April 2025, on the trail, in search of wildflowers

We went on one hike on April 1st, before my husband’s neck surgery on April 4th. After a couple of weeks of rest, we found some shorter, easier hikes in the last half of April, following the wildflower bloom, but keeping activity level within medical guidelines.

April 1 – Catherine Creek: Lower Tracy Hill – Arch Loop, WA

One of our usual trails. It was lovely to see the next phase of bloom in the meadows here.

View from the trailhead: the meadows are full of white saxifrage, also purple shooting stars, and a few camas beginning to bloom.
Looking south toward Mt Hood, the orchards of Mosier are glowing as the leaves unfurl.
Along the trail – rosy plectritus and purple broomrape.
Pockets of camas lilies
Saxifrage and shooting stars
Columbia desert parsley
Ponderosas reflected in a vernal pool, and yellow desert parsley.
Our trail passed above the ent who guards the slope…
He’s still standing.
On our return trail, we passed below the Arch, with eagles soaring above.
Some early bloomers were hanging on in this cliff shadow – gold stars and grass widows.
A few larkspur were just starting to bloom among them.

April 21 – Mitchell Point Tunnel and Mosier Plateau, OR

Last month I mentioned seeing the nearly completed Mitchell Point Tunnel from the highway as we drove by. The tunnel is now open. We stopped on our way to Mosier Plateau to see the views from the tunnel.

Mitchell Point from the parking lot.
The new pedestrian and bicycle tunnel replaces the original automobile tunnel on the Old Columbia River Highway that was destroyed when Interstate 84 was built. The tunnel passes around the north side and through Mitchell Point.
Western tunnel entrance
Western view from the western tunnel entrance on a windy day.
There are five or six viewing windows in the 600 foot long tunnel.
View through one of the windows.
Another window view.
Eastern tunnel opening.
View from the eastern opening toward the highway and the eastern gorge.
Back through the tunnel.
The western entry patio was comfortably sheltered from the wind today.
We walked a short way up the Mitchell Point Trail, which has been closed during tunnel construction. There were lots of wildflowers blooming in the woods. The trail becomes quite steep and rocky, and not suited for a surgical recovery hiker, so we didn’t go very far.

We drove on to Mosier Plateau, where the lower part of the hike is protected from the wind. Eventually, the trail emerges onto the open bench above the river, where the blooms and views were beautiful, but the wind too strong to want to walk the full length of the plateau.

Passing Mosier Creek Falls on the lower trail.
Heading uphill within Mosier Creek drainage, well protected from the wind.
Looking up along the trail,
Northward, toward the river – clumps of bright yellow balsam root bloom becoming more abundant.
Balsamroot
With a few poppies
On the windy plateau, looking west down the Columbia River and toward Mosier.
Northern view, looking directly at Coyote Wall in Washington
A perfect view of the black basalt outcrops of the labyrinth, where I can pick out a couple of my favorite trees.
And farther east toward Rowland Wall, Catherine Creek, and her famous Arch.

April 23 – Camassia Nature Preserve, West Linn, OR

A one mile loop trail through a natural area near Highway 205 and the Willamette River – somehow preserved from surrounding housing and industrial development.

Walking boardwalks through the green forest, with fringe cup and ferns.
A few blue-eyed Marys that always remind me of my sister.
Open meadows of camas and rosy plectritis
Camas meadows and mossy rocks.
Another meadow.
Cell tower osprey – the bird can see the Willamette River near Oregon City from their perch.
Camas
Camas, rosy plectritis and buttercups
Trillium and violets in the forest on the return trail.

April 25 – Round Lake Lily Fields, Camas, WA

Another short, easy walk in a suburban area where large slopes of camas lilies are not far from housing developments.

The lower trail near Round Lake…
Several paths wind through open slopes of camas lilies.
Camas lily
Continuing upward
Mossy rocks and camas lilies
Near the top of the hill
A few glacier lilies still blooming at the very top of the trail.

April 29 – Weldon Wagon Road, WA

The wind continued strong and steady all week in the Gorge. We chose this hike, in part because it has fabulous displays of balsam root along a smooth trail, but also because it is a bit protected from the relentless blasting wind in the main Columbia River corridor.

