Wednesday, August 15, 2007

I love this poem. It is so appropriate, especially in these times:

Friend, if perhaps in a year or ten
You may want to walk this path again,
Then fail not to remove the trace
Of synthetic foil, cans or waste,
Plastics that no living thing can flourish on
Or traps you will not want to step upon
Else in times which are soon to come
Instead of beauty you will find a slum
And, perhaps, you will come to understand
How the splendour of our land
Was spoilt by your hand
Author unknown

Tuesday, August 14, 2007

Prineville, with the Crooked River in the foreground and the Ochoco Mountains in the distance, from Ochoco Viewpoint.

Sunday, August 12, 2007

The fruit of a wild currant growing along Ochoco Creek.

Saturday, August 11, 2007

My favorite river, the Crooked.
The Crooked.
An impenetrable forest of teasel (Dipsacus fullonum) along the banks of the Crooked.
The Crooked River.

Thursday, August 9, 2007

From left to right: Broken Top; South, Middle, and North Sister, as viewed from the quaint little tourist town of Sisters.
Ponderosa Pines near Big Summit Prairie, deep in the beautiful Ochocos.
Ochoco Creek Park, on a cool, crisp, high-desert Summer morning.
Nighttime temperatures have been dipping into the 40's, typical for this area. (It makes for a comfortable night's sleep.)
Rabbit-brush, Chrysothamnus nauseosus. A pretty, yet common, wildflower of Eastern Oregon.
The Crooked River, above Prineville Reservoir.
The Crooked River valley, along the highway to Post.
A fence post and typical scenery near Post, the geographical center of Oregon.
Ochoco Creek as it flows through town.
A thistle along Ochoco Creek.
Ochoco Creek Park.
Wildland Firefighters Monument, Ochoco Creek Park.
Several local forefighters lost their lives during a wildfire in the mid-90's. This monument was erected to honor them, and all wildland firefighters.
An Ochoco National Forest canopy.
An irrigation ditch that flows through Prineville.
Lake Billy Chinook, on a busy Summer weekend.
Round Butte Dam, out of sight, impounds the waters of the Deschutes, Crooked, and Metolius rivers to form this beautiful lake. In the distance is Mt Hood, which, at 11,239', is Oregon's highest peak.
Lake Billy Chinook, from the rim.
Lake Billy Chinook.
Smith Rock State Park, with Mt. Jefferson (at 10,497', Oregon's second highest peak), in the distance.
Prineville Reservoir.