• Weather and Travel
  • Events
  • Hikes And Sights
    • The Beautiful Columbia River Gorge
      • Angel’s Rest_ Wahkeena Falls
    • The Sandy River
    • Larch Mountain
    • Sandy River Delta / Thousand Acres
    • Mt. Hood
  • Eat And Drink
    • Restaurants
      • Ristorante de Pompello
      • The Riverview
      • The Troutdale General Store
      • Tippy Canoe
    • Beer and Other Refreshing Beverages
      • McMenamin’s Edgefield
      • The Historic Springdale Pub
    • The Liquor Store
  • Art and Shopping
    • Art
  • Where To Find What

Columbia Gorge Gateway

~ News And Views In And Around Troutdale, Oregon and the West Columbia Gorge

Columbia Gorge Gateway

Tag Archives: columbia gorge

Gorge Guide On Your Phone!

30 Tuesday Apr 2013

Posted by loreeharrell in And Around, Day Trips, News In

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

app, columbia gorge, Gorge Guide, magazine, new

This is entirely cool… Gorge Guide now has an app so you have Gorge Guide to go, even when you left your copy at home! I looked over Steph’s shoulder today when she downloaded it and it’s a great app.

Gorge Guide2

So hie to the App Store or Google play and enjoy thoroughly… this is a great publication, and a valuable addition.

* You’ll notice I said “Gorge Guide On Your Phone”, not “Gorge Guide On My Phone”.  Windows version not available at this time, so I’ll just peer over the shoulder of all you cool people with iPhones and Android. : )

Images gorgeguide.com

 

Share this:

  • Email
  • LinkedIn
  • Print
  • Twitter
  • Facebook
  • Pinterest

Like this:

Like Loading...

Columbia Gorge Flower Frenzy!

08 Monday Apr 2013

Posted by loreeharrell in And Around, Day Trips, Events

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

columbia gorge, event, flower, frenzy, friends of the columbia gorge, hike, nature, oregon, walk

Friends of the Columbia Gorge
Flower Frenzy Challenge 2013!

March 1 to July 31, 2013

FriendsoftheColumbiaGorge_FlowerFrenzy2013

What a great reason to get boots on the trails, and experience the spring and early summer in our beautiful Columbia Gorge!  Every year, I intend to get out to Dog Mountain in the spring, and every year, I miss the window.  Rain or shine, I am going this weekend – mark it.

Friends Of The Columbia Gorge has put together a treasure hunt of 25 beautiful flowers that appear briefly in the Gorge in the spring and early summer, and the challenge is to get out there and find as many as you can, with the shyer of the bunch being worth more points.  There are prizes, although I would suggest the treasure, in this case, is in the finding more than the winning :).  The log has great information on each flower, like:

Bitter Root

Bitter Root _ Lewisia rediviva… This flower was found in the Bitter Root Mtns by Lewis & Clark (state flower of Montana). The speciman they brought back had a viable root and bloomed years after the expedition. Hence the scientific name. American Indians valued it highly as a food, and although it is nutritous, it tastes bitter. According to tribal myths, the plant grew from the tears of a starving old woman, and its roots are bitter because of her sorrow. The large, fleshy roots were harvested just as the blossoms began to bud, and, after being boiled, became jellylike and less bitter.

Register at www.gorgefriends.org/flowerfrenzy , print out your log, and go find some beauty you haven’t seen before.  Even if you’re not going to play this time, become a member!  Memberships start at 35.00, which is a killer deal and gives you access to great inside information and resources.  I also see that if you register now, you get a free copy of Ross Jolley’s “Wildflowers Of The Columbia Gorge”!WildflowersoftheColumbiaGorge_RussJolley

Some of the early ones will be disappearing soon (or you’ll have to hike up higher to find them), so start this weekend and I’ll see you on the other side of a cluster of Dutchman’s Breeches!

Share this:

  • Email
  • LinkedIn
  • Print
  • Twitter
  • Facebook
  • Pinterest

Like this:

Like Loading...

Well that’ll put a rose in those cheeks!