Oak woodlands along the lower trail
Bastard toadflax – my first time seeing this small white cluster flower.
Purple lupine and white manroot along the upper forest trail, just before the opening to…
the wide view across the balsamroot filled slopes.
We took a side trail up the ridge with a view to Mt Adams to the north for our lunch stop.
Back on the main trail, balsam root all the way…
And big headed clover,
Balsamroot
The upper trail is wooded, with blue flowers of Pacific hound’s tongue and yellow violets in the understory.
Returning down the way we came. Pale pink phlox among the yellow balsamroot.
Our descending trail back down through the flowering slopes.

On the drive home, we stopped at the overlook on Highway 84 just below Corbett, where the perfectly calm air allowed a river mirror to form – we don’t see that very often on our gorge excursions.

Eastward, up river, Crown Point/Vista House on the right skyline.
Westward toward Washougal
Panorama view
Historical Marker at the viewpoint

Thus, we enjoyed another month of wildflower hikes, with more to come in May.

Wildflower Hiking in March, 2025

We enjoyed three wildflower hikes in the eastern Columbia River Gorge in March, all trails we have been to many times in different seasons. I love tracking the phases of wildflower bloom each time we go.

March 3 – Catherine Creek and Lower Labyrinth, WA

Early March is grass widow season at the lower elevations of the Catherine Creek and Labyrinth trail systems. My camera doesn’t do them justice, but the swaths of purple grass widows are so very pretty!

Fields of purple grass widows carpeted the lower meadows along the ADA Trail at Catherine Creek.
Grass widows
Looking eastward…
Early yellow parsleys in the woodland.
More grass widows on the rocky outcrops.
There was nothing blooming at the slightly higher elevation fairy ponds, so we went to the nearby Labyrinth/Old Highway 8 Trail to see what was happening there.
The Lower Labyrinth Falls along Old Hwy 8 was full.
The Upper Labyrinth Falls was also full, but there were no flowers up here.
The flowers were concentrated in the lower elevation areas…
Grass widows, gold stars, pink woodland stars.

March 11 – Rowena Crest, OR

The next week, on the Oregon side of the river, we saw more swaths of purple grass widows along Rowena Crest – both in the lower part of the Tom McCall Trail, and the Rowena Crest Trail.

We started by walking toward Tom McCall Point, where grass widows filled the meadows.
Grass widows and tiny white spring whitlow grass blooms
We walked through the oak tree lined Parsley Alley, and saw purple Columbia Desert Parsley beginning to bloom.
Columbia Desert Parsley
Looking east toward Lyle Cherry Orchard and the Rowena curves
Yellow bells popping up in places.

We went back down, and walked all the way to the end of the Rowena Plateau Trail.

Grass widow meadows along Rowena Plateau Trail
Yellow parsley
White salt and pepper parsley
Gold Stars in the meadows at the west end of the trail

Reflections in the ponds along the way provided some abstraction distractions…

Pond
with ripples
Zooming in
Closer
and closer
and back out.
Another pond.

We walked back along a side trail near the cliff edges – so many flowers!

Looking toward Lyle, WA.
And back toward Tom McCall Point.

March 18 – Rowland Wall/Stringbean Loop, WA

By mid-March in the Catherine Creek area, grass widows were joined by other flowers – saxifrage, gold stars, yellow bells, more of the parsleys, and the first balsam roots.

At the trailhead, white saxifrage were speckling the meadows along with grass widows.
Gold stars becoming abundant in the rocky areas overlooking the arch.
Plenty of grass widows, looking toward the orchards of Mosier.
The burn areas from last fall’s Top Of The World Fire are prominent around the trees, but the slopes have turned green.
There were many robins hopping along today. We watched these two playing in some puddles while we ate our lunch.
Robin
We continued uphill on the burned, but now green, slope of Sunflower Hill.
Two robins in the top of the oak tree.
Looking east from our high point.
We dropped down over Rowland Wall, then decided to walk the inside-out switchbacks of the String Bean Trail. We didn’t find many flowers in the woodlands.
Looking back toward Rowland Wall, and the Needle.
We crossed the lava flows, then went back up over the wall at the lower trail.
We saw the first of the balsam roots blooming along the way
Rowland Wall scree slope and Needle
Plenty of yellow parsleys blooming along these west-facing slopes,
And pockets of yellow bells.
Grass widows and gold stars.

It was a beautiful day, and I am looking forward to the next phase of wildflower bloom in the eastern gorge!

Preview of Coming Attractions –

Driving home westward on Interstate 84, we passed under the base of Mitchell Point. The tunnel on the old highway was destroyed when I-84 was built, but has recently been reconstructed and reopened as part of the bike path through the gorge. I grabbed a photo as we passed – and we hope to walk there sometime soon. The views are supposed to be amazing!

