Category Archives: Uncategorized

Going to the Sun Road and Logan’s Pass to Hidden Lake

June 29, 2015 Monday.  Going to the Sun Road & Logan’s Pass

Left early this morning for a drive to Logan’s Pass and hike to Hidden Lake.  Logan’s Pass is the half way point on the Going to The Sun road as one heads west across the Park.  The hike was only 3 miles but took up a several hours and crosses the Continental Divide.
The trail was part boardwalk, gravel, rocks, and snow, an easy 600 foot incline to a look out that was a breathtaking view of the valley, Hidden Lake, and several peaks.

Our hiking group in Redding  always say that a good hike has at least on of these features……water, wild flowers, or an exceptional view.  This was everything rolled into one.   The melting snow produced the most beautiful streams and waterfalls and the meadows of wild flowers in white, yellow, coral, pink, purple.  The mountain goats were very friendly and comfortably shared the trail with us.  The snowy areas were only about 1/3 of the trail, but posed the greatest difficulty traversing.  Crampons would have been quite useful!  The array of clothing was quite interesting from complete hiking gear complete with back pack and bear spray to shorts and flip flops.

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Panorama Near the Summit
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Crampons Anyone???
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The Summit
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Sharing the Trail
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Flowers Everywhere
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“Papa Doug you taste good” said this wandering deer.

We traversed the rest of the Going to the Sun road to the west side of the Park (40 miles total) and ate  at the McDonald Lake Lodge.  We scoped out a couple more hikes that we will do later in the week.

We have been “newsless” for the last week…..Doug set up our satellite TV and we were heard about the Supreme Court ruling on Obama Care and the recognition of gay marriage.  The (hopefully) unintended consequences of these rulings are going to have profound effects on this country as we know it.

Day 2 Many Glacier Lodge

June 27, 2015. Many Glacier Lodge

Since it is the weekend, we decided to stay on the East side of the Park and explore where we are camped.  We went to Many Glacier Lodge for lunch and was not disappointed.  The food was reasonably priced and wonderful!  The view from the dinning room was over Swift Current Lake.  It seems that the vendor that runs all the lodges hires young people from all over the U.S. for the summer.  Our server was from Salt Lake City and studying International Business in college.

We had a tour of the lodge celebrating it’s 100 th year.  All of the lodges in the park were built around 1913-1915 to accommodate summer visitors from the East that came by the Great Northern Railroad.  These are pictures of Many Glacier Lodge and of course -us._DHM6649

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Glacier Park Day 2

June 27, 2015. Glacier National Park – Eastside

10:30 pm.  Doug and I simply can’t go to sleep while it is still light out.  They say this has been one of the hottest June’s in many years.  We would like to get to bed early so we would get up and get our day started before the heat picks up.  By 1030 it has cooled down and is time for a fire, but it is bed time.

This was a beautiful critter we ran in to in the parking lot last evening at 9PM leaving Logan Pass.  I thought we had to hike to see these things but they just wander around checking out the tourists!

Local Resident
Local Resident

Doug’s friend found him at the park headquarters!

Doug's New Friend
Doug’s New Friend

(Bonny insists that I tell you that the upper picture is one SHE took of a real Big Horn Sheep while the in the lower picture I’m hugging a statue! Pretty lifelike isn’t it?- Doug)

Redding to Glacier National Park

On the Road Again…..first leg to Glacier National Park…June 23, 2015

At last……….I must have had delusions of grandeur to think that we could get back to Redding on Sunday and, then, be ready to leave for Montana on Tuesday.  Our brief trip to Long Beach was to celebrate MoMo’s promotion to high school,  Bob Carter’s 70 th birthday, and a lovely evening Duffy cruise and dinner with Doug’s sister Patti and her husband Dick.  We also wished Madi well as she departed for a week long mission trip to Guatemala. Family events finished and now onto Glacier and Canada!

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Family at lunch for MoMo’s graduation!
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Two Proud Grandmas
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Bob Carter at 70!
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Captain Patti and first mate, Dick, about to cast off and head to dinner in Newport.

We got on the road for the first leg of our journey to Glacier around 1 pm…only 3 hours later than planned…not bad.  We are hoping to arrive in time to have dinner with Tammy & Joe Florio in Bend, Oregon.  Looks like we are leaving Redding as temperatures soar to 114 degrees this week.

