On Thursday we drove further west into the state of Washington. We passed through the three-city area of Pasco,
Kennewick, and Richland. They lie at the confluence of the Columbia,
Snake and Yakima Rivers. After noticing the harvesting of wheat in the Walla
Walla area, it was interesting to see the wheat
sitting in large piles at the wharfs waiting to be shipped out. Heading north we drove through a section of
the Yakima River valley where there are many peach and
apple orchards as well as vineyards. I
now fully understand why it has been said that Washington
produces the most apples of any other state!
Climbing out of the valley we
suddenly left the lush fields and pastures to discover a vast canyon spread out
below us.
That evening we parked outside of the town of Cle
Elum, a town named after its namesake river which
flows down from Cle Elum
Lake 8 miles to the northeast. In
the Kittitas Indian tongue Cle Elum means “swift water”. The Yakima River flows
into the Cle Elum
River, we are currently parked close
to the Yakima River.
At the present its level is quite high and it, as well as the Cle
Elum River
is flowing very swiftly.
Yesterday,
Saturday, we drove into the town to tour the Carpenter
House Museum. In the early part of the last century Frank
Carpenter was a successful banker- his bank was one of the very few which
survived the Great Depression years. His
house is a large three-story frame building.
In one of the bedrooms we were surprised to find furniture made by
John’s past employer, the Boeing Company.
During World War I most planes were made of wood and therefore Boeing
had many wood craftsmen. Pictured below
is a French styled bed painted cream with floral wreaths, made by the company. It was in the nursery of the home.
From the town of Cle Elum
we wandered north and stopped to take hike the Salmon Viewing Trail along the Cle
Elum River. Unfortunately this is the wrong time of the
year to see their passage down the river- that happens in September and
October. Along the river there are bleachers from which to view the salmon.
Our furthest point north Friday was the town of
Roselyn. It was once used as a backdrop
for the television series “Northern Exposure” and given the fictitious name of Cicely,
Alaska.
In reality it was a successful coal mining town founded in 1886 with its
population peaking at 4,000 in the 1920s. It is now a town catering to tourists, with many restaurants and small shops. What makes it so charming is that the town has kept many of its older buildings, many of which were built in the early part of the 20th century.
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