Monthly Archives: October 2020

Open Range

As much as we loved the Palouse, we did have to go home.

The day we drove from Park City, Utah, to Farmington, New Mexico, was a day of extremely smoky skies; the smoke obscured almost all of what was there to look at. But if I’d been enchanted by the natural scenery, there’s a chance I would have missed this cast-off stove beside the railroad tracks.

near Moab, Utah
photographed 9.7.2020

Tip from a local resident

Here’s a tip, in case you find yourself in Colfax, Washington, at lunch: go to the Top Notch Cafe, whose sign says they have the best burgers in the United States. The sign is not wrong.

And the proprietor of the place, after determining that I was in fact a photographer, said, “So, you DO know about the covered bridge, don’t you?” I did not know about it, and he kindly provided directions to it, which is the only reason that this photograph came to be.

And, also the only reason that I found my favorite memento of the trip. On the edge of the dirt road leading to the bridge, I spotted a little pile of animal bones. Naturally, I saved one, a flat one that’s about two inches long and a half-inch wide. I gave it a name, too, and it rode along with us and now resides on the shelf-o-randomness in my office, where it keeps company with a toy soldier (painted gold) that I found on a sidewalk in Portland, Oregon, a glow-in-the-dark archangel Michael, etc. Anyway, the bone’s name is Leon Roadbone, of course after this guy.)

EDIT – SAD UPDATE
Ryan McGinty, an excellent Palouse photographer, posted on my Instagram account that this bridge burned down in a wildfire on September 7. “You have one of the last photos of this bridge,” he said. You can read about the bridge here.

near Colfax, Washington
photographed 9.1.2020

This is but one example

How I got out of the Palouse without taking a million pictures is a bit of a mystery. Every place I looked, every road we went down, every hill we topped provided me with a new photographic vista. I’ve never been anywhere that was this spectacular. I can’t wait to go back.

near Colfax, Washington
photographed 9.2.2020

Waiting for Next Year

Farm equipment, and something that used to be farm equipment, in a field that’s partially harvested.

near Washtucna, Washington
photographed 9.2.2020

As the harvest moon rose

The very bright moon was lighting up the hillside as the sky tried to darken.

(There were two people standing there with us as the moon slid up into view. No one spoke. When the moon had cleared the hill, they turned and walked away. It was simple and profound.)

Palouse, Washington
photographed 9.3.2020