(posting a few days after the fact because internet hasn’t been easily accessible)
A few photos of some of the sites of interest we saw in our travels the last few days:
The day after the quilt show, we headed back into Sisters, OR to explore the town-site. It very much looks like an old-west town, when the quilts are down and we could see the buildings. This hotel is front and center:
With a plaque denoting its history:
Just outside of Sisters is this monument to wild horses, that speaks of the horse and rodeo activities in the area:
Here, too we were able to get a photo of the Sisters Mountains, for which the town is named. It was a little clouded over (nice to not have such intense heat) so the mountains don’t stand out as clearly as they could:
We drove down the road a bit and visited Bend, where there was a Summer Festival street fair happening, and we had the opportunity to see the work of many local artisans. Bend is a much more modern-looking city, about 40 times the size of Sisters in population, with all the amenities. On a street corner, was this sculpture:
Always, occupied, there’s still room on the bench for a weary shopper to rest for a while, and no fear of the birds ‘sharing’.
As we drove along the highways and by-ways, there was much of man and nature to make us wonder.
The bridge across the Columbia River at Briggs Junction, looking from Oregon into Washington:
A dam also on the Columbia River (have to look up to see which one this is when we get internet access again) releasing its power
Wind generators gathering up nature’s bounty to provide us with……TV’s, lights, microwave ovens:
Oh, the wonder of nature and technology mixed!
Wheat fields ripe for harvest:
We wondered as we passed acre after acre after acre where all this wheat was going – into flour for all the wonderful foods we enjoy, or into ethanol for gas so we can travel and see al these wonders?
Machinery at the ready:
Machinery at work:
Pretty little towns with old buildings – wonder what stories they could tell?
Abandoned barns – wonder why they’re left to go to waste like this:
Historical markers – no doubt about the stories here:
Bikers – how DO they sit on those little seats hour after hour?
World’s Largest Truck – Grizz wonders if this is still true, but no matter, it’s gigantic:
Hay all baled up in the field – much different from the hay bales we used to gather when we were young:
And so, we’ve arrived in Alberta – here for a few days to play with LV and visit our kids. As soon as I get back onto internet, I’ll post this, and the rest of the stories and pics from the Sisters’ Quilt Show.
Happy wandering and wondering! Blessings, Peg
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