Wednesday, July 8, 2026

Another visit

 

 

Elisa and Solomon.

 

They both got the entire day off work to spend with us, and we made the most of it.  Of course they were charming, as always.

 

We finished off the day by driving east out of Portland, after rush-hour traffic to the Columbia River Gorge.  Along the way, Mount Hood peeked out.

 

2026 Summer Trip Map Link

 

Settled in for the night at Ainsworth State Park, at a wonderful site; just like state parks are supposed to be.

 

Easy walks for my rehabilitating leg.

 

 

Monday, July 6, 2026

No boat trailer?

 

 

No problem.

On the water, drive your boat over the lift and it picks you up.

 

Then the fork lift picks you up even higher,

 

 

…and puts you away up on a shelf!

 

 

Meanwhile, we’ve moved on.  We’re at Paradise Point State Park down by Oregon for the night.

 

2026 Summer Trip Map Link

 

 

It’s not as nice as it looks.  It’s right on the freeway, so it’s really loud.  No problem.  We’re moving on tomorrow morning.

 

Along the way.  Mount Ranier makes an appearance.

 

 

 

Sunday, July 5, 2026

The small town of La Conner

 

 

Rainbow Bridge.

 

Deadliest Catch.

 

Judy says if she were a boat, she’d be a tugboat.  Or maybe a little working boat like this.

 

And what a nice spot for a park and waterfall.

 

 

Friday, July 3, 2026

Christie’s yard

 

 

It seems every time we’re here it’s in full bloom.

 

 

 

 

 

Thursday, July 2, 2026

Along the way

 

 

The Old Fir Log.

 

It was born in the 1200s!

 

 

It’s big.

 

 

Clear rings to count.

 

 

They put tags on the date line for notable events.

 

If you expand the photo, you can see how most of our history is jammed in right at the end.

 

Wednesday, July 1, 2026

Update

 

 

Had the date with the orthopedic doctor.  It is a hamstring tear, and probably in two different places, but no surgery is required.  The hamstring is made up of four separate muscles, and while the injured muscle may never regain the form of its former self, there is plenty of other muscle for the leg to function normally for me.  Imaging and corrective surgery would have been a possibility had I been a young professional athlete.  Since we’re not going that corrective route, this probably ends my prospects for a pro career .  Letting it heal on its own over the next month or so should be just fine.

 

We’ll keep rolling along.

 

 

Sunday, June 28, 2026

An ancient cedar tree

 

 

 

With a story.

 

It was believed to be a thousand years old when it died in a fire in the 1800s.