Showing posts with label cycling. Show all posts
Showing posts with label cycling. Show all posts

Sunday, June 17, 2018

Wallowa Lake, Oregon

Northeast Oregon

Wallowa Lake State Park

 As we traveled around Oregon, people kept telling us that we needed to visit Joseph and Wallowa Lake. We managed to get 5 nights with full hookups in the state park, so we could checkout all of the hubbub. Our first two days were pretty cold with lows in the 30s and highs in the 50s. The space heater was working overtime as we awoke to snow one morning. The park ranger said that the campground was not too full since many people asked for refunds and left early. That just made more room for us.
 
  Wallowa Lake is a glacial lake at the base of the Wallowa Mountains in the Eagle Cap Wilderness. 
 
We had full hookups but no WIFI or Sprint service at our site. Once a day we would walk to the marina and use their WIFI and watch the fishermen catching kokanee salmon.
 
 We hiked along the Chief Joseph Trail on the West Fork of the Wallowa River to the BC Falls on our first hike even though it was chilly and rain was in the forecast for later in the morning.

Many of the small wildflowers were in bloom.
 We hiked through several sections of landslides that gave me the willies.
Our handy bear spray was nearby for an easy reach. But when a dog came charging and showing his teeth at us on the trail, we were glad to have our poles in our hands. He saw them and headed around us. Shewww!
 

The second bridge to the second waterfall had been washed out but we could see it from where we were standing.

Town of Joseph

We enjoyed the small artsy city of Joseph named in memory of a Native American chief which is just 6 miles from the campground.
 
Chief Joseph, respected in his Nez Perce tribe, was misunderstood by the white man in the 1800s, and especially by the U.S. government. Today, however, he is recognized as having been a strong, compassionate leader.
 
The Wallowa band of the Nez Perce had lived peacefully in the remote Wallowa Valley for centuries.

As white settlers began to move west and north, they eventually reached the land of the Nez Perce. Chief Joseph recalled:
“The first white men of your people who came to our country were named Lewis and Clark . . . . They talked straight and our people gave them a great feast . . . . We had a great many horses of which we gave them what they needed, and they gave us guns and tobacco in return.”
 
This was in 1805, and the good feelings lasted for several decades. But in the 1870s, settlers and the U.S. Cavalry started to force the Nez Perce from their homeland. Chief Old Joseph had signed a treaty in 1855, but when the discovery of gold nearby prompted the government to take back millions of acres, he renounced the treaty. In 1863, a new treaty divided the tribe into treaty and non-treaty bands.
 
The chiefs eventually agreed to new boundaries, diminishing their lands to one-tenth their original size.

Wallowa Lake Tramway

The small Wallowa Lake Tram carried us up the steep 1.8 miles from 4200 feet to 8150 to some beautiful views and nice hiking trails on Mt Howard.





 
On our last day, we trekked up the steep East Fork of the river from the Alpine Trailhead. The river was running high with multiple waterfalls along the way. Fortunately, the temps were in the low 70s.
There are so many trails to hike and small towns to explore I this area. But we chose to stay nearby the state park.
 A local man was hiking the West Fork with his son and was showing us the mushrooms and how to distinguish between different types and how to prepare them. This one sells for $24\lb in the market. We saw a few morels but left them for the deer.
 

La Grande, OR

Heading to La Grande, south of Joseph, we stayed at Grande Hot Springs Resort on Hot Lake. The warm hot springs were refreshing for our sore muscles.
 Grande Hot Springs hot mineral water is sourced from Hot Lake Springs. It is collected at 171F and pumped to the property. The large pool was 96 degrees and small spa 104.5 after being mixed with 77 degrees domestic well water which is geothermal mineral water.
 The hot springs were a great place to visit at the end of our hike or bike rides.
The Grand Bikeway goes through Union which has a rural charm with a population of just over 2100 and Victorian style homes, buildings and tree-lined streets. This was where we would start our bike ride through the farms and ranches towards Cove.




     
Cove with a population of 680 is known as the land of the big prize cherries, and the home of apple pies. As we rode by the farms and ranches the cherries trees looked ready to be picked.

 
The winds were strong on our final day blowing in rain. As much as we would  have liked a bike ride, we opted for a hike in the Mount Emily Recreation Area. It is a huge area and happened to be having a mountain biking event. We just chose trails that weren't in their plans for a nice hike. La Grande turned out to have much more to offer than we had expected.
 
It has been quite an interesting couple of months in Oregon. From the beaches of the Pacific Ocean to the Willamette Valley, Cascades and the eastern farms and mountains, Oregon has not disappointed.
 