We got off with a BANG….literally.  As we were loading the coach, we dropped and broke two bottles of wine…..not too sticky and fortunately ” white “.  I do hope I am PC….. can I say white?

I will never get tired of the drive North out of Redding.  It is so beautiful going through the mountains and the valleys.  Shasta Lake, sadly, is very low due to the continued draught.

We entered Oregon on Hwy 97 in a lovely valley.  It is haunting how suddenly Oregon is different.  The road changes and landscape is so green.  Suddenly there is water and green green fields.  It is a palpable difference.  Factoid – the entire state of Oregon’s population is about 1/3 the size of Los Angeles County alone.

We have kept moving despite many places we would like to explore….like the waterfalls at Post Falls, ID and the cities of Missoula, Kalispell, & Whitefish, Montana

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Spent the last two nights in Elk’s Lodge parking lots ( RV ) with electrical hookups. Spokane & Kalispell……not beautiful, but the price was right.

The drive through Montana is breathtaking with mountains followed by vast valleys of cattle ranches and farm land and lots of green expanse.  We drove most of the time up Montana along the edge of Flathead Lake.  I didn’t know that it is the largest fresh water lake west of the Mississippi.  162 miles of shoreline.  We did spend a considerable bit of time following a house that was being moved intact by a semi on a two lane highway – SLOW!!!.   It was way too scary to pass, so we just plodded along.

After a quick dinner at the ELKS club of chicken and ribs ($8), we went into Whitefish. It was well worth it.  Such a beautiful quaint city with Whitefish lake for boating and all water sports and just up the hill is Big Mountain for winter sports.

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Whitefish, Montana lakeside beach

It is 1015.  We are pooped and ready for bed and it is still light out.   I love it!  I’ll bet I would hate the winter.  It is probably dark at 3:30 pm.  I will have to confirm that.

We have been on and off the phone with Melanie tonight.  Apparently she was bit by her dog Teddy today (accident) and has lymphangitis.  She is currently in the ER getting IV antibiotics.

We have about a 150 mile drive tomorrow to reach our campsite at St. Mary on the East side of Glacier National Park.  After 3 days on the road we are looking forward to staying put for 7 days and simply exploring.  We heard the The Road to the Sun just opened last week.  This traverses Glacier East to West and can only be done by car…I think the Jeep will come in handy.

Friday June 26, 2015

Arrived at our camp site at St. Mary and decided to do just a little exploring around 4 pm.  We drove about 18 miles on the Going to the Sun Road and found ourselves at Logan Pass after several stops.  Every turn seemed to get more beautiful.  Even though the visitors lodge was closed for the day, we started on a hike filled with yellow wild flowers and patches of snow and multiple waterfalls. 

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FINALLY! Glacier National Park at Logan’s Pass for an evening hike.

The temperature  dropped as the valley became shaded but the sun was still bright at 9:30.  Back at camp with a wonderful fire ( thank you Doug) we finished dinner around 11 pm.  An early start in the the morning is only wishful thinking for this old girl.

McCloud Hike and Elks Chilli Cookoff

McCloud (7 of 9) McCloud (1 of 9) McCloud (3 of 9) McCloud (9 of 9) McCloud (4 of 9) McCloud (5 of 9)June 7th Bonny and I headed off to McCloud for a few days in the mountains AND  to experience our first Redding Elks Chili Cook Off.

The weather was great, the hiking beautiful, and the Elks were entertaining and convivial. This was our first official Elk RV trip – the first of many more to come we hope!

I have included some key pictures and I am sure the images will tell you more about the week than my typed words. It was a great time and we met new friends. I also found some previous patients there as well. All had had Coronary Bypass and one valve replacement. They were in the mountains with their families enjoying life. It was great to be part of that for them.

 

Trip Photo Gallery

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Newport Bridge
Our Route
Our Route
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Mount Shasta coming home
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Yaquina Light House
The beach and lighthouse below our RV site
The beach and lighthouse below our RV site
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“Love Letters In the Sand ” Pat Boone 1956 – www.dougand bonny.com
Yaquina Lighthouse
Yaquina Lighthouse
Newport bridge detail - beautiful!
Newport bridge detail – beautiful!

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Not looking too bad after 264 steps to the top!
Not looking too bad after 264 steps to the top!
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OOPS! We shouldn’t be here with our 40 ft. rig!
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Happy Anniversary!