Mitchell Point Tunnel, above the highway on the left.

March 2025, at home…

We made our way to the spring equinox with a lunar eclipse, a St Patrick’s Day parade in the neighborhood; more knitting, quilting, home improvement, and reading; blooming plants in the neighborhood; three wildflower hikes in the Columbia River Gorge (next post), and a lot of rain…

Lunar Eclipse, March 13th

My photo, with camera set to fireworks…The sky is light because of the time delay, but the stars are out.
My husband’s photo, with fancy zoom lens on tripod.

March 16th – Neighborhood St Patricks Day annual parade…

Knitting:

Hats for the Guild Service Project
Sock progress
And a new scarf

Quilting –

I sewed together these quilt blocks. They may become pillows – I’m still trying to decide.

Home Improvement –

New dining room blinds and patched wallpaper

Reading –

I read six books in March.
Nancy Russell and John Yeon, Columbia River Gorge

I learned so much in the two books about Nancy Russell and John Yeon, two conservationists who worked indefatigably for many years to create the Columbia River Gorge National Scenic Area, and then to implement the plan. It was a huge political and fundraising challenge to cobble together all the different government and formerly private lands, preserving the ecosystems and creating many of the trail systems we hike regularly. I think grateful thoughts every time we drive through or hike in the gorge!

Neighborhood blooms –

Flowering plum
Hyacinth
Daffodils
Camillia
Rain, in puddles
Cherry trees
Tulips
Sidewalk of the month
Yard sign of the month

A change of plans…

At the end of the month we cancelled our planned trip to the east coast to visit family in Connecticut and Pennsylvania, so that my husband could get surgery on his neck, where a bone spur on the C3 vertebra was causing neurological symptoms and weakness. The procedure will be during the first week of April. More on the outcome next month… ( Update – it went well, he is recovering as expected.)

Two final notes –

1) I still have not gotten the hang of blog editing in the block mode on this site, so it is taking me a long time to create posts.

2) We are trying our best to stay positive in a constantly chaotic, hateful regime, so I am posting a couple of positive internet memes here at the end, to remind me to stay hopeful…

Internet meme
Historical perspective

February 2025…

The shortest month seemed very long. I went from skiing the neighborhood snow to admiring the early spring blooms. I knit, quilted, and read as productive activities to counter the political upheaval. We honored the boycots. I made progress on the recycle/repair/upcycle four-year home improvement project. And we went on two hikes.

Crafting/Home Improvement:

Another pair of socks completed
Hat for the Guild service project
I started sewing these quilt blocks together
Back hall carpet installed, almost the last step in that project.

Reading – I read nine books last month, many by or about women: writers, artists, a river guide, a Supreme Court Justice. After watching the Bob Dylan movie last month (A Complete Unknown), I was very interested to read Suze Rotolo’s side of the story. She was a politically active artist. She made a lasting impression on Dylan and his music, but she wanted to pursue her own artistic and life goals, not be just another string on his guitar, his ‘chick’, who would wait for him while he did whatever, wherever in the world. I really admire her for that. There are many great, less celebrated women out there, and I plan to read more of their stories. Meanwhile, I have been listening to the early Bob Dylan music – it fits the mood of this time in the world.

March 2025 Books

The neighborhood:

February 14th – I always love a chance to get out my 35 year old cross country skis, and kick-glide for a couple of miles down the quiet, flat streets of Irvington. The snow was perfect this day! And almost completely gone the next day.

Skiing out the front door
Just enough snow…
Sunny and calm
Nice flat streets
Japanese Maple

Meanwhile, in Philadelphia, our son and his fiancee were attending the Super Bowl Victory Parade! Wearing hats that I knit for them last year.

Around town – flowers and rainbows…

Hiking –

We hiked out in the eastern Columbia River Gorge twice in February –

February 20th – Crawford Oaks, WA – We hiked about 5 miles on the Lower Vista Loop, past the full Eight Mile Creek Falls, and around the lower plateau. We saw very few early flowers and just a bit too much wind that day.

Eight Mile Falls
Gold stars
A lone grass widow
Salt and Pepper parsley, Dalles Mountain Ranch
Westward view
Eastward view

February 27th – Memaloose Hills, OR – A beautiful, perfectly calm day. We could see the blue heron rookery on yonder cliff top and a few flowers. It was an easy, enjoyable 3.5 mile hike with dear friends.