 
 

Thursday, June 7, 2018

Sisters, Oregon

Heading to the high desert

 
The landscape changes dramatically as we traveled towards the Cascades from the green agricultural Willamette Valley to the high dry plains with pines and sagebrush. The air is much drier making our Canasta cards no longer stick together.
Staying at Sisters Creekside County Campground on the edge of Sisters was a great location close enough for us to walk around the town, drive to some nice hiking on the McKenzie River Trail and Smith Rock or just visit Bend. Driving into Bend wasn't as pleasant as the rest but we managed to accomplish our required tasks.
Detroit Lake

Mt Jefferson and its glaciers
Washington state requires fingerprinting before a person can volunteer in WA. We made an appointment at the police station in Bend. Having been fingerprinted several times in the past when I got a nursing license in a new state and it always went smoothly. This time, it took over an hour for both of us. They tore up several cards because they didn't like how they looked and a new fellow was training. I hope the cards we walked out with were ok.

One reason we decided to volunteer in Oregon or Washington is they only require 30 days and are very nice states to visit. Many other states require volunteers to stay the entire season. We are a little too itchy to stay that long. Even when I was a traveling nurse three months was pushing our outer limit of time to stay someplace other than when we were in Alaska and Seattle and we extended a couple of months.
Mike getting fingerprinted
 

 

McKenzie River Trail

We used our hiking project app to find a hike on the McKenzie River Highway. Boy, was it a treat. Three waterfalls and a blue pool. We continually saw the influence of the volcanos from many years ago on this area.
Sahale Falls

The Waterfalls Loop Trail hike along the McKenzie River to Sahalie and Koosah Falls is about 3 miles long for hikers and mountain bikers with foaming white water cascades in between.




Koosah Falls


The 25 mile McKenzie River Trail is a favorite of hikers and extreme mountain bikers. As we walked along, we could see that it must have taken a great deal of effort to build and maintain the trail.

Before reaching Blue Pool, the McKenzie River goes underground a few miles up stream when the flow is lower.  The river only flows over the falls a few times a year, the rest if the time the water emerges from the rocks underwater in the basin of waterfall pool.
 
  The topaz colored water is so clear that is seems to be only about 5 ft deep but in many spots its over 30 ft deep.  The waterfall ledge is a favorite for jumping on a hot summer day.  You can hike over the waterfall ledge and find a trail that leads you down to the side of the pool when the waterfall is dry.

Tamolitch Falls and Blue Pool

The rhododendrons bloom later in the valley. 




The campground on the edge of town was a great location for walking to the farmer's market and breweries.

Music at the farmer's market
 


It can be difficult to find a cycling route when we arrive in a new location. We often checkout the local cycling clubs which are often welcoming to visiting cyclist to join a ride. Usually, they list their rides and cue sheets on their websites. Another resource is the local bike shops. They are often good about giving us information or copies of their ride sheets for a small fee or free. If I feel uncomfortable with the roads and cycle lanes, we take a drive to scope out the roads and traffic conditions ahead of time. It is not worth not enjoying ourselves and feeling like we
might die. We have only called a ride a few times and that was due to poor planning or heavy rain.
 
We had a few nice rides during our ten day stay with many more easy to moderate routes left unridden. 

Smith Rock State Park

 
 Smith Rock State Park's spires rise above the Crooked River and is known for rock climbing with routes for levels from beginner to expert. As we hiked, we had the opportunity to watch not only beginners but the expert climbers. A volunteer was also present at the visitor's center with his spotting scope and let us look at a number of  golden eagle's nests and was very informative. This made our short list of places we would like to volunteer in the future.
The volcanic evidence is all around central Oregon.




You have to love a place where the people in the restaurants have hat hair and look like they have been outside hiking, cycling or rock climbing. Everyone looks tired and happy. The food was fresh  and locally grown. The fresh air from hiking made the food and beer taste even better.

On mile steep hike up Misery Ridge to the top.
 
When my children were small and would wake up in the middle of the night, I would get them settled back to sleep then head to the back deck with a warm blanket to look at the stars for 10-15 minutes before returning to bed my self.  Even now, I still like to go out and listen to the quiet night when we are away from the lights of the cities. Last night at 3 am, we were both awake. (It could have been because I dropped something on the floor that made a crash noise when I got up.) The stars were out after many cloudy nights. We sat in our loungers with a down blanket and listened to
the breeze through the trees. A shooting star or comet with a long tail shot across the sky. Does it get any better than that?

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