22 Tuesday Jan 2013

Posted by loreeharrell in And Around, Day Trips, Other Side Of The Inside Of The Box

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

beautiful, cold, columbia gorge, Corbett, moon, Sandy River, Troutdale, walk, wind

It has been one wicked windy few days.  Utterly beautiful blue skies, frosts in the mornings, and an all around visual delight.

But bundle on up before you go out there, it has been one wicked windy few days.

You would think that those of us who have lived here our entire lives would be used to it.  However, I have come to the personal conclusion that there are things you never get used to and will push against to your last breath.  For me, the wind is one of those.  I’m good with cold, I’m okay with hot (yes, we do get hot.  Think back.), but when you add those 52 mph gusts to a 32 degree temp, I’m out.  Could I please have the 14.1 degrees straight in calm air?  [Want to know where I got that number?  Here’s a cool toy for those of us who live in the wind.  Wind chill / temp conversion tool.  You can thank me later.]

However, I would like to point out a couple bright spots in the midst…
1)  You look very healthy when you come indoors (once you get the hair back off of the wrong side of your head and other humans can see your face) with a flattering rosy glow.
2)  If you’re having trouble waking up in the morning and getting into your day, save the five bucks for the coffee and just step outside.
3)  When you take your dogs up to that stretch between Corbett and Aims for the run down to the river,  that calm clear cold under a clear-star-sky moon will absolutely redeem any lingering annoyance with the environment.

Larch Mountain blocks the east wind completely where the dogs and I take our nightly hike to the Sandy River.  Completely.  We pile into the van in the chaos and drive up the hill, and we step out into pure peace.

"Hey, what do you want from a cell phone in the dark?"

“Hey, what do you want from a cell phone in the dark?”

It is such a gift.  The waxing moon has lit the trail almost to no-flashlight level, the river is sparkling under the occasional mist, the rocks are beautifully frosted, it’s the perfect temperature for the long hike back up the hill, and everyone else is huddled at home around the woodstove, leaving the trail, and the forest, and the river,
to just us.

It is a good thing.

Share this:

  • Email
  • LinkedIn
  • Print
  • Twitter
  • Facebook
  • Pinterest

Like this:

Like Loading...

I Don’t Care What Anyone Says…

05 Monday Nov 2012

Posted by loreeharrell in And Around

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

color, columbia gorge, dusk, fall, hike, hotel, leaves, nature, oregon, Sandy River

… or how wet I get in the middle of it.  It is an absolutely beautiful fall.

Maybe it’s just some oddly skewed perspective on my end, but I don’t remember the color being quite this [abundant saturated almost iridescence] in most other years.  By the time I get out to the woods in the evening, it’s teetering on the edge of dusk, and still there is this…

and this…

Sandy River Trail, 10.31.12

and a bit of this.

Sandy River Trail just after the rain, just before dusk

Sweet.  Very sweet.  Don’t be put off by the rain – get out there.  It’s all lit up from the inside out.

– Loree

Share this:

  • Email
  • LinkedIn
  • Print
  • Twitter
  • Facebook
  • Pinterest

Like this:

Like Loading...

What To Do In The Rain

29 Monday Oct 2012

Posted by loreeharrell in And Around

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

columbia gorge, fall, rain, Troutdale, view, walk, what to do

Well, we’re (finally) living up to our reputation for Wet, but not to despair!… we have a lot you can see and enjoy with only brief forays out into the deluge (she says as the sun comes out and lights the trees up yellow and orange against striking gray clouds with not a drop falling from above).

Break in the clouds outside the window

Head to Portland Women’s Forum

The view up at Portland Women’s Forum (Scenic Hwy 30 about 9 miles east of Troutdale) is magnificent any time.  Including (especially?) when the clouds are lower than where you’re standing and the view up the Gorge looks primeval and secret.

This image was taken during a break on a stormy day when I ventured the trail on the west side of the lot, down a little hill and around a bend to the most lovely view.  The fields on the other side of the river seemed particularly lovely that day with the little bit of snow in the hills, so zoomed in hard, but, yes, there is a river (big river) between here and there.