Eastward view from the Memaloose Overlook
View to the north, with a peek at Mt Adams
Westward view, heron rookery circled in red
Fuzzy zoomed-in heron rookery
Trail up the south approach to Chatfield Hill
View to Mt Adams from the top
A few grass widows up there
Columbia Desert Parsley
Spring Whitlow grass
Lunch at the top, and a view to Mt Hood (photo credit to my husband).

Meanwhile, the news is worse every day – we are doing what we can, and trying to hold on to the glimmers and small victories. The daily reports of the shredding of the constitution by anti-empathic billionaires is trying every nerve, but I try to stay positive…

Bumper Sticker
Internet meme
Internet meme

Bandon, Oregon January 5-9, 2025

We celebrated our 40th wedding anniversary with a trip to the southern Oregon Coast. We stayed just south of Bandon, in a room with a view.

Looking south
View south
Looking north
View north

We had easy access to the wide sand beach south of Face Rock, and took several long walks north and south over the next few days. We also drove south to Cape Blanco, and north to Cape Arago. Other than a bit of rain the day we arrived, we had fabulous weather – sunny and calm.

Locations of hikes and beach walks on the southern Oregon Coast near Bandon.

1/6 – Bandon Beach and Cape Blanco

We walked north to Face Rock in the morning.

South view, Bandon Beach
North toward Face Rock
Oyster catcher
Rock pillars off shore
The tunnel near Face Rock
Looking south from the Face Rock overlook
Looking north from the Face Rock overlook

After lunch, we drove south to Cape Blanco. We walked down to the beach, then along the strand line to the north, at approximately low tide.

Looking west toward the Cape Blanco Lighthouse,
and northward from the bluff above the beach.
Cape Blanco beach
Lots of wave action in the rock garden,
Tide going out…
And another view of the beach on the north side of Cape Blanco.

Later that evening I watched the sun set from our room…

Sunset

1/7 – Beaches to the north – Sunset Bay, Yoakam Point, Blastendorff Beach, Seven Devils Beach

We drove north to Cape Arago, but a recent washout closed the road, so we could only go as far as Sunset Bay. We started with a short walk there, then explored a few locations to the north.

Sunset Bay at low tide

We walked about a mile around Yoakam Point, looking at the view from various cliff overlooks:

Looking east toward Blastendorff Beach
Yoakam Point
Cape Arago
Cape Arago Lighthouse
Natural arch

We ate lunch and then took a walk at Blastendorff Beach.

Blastendorff Beach, and jetty to the Coos Bay inlet

Driving back south, we took a side trip to the Seven Devils Wayside, and walked on the beach there. We even saw someone panning for gold.

Historical uses of this area…
Looking south from Merchants Beach
Painterly sky and water

Back in Brandon, we took a walk along the pier. It was mostly deserted, with most shops closed. I was fascinated by the mosaic installation on the boardwalk.

Bandon pier
Spiral Mosaic
Mosaic center
Mosaic detail
So many great little details – I looked at it for a long time!

Later, we walked out onto Coquille Point again, to watch the sunset. We met a large puffin sculpture there.

Coquille Point overlook
Looking south
Puffin made of flotsam
Another view of the Puffin sculpture

1/8 – Low tide near Bandon – Face Rock and Coquille Point

With low tide in the afternoon, this was a perfect day to walk north toward Face Rock and then beyond Coquille Point and look at tide pools, water, sky, and all the reflected permutations.

Bandon Beach, looking north…
Looking south – reflections – water – sky
Sea stacks
Logs north of Coquille Point
More reflections
Low tide beach
Blue sand and sky
Sea stars and anemones
Closer view
More reflections
Face Rock tunnel
Tide pools
Sky and water…

Later, we enjoyed another sunset from the Coquille Point Overlook…

South view
Sun just dipping below the horizon
The flotsam Puffin glowing in the sunset.

We enjoyed our few days of calm weather and beach walks, a break from the ‘real’ world, and what was to come next in January.

Looking back:

Coberg, Oregon, January 5, 1985

December 2024

We returned from our California/Thanksgiving road trip on the first of December, with the Winter Solstice, Christmas, Hanukkah and home repair to look forward to. In the neighborhood, some folks went all in on their decor – a few of my favorites:

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Rudolph and friends

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Giant ornaments

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All the snow people

We had a stretch of cold, clear days, one of which was an appointment at OHSU for me – all well, for the moment, and I got a great 7th floor view of Portland.

