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hrefhttps://gonorthwest.us/wp-json/ />link relEditURI typeapplication/rsd+xml titleRSD hrefhttps://gonorthwest.us/xmlrpc.php?rsd />link relwlwmanifest typeapplication/wlwmanifest+xml hrefhttps://gonorthwest.us/wp-includes/wlwmanifest.xml /> meta namegenerator contentWordPress 5.7.12 />meta namegenerator contentSite Kit by Google 1.30.0 />style typetext/css>img#wpstats{display:none}/style> meta namegoogle-site-verification contentruDEKU-mz_3vpugngjQaRizTKrZikFiBEfIwIxcmWVk>script async src//pagead2.googlesyndication.com/pagead/js/adsbygoogle.js>/script>script>(adsbygoogle window.adsbygoogle || ).push({google_ad_client:ca-pub-8974270936436419,enable_page_level_ads:true,tag_partner:site_kit});/script>/head>body data-rsssl1 classhome blog custom-font-enabled single-author>div idpage classhfeed site> header idmasthead classsite-header rolebanner> hgroup> h1 classsite-title>a hrefhttps://gonorthwest.us/ titleGo Northwest! relhome>Go Northwest! sup>®/sup>/a>/h1> h2 classsite-description>A location-based ongoing commentary about points of interest in the Pacific Northwest./h2> /hgroup> nav idsite-navigation classmain-navigation rolenavigation> h3 classmenu-toggle>Menu/h3> a classassistive-text href#content titleSkip to content>Skip to content/a> div classmenu-menu-1-container>ul idmenu-menu-1 classnav-menu>li idmenu-item-699 classmenu-item menu-item-type-custom menu-item-object-custom current-menu-item current_page_item menu-item-home menu-item-699>a hrefhttps://gonorthwest.us/ aria-currentpage>Home/a>/li>li idmenu-item-701 classmenu-item menu-item-type-taxonomy menu-item-object-category menu-item-has-children menu-item-701>a hrefhttps://gonorthwest.us/category/activities/>Activities/a>ul classsub-menu> li idmenu-item-704 classmenu-item menu-item-type-taxonomy menu-item-object-category menu-item-704>a hrefhttps://gonorthwest.us/category/activities/fish/>Fishing/a>/li>/ul>/li>li idmenu-item-703 classmenu-item menu-item-type-taxonomy menu-item-object-category menu-item-703>a hrefhttps://gonorthwest.us/category/attractions/>Attractions/a>/li>li idmenu-item-700 classmenu-item menu-item-type-post_type menu-item-object-page menu-item-700>a hrefhttps://gonorthwest.us/about/>About/a>/li>/ul>/div> /nav>!-- #site-navigation --> a hrefhttps://gonorthwest.us/>img srchttps://gonorthwest.us/wp-content/uploads/2015/03/DSC_3603.jpg classheader-image width960 height250 alt />/a> /header>!-- #masthead --> div idmain classwrapper> div idprimary classsite-content> div idcontent rolemain> article idpost-716 classpost-716 post type-post status-publish format-standard hentry category-attractions category-idaho category-pacificnorthwest tag-country-store tag-eastern-idaho tag-fall-creek-falls tag-idaho tag-rainey-creek tag-rainey-creek-country-store tag-snake-river tag-swan-valley tag-waterfalls> header classentry-header> h1 classentry-title> a hrefhttps://gonorthwest.us/2019/11/08/fall-creek-falls/ relbookmark>Fall Creek Falls/a> /h1> /header>!-- .entry-header --> div classentry-content> figure classwp-block-image>img loadinglazy width607 height405 srchttps://gonorthwest.us/wp-content/uploads/2019/11/DSC_3018.jpg alt classwp-image-715 srcsethttps://gonorthwest.us/wp-content/uploads/2019/11/DSC_3018.jpg 607w, https://gonorthwest.us/wp-content/uploads/2019/11/DSC_3018-300x200.jpg 300w sizes(max-width: 607px) 100vw, 607px />/figure>p>Fall Creek Falls is a beautiful waterfall in eastern Idaho near the Swan Valley community but hard to find. That’s because few signs point the way and literature about the falls usually isn’t specific about its location. But Fall Creek Falls is a is a spectacular waterfall. I say that because of the overall scenic beauty of the falls and its many features as well as the beauty of its location./p>p>Fall Creek spills over rocks at the head of a cliff at anelevation of 5,338 feet. The water then drops some 60 feet into the Snake Riverwhile dividing into several paths separated by the rocky and broken face of acliff. The falling water further subdivides and spills into pools and over ledgeswhile making its way into the Snake River. /p>p>Fall Creek Falls is a hidden gem not easy to find. There are no signs pointing the way. The falls is across the Snake River from the