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WY Cattle move |
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Grand Tetons, WY |
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Grand Teton National Park |
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Nuclear Rods by Breeder |
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First nuclear powered electricity facility; Idaho |
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Doug & Twila Wright Ward, Roger Wright, Christine |
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Craters of the Moon, Idaho |
We arrived at my brother Gary's home
in Newburg, OR yesterday. We dipped our feet in the Pacific Ocean this
afternoon for the second time since the beginning of our trip and have enjoyed
riding through beautiful forests of the Oregon coastal and Cascades ranges and
the agricultural diversity of the Willamette Valley. We have traveled around
8400 miles so far on this trip and will have logged close to another 4000 miles til we get back to Virginia in
another month. We have visited between 15 and 20 national parks and monuments,
spent the night in at least 20 Walmart parking lots, and a dozen or so national
park service managed campgrounds. A half dozen or so times we have camped at
roadside pull offs or vacant lots. We have used motels about a half dozen
times. We have stayed at the homes of relatives and (or) friends a dozen times
and counting. We have yet to use a KOA or other privately owned RV campground
and probably never will.
Highlights of the past two weeks have been a
weekend spent at a Mennonite Central Committee Bolivia reunion where we
reconnected with friends we haven't seen for 40 years; hiking and viewing snow
fields, a profusion of wild flowers, and elk herds on alpine tundra above
11,000 feet altitude; several nights spent in the homes of friends; and chance
encounters with local folks in small towns, learning about local events and
issues. We have learned a lot of history about diverse things like the first
nuclear power plant to generate electricity in Idaho, the hardships of wagon
travel along the Oregon Trail 150 years ago, and the realities of modern day
cowboying and range management. It's these kinds of things that make an
extended trip personally enriching with lots of cherished memories.
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CO, Black Canyon of the Gunnison |
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Black Canyon |