Archive for the 'Photos' Category

Returned from Washington and Oregon

Sunday, July 8th, 2007

PortlandBendView from Paulina Peak

We had a great trip to Washington and Oregon. I’ll say more in a future post. For now, enjoy the pictures above. The first shows Portland, Oregon, with the Cascade Mountains in the background. It was taken looking east from the Japanese Garden. The second is Bend, Oregon, which is on the eastern side of the Cascades; this view is looking west from Pilot Butte, with the Cascades in the background. The third is the impressive view looking west toward the Cascades from the 8,000 foot summit of Paulina Peak. Don’t be too impressed with my climb of that summit; you can drive there!

That Plant with Yellow Flowers Identified

Monday, July 10th, 2006

I’m pretty sure I’ve correctly identified that plant with yellow flowers that I described in my previous entry. It’s most likely birdsfoot trefoil (Lotus corniculatus). Here are three shots I took on Saturday, July 8, here in Northfield, Minnesota:

birdsfoot trefoil 1

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Photos: A Trip to Southwestern Minnesota and South Dakota

Tuesday, October 18th, 2005

This column represents an experiment in the use of photos for “Northern Letter.” As you probably already know, I’m more of a text guy than an image guy, but I do like taking photos. With very little experience in preparing photos for the web, I remain open to suggestions.

I took the images below on a recent trip to southwestern Minnesota and South Dakota. We traveled most of the way on Highway 14, the Laura Ingalls Wilder Historic Highway. We first went to Brookings, South Dakota, where we visited relatives from my wife’s side of the family.

So Dak border.jpg

Above is the sign marking the entry into South Dakota. It reads, “Great faces. Great places.”

harvest road.jpg

On our return to Minnesota on Sunday, October, 16, we saw many farmers out in their fields or on the road, working to bring in the harvest. Above is one dirt road littered with harvested corn.

I had hoped to visit the wind farms on Buffalo Ridge near Lake Benton, Minnesota. They weren’t hard to miss from the highway (below), since there are dozens and dozens of them and each turbine is well over 200 feet high. They look like Martian war machines marching across the landscape. The photos don’t really do justice to the huge scale of the project.

Windmills 1.jpg

Windmills 2.jpg

Windmills 3.jpg

Wind turbines ready for assembly

My Moon Handbook to Minnesota (2004), by Tim Bewer, says this is “the world’s largest windpower project: a nearly 100-mile chain of over 450 modern wind turbines.” Bewer makes another large claim that cries out for confirmation: “Studies show that southwest Minnesota has more wind power potential than all of California and could conceivably produce enough electricity for the entire state.”

We also stopped at the Laura Ingalls Wilder Museum in Walnut Grove, Minnesota, where Ingalls’ book, “On the Banks of Plum Creek,” is set. The last photo shows me and our daughter, Ava, sitting on an uncovered covered wagon.

laura's travels.jpg

Wilder Museum.jpg

wagon.jpg