community of Swan Valley. Swan Valley is located beside US Highway 26 in a hrefhttps://www.gonorthwest.com/Idaho/eastern/ide.htm>eastern Idaho’s/a> Bonneville County. The small town of about 204 residents is east of Idaho Falls, ID, southwest of Victor, ID and west of a hrefhttps://www.gonorthwest.com/Wyoming/northwest/jackson/jackson.htm>Jackson/a>, a hrefhttps://www.gonorthwest.com/Wyoming/Wyoming.htm>Wyoming/a>. A short short drive of about 45 minutes from Jackson will take you there./p>p>I was seeking the falls at the suggestion of a friend. Shehad seen a photo of the falls on a magazine cover and thought I would want to takea photo of it myself. /p>p>Earlier in the day I had been at a hrefhttps://www.gonorthwest.com/Wyoming/grandteton/grandteton.htm>Grand Teton National Park/a> After an enjoyable lunch at a hrefhttps://www.gonorthwest.com/Wyoming/northwest/tetonvillage/tetonvillage.htm>Teton Village/a> I headed south on Moose Wilson Road, which becomes WY 390 before it reaches the junction with WY 22. At the junction, I turned west and drove on WY 22 over Teton Pass, elevation, 8,431 feet (2,570 m) and on to Victor, ID. At Victor, I took Idaho Route 31 southwest to US 26 and the community of Swan Valley. Truly, this falls is not easy to get to./p>p>At the junction of ID 31 and US 26, I happily found myselfat the Rainey Creek Country Store. Lucky for me Rainey Creek Country Store alsois a deli and an ice cream emporium. The day was very hot and I neededrefreshment. Ice cream fit the bill./p>h3>Asking for Directions Saved the Day/h3>p>Still clueless as to the whereabouts of the falls, I askedan employee at Rainey Creek Country Store for directions. She said drive northon US 26 and cross the bridge over the Snake River. A short distance beyond thewest side of the bridge, I should take a dirt road that would lead me to whereI could see the falls. The road is NF-058 and it parallels the Snake River.Still, I saw no sign of the falls; not even a Forest Service sign./p>p>Finally, I stopped at a wide spot in the road to get my bearings. I got out of the Jeep and walked over to the edge of a cliff overlooking the river. Though the view was mostly obscured by thick brush, I managed to look upstream and saw the falls without falling off the cliff into the river. I’m still too far away and I want to get closer. But I take a shot anyway with my camera with the telephoto lens. The shot is not great but it does show the terraces of the falls and how the falling water separates into various streams and cascades. I then make my way to the Jeep./p>figure classwp-block-image>img loadinglazy width607 height403 srchttps://gonorthwest.us/wp-content/uploads/2019/11/DSC_2986.jpg altTelephoto view of Fall Creek Falls classwp-image-718 srcsethttps://gonorthwest.us/wp-content/uploads/2019/11/DSC_2986.jpg 607w, https://gonorthwest.us/wp-content/uploads/2019/11/DSC_2986-300x199.jpg 300w sizes(max-width: 607px) 100vw, 607px />/figure>p>Back in the Jeep, I backtracked to another wide spot in the road, parked, and grabbed my cameras and tripod. I soon found a faint trail In the midst of thick brush and followed the trail to a spot where I could safely stand and take my photos. I was still a good ways from the falls, but time was getting short and I needed to take my shots./p>h3>Photograph the Falls Early in the Day and From a Boat/h3>p>But now it is late in the afternoon and the falls was indeep shadow. Leaning out over the cliff I pointed my camera far to the left andclicked off several shots. I was shooting the falls from the side. The only wayto get a shot of the face was to either be in a boat or standing on one of theseveral islands in the river./p>p>I probably spent an hour there taking photos and I finally got a shot I liked. Then it was time to leave as I had a four-hour drive to my destination for the night. /p>p>Back home at my office and at my computer I saw that by cropping, I could make several scenes from the one image. The vertical below is one of my favorites. /p>figure classwp-block-image>img loadinglazy width250 height318 srchttps://gonorthwest.us/wp-content/uploads/2019/11/DSC_3031-e1573266795169.jpg altSmall portion of the Fall Creek Falls original image. classwp-image-722/>figcaption>br>/figcaption>/figure>p