Grab a coffee at the Corbett Market on the way up, and stop at the Springdale Pub on your way back down the hill to enjoy something local from the tap and a good burger.

Go On An Explore
Not Cherries from Cascade Locks

Last night I got word that a cousin I hadn’t seen (since my age started with a 1) was going to be in Cascade Locks with his family, so I got in the car after work and headed out I-84 to meet them.

Now, I’m not going to tell you it was a beautiful drive – it was dark and there was something bearing a close resemblance to a Deluge going on – but what a great short trip.  I got there around 6:00, and, as I pulled into the parking lot of their hotel, I saw a big sign that said CHERRIES, and a man under a long tarp with a table full of fruit.  Just as I was thinking, Cherries?  How can there be cherries?... I saw that he had a second big sign out that said CHERRIES and I thought, Well, maybe cherries have a second season like strawberries that you never know about if you’re buying your cherries in town.  So I stopped. And got out in the Deluge (which never is as Deluge-ish when you’re not driving through it at 60 mph) and joined him under the tarp.  I said, “You really have cherries?”.  He said, cutting a pear, “Sure do!  In about ten more months.  Right here in this very spot.  Try this pear.”

The pears were very good.  I have ten dollars worth of pears now.  I can’t eat ten dollars worth of pears, so there is pear sharing going on.

The hotel sent us across Bridge Of The Gods into Stevenson for dinner.  The Bridge Of The Gods is quite possibly the only toll both (costs a whole buck to cross – don’t let it deter you) in the country with Halloween knick-knacks tucked into every nook and cranny of the bridge near the booth.  No, not your standard outside Halloween decor, but little ghosts and goblins and witches and pumpkins…  it’s very festive.  Made me smile.

We had a lovely dinner at The Big River Grill [“Sturgeon General Approved”… didn’t see that coming, did you?] with entree salads (spinach with grilled portabella one side of the table;  wild salmon the other) and huge sandwiches (veggie portabella and a reuben) enjoyed thoroughly.  Nice atmosphere, good service and food.  Recommend a stop there, and Stevenson looks like a charming town.

All in all, it was a great break on a workday… made it feel like a day off (!) and I was tucked back in by the fire by 8:30.

Meanwhile, back at the farm…
It’s supposed to be raining on Halloween.  I know of a cozy hotel hosting an evening of treats and art and fun :)… see you at the Halloween Hanging!

Share this:

  • Email
  • LinkedIn
  • Print
  • Twitter
  • Facebook
  • Pinterest

Like this:

Like Loading...

Recent Posts

  • Fall In The Gorge
  • Larch Mountain Gate Opens 05.27.14!
  • Snapshot 8
  • And A…
  • We Wish You…

Archives

  • November 2016
  • May 2014
  • January 2014
  • December 2013
  • November 2013
  • October 2013
  • September 2013
  • August 2013
  • July 2013
  • June 2013
  • May 2013
  • April 2013
  • March 2013
  • February 2013
  • January 2013
  • December 2012
  • November 2012
  • October 2012

Categories

  • And Around
  • Beauty Be Us
  • Community
  • Day Trips
  • Events
  • News In
  • Other Side Of The Inside Of The Box
  • Ramblings
  • Snapshots
  • Uncategorized
  • What I Learned From My Dogs Today

Meta

  • Register
  • Log in
  • Entries feed
  • Comments feed
  • WordPress.com

Create a free website or blog at WordPress.com.

Privacy & Cookies: This site uses cookies. By continuing to use this website, you agree to their use.
To find out more, including how to control cookies, see here: Cookie Policy
  • Follow Following
    • Columbia Gorge Gateway
    • Join 50 other followers
    • Already have a WordPress.com account? Log in now.
    • Columbia Gorge Gateway
    • Customize
    • Follow Following
    • Sign up
    • Log in
    • Report this content
    • View site in Reader
    • Manage subscriptions
    • Collapse this bar
 

Loading Comments...
 

    %d bloggers like this: