top of page
Search
  • Judy and Mark

Chasing Lewis and Clark



So it starts by crossing from Oregon into Washington state.

And seeing signs like THIS!

And this.

Okay, maybe this isn't everyone's idea of an adventure, but you can't cross the Columbia River and not shiver with excitement at the idea that Meriwether Lewis and William Clark marveled over this very same waterway.

Right??

OKAY, So we'll take it back. Here's what it feels like to cross into this land. You follow the bluest river you have ever seen. For hours, you see nothing but the same mountains THEY (voice quivers) witnessed. [Mark's comment: Note how Judy refers to Lewis and Clark as "They." For days on end, she would just stop, pause, stare, and say things like, "THEY were here," "THEY crossed this river, "THEY camped here," ... get the point?]

You see the wheat that now grows on the land (small shudder) that they saw.

And the beautiful mountains.

And more wheat. AND THEN OMG WE LOOK UP AND SEE THE JOLLY GREEN GIANT!!

Dayton, Washington is the home of the Jolly Green Giant's first processing plant, where during the Great Depression they grew and canned peas and asparagus to feed a hungry country, and then expanded during WWII when they had the good fortune to find Japanese interns and German POWs to keep the factory humming.

Every town we pass, every alley we cross, every park, every farmers market, they all seem to recognize the contributions of Lewis and Clark and Sacajawea and Charbonneau, the father of her child, and the Corps of Discovery. Their names are everywhere. [Mark's comment: Judy omitted the most interesting part of this story. Charbonneau won Sacajawea in a poker game. Now that is the type of history that keeps people interested.]

Mark has urged me not to bore you with how much history is in this part of the country.

It really is amazing, but I've been cautioned not to take you on this detour.

So next we pass through CLARKston, Washington and then...

...enter LEWISton, Idaho.

And arrive at a KOA where we have one of the worst nights on our trip. "RV Dump," as they caution on the sign, should have given it away. [Mark's comment: So fortunate for Judy this campsite occurred in our 6th week of the trip and not the 1st. Otherwise, I would not have made it. And, apologies to the KOA in West Wendover, NV. You are not the worst KOA.)

Meet the neighbors!

Naaah, let's go for a walk. Good thing our van blends right in.

Spare no cost on marketing.

Ended up in the town of Kooskia. Had a delicious dinner sitting outside the Farm Table Cafe with the best blueberry pie on the trip. And this friendly patron who exited the cafe with a friendly six-shot on his hip (Idaho's an open-carry state).

And our server was perfect. Having graduated from high school a few weeks ago, she was readying to relocate to her aunt's apartment in Texas, not the path of anyone else in her Kooskia-based family. As she shared this with us, a souped-up muffler-free Ram Pick-up sped by. Our eyes met. She stared straight through us and smiled through her teeth saying,"I just graduated with him."


But like every night, we ended it with this sunset.

A bedtime story...




17 views0 comments

Recent Posts

See All

Komentar


bottom of page