classhas-text-align-left>a relnoopener noreferrer target_blank hrefhttps://www.amazon.com/gp/offer-listing/1594857539/refas_li_tl?ieUTF8&camp1789&creative9325&creativeASIN1594857539&linkCodeam2&taggonoll-20&linkId539bf0a7051e8dfdbd98d70a7275eca3>Waterfall Lover’s Guide Pacific Northwest: Where to Find Hundreds of Spectacular Waterfalls in Washington, Oregon, and Idaho, 5th Edition/a>. By Gregory Plumb. The author is a geographer and a university professor who has documented waterfalls throughout the US. ISBN-10: 1594857539; 5th Edition Paperback; 384 Pages; 6 x 1.1 x 8.9 inches ; August 16, 2013.a hrefhttps://www.amazon.com/gp/offer-listing/1594857539/refas_li_tl?ieUTF8&camp1789&creative9325&creativeASIN1594857539&linkCodeam2&taggonoll-20&linkId539bf0a7051e8dfdbd98d70a7275eca3>img loadinglazy width100 height150 classwp-image-740 stylewidth: 100px; srchttps://gonorthwest.us/wp-content/uploads/2019/11/1594857539.jpg altWaterfall Lovers Guide to waterfalls in the Pacific Northwest.>/a>/p>h3>Shop Now/h3>p>img loadinglazy width100 height30 classwp-image-728 stylewidth: 100px; srchttps://gonorthwest.us/wp-content/uploads/2019/11/100X30-w-logo.gif altamazon logo for books>/p>p>Your orders are appreciated. They help keep this site online. Thank you!/p> /div>!-- .entry-content --> footer classentry-meta> This entry was posted in a hrefhttps://gonorthwest.us/category/attractions/ relcategory tag>Attractions/a>, a hrefhttps://gonorthwest.us/category/idaho/ relcategory tag>Idaho/a>, a hrefhttps://gonorthwest.us/category/pacificnorthwest/ relcategory tag>Pacific Northwest/a> and tagged a hrefhttps://gonorthwest.us/tag/country-store/ reltag>Country Store/a>, a hrefhttps://gonorthwest.us/tag/eastern-idaho/ reltag>Eastern Idaho/a>, a hrefhttps://gonorthwest.us/tag/fall-creek-falls/ reltag>Fall Creek Falls/a>, a hrefhttps://gonorthwest.us/tag/idaho/ reltag>Idaho/a>, a hrefhttps://gonorthwest.us/tag/rainey-creek/ reltag>Rainey Creek/a>, a hrefhttps://gonorthwest.us/tag/rainey-creek-country-store/ reltag>Rainey Creek Country Store/a>, a hrefhttps://gonorthwest.us/tag/snake-river/ reltag>Snake River/a>, a hrefhttps://gonorthwest.us/tag/swan-valley/ reltag>Swan Valley/a>, a hrefhttps://gonorthwest.us/tag/waterfalls/ reltag>waterfalls/a> on a hrefhttps://gonorthwest.us/2019/11/08/fall-creek-falls/ title8:24 pm relbookmark>time classentry-date datetime2019-11-08T20:24:56-07:00>November 8, 2019/time>/a>span classby-author> by span classauthor vcard>a classurl fn n hrefhttps://gonorthwest.us/author/admin/ titleView all posts by Jack High relauthor>Jack High/a>/span>/span>. /footer>!-- .entry-meta --> /article>!-- #post --> article idpost-659 classpost-659 post type-post status-publish format-standard hentry category-fish category-hells-canyon category-idaho tag-fishing tag-fishing-guides tag-hells-canyon tag-hells-canyon-rapids tag-jet-boat-tours tag-killgore-adventures tag-salmon-river tag-snake-river tag-white-bird-idaho> header classentry-header> h1 classentry-title> a hrefhttps://gonorthwest.us/2014/07/06/killgore-adventures/ relbookmark>Killgore Adventures Fishing Trips – The Video/a> /h1> /header>!-- .entry-header --> div classentry-content> p>By Jack High/p>p>Well . . . we got it done! And just in time for the 2014 fishing season./p>p>The “we” is me and my staff at em>Go Northwest!/em>. The “it” is the fishing video for a hrefhttp://killgoreadventures.com/ titleKillgore Adventures target_blank>Killgore Adventures/a>. You can watch it on now on YouTube (be sure to catch the outtakes at the end):/p>p>iframe loadinglazy width625 height352 srchttps://www.youtube.com/embed/ih3uMkUW158?featureoembed frameborder0 allowfullscreen>/iframe>/p>p>Here are a few things you might want to know./p>p>Killgore Adventures is a jet boat tour and fishing business out of a hrefhttp://www.gonorthwest.com/Idaho/northcentral/Whitebird/whitebird.htm titleWhite Bird target_blank>White Bird/a>, a hrefhttp://www.gonorthwest.com/Idaho/Idaho.htm titleIdaho target_blank>Idaho/a>. The company and its guides operate on the Snake and Salmon Rivers which parallel one another for a number of miles and offer great fishing and great scenery in a hrefhttp://www.gonorthwest.com/Idaho/northcentral/idnc.htm titleNorth Central Idaho target_blank>North Central Idaho/a>./p>p>Both