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Tram, Downtown Portland

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Willamette River, Mt St Helens

And, during that clear weather stretch, the roofing crew we hired put a new roof on our very steep roof.

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New plywood

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Tar paper

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Shingles

Hiking

I went on two hikes – one out to Catherine Creek, WA, on a foggy day, and one to Powell Butte, in Portland.

December 10th – Catherine Creek, WA

We stopped at the Starvation Creek Rest Area on our drive. The sun was out, and we could see the frosted trees at the top of Wind Mountain.

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Wind Mountain from Starvation Creek

Clouds were sitting on the hills at Catherine Creek. We walked up Sunflower Hill through the recent controlled burn zone, then back down along Rowland Wall. The sun never came out here…

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Walking up Sunflower Hill toward the burn zone.

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Green coming up through the blackened soil.

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Springtime view of that same slope – 2023

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Walking down Rowland wall

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The leaning tree and Rowland Lake

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Fields of Mosier beyond

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Golden grass of winter

December 19th – Powell Butte – We could see Mt Hood, Mt St Helens, and a few deer.

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We watched the lenticular cloud forming over Mt Hood

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Mt Hood

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Mt St Helens had already donned her own cloud cloak

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A few deer in the forest

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And a sentiment from the Bard…

Knitting

I finished my Christmas gift knitting, and then made a new cowl after Christmas.

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Socks, mitts, hat

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More socks

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Lancelot Cowl

Winter Solstice

The sun was out. I walked through the neighborhood looking at shadows and puddle mirrors in the low bright light.

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Christmas

Christmas arrived, a little quieter this year, with no out of town company. We celebrated with local family and our usual trappings – tree, gifts, cookies, tamales…

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2024 Christmas Tree

Hanukkah

The first night was Christmas evening this year. The next day, we went with friends to the old Hollywood Theatre, not too far from us in Portland, to see the new Bob Dylan biopic – which we thoroughly enjoyed. I grew up listening to that music as a child, because my older sister played it non stop on the record player in our shared room.

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First night

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Hollywood Theater, Sandy Boulevard

New Years’ Eve

Another sunny day. I walked through the neighborhood, thinking about choices for next year as I passed some of my favorite shadows and cracks, and found some new shadows and reflections…

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We lit the seventh night candles at sunset, than enjoyed a phone call with our son, who had just gotten engaged to his partner – a splendid, cheerful moment to end the year!

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Seventh night

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New Year’s Eve in Philadelphia

Thanksgiving roadtrip to California, 2024

November 23 to Dec 1 – For the first time in many years we did not host Thanksgiving at our home. Instead, we drove to California to share the holiday with our daughter, graciously hosted by her partner’s family.  We stayed in a nearby hotel, and hiked outside four of the days of our visit.

Southbound – We drove as far as Red Bluff, CA on Saturday, Nov. 23. There had been road-closing snowfall earlier in the week, but we made it over the Siskiyous with no problems, and had beautiful views of Mt Shasta.

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Mount Shasta

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The cone just visible,

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and the glaciers and moraines.

The next day, we continued south in the Sacramento Valley, through the Tule fog. We turned west near Williams, and as soon as we left the valley, the blue skies shone through.

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Tule fog along I-5.

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Williams, CA

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Blue sky, oak woodlands along Cache Creek and Hwy 20.

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Watching ourselves reflected in the slow milk tanker truck.

We drove to Forestville, Ca, to meet some friends for lunch and a rainy walk through Armstrong Grove, then continued south to Corte Madera by dinnertime.

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Armstrong Grove in the drizzle

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Colonel Armstrong tree

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Oxalis on the forest floor

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Overflowing stream

Monday, November 25th – The next day, my good husband tested positive for rebound Covid….drat! We quickly arranged separate hotel rooms, and he had to stay quarantined most of the visit. Fortunately, it was a mild case, but we did not want to spread it around!  He was able to join the family in their outdoor spaces – they had a good array of Covid-era heat lamps. And he could join in outdoor hikes and walks, so all was not lost, and no one else there became ill, so in that respect it was a successful visit. I tested negative every day, so was able to join the family for a lovely Thanksgiving dinner, and several walks and hikes.

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Thanksgiving table

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Walks and hikes near Corte Madera

Dawn Falls – This was a completely rainy walk up to the falls, through redwoods and forest – quite beautiful and authentic!

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Dawn Falls, Baltimore Canyon

The Corte Madera Bike Path was close to our hotel, and a good place to walk to see birds.