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Anniversary Dinner 2014
Anniversary Dinner 2014
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Canon Beach at sunset
Our Shadows In The Sand
Our Shadows In The Sand
Canon Beach
Canon Beach
Portland bridges and harbor at night
Portland bridges and harbor at night
Downtown Portland
Downtown Portland
Japanese Garden Stairway - Portland
Japanese Garden Stairway – Portland
Sunset at the RV park
Sunset at the RV park
Our first selfie!
Our first selfie!
Getting Ready for the Trail
Getting Ready for the Trail
Sunset on the Rogue just 20 feet from our campsite
Sunset on the Rogue just 20 feet from our campsite

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Mount Hood Summit
Mount Hood Summit
Bonny's New Best Friend - Smokey!
Bonny’s New Best Friend – Smokey!
View House overlooking the Columbia River
View House overlooking the Columbia River

The End or just the begining…..

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I got such a thrill as we rounded a curve just north of Yreka at mile marker 776…….the majesty of Mt. Shasta came into view.  When we left you could hardly see her for all the smoke.  Today she is clear and crisp and snow capped.  She is sort of like God….when you know where she is, you know where you are.

Our Route
Our Route

Miles traveled 1,230

We will be going down (flying) to Long Beach next week to meet our new sweet baby girl, Malia Rose, and to attend a memorial service for a dear friend of Doug’s, John Messenger.  John was a cardiologist at Long Beach Memorial and very instrumental in the development of the Heart Institute.

New RV !!

Well, we found an RV that we couldn’t resist. We followed the RV to a rest stop in Oregon and found that it was for sale! It had more mileage than we wished but it made up for the miles with outstanding new features.

First, it is brightly painted with high visibility (HI-VIS) colors to aid in road recognition and thus safety. Second, the new RV  has ample length and comes with a superb roof storage area complete with a roof mounted vented propane system. The most intriguing aspect of the roof is the rear deck with an onboard functional hen-house with six hens up there enjoying the view at more than 60 MPH.  You don’t find THAT feature at many RV shows do you now? (the hen house  is usually a major, major  upgrade) The hens do have a completely enclosed and protected shelter available for high speed maneuvers and frigid conditions if they are having any trouble walking on the deck. When the vehicle is stopped the hens are able to feed on a rear deck exercise area from an auto feeder and auto water source. The current owner told us that the hens have a heck of a time trying to peck at those corn pieces at 60 MPH so he must slow down or stop and activate the feeder or they will get “sickly”.

Owning this technical masterpiece means that Bonny and I will  no longer have to rely on KFC for sustenance during our travels! Just a quick trip up that rear ladder and dinner is ready – scrambled eggs or …?

Talk about true freedom and living off the grid!

Brightly Painted RV
Brightly Painted RV
Our New Hen House
Our New Hen House

 

How we did

I need a hair cut and a pedicure…….My electric toothbrush has died….I am out of clean underwear…..it is time to return to Redding.  Oh did I mention, it is raining?  I don’t particularly enjoy outdoor exploring in the rain.

We are at Seven Feather’s RV Resort on the I-5 North of Medford.  It’s claim is that it wants to be the best RV Park in Oregon.  It is connected to the Seven Feathers Casino and is run by the Cal Creek Band of Umpqua Indian Tribe.  So far I am impressed.  When we arrived (in the dark) we were escorted to our site by a guy in a golf cart ( gratuities appreciated).  The cost per night is $36.  We have found that our cost per night on this adventure has been in the $20-30 range.  We have just decided to stay for the day and explore when the rain lets up, make a pot of soup, cozy up and read.  Coincidently The Bucket List is on the TV.

Doug and I have been on the road together in approximately 400sq.  feet for a little over 3 weeks.  He is very easy to get along with.  There is a definite division of labor.    He does everything on the outside and I do everything on the inside.  One of the things I made very clear before we ventured out was that I absolutely could not live for long in a messy coach.  For those of you that know Doug, I am not exaggerating when I say, Messy is his middle name.  He has blown me away with the pride he takes in the coach.   Wonders never cease!!!!  The cupboards are organized and the wood is polished.

One of my goals on this trip was to learn how to cook in a combination microwave/convection oven. The microwave broke shortly after we left and one burner on the stove just doesn’t seem to want to turn on.  I have actually done quite well with one burner and a bar-b-q.

