June 25, 2007.
Last night
we stayed at the Clearwater River Casino & RV-Resort. The RV-Park is an old
KOA and in bad shape. We would NOT recommend it. There are several parks in Clarkston,
Washington that would be much preferable. Cell phones work in Washington. If you
have Verizon or Alltel and possibly Sprint you are probably going to be roaming
in most parts of western Idaho where they are serviced by an "off-brand"
cell service that does not have contracts with the big carriers like Verizon and
Alltel. Things return to normal in Washington. TV is bad to nonexistent at Clearwater
River Casino & Resort. I could go on but won't. Yes I will, the electricity
supply was wired backwards with the hot and neutral wires reversed.
This
morning we drove across the Snake River to the Port of Wilma. This barge was taking
on a load of grain. You can see grain dust rising from the vent holes in the top
of the hopper barge.
Instead of filling this barge with grain
stored dockside, in large silos, tractor trailer trucks are delivering truck loads
of grain and unloading dockside. It takes a lot of 18 wheel tractor trailer rigs
to fill a barge like this. I don't know how many but this barge has been loading
for several days and will be for days to come.
The forest products facility
is turning out these huge stacks of lumber.
That
big machine has grabbed another load of logs. This load of logs is a complete
load for a logging truck. There are three to five of these large machines moving
logs at any one time.
Barge load of
woodchips at Wilma Port
Facility near Clarkston, Washington
This
barge load of wood chips was being unloaded and hauled off by tractor trailer
rigs. The Potlatch pulp mill a few miles upriver in Lewiston, Idaho is where these
chips are heading. The chips are going to be used in press board and or pulp manufacturing
at the Potlatch plant. It would be so much more efficient if the barge could just
deliver the chips to the Potlatch papermill, lumbermill, pressboard plant, pulp
mill, and whatever else the plant produces. Whatever, the chips are being unloaded
off that barge and hauled off in tractor trailer trucks.
Log inventory.
As
we left the port we passed this grain storage facility across the Clearwater
River from Lewiston,
Idaho.
As we head
up the Spiral
Highway Joyce
took this picture of the confluence of the Snake River and the Clearwater
River. The Clearwater
River is the one coming from the left side of this picture. The camera
is looking to the south. The Snake river is flowing from the center of the picture.
Lewiston,
Idaho is on the left side of the Snake River while Clarkston, Washington
is on the right side of the Snake River. It is hard to see but look closely for
the blue bridge across the Snake River a few hundred yards south of its confluence
with the Clearwater
River.
That bridge is the US 12 bridge that connects
Lewiston and Clarkston and is know as the interstate bridge, not because it is
part of the interstate system but because it connects two states.
Bridge
over Snake River at Clarkston, Washington
And this final picture of
Clarkston, Washington and the Snake River that Joyce
took as we were in the motorhome moving to Coeur
d'Alene. The river looks so serene in this picture.
Good
job Joyce.
Until next time remember
how good life is.
Mike
& Joyce Hendrix
Until next time remember
how good life is.
Mike
& Joyce Hendrix who we are
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