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Canal reflections

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Wetlands with egrets

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Egret

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Skunks

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Bird of Paradise

The Shore Marsh Wildlife Area was also nearby – flat, and with scenic views across the North Bay wetlands.

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Egret, San Quentin

We hiked around Phoenix Lake on Black Friday – just one of the many trails around Mt Tamalpais on the Marin Peninsula.

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Mt Tamalpais above as we walk down toward Phoenix Lake

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Stream channel

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Phoenix Lake

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Reflections

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Hiking back up

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Oak tree with galls

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Mistletoe that has fallen by the path

Northbound – November 30

We drove across the north end of the San Francisco Bay on a clear day. I took photos from the car as we drove – so the framing may be a bit blurry. We transitioned from flat watery views, through the foothills and into the central valley, from which we could see the Sutter Buttes and the snow-covered peaks around Mt Lassen.

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San Pablo Bay

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Looking south

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and northward

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Sutter Buttes

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Mount Lassen

We stopped for lunch in Redding at the Sundial Bridge across the Sacramento River, a good place to stretch out our legs.

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Sundial Bridge from our picnic table

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Crossing to the north

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Eastward view to Mt Lassen

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Shadows and lines 

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Side view from the north viewing area

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Underside, looking south

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West view toward the Trinity Alps

After lunch, we continued north to Medford, Oregon, over frosty passes.

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Frosty landscape over the passes

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Blue sky and frosted trees

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Mt Shasta

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Crossing into Oregon

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Hotel room art in Medford

Home to PortlandDecember 1st – We drove north from Medford, once again over frosty passes, reaching our familiar Mt Hood scenery by midday.

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Frosty pass near Medford

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Mt Hood from the Marquam Bridge, Portland

We had a lovely visit with our daughter, and with her partner and family.  I enjoyed revisiting some of our old stomping grounds in northern California. I didn’t realize there were so many great trails around Mt Tam – I hope to visit again and hike more of them.

August 2024 Hiking

I went on four hiking adventures in August – two to the coast on very hot days, and two to the slopes of Mt Hood.

August 5 – Ecola State Park and Hug Point, Oregon Coast

I like to spend my birthday in nature. It was too hot for hiking inland, so we headed to the coast for the day. We started at Ecola State Park, had a picnic lunch with a view, and took a  3 mile hike down to Crescent Beach and back.

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View south from Ecola Point

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Looking north from Crescent Beach toward Ecola Point

High tide was in the middle of the afternoon, so we wandered around Cannon Beach for a bit. I treated myself to a few quilting fabrics at Center Diamond, then we had an early dinner in town.

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Birthday fabric, including puffins that remind me of Iceland.

Next, we went to one of our favorite beaches – Hug Point. First we walked south, looking at all the landmarks from the summers we spent entire weeks here with our kids.

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View south from Hug Point

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I was pleased to see pods of pelicans flying along the surf line.

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The Cave

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Big Barnacle Rock and Castle Rock

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The little blue cottage on the bluff where we spent many a happy summer week

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Farther south, more pelicans on a sand bar

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Pelicans!

Then we walked north, up over Hug Point.

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Walking toward Hug Point,

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as the tide is going out.

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View north from Hug Point

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and looking toward the beach just on the other side

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Oyster catcher among the mussels, barnacles and anemones on the Hug Point road bed

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The Waterfall

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Goodbye for now…

It was a beautiful evening – not too crowded, hot, or windy. As we drove home, I was completely satisfied with my birthday adventure.

August 8 – Sitka Sedge State Park, Oregon Coast

Another hot day inland, we decided to investigate this relatively new State Park near Pacific City, a little farther down the coast from our usual spots.

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Our trail through Sitka Sedge Natural Area, about 4 miles.

The entry trail along a dike separates the Sand Lake Estuary from a wetland to the south. Then the trail goes through a vegetated dune that runs parallel to the coast. We walked through the forest for a bit, and ate lunch looking back toward the estuary wetlands.

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Sand Lake Estuary

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Sandy trail over the dunes

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Heron and gulls from our lunch stop

After lunch we emerged onto the foggy beach, and walked south for a ways, before circling back up and over the dune, completing the loop to the entry trail.

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Emerging onto the beach

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Looking north, beach off limits for now, as it is sand plover nesting season.

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Looking south – lots of jellyfish in the flotsam

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And back over the dunes…

It was a good place for a walk on a hot day – we saw a few birds and a hang glider, but not many other people.