rivers run free in rough and rugged deep canyons offering magnificent scenery, exciting rapids and plenty of wildlife including bear, deer, big horn rams and bald eagles. A great portion of the Snake River in particular runs through the heart of the a hrefhttp://www.gonorthwest.com/Idaho/Hells_Canyon/Hells_Canyon_NRA.htm titleHells Canyon National Recreation Area target_blank>Hells Canyon National Recreation Area/a>./p>p>On many outings one might catch different species of fish on the same day on one or both of the two magnificent rivers. I made two trips with the outfitter, once in October and once in January to shoot still and video images for their project./p>p>In October, we used two boats. One, the em>American Eagle/em>, skippered by Homer Brown, chief fishing guide. The second, the em>Horn Star/em> was skippered by Kurt Killgore, who usually is driving either the em>Horn Star/em> or the em>Happy Hour/em> on Jet Boat Tours. But on this day Kurt turned to fishing since the outfitter had booked several clients and decided to run two boats. em>Happy Hour/em> is a 36-passenger boat primarily used for tours and for transporting rafters and their gear./p>p>The first day out we headed up the Snake River in a hrefhttp://www.gonorthwest.com/Idaho/Hells_Canyon/Hells_Canyon.htm titleHells Canyon target_blank>Hells Canyon/a> aboard the fast em>Horn Star/em> from a hrefhttp://www.gonorthwest.com/Idaho/Hells_Canyon/pittsburg-landing.htm titlePittsburg Landing on the Snake River in Hells Canyon target_blank>Pittsburg Landing/a>, to fish the wild river section for white sturgeon, rainbow trout, and bass./p>p>div idattachment_684 stylewidth: 185px classwp-caption alignright>img aria-describedbycaption-attachment-684 loadinglazy srchttps://gonorthwest.us/wp-content/uploads/2014/07/Snapshots-Kurt-00011_175x225.jpg altKurt Killgore width175 height225 classsize-full wp-image-684 />p idcaption-attachment-684 classwp-caption-text>Kurt Killgore/p>/div>Our trip ran through Class 3, 4, and 5 whitewater rapids on our way to and from the fishing holes, and as Kurt says, “Everybody gets a heck of a boat ride out of it, and makes for a big adventure for everyone in the boat.”/p>p>The second day I rode with Homer Brown and we ran some 30 miles north of Pittsburg Landing to where the Salmon pours into the Snake. Kurt explains, “We start off fishing down at the confluence of the Snake and Salmon rivers because that’s where the most fish are. But once we get that big dose of fish that come up the Salmon River, we’ll be fishing right out of our motel and campground, so our trips are launching just 100 yards away from where you’ll stay, which makes it really convenient for our customers./p>p>And, indeed, I interviewed one of their clients who fished right off their beach on the Salmon and reported that he had caught several salmon from that spot during the past couple of days./p>p>Kurt points out that “One of the big perks for our clients is they can stay right at our place on the Salmon River.” Clients can tent camp, or stay in their RV Park, or take one of their motel units, all of which are no more than an easy walk from the beach./p>p>div idattachment_686 stylewidth: 185px classwp-caption alignright>img aria-describedbycaption-attachment-686 loadinglazy srchttps://gonorthwest.us/wp-content/uploads/2014/07/Homer01-175x225.jpg altHomer Brown width175 height225 classsize-full wp-image-686 />p idcaption-attachment-686 classwp-caption-text>Homer Brown,/p>/div>Homer, like Kurt, also notes that “When you come on a fishing trip with Killgore Adventures, it’s not just a fishing trip. We’re going to see a lot of wildlife, we’re going to get to catch some nice fish, and it’s a great way to spend a day with your family.”/p>p>Their fishing trips generally start at 8’o’clock in the morning and finish around 5’o’clock in the afternoon. “We have lunch for you on the boat, we have drinks on the boat, and it makes a really nice day”, says Homer. “We make sure you have everything you need. We have all the gear, all the tackle, everything you need to go fishing. If you want to bring your gear, you can. Sometimes we have people who have their favorite rod or their favorite lure, and that’s fine. Bring it. We’ll put it together for you and make sure you get to use it and have a good time.”