Every where I go, I think it is the best.  I think of the kids and grandkids and how much they would enjoy each place.

One of the acquisitions Doug has made this time around is a little round thing that I thought was a white covered bar-b-q.  It turns out to be a satellite dish with much newer technology than our 10 year old RV has.  On this trip we are returning much less news depleted.  At this time in the news we are 3 weeks from the mid-term elections. There are 3 cases of Ebola in the US.  The nurse that contracted Ebola graduated 4 years ago and has worked in Critical Care and is one of 70 people that had cared for Mr. Duncan, the first to die of Ebola in the US.  Leon Panetta has just released his book. BO still stands firmly on “no boots on the ground” as ISSIL moves in on Baghdad.

I am learning that there are about four different kinds of camp sites….at least those in Oregon.  The first is the state or county parks with gravel pads, lots of trees, sometimes grass, a well worn picnic table, and a REAL fire pit…….places that make you want to hang out at your campsite.  The next have little or no trees, concrete or asphalt pads, very clean with laundry facilities, not much character but reasonably priced and put you near a city or attraction  you want to spend the majority of your time.  For me that would be Portland Fairview RV Park.  The third are very very nice “resorts” with flowers and all the amenities with very strict rules and no children or fire pits in site.  Many of these places only allow class A or C rigs of a certain age (Pacific Shores RV Resort).  Perhaps the price and word “Resort” are the clues.  The last are simply “parking lots” like the Walla Walla Elks or Whisky Town at Oak Bottom. This Seven Feathers might just be the best of everything……we will see when it stops raining.

As this trip comes to an end, we are talking about our next outing.  We are thinking of starting at Quartzite in Arizona which is a meeting of about 20,000 folks with Tiffin RVs.  This is on BLM land and is completely “dry” camping.  Waste is trucked out and Water is trucked in.  We were thinking it would be a good starting point in January for a tour of the South West ending with a visit with Matt in Dallas, Texas.  I have never set foot in Texas.

Neil Lindstrom – On the Beach

_DSC5304One of the great joys of travel, and RV travel in particular, is meeting fellow travelers. Bonny and I took a walk on the beach in Newport, Oregon today. There on the beach we met and talked with a wonderful American, Neil Lindstrom. Neil and his wife live in the north-east corner of Colorado where he is a retired farmer.  He and his wife are heavily involved in helping children and youth in Colorado. He financially supports a children’s summer camp near Estes Park, Colorado. Most interesting, he has been generously offering parcels of his own farm land to deserving young farmers in his area. He wants to help them get a start in family farming – something he believes is an important part of the United States. We agree. Hats off to Neil and his wife – real Americans!

Beach at Newport, Oregon October 13, 2014
Beach at Newport, Oregon October 13, 2014

3 days in Newport, Oregon

133 miles of Oregon coastline from Astoria to Newport…….I enjoyed the scenery, Doug, however,  was white knuckling it for most of the trip as he maneuvered 62 1/2 feet and  38,000 pounds of vehicle  on the 101 Coast Highway.  He is really quite a good driver.

Oregon is my new favorite state and I think God’s favorite color is green.  The lushness of Central Oregon and the coast is unsurpassed.  I know I look forward to returning and enjoying the many bike trails that are everywhere in the state.

We stayed at Pacific Shores RV Resort.  This was the most pricey of our sites at $70 in the off season.  Unlike other parks, each site is individually owned.  There was an indoor pool, spa, and gym ( none of which we used :  (   ) BUT, the view from the front seat of our RV was spectacular with a trail down to a beach that we mostly had to ourselves. For future reference, space 128 is the most beautiful with ocean view, grass, and a forrest to the right.

Yaquina Lighthouse
Yaquina Lighthouse as seen 20 ft from our RV!

We spent a day at a state park thats main attraction is a beautiful lighthouse………Yaquina State Park.  The sea was very rough that day with anticipated storms.  We were warned to be careful of Sneeker waves which are exactly that.   We never saw one, but our previously mentioned acquaintances, Neil, said he and his wife were drenched by one near the beach.

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Yaquina Head Light House – Operational 1873
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Stormy day with rough surf – any sneaker waves nearby?

 

Newport, Oregon

The beach and lighthouse below our RV site
The beach and lighthouse below our RV site

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

We arrived in Newport, Oregon late yesterday 10/10/14. It rained most of the night and the fog was thick this morning. By noon all had cleared and we went hiking up a substantial hill at the south end of the beach. This is a beautiful part of the Oregon coast.

