We took a motorized boat --jet boat--tour up the Snake River from Clarkston Washington to Hell's Canyon, the deepest river gorge in North America (7.993 ft). The river was wonderfully reflective as we left Clarkston.
The geology of the Snake and Columbia Rivers is spectacular. Basalt columns lined the riverbanks.
basalt columns |
a closer look at the basalt columns |
At the beginning there were houses along the river.
The hills were often grazed to smoothness
Sometimes the shore formed eroding cliffs
The houses along the river became scattered and isolated. The Snake here is the border between Washington and then, as we went farther south, it was Oregon on the west with Idaho to the east. Pretty soon it was national forest on both sides.
Here a osprey had a nest on an old pole
As we got into Hell's Canyon, the banks became very steep
the yellow dots are clumps of balsamroot, Balsamorhiza |
The canyon narrowed
Shrubs, probably willows (Salix) in the water close to the shoreline
Tumbled rocks coming down and into the river
The view ahead becaome ever more dramatic:
We didn't nee much wildlife, buzzing along in the boat as we were, but we did spot a small herd of mountain sheep:
Looking back at the narrowed canyon as we turn back north
Kathy Keeler
A Wandering Botanist
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The basalt columns are spectacular.
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