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Wetland south of the dike, with sand pipers

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Sand pipers

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Yellow legs

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Cedar waxwing

August 14 – Umbrella Falls, Mt Hood

Another hot day, and an easier trail on Mt Hood. I still feel like I am getting my hiking legs back. I had never been to Umbrella Falls, always opting for the harder hikes in the area that go up higher on Mt Hood. Also, one can practically drive to Umbrella Falls from the Mt Hood Meadows parking area, but we wanted to hike. This trail offered a fair amount of shade, some wildflower meadows, a peek at the mountain and two waterfalls.

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Mt Hood, from Hwy 35

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Shady trail junction from the Elk Meadows Trail

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Views across the ski runs of Mt Hood Meadows

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We could see the top of the mountain from our shady lunch spot

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Mt Hood, Sitka Mountain Ash berries

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Umbrella Falls

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Umbrella Falls

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Fireweed

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Meadows of pearly everlasting

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Pearly everlasting

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This tree spoke to me on the way down

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Trail junction

It turns out that the trail viewpoint of Sahalie Falls requires scrambling down a steep cliff, but I could see from the map that we could drive to a better view point along the frontage road.

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Sahalie Falls, from the old road

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Trail Map – 4.3 miles, 700 feet elevation gain.

August 20 – Cloud Cap Shelter and TImberline Trail High Point, Mt Hood

One of my favorite spaces on the edge of the sky…requiring a long drive up a deteriorating road to the trailhead at the Cloud Cap Campground (elev. 5800 feet). Then up the rocky and sandy East Eliot Moraine trail, a few close ups of the Eliot Glacier during our lunch stop, a visit to the Cloud Cap Shelter, then a gradually rising track across the alpine slopes to the 7300 foot high point on the Timberline Trail. The mountain was mostly under the cloud cap today, but I still and always enjoy the elevation and the views!

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Looking northeast from the East Eliot Moraine – Mt Adams peeking through the clouds, and our starting point from the Cloud Cap Campground. The Cloud Cap Inn/Crag Rats Headquarters has a new roof!

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Zooming in on Mt Adams

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Looking along our trail up the moraine toward the Eliot Glacier

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The Cloud Cap Shelter on the skyline

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Zoom view

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The mountain is trying to come out!

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Eliot Glacier close ups…

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Elliot Glacier

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Eliot Glacier

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Sun break

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Crossing south to the Cloud Cap Shelter

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No one else here, though we did pass a few groups of backpackers today.

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Lupine and buckwheat

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Southbound along the cairn-posted Timberline Trail

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And looking back northeast – the Hood River Valley beyond.

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Asters

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Partridge foot

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A few short snow crossings

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Approaching the high point of the Timberline Trail

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My husband took this photo of me walking along the high point ridge to our usual rest stop.

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The other side of the ridge – Mt Jefferson on the horizon. The Timberline Trail continues down to Gnarl Ridge.

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Mini lupine

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Heading back to the Timberline Trail high point saddle – We can see Cooper Spur, but the top of Mt Hood is still hiding under the cloud.

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We walk back along the edge of the sky.

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We take the main Timberline Trail below East Eliot Moraine on the way down, and I look for the giant boulder that has been teetering on the edge the last few times we have hiked here.

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It is still here!

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Monkey flowers and lupine in Tilly Jane Creek

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And this little ground squirrel, wishing us farewell until next time…

Later in the month, my husband had a surgery on his hand, so we will be curtailing our hikes for a few weeks. But there will be more adventures soon!

July 2024 update…

We were in Iceland for the last week of June and first two weeks of July. When I returned, I had a 24 hour travel day, a nine hour time shift, and a very mild case of Covid as part of my re-entry process. I made it through all, and then was able to share some time with visiting family members.

July 18-23 – Visiting with my family in Portland and Eugene. We spent a few days in Portland, and came across quilt shows in the Portland Central Library, and at Powell’s Books. We also visited the Peninsula Park Rose Garden.

Portland’s beautiful Central Library, with art show:

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Quilt show at Powell’s Books:

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Peninsula Park Rose Garden:

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Family events in Eugene and Portland:

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A favorite garden in Eugene

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A belated birthday party

Knitting – I made progress on the Emotional Support Chicken, very fun! And started knitting a vest with the Allafoss Lopi yarn I bought in Iceland.

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Emotional Support Chicken, in progress

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Vest swatch

Hiking – Larch Mountain, Oregon – July 30th – I went on one short hike at the end of the month. It was cloudy, so no mountain views today. Lovely to be in the forest and see a few wildflowers.