Below is a picture I took of Bonny at the summit. On the cliff just over her right shoulder and about a mile away, sits our RV. This turned our to be a beautiful day!

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Bonny near the summit south of our beach RV site.

The Best Part of This Day—-Welcome Malia !

Welcome to Malia Rose deMetropolis – Born 10-09-2014

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The day has been long as we were updated periodically about Lindsay’s progress in labor.  Then…………at 7:52 pm came Andy’s text….. It’s a girl!   Wait a minute……I predicted it was a boy!   Never, never take me to Las Vegas.   Janice says she looks just like her big brother, Dylan.   We can’t wait to see her.   With the miracle of texting, we ALMOST feel like we are there.   For those of you that aren’t in and around Long Beach,  Andy is my youngest son and Lindsay is his wife.   He is a Long Beach fireman and Lindsay is an RN and works in the ER at Long Beach Memorial Hospital.   This sweet girl weighed in at 7-14 and is 20″ long and HEALTHY.

Dylan Meets His Sister
Dylan Meets His Sister
Malia's First Selfy
Malia’s First Selfie!
Happy Day!
Happy Day!

 

 

The Cannery

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Bonny’s Big Catch!

Every year I start looking for stocking stuffers on January  1st.  It can get expensive when you are filling 16 stockings!  I saw some Chinook Salmon that I thought the boys might enjoy but it was $14 a can at the museum store.  My quest……..to locate this item at a more reasonable price.  This led us to this small cannery on the Skipanon River.  It is referred to as a micro- cannery.   These are quickly disappearing from the coast.  Josh, the manager,  greeted us and gave us a great personalized tour.  Fridays are busy for them as they get ready to go to Portland for Saturday Market. The canning machine they use was built in 1917.  He says it works perfectly but he is finding it difficult to get parts and a mechanic that can actually work on it.  I think he said he has to fly in a mechanic from the mid-west.  Besides learning about the hand packing and smoking process, I was fascinated by their best butcher ( is that what you call someone that filets fish?).  She is 81 years old.   She is also the chief  sharpener of all the knives.

I saved a little at $9.50 a can.  Merry Christmas boys.  Please don’t feed it to the dogs.

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81 and still working!
81 and still working!
Won a State Award!
Won a State Award!
Made in 1917 and still running daily!
Made in 1917 and still running daily!

 

 

Thoughts From Astoria

Today Doug and I are waiting on word of the birth of Andy & Lindsay’s second baby. It has worked out by design that Janice (our other daughter-in-law) will be taking care of her at Long Beach Memorial. Sweet anticipation! We feel very comfortable with her under Janice’s watchful eye.

Yesterday we visited the Maritime Museum here in Astoria. What an educational day it was. We learned a great deal about the Coast Guard and the vigorous and dangerous training. The area here where the Columbia River and the Pacific Ocean meet is considered one of the most dangerous in the word calling it the “Graveyard of the Pacific” with over 700 ship wrecks and countless loss of life. What makes the Columbia River so important is its ability to provide transport of goods to inland America as far as Lewiston, Idaho. Imagine! Today we are going to learn about the discovery of this area by Lewis & Clark.

Looking back at the pictures Doug has posted, it looks like we are always wearing the same thing….it is true. When we left Redding it was 100 degrees and we packed accordingly. It had been so long since we saw temperatures below 80, we couldn’t imagine needing anything but flip flops and shorts. Lesson learned.

One of the things I love about Oregon is the GREEN. It actually rains here. We have several umbrellas, but not a single one in the RV.

I don’t really have an obsession with Costco. When I meet someone that lives in Redding, I will often ask what made them choose Redding as their home. One of the answers I found very interesting was from a fellow hiker, Linda Katlin. They have travelled extensively around the US (looking for a place to settle in retirement). Gary is an engineer. They narrowed their search to only places that had a Costco, believing that that community would have the level of goods and services that they felt necessary to establish a home. They built their own home in Cottonwood. They live in the country but know that civilization is just down the I-5.

The Art of Racing in the Rain…..recommended read on many levels. I now can’t look at a dog without wondering what he or she is thinking. I know more about race car driving than I ever wanted to know & never ever give up.

