Over Memorial Day we took a trip to Avery, Idaho, on the St. Joe River. Besides being one of the country's premier fly fishing rivers, it is also claimed to be the highest navigable river in the US. They used to run steamboats from the lake up to the communities along the lower part of the river.
We drove east through Washington's big-time wheat country, the Palouse, where they take their farm tractors very seriously, and then to St. Maries, Idaho where the St. Joe flows into Cour d'Alene Lake. Last leg was up the river for fifty miles to the tiny railroad community of Avery. On the way back we stopped at Palouse Falls. Second to the last shot is of a marmot, a rodent about the size of a small raccoon. On the ranch I worked on in the Colorado Rockies the locals called them "Eeps" for the loud, piercing call they make.
We drove east through Washington's big-time wheat country, the Palouse, where they take their farm tractors very seriously, and then to St. Maries, Idaho where the St. Joe flows into Cour d'Alene Lake. Last leg was up the river for fifty miles to the tiny railroad community of Avery. On the way back we stopped at Palouse Falls. Second to the last shot is of a marmot, a rodent about the size of a small raccoon. On the ranch I worked on in the Colorado Rockies the locals called them "Eeps" for the loud, piercing call they make.
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Palouse.jpg137.1 KB · Views: 167
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Tractor.jpg86.1 KB · Views: 155
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Tractor 2.jpg128.1 KB · Views: 147
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Shadowy St. Joe.jpg41 KB · Views: 148
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St. Joe steamboa.jpg131 KB · Views: 594
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Avery 1.jpg136.1 KB · Views: 3,055
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Fishing.jpg189.8 KB · Views: 158
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Falls 1.jpg150.2 KB · Views: 153
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Falls 2.jpg147.2 KB · Views: 137
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Marmot.jpg77.3 KB · Views: 143
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