. and head west. Many beautiful bottom valleys.
  Hey, Let's hit Idaho
Wildlands of San Francisco
May 26, 2016
It is all around us and it is relentless. Right now it is working at destroying our homes and cities. While we sleep at night it is tirelessly toiling away. Overcoming everything we know. Everything we have made. Everything we will ever do. There is no escape. We are in a symbiotic relationship with it. We love it deeply and without it we will die. Yet in the long run, our species will be gone and it will overrun this world until all life is gone and there is nothing left but a burnt ember orbiting the Sun.
Some Humble Abodes
May 23, 2016
There are uncounted scads of really nice Victorian houses in San Francisco and if I was to take pictures of the best of them I couldn't afford the film... er... hard drive space. Besides, San Francisco has many more syles of houses beyond Victorians. This a selection of a few that I have shot in the past month or so.
Fort Bragg on a Foggy Night
May 12, 2016
The fog rolls in.. It is late on a late spring night. Nothing on TV. There never is. Grab the camera & tripod... it's time to take a walk.
And a Few More Pictures of San Francisco
May 09, 2016
There are always a few left-over pictures that don't seem to fit in with any article.. I'll throw in a Batch of San Francisco images here. these are shot in all sections of the city, and are not displayed in any particular order.
California's Lost Coast
May 07, 2016
There is an area of California known as the Lost Coast. Somewhere north of Fort Bragg, south of Ferndale and west of highway 101. There are a few ways to get there but fewer people who will tell you how. Some places you can drive to, much of it is accessable only by foot if at all. It is one of the remaining places that Sasquatch can run free.
What are you going to do in San Francisco anyhow?
Dec 28, 2015
I like San Francisco. I always have. For my first job I was a driver for a water lab. Every morning I had to drive from Redwood City to Marin (through San Francisco, of course). I had all morning to do the drive plus my lunch hour. I would often spend my lunch hour picking a new route through the city. Way too much fun to be paid for, but i took the money anyway. Now I had the opportunity to spend all day every day in the city.
Recent Pictures
Jun 19, 2015
May & June get lumped together. Lots of packing. 56 years of house to deal with. Getting my replacements at Gryphon up and running.
Some Recent Pictures
May 19, 2015
April was an interesting month. Packing things up. A few shots testing a new Canon 100-400mm lens. Of course when packing things can get messy... I knocked over a pile of empty film reels. It looked so nice I just had to take a picture.
A Utah Loop
Sep 05, 2016
The Distance from Blanding, Utah to Bluff Utah is only about 25 miles but if you plan carefully you can make it in 200. I had planned carefully... I had planned to be responsible, put in a day and and drive from Blanding to Torrey. After all The previous day I had driven 120 miles and landed 21 miles from my starting point... I needed to make "progress" gol darn it! and 175 miles farther down the road was furthering my cause. I was less than two blocks down the road when I saw a sign that read "Mexican Hat 50 miles."
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