Retreat at Fort Clatsop

Bonny and I visited The Lewis and Clark Center which is located at the site of the log fort built built by the  U.S. Army Discovery Corps led by Captain Lewis and Lieutenant Clark.  The group had departed St. Louis in May of 1804 and arrived here in November of 1805 at the Pacific ocean. This fort was designed and built from local trees in a few weeks to provide needed shelter from a bitter winter. It is magnificent to see and appreciate what these  remarkable individuals accomplished.

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At the dusk at U.S. Army installations world over the U.S. flag is lowered and  correctly folded. The entire event and the bugle played is called “Retreat” followed by “To the Colors”.  The staff noticed my U.S. Army hat, the Park Rangers honored me with the opportunity to fold the flag. It has been a long time but my memory kicked in and I pulled it off. Whew!

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View From the Top

Astoria has an interesting hill overlooking the town and the Columbia River. There is a tower that Bonny and I climbed (164 steps) and the view is amazing. I will stop with the words but here are the pictures. Click on them to see full size.

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Not looking too bad after 264 steps to the top!
Not looking too bad after 164 steps to the top!

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Anniversary in Astoria!

October 7th marks our 14th anniversary.

Anniversary Dinner 2014
Anniversary Dinner 2014

Bonny and I feel very fortunate for our families and many friends both in Southern California, Redding and all across this wonderful country. We also spent time reminiscing about past adventures and travels and planning more of the same to come!

Thank you all for enriching our lives! Really, thank YOU.

We enjoyed a wonderful evening and dinner at the Bridgewater Bistro here in Astoria, Oregon. We had wonderful seafood dinners and attacked a bottle of matured grape juice from Roderer.  The combination and location were just great. We would really recommend this restaurant if you ever get up this far into Oregon. Here is there web site:

http://bridgewaterbistro.com

Some pictures follow and as usual you can see them enlarged with a simple mouse click!    Anniversary Dinner

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Astoria

I woke up this morning completely surrounded by fog.  It was delightful sitting up front watching the sun rise and the fog lift on the beautiful golf course that we have called home for a few days.  I have always said that one of the best things about retirement is “sleeping until I’m through”.

Today is our anniversary….14 years.  We have had a lot of fun and I can honestly say, still, that I have never once been bored!!!  I would gladly sign up for another 14……that should put us into our mid 80’s.

Yesterday we visited the beach communities of Seaside and Cannon Beach.  (Pictures are here – just click) They are typical beach towns and very different from Astoria just a few miles to the North.

Astoria is built on a hillside near where the Columbia River meets the sea.  Most of homes are Victorian and some are 200 years old.  At one time the population was as high as 100,000  with a thriving logging, shipping, and canning industry.  At that time the town was build on wooden piles  over the water.  A huge fire in the 1920’s destroyed the city as it swept under and burnt the support the city was built.  Today the population is 10,000, however, Doug and I spotted a Costco which tells us a lot about the surrounding community.

 

Astoria

We arrived in Astoria, Oregon last evening and found our RV site on a beautiful golf course. Getting here was a challenge. Our GPS choose to route our 40 ft motorhome with our Jeep attached (63 feet total) up a steep hill then onto  a narrow residential street which was a dead end! This necessitated unhooking the Jeep and blocking the street while we made a tight multi-point u-turn.  Bonny was a great spotter! All went well! But check out the sign on our GPS “approved” route!

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We plan to stay a few days here it is so lovely.

Bonny will add her thoughts.

Astoria Pictures here

Fish and Chips Here
We were sent here for the best fish and chips in town!

 

Columbia River Gorge

October 3, 2014   Columbia Gorge

Today we returned to the Columbia Gorge……..we simply ran out of time yesterday watching the sunset on our day from the Vista House high above the Gorge. I love how God ends his day with the sun peeking through the leaves, the deepening red of the sky followed by the twinkling of a million lights.

We started with brunch at Multnomah Restaurant. It is a beautiful lodge like structure with a huge fireplace that always seems to be well fed. We ate in the room next door that is a sun room with a steep glass roof.  We seem to find beauty everywhere we look….a beautiful cloudless day, a bit windy with white caps seen on the Columbia River. The Multnomha  Falls are the 2 nd highest year round water falls in the US.  Doug and I walked up to the 1st of 11 switchbacks.  Since we had planed a bike ride, we decided that was high enough.