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Sherrard Point Trailhead – only a third of a mile, less than 200 feet, to the top.

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Stairs to the top of Larch Mountain

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Views to the south – Mts Hood and Jefferson behind all those clouds.

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Looking north – clouds, rocks, wildflowers

Traveling – June 23 – July 13 – We drove completely around Iceland, more than 1200 miles of driving, and more than 50 miles of hiking. We visited every size and shape of waterfall; also, volcanic rocks, geothermal fields, glaciers, fjords, black sand beaches, birds, and wildflowers. I plan to create a more detailed post in the future. Below is a highlight photo collage.

Meanwhile, a couple of family members were also traveling:

From Iceland, my husband continued eastward to Chamonix, France. He completed an 80 mile hiking tour of Mont Blanc with a tour company!

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Mont Blanc

And my daughter was able to travel with friends to Portugal, then on to Paris for a bit of Olympics!

Looking forward…with hope…

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June 2024

June, so far…Three hikes, watching the tomatoes grow, pulling weeds, checking off the medical and dental appointments, some home maintenance, and getting ready for travel. Then off we went to Iceland for three weeks… (See next post)

Some views from the tram plaza at OHSU:

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Knitting – I’m making slow but pleasant progress on my Garter Mesh scarf, using the Linello yarn I bought in Innsbruck last summer. I enjoy watching the rainbow unfurl as I go. And I’ve got the second sock of a pair ready for airplane knitting.

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Knitting in progress…

I started knitting an Emotional Support Chicken, using leftover sock yarn. So fun! This one really calls to me, even though I have other things to work on.

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Garden – The tomatoes, basil, and flowers are growing – I have foiled the snails and squirrels so far. I’m hoping for an overgrown profusion of flowers and tomatoes when we return.

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Tomatoes, basil and marigolds

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Snapdragons, zinnias, cosmos, dahlias, and pentstemon.

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Delphinium in the neighborhood

Hikes –

June 6 – Saddle Mountain, OR – We love this hike, though it seems steeper each year. The yellow monkey flowers were particularly bright this year, and I found the first of the Lewisia columbiana, just starting to bloom. All the Cascade Mountain peaks were out today.

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Saddle Mountain from the trailhead, and a meadow of candy flowers

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Monkey flowers along the trail

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Topknot Rock

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Meadows, approaching the penultimate high point.

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But we still have to go down the saddle and then up to the summit; fortunately, the wildflowers pull me up.

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Mts Rainier, St Helens and Adams from the top

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Panorama – west to north – Pacific Ocean, Astoria

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Panorama –  north to east – The High Cascades: Mts Rainier, St Helens, Adams, Hood and even Jefferson in the haze south of the lower summit.

Some of the flowers:

June 11 – Salmon Creek Greenway Trail and Klineline Pond, WA – One day our appointments were near Salmon Creek in southwest Washington, and we had some extra time for a walk here. It was okay – a bit too hot to walk very far on this unshaded trail, and far enough into the summer that things were getting a little weedy and dry – not a wilderness experience, but a valuable resource for locals – a swimming and fishing pond, a bike path along the creek, and nearby sports fields. We could hear lots of birds in the trees.

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Bridge over Salmon Creek

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Salmon Creek from the bridge

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Klineline Pond

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Another pond along the greenway

June 19 – Lookout Mountain, Oregon –  Somehow we got the idea that this hike was accessible, and the trailhead (6000 feet) is, but half a mile and 400 more elevation feet up the trail, and it was all snow. We weren’t really equipped for that, so we spent a little time looking at the abundant shooting stars, marsh marigolds and buttercups in the High Prairie Trailhead meadow.

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High Prairie Trailhead

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400 feet higher – the trail disappeared under snow.

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High Prairie Meadow, Mt St Helens beyond

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Shooting stars and buttercups

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Marsh Marigolds

On our return drive, we took a short walk on the Cook Meadows side trail that we explored last summer in July when it was bursting full of wildflowers. We saw just the beginnings of the bloom there.

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Cook Meadows view of Mt Hood, June 2024

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Same view, July 2023, with scarlet gillia

Some of the flowers we saw today:

The first of the season King/Coho salmon was available from a native fish market in Hood River, making our trip worthwhile, even if our hike was abbreviated.

And of course, Happy Solstice and Happy Pride Month!

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Next stop, Iceland!