/p>p>On that particular day of shooting the video, a fourteen-year-old girl on the “Horn Star” caught her first steelhead ever (you can see her in the video). She enjoyed a really great experience in a beautiful setting on the Lower Salmon River and she got to reel in a really amazing fish./p>p>Toward late afternoon a young woman also on the “Horn Star” caught a large sturgeon and those of us on the other boat enjoyed watching her wrestle it to shore and pose for a photo. (You also can see that scene in the video.)/p>p>div idattachment_682 stylewidth: 617px classwp-caption aligncenter>img aria-describedbycaption-attachment-682 loadinglazy srchttps://gonorthwest.us/wp-content/uploads/2014/07/DSC3890.jpg altCatching a White Sturgeon with Killgore Adventures width607 height350 classsize-full wp-image-682 srcsethttps://gonorthwest.us/wp-content/uploads/2014/07/DSC3890.jpg 607w, https://gonorthwest.us/wp-content/uploads/2014/07/DSC3890-300x172.jpg 300w sizes(max-width: 607px) 100vw, 607px />p idcaption-attachment-682 classwp-caption-text>Rachel Elizabeth assisted by Kurt Killgore lands her first White Sturgeon./p>/div>Kurt and Homer explain that the sturgeon you catch in Hells Canyon and on the Salmon River are white sturgeon. They see them in excess of 8-feet quite often and sometimes see them in excess of 10 feet. Homer points out that “A 10-foot fish on a fish chart is about 500 lbs. These fish are really big, they fight really hard, they jump and they scream a lot of line off”, he says. “So they’re not just like a bottom-dwelling, lazy fish. When you set the hook on one, and when you’ve got one pulling, it’s a pretty amazing experience.”/p>p>Homer says, “Our trip is pretty consistent all the time, we make sure we get you up there, see some game, see some cool stuff, catch some fish, have you a good lunch on the beach, and just kind of have that good camaraderie of having people around and having good conversations. It’s not just hardcore fishing when you go with us. It’s a really pleasant time.”/p>p>In winding up the interview and photo shoot, Kurt offered one more thought, “One of the best parts about fishing with us is we’re local, we live right here between Hells Canyon and the Salmon River. We’re not from anywhere else. We were born and raised here and we’ve fished here our whole lives. We’ve got this awesome scenery,” he adds, “and the fishing is awesome, I mean it’s second to none really.” And he summarized his enjoyment of his trips with, “It’s pretty hard to have a bad day in Hells Canyon.”/p> /div>!-- .entry-content --> footer classentry-meta> This entry was posted in a hrefhttps://gonorthwest.us/category/activities/fish/ relcategory tag>Fishing/a>, a hrefhttps://gonorthwest.us/category/hells-canyon/ relcategory tag>Hells Canyon/a>, a hrefhttps://gonorthwest.us/category/idaho/ relcategory tag>Idaho/a> and tagged a hrefhttps://gonorthwest.us/tag/fishing/ reltag>fishing/a>, a hrefhttps://gonorthwest.us/tag/fishing-guides/ reltag>Fishing guides/a>, a hrefhttps://gonorthwest.us/tag/hells-canyon/ reltag>Hells Canyon/a>, a hrefhttps://gonorthwest.us/tag/hells-canyon-rapids/ reltag>Hells Canyon rapids/a>, a hrefhttps://gonorthwest.us/tag/jet-boat-tours/ reltag>Jet Boat Tours/a>, a hrefhttps://gonorthwest.us/tag/killgore-adventures/ reltag>Killgore Adventures/a>, a hrefhttps://gonorthwest.us/tag/salmon-river/ reltag>Salmon River/a>, a hrefhttps://gonorthwest.us/tag/snake-river/ reltag>Snake River/a>, a hrefhttps://gonorthwest.us/tag/white-bird-idaho/ reltag>White Bird Idaho/a> on a hrefhttps://gonorthwest.us/2014/07/06/killgore-adventures/ title6:59 pm relbookmark>time classentry-date datetime2014-07-06T18:59:02-07:00>July 6, 2014/time>/a>span classby-author> by span classauthor vcard>a classurl fn n hrefhttps://gonorthwest.us/author/admin/ titleView all posts by Jack High relauthor>Jack High/a>/span>/span>. /footer>!-- .entry-meta --> /article>!-- #post --> article idpost-639 classpost-639 post type-post status-publish format-standard hentry category-activities category-fish category-hells-canyon category-idaho category-salmon-river category-tours tag-fishing tag-salmon-river tag-steelhead-fishing tag-white-bird-idaho> header classentry-header> h1 classentry-title> a hrefhttps://gonorthwest.us/2014/01/25/fishing-near-shorty-canyon/ relbookmark>Fishing Near Shorty Canyon/a> /h1> /header>!