Oregon provides many miles of bike riding trails for its citizens and we only got a very small taste. Today we did a trail that is dedicated to bikes and runs from Dobson to Cascade Locks. It is 8 miles long. As beautiful as it is, it follows the freeway and is noisy. We started from both ends and would recommend beginning at Cascade. It is away from the freeway and is dominated by tree covered tunnels………it is like riding your bike into Heaven.

On our way out, we stopped at an outdoor market for fresh fish ( or folks selling fish out of coolers in a parking lot). It is very interesting that the Indians in the area have no restrictions on fishing and can use nets as well. The smoked salmon didn’t last very long, yum.

Tomorrow, Astoria.

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Mt. Hood and Cascade Locks

October 2, 2014  

Mt. Hood,  Cascade Locks, and Columbia River Gorge

We drove to Mt. Hood for a pleasant morning at Timberline Lodge. After visiting the mountain, we ended up spending quite a while at a small town called Cascades Locks, population 1000.  We met the mayor who was mowing the lawn at the park and is also the paddle boat captin.  There was a very small beautiful island called Thunder Island that we explored.  We did make it to the Multnomah falls, but late. We watched the sun set at Vista House on the Historical Route 30.  We are going back tomorrow via Route 14 from Vancouver over the Bridge of the Gods and have brunch at the falls.

Click Here for Photos!

Sunset view of the Columbia River from the View House
Sunset view of the Columbia River from the View House

Portland

October1, 2014 

Portland, Oregon

Bonny and I arrived in Portland and met her long time nursing school friend, Maggie. We attended the Oregon Symphony that evening in one of the most beautiful music venues we have ever seen.

Then next day we had a personal Portland tour by Maggie

The following day we did a self guided tour of the Japanese Garden and the Western Forest just on the edge of the city. We had a beautiful day and a wonderful experience. Portland is an attractive city with a lovely, lively downtown and much to see.

Check out our Portland Photos here!Japanese Garden Portland

Portland

October 1, 2014

Portland

Portland…..where the weather is predictably unpredictable.  This is definitely a “layering” city.  Yesterday we experienced light rain, sunshine, warm sunshine, clouds, rain in the sunshine, twinkling rain.
We spent the day seeing the city that my friend Maggie loves and I can see why.  First we toured her house which is a very small cottage, but is surprisingly spacious with a loft for her bedroom and a basement for everything else.  The gardens she has created in the front and back are ever so inviting.  She offers it on occasion as a B & B which delights her guests.  The neighborhood has homes of varying size, many Victorian and Craftsman homes and tree canopied streets.  It is near Reed Collage which is a small, very expensive private school.  She thinks it looks like Hogwarts.
Our first stop was the tram which extents over the city from the waterfront to the Medical Center on the hill overlooking Portland……breathtaking.
Aerial tram to OU Medical Center with view of Portland
Aerial tram to OU Medical Center with view of Portland

Portland

September 30, 2014

Portland

Our first real day in Portland.  My friend Maggie Chandler ( she was a nursing school friend that went on to become the librarian at Poly until her retirement ) spent the day as our personal tour guide.  You can tell she loves Portland.  Doug & I agree.  It is a fabulous place with just about anything you could want to do.
We started the day at the aerial tram that travels from the river up to the medical centers on the hill overlooking the city.  It is the best way ever to get a lay of the land.  We traveled around town on the metro buses.  I think what I love best are the trees that line the down town streets.  The city is really clean.  One of our stops was along the river where Maggie and 19 of her closets friends meet 3 times a week to paddle in the Dragon Boats.  You should see her biceps and lats!!  They do this in rain or snow.   Makes me feel like a bit of a wuss since you will only find me kayaking in fair weather.   Saw Powell’s Book store, famous for it’s size and  three stories.  We wonder how the electronic books affected it’s sales.  We ended the day at Jake’s for happy hour and fish tacos.
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Eugene to Portland

