Showing posts with label Washingon. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Washingon. Show all posts

23 June 2010

Mt. Rainier's top

Tue 22 June 2010
The clouds cleared away and we got to see and photograph the top of Mt. Rainier today. It is tall, white with snow, a bit rounded looking, and beautiful. We have our noses pointed home now and made it to Baker City, Oregon. Image source: http://www.flickr.com/photos/brewbooks/2939372409/

There is a dividing transition line that runs through the big volcanoes of the Northwest. Rainier, St. Helens, Hood, Adams and Lassen are all peaks that separate the moist, cloudy, fern covered, spruce-hemlock forests on the west from the much drier sagebrush and pine forests on the east. The farther we drove from Mt. Rainier the drier it got and the clearer the sky became.

20 June 2010

Cascade Locks, Indians, salmon, Dismal Nitch

Sat 19 June 2010
Cascade Locks is a canal lock build to help barges around some rapids on the Columbia River. The newer dams on the river have made the lock obsolete but it is fun to see the way they must have worked by closing a gate to build up a backlog of water flowing downstream into the lock. But the most interesting part was that saw the modern Indians have built platforms down on the side of the walls of the old lock about ten feet above the water. They use these platforms to stand on and we saw them wearing modern rain gear while they catch salmon in nets on a long handled loop. They catch them really fast. When they catch them they pull the net up on the platform and empty the flopping fish on the platform. So they are standing among half a dozen flopping fish as they put the net back down in the water to catch more fish. They load this fish into coolers and sell them to tourists as "fresh." Image source: http://digitum.washingtonhistory.org/cdm4/item_viewer.php?CISOROOT=/columbia&CISOPTR=71&CISOBOX=1&REC=1

We also saw Dismal Nitch on the north shore of the Columbia River where the Lewis and Clark's Corp of Discovery was caught by a winter storm on the Columbia for six days and had to hole up hoping for a change of weather. It was the only time in their journals when they used the word dangerous. When the weather broke they went a few miles further and found Station Camp where they could see the Pacific Ocean and realized their mission had been completed. The site was so important they made a complete map of it and spent a lot of time determining the exact latitude and longitude of it. They knew they were on the Columbia River because as they got closer to the ocean they met many tribes with trade goods brought in by ships. They had a map showing the location of the Columbia and they provided their own map of the area between the lower Missouri and the Columbia rivers.