-- .entry-header --> div classentry-content> p>img loadinglazy srchttps://gonorthwest.us/wp-content/uploads/2014/01/DSC4059-2.jpg altFishing near Shorty Canyon on the Salmon River width607 height405 classaligncenter size-full wp-image-640 srcsethttps://gonorthwest.us/wp-content/uploads/2014/01/DSC4059-2.jpg 607w, https://gonorthwest.us/wp-content/uploads/2014/01/DSC4059-2-300x200.jpg 300w sizes(max-width: 607px) 100vw, 607px />Here at our first stop to fish we are about 500 feet north of Shorty Canyon on the west bank of the Salmon River at an elevation of about 1300 feet in North Central Idaho. The temperature is still in the low 30s at a little after 11:00 AM, but we have a bright sun and a cloudless sky and the day is bound to warm up./p>p>Shorty Canyon is approximately four miles north of the beach at the headquarters of a hrefhttp://killgoreadventures.com/ titleKillgore Adventures target_blank>Killgore Adventures/a>/a> in White Bird where we began our trip nearly an hour ago. Canyon walls at this spot climb to elevations exceeding 4400 feet on both sides of the river. They are mostly terraced and interlaced with steep gullies, sheer cliffs, scattered trees and shrubs. The landscape is pretty brown this time of year with occasional spots of reddish bushes, green moss and a rare sprout of green grass in protected areas./p>p>The Snake River is about 10 miles to the west. The two rivers flow north side by side for many miles until they are joined when the Salmon River flows into the Snake a few miles south of Lewiston. In some places the two rivers are as close as five miles apart. At other places they are separated by as much as 20 miles./p>p>A series of ridges separate the two rivers, some climbing to more than 4,600 feet in elevation. Topographic maps show a few roads meandering among the canyons, saddles and ridge tops that would be fun to explore on another outing./p>p>The three other members of our party are fishing while I’m shooting stills and video of them for a video project. They are hoping to catch steelhead and I’m hoping they succeed./p>p>For more on Hells Canyon, the Snake and Salmon rivers please visit our web site starting at our a hrefhttp://www.gonorthwest.com/Idaho/northcentral/idnc.htm titleNorth Central Idaho target_blank>North Central Idaho/a>/a> page./p> /div>!-- .entry-content --> footer classentry-meta> This entry was posted in a hrefhttps://gonorthwest.us/category/activities/ relcategory tag>Activities/a>, a hrefhttps://gonorthwest.us/category/activities/fish/ relcategory tag>Fishing/a>, a hrefhttps://gonorthwest.us/category/hells-canyon/ relcategory tag>Hells Canyon/a>, a hrefhttps://gonorthwest.us/category/idaho/ relcategory tag>Idaho/a>, a hrefhttps://gonorthwest.us/category/salmon-river/ relcategory tag>Salmon River/a>, a hrefhttps://gonorthwest.us/category/tours/ relcategory tag>Tours/a> and tagged a hrefhttps://gonorthwest.us/tag/fishing/ reltag>fishing/a>, a hrefhttps://gonorthwest.us/tag/salmon-river/ reltag>Salmon River/a>, a hrefhttps://gonorthwest.us/tag/steelhead-fishing/ reltag>Steelhead fishing/a>, a hrefhttps://gonorthwest.us/tag/white-bird-idaho/ reltag>White Bird Idaho/a> on a hrefhttps://gonorthwest.us/2014/01/25/fishing-near-shorty-canyon/ title6:31 pm relbookmark>time classentry-date datetime2014-01-25T18:31:22-07:00>January 25, 2014/time>/a>span classby-author> by span classauthor vcard>a classurl fn n hrefhttps://gonorthwest.us/author/admin/ titleView all posts by Jack High relauthor>Jack High/a>/span>/span>. /footer>!-- .entry-meta --> /article>!-- #post --> article idpost-630 classpost-630 post type-post status-publish format-standard hentry category-idaho category-tours tag-killgore-adventures tag-salmon-river tag-white-bird-idaho> header classentry-header> h1 classentry-title> a hrefhttps://gonorthwest.us/2014/01/23/salmon-river/ relbookmark>The Salmon River at White Bird, Idaho/a> /h1> /header>!