September 30, 2014

Leaving Eugene for Portland

Hi everyone,

I can see I am getting a bit delinquent in my diary.  One of Doug’s goals on this trip is to create and maintain a blog about our adventures.  This will be a separate web site you can go to ( or not).  Some of you have voiced interest in our travels, others are getting this simply because you are related to us.  This is created so WE can recount our days.
The past few days have be spent in Eugene, Oregon at at a wonderful county park called Armitage County Park.  We had the last of 31 sites.  It was one of the best places we have ever stayed.  The sites are very spacious with trees all around, surrounded by a county park on the edge of the Mckenzie River.   We met a lovely couple that have been full timing it for 16 months in a 20 foot trailer.  They managed to transport their 2 bikes, an 18 year old cat, and a 2 man kayak.  We are impressed.  We felt so “out in the country” but Costco was less than 5 minutes from our camp!
Sunday we did a bike ride along a Willamette River Trail and through the Univeisty of Oregon campus. We  both agree that we have to come back to Eugene.   It is a very interesting culture here.  People watching is quite entertaining, especially at The Saturday Market.
Monday September 29, 2014
Arrived in Portland to intermittent rain ( although, they don’t consider it rain here).  We met up with my friend Maggie and joined her and friends for Happy Hour at Ruth’s Chris Steakhouse and on to the Oregon Symphony.

To be continued……….We are anxiously waiting for news from Andy & Lindsay about Dylan’s new brother or sister :  )

Enroute to Eugene

September 27,2014

Enroute to Eugene

Hi everyone,

Doug and I are on I-5 headed towards Eugene, Or.  We have spent the last 4 days in the Rogue Valley State Park.  After a day of rain, the skies are beautiful and most everything is refreshingly green. I think we both needed a few days to just chill. We rode our bikes, visited my friend from nursing school, Linda Hanson, saw a couple of movies, cozied up and read, and I refamiliarized my self with the coach.  I also took a tour of the kitchens and packing facility at Harry & David’s.  I learned that they are the major employer for the city of Medford.  I have always loved their products and like them even better now.

Doug has done a great job fixing  up the coach and preparing for this trip.  We even have a reverse osmosis system (I thought the same thing-SO?????).  It completely purifies the water………no scum in the shower and clear ice cubes, not to mention completely purified water to drink.

Of note.. Jacksonville is a delightful must see.  We had lunch and spent the afternoon with Linda at a great little resturant called The Bella Union.   It has also become quite an area for wineries. We sat under a huge fig tree that covered the entire patio.
We saw the movie The 100 Foot Journey.  Don’t miss it.  It is a delightful story that takes place in the South of France.  I just finished reading 11/22/1963 by Steven King.  Would recommend it.  It is about traveling back in time and preventing the assassination of JFK.
Last night we started dinner about 830 after a trip to Costco for some good rib eye steaks (as you know we are both carnivores ).  We looked like the 2 Stooges trying to build a fire and bar-b-q.   The fire just wouldn’t cooperate and we couldn’t see a thing to cook.  We are learning  :  )   Where is a fireman when you need him?  You boys are always good at starting a bonfire.
Saturday September 27, 2014
So far the promised 73 degree, mostly sunny day, has not materialized……maybe it will be laundry day :  (
(Doug here – that was damp wood – really it was)
Bonny
Rogue River Sunset from our campsite (20 ft. walk)

September 26

September 26, 2014

Doug and Bonny on the Road

This will serve as our photo gallery and our memory/scrap book of our new RV adventures. We are camped on the edge of the Rogue River in Oregon as I write this just before sunrise on September 26, 2014. This has been a lovely 4 day stay – complete with a day of RAIN. I had almost forgot what rain was until I was awakened by the sound on the RV roof. Bonny of course want to WALK in the rain – like a little kid. Of course we got wet but what the heck – we are retired!!

Stay tuned

The Trip Starts – Finally!

September 23
2014 The Trip Starts – Finally!
Hi there,

Well we are finally on the road.  Doug and I were so tired from packing the RV on Saturday that we parked in the Redding Elk’s and went out to a movie and pizza.  We left for Oregon on Sunday,  September 21st, refreshed.  We drove 168 miles to the Rogue River State Park between Grants Pass and Medford.  The ride was nice, but the ravages of the draught were very apparent with huge areas of tree not turning to fall colors, but dying.  The fires have left the skies smokey as the worst smoggy day in LA.  Our little spot at the Rogue River has lots of healthy trees.  The best part of all is that we can have a real fire.  We bought 2 bundles of firewood.  Hey!!
Today is the first day with absolutely no agenda except a bike ride to explore the town of Rogue River.  Tomorrow we are having lunch with a gal I went to nursing school with, Linda Sprague Hanson.  She lives in Central Point.  She says she still has horses that are descendants of the horses she had when we were in school over 45 years ago.  I am so looking forward to seeing her.
Bonny and Doug