On the Road Again
Pendleton, Oregon: As I often do, I am naming this little road trip after a Jimmy Buffett
song. This time, Take the Weather with You, a 1991 Crowded
House song that Jimmy sings. Whatever. We are expecting some weather on
this trip. Hot weather. Freezing weather. Everything in-between weather.
In reality, this isn't a vacation. It is blind delivery. And by "blind", I mean
of the "mini-blind" variety. In this instance, wooden blinds. For a four
bedroom, two-story home.

This is just a small part of our delivery
Why, you may ask? Steve & Mary's #3 child, Chris, has recently relocated
from his job (he is in green energy) in Abu Dhabi, United Arab Emirates,
to Provo, Utah. Chris bought a house. He ordered wooden blinds for his
windows. He accidentally shipped the blinds to his billing address
instead of his new home address. Since Chris has been living overseas,
his billing address has been his Mom's house down the hill from us. To make a
short story long... we were going to visit Chris in Provo during this
trip, so we are schlepping the blinds along. Meanwhile, Chris is living
in a house with no blinds. I would laugh at him, since he is freak
genius with an engineering degree from Purdue... except I do crazy stuff
like this all the time. Glass houses... throwing stones... especially if
your glass house has no curtains.
Being that we are such nice people, we will probably help him install
the dang things too.
And, so we hit the road, heading east along the beautiful Columbia River
Gorge, one of the prettiest drives in America! It is a bit stressful
driving through Portland, but once we escaped the city, the traffic
eased and we decided to make lunch camp at the
fish hatchery at Bonneville Dam. This is just a great stop - plenty
of RV parking, shady picnic tables, pretty paths and flowers - and a
fish hatchery. We had a sandwich (grilled tarragon chicken on brioche...
you know, regular old camping food) and took a spin around the hatchery.

Over 11 million salmon are raised and released annually at this
facility. It is an amazing process - actually involving "milking" the
males for their sperm and actually KILLING the females for their eggs.
(Salmon spawn and then die, so technically it is only speeding
up the process.) I don't want to get into the politics of the hydro dams
getting in the way of all this occurring naturally, since I am
sucking up about a gazillion kilowatts doing this blog post, am
generally against flooding and I had salmon for dinner last night.

Nature or nurture, these fingerlings know instinctively what they are
supposed to do.

There are several ponds with rainbow trout and sturgeon.
You can purchase a handful of fish food for a quarter and toss it into
the ponds.

The hatchery has a under-water viewing room where you
can get up-close and personal with rainbow trout and sturgeon.

The large fish in front of the window is a rainbow
trout!

A really, really big rainbow trout.

And this is Herman the Sturgeon. Herman is a White
Sturgeon over 70 years old. He is ten feet long and weighs over 450
pounds! Sturgeon are from the Jurassic era (100-200 million years ago).
There are twenty-three species of sturgeon world-wide and the most
common White Sturgeon live below Bonneville Dam. White Sturgeon can live
for hundreds of years and reach 20 feet and 1800 pounds.
And so we arrived in 90-degree Pendleton, Oregon. The
air is smoky due to brush fires in Central Washington, so I suppose we
will have a beautiful sunset.

The photo (above) is very busy. We were watching our
neighbor throw a tennis ball over and over and over and over with his
beautiful black lab... when we both noticed this dude riding his bike
from the golf course, dragging his golf bag along. Clever.

My Driver was not interested in riding his bike. My
Driver was not interested in golfing. My Driver did not want to play
with a dog. My Driver wanted to relax. Enjoy a glass of wine. Have a
nice meal. He was tired.

Good thing he brought me along.

After dinner, DT took my camera on a sunset safari.
Pretty!
Until my next update, I remain, your Eastern Oregon correspondent.
RV Park: Wildhorse
Resort Casino RV Park. Long pull-through sites.
Pool. Hot tub (in season). Laundry. 30 & 50 amp, but
make reservations if you need 50 amp. Walk to casino
or take the shuttle. The tribe has a nice museum on
the property also. About eight miles east of
downtown Pendleton.