-- .entry-header --> div classentry-content> p>img loadinglazy srchttps://gonorthwest.us/wp-content/uploads/2014/01/DSC_6357.jpg altSalmon River at White Bird, Idaho. width607 height403 classaligncenter size-full wp-image-631 srcsethttps://gonorthwest.us/wp-content/uploads/2014/01/DSC_6357.jpg 607w, https://gonorthwest.us/wp-content/uploads/2014/01/DSC_6357-300x199.jpg 300w sizes(max-width: 607px) 100vw, 607px />In White Bird, Idaho looking across the Salmon River on a beautiful January 21st with the temperature at 24 degrees. We are about to board a jet boat for a video shoot highlighting the fishing trips offered by a hrefhttp://killgoreadventures.com/ titleKillgore Adventures target_blank>Killgore Adventures/a>./p>p>This shot was taken from the beach at the Killgore Adventures headquarters. The beach is just a few yards from the outfitter’s office, motel and RV Park. /p>p>Killgore Adventures operates Jet Boat tours and also fishing trips during most months of the year on either or both the Snake River in Hells Canyon and/or the Salmon River. These two great rivers run almost parallel for several miles in north central Idaho and then come together a few miles south of Lewiston, Idaho at the confluence where the Salmon empties into the Snake./p>p>Jet Boat tours typically are run from the Spring through the Fall seasons. Several tours are offered. The most populer is a six-hour tour on the Snake River in Hells Canyon that begins at Pittsburg Landing and runs upstream to the Hells Canyon Dam and visitor center and back. A hearty lunch is included and plenty of drinks are available for thirsty clients including water, soft drinks and sport drinks./p>p>Highlights of the tour include stopping at historical ranches, running the several class IV and V rapids, seeing a variety of wildlife and stopping to wade or swim at beautiful sandy beaches. The outfitter also offers a loop tour of both the Snake River and the Salmon River. /p>p>Fishing trips are run on both rivers and the catch could be steelhead, salmon, bass, trout and even the huge sturgeon./p>p>Today, the focus is on fishing. As soon as the boat arrives we will head downstream and stop at several favored fishing holes to catch steelhead./p>p>For more about White Bird, jet boat tours and north central Idaho, please go to our em>Go Northwest!/em> web site and visit our a hrefhttp://www.gonorthwest.com/Idaho/northcentral/Whitebird/whitebird.htm titleWhite Bird, Idaho target_blank>White Bird page/a> or our page for a hrefhttp://www.gonorthwest.com/Idaho/Hells_Canyon/jetboattours.htm titleJet Boat tours of Hells Canyon target_blank>jet boat tours/a>./p> /div>!-- .entry-content --> footer classentry-meta> This entry was posted in a hrefhttps://gonorthwest.us/category/idaho/ relcategory tag>Idaho/a>, a hrefhttps://gonorthwest.us/category/tours/ relcategory tag>Tours/a> and tagged a hrefhttps://gonorthwest.us/tag/killgore-adventures/ reltag>Killgore Adventures/a>, a hrefhttps://gonorthwest.us/tag/salmon-river/ reltag>Salmon River/a>, a hrefhttps://gonorthwest.us/tag/white-bird-idaho/ reltag>White Bird Idaho/a> on a hrefhttps://gonorthwest.us/2014/01/23/salmon-river/ title5:54 pm relbookmark>time classentry-date datetime2014-01-23T17:54:21-07:00>January 23, 2014/time>/a>span classby-author> by span classauthor vcard>a classurl fn n hrefhttps://gonorthwest.us/author/admin/ titleView all posts by Jack High relauthor>Jack High/a>/span>/span>. /footer>!-- .entry-meta --> /article>!-- #post --> article idpost-584 classpost-584 post type-post status-publish format-standard hentry category-attractions category-seattle category-washington tag-houseboats tag-lake-union tag-seattle tag-seattle-houseboats> header classentry-header> h1 classentry-title> a hrefhttps://gonorthwest.us/2013/05/03/houseboats-on-seattles-lake-union/ relbookmark>Houseboats on Seattle’s Lake Union/a> /h1> /header>!-- .entry-header --> div classentry-content> p>img loadinglazy classaligncenter size-full wp-image-585 alt_DSC2259 srchttps://gonorthwest.us/wp-content/uploads/2013/05/DSC2259.jpg width450 height300 srcsethttps://gonorthwest.us/wp-content/uploads/2013/05/DSC2259.jpg 450w, https://gonorthwest.us/wp-content/uploads/2013/05/DSC2259-300x200.jpg 300w sizes(max-width: 450px) 100vw, 450px />/p>p>Enjoyed a beautiful day in a titleSeattle hrefhttp://www.gonorthwest.com/Washington/seattle/Seattle.htm target_blank>Seattle/a>. First stop was along the east shore of Lake Union to catch this shot looking west at houseboats, the lake and a titleQueen Anne Neighborhood hrefhttp://www.gonorthwest.com/Washington/seattle/Queen_Anne/Queen_Anne.htm target_blank>Queen Anne/a> Hill in the background just as the float plane was taking off. Had found a small open space between ample shrubbery to get a good view. The spot is near the water’s edge on Fairview Avenue East between E. Newton Street and East Boston Street. GPS coodinates: N 47, 38.2427; W 122, 19.7696./p> /div>!