Monday, July 24, 2017

Olympic Peninsula, Washington

After we left North Cascades National Park, which is located northeast of Seattle on Hwy 20 off of I-5, we drove south on I-5 to Rockport, then to Elma. It was a long drive, mostly because of the traffic on I-5 through Tacoma into Olympia. It was mostly stop and go for about 20 miles and not much fun. Elma is a small town with not much in it, and the park we stayed at was small, with small spaces and no good places to walk and let the dogs loose. Our final destination was Sequim, Washington on the Olympic Peninsula.


Tuesday, July 18, 2017

North Cascades National Park, Washington

North Cascades National Park contains some of America's most beautiful mountain scenery - high jagged peaks, ridges, slopes, and many waterfalls. Glaciers can be seen on the highest mountain peaks. We took a trail behind the Visitor Center, which turned out to be longer than we had intended and Jim was quite tired and his back started hurting before we finished.  It took us down to the Skagit River, but there were no good views of the river.  I got a better shot of the river from the River Trail that is across the street from our campground.


Wednesday, July 12, 2017

Wild Horses Monument, Vantage, Washington

The road sign calls it Wild Horses Monument, but the real name of this artwork is Grandfather Cuts Loose the Ponies. Despite being begun in 1989, supposedly it's still not complete.

Trail to the horses

Wednesday, July 5, 2017

Kootenai Falls & Ross Creek Cedars, Libby, Montanta

The Kootenai River flows down from the mountains into a canyon and over Kootenai Falls, one of the largest free-flowing waterfalls in the Northwest. Kootenai Falls was the setting for the movie "The River Wild" filmed in 1993. The falls do not look very big but they drop 90 feet in less than a mile. The main falls are 30 feet high.