-- .entry-content --> footer classentry-meta> This entry was posted in a hrefhttps://gonorthwest.us/category/attractions/ relcategory tag>Attractions/a>, a hrefhttps://gonorthwest.us/category/washington/seattle/ relcategory tag>Seattle/a>, a hrefhttps://gonorthwest.us/category/washington/ relcategory tag>Washington/a> and tagged a hrefhttps://gonorthwest.us/tag/houseboats/ reltag>Houseboats/a>, a hrefhttps://gonorthwest.us/tag/lake-union/ reltag>Lake Union/a>, a hrefhttps://gonorthwest.us/tag/seattle/ reltag>Seattle/a>, a hrefhttps://gonorthwest.us/tag/seattle-houseboats/ reltag>Seattle houseboats/a> on a hrefhttps://gonorthwest.us/2013/05/03/houseboats-on-seattles-lake-union/ title11:18 am relbookmark>time classentry-date datetime2013-05-03T11:18:48-07:00>May 3, 2013/time>/a>span classby-author> by span classauthor vcard>a classurl fn n hrefhttps://gonorthwest.us/author/admin/ titleView all posts by Jack High relauthor>Jack High/a>/span>/span>. /footer>!-- .entry-meta --> /article>!-- #post --> article idpost-569 classpost-569 post type-post status-publish format-standard hentry category-washington tag-i-90 tag-snoqualmie-pass> header classentry-header> h1 classentry-title> a hrefhttps://gonorthwest.us/2013/05/02/sunset-approaching-seattle/ relbookmark>Sunset Approaching Seattle/a> /h1> /header>!-- .entry-header --> div classentry-content> p>img loadinglazy classaligncenter size-full wp-image-570 altIMG_2298 srchttps://gonorthwest.us/wp-content/uploads/2013/05/IMG_2298.jpg width450 height299 srcsethttps://gonorthwest.us/wp-content/uploads/2013/05/IMG_2298.jpg 450w, https://gonorthwest.us/wp-content/uploads/2013/05/IMG_2298-300x199.jpg 300w sizes(max-width: 450px) 100vw, 450px />/p>p>Having crossed Snoqualmie Pass and still heading westbound on I-90, I have high hopes of catching one of Seattle’s spectacular sunsets from perhaps Alki Beach or Golden Gardens Park./p>p>Seen here is but a glimps of what I’m hoping for. But I do kind of like this one and particularly the reflection off my Jeep’s hood./p>p>The shot was taken at a sign on the left denoting the South Fork Snoqualmie River approximately half way between the Snoqualmie Pass Summit and the town of North Bend. GPS coordinates: N 47, 26.2541; W 121, 38.8913./p> /div>!-- .entry-content --> footer classentry-meta> This entry was posted in a hrefhttps://gonorthwest.us/category/washington/ relcategory tag>Washington/a> and tagged a hrefhttps://gonorthwest.us/tag/i-90/ reltag>I-90/a>, a hrefhttps://gonorthwest.us/tag/snoqualmie-pass/ reltag>Snoqualmie Pass/a> on a hrefhttps://gonorthwest.us/2013/05/02/sunset-approaching-seattle/ title8:31 pm relbookmark>time classentry-date datetime2013-05-02T20:31:00-07:00>May 2, 2013/time>/a>span classby-author> by span classauthor vcard>a classurl fn n hrefhttps://gonorthwest.us/author/admin/ titleView all posts by Jack High relauthor>Jack High/a>/span>/span>. /footer>!-- .entry-meta --> /article>!-- #post --> article idpost-560 classpost-560 post type-post status-publish format-standard hentry category-washington tag-i-90 tag-snoqulmie-pass> header classentry-header> h1 classentry-title> a hrefhttps://gonorthwest.us/2013/05/02/i-90-construction-at-snoqualmie-pass-washington/ relbookmark>I-90 Construction at Snoqualmie Pass, Washington/a> /h1> /header>!-- .entry-header --> div classentry-content> p>div idattachment_564 stylewidth: 460px classwp-caption aligncenter>img aria-describedbycaption-attachment-564 loadinglazy classsize-full wp-image-564 altConstruction Backup at Snoqualmie Pass srchttps://gonorthwest.us/wp-content/uploads/2013/05/DSC_47611.jpg width450 height299 srcsethttps://gonorthwest.us/wp-content/uploads/2013/05/DSC_47611.jpg 450w, https://gonorthwest.us/wp-content/uploads/2013/05/DSC_47611-300x199.jpg 300w sizes(max-width: 450px) 100vw, 450px />p idcaption-attachment-564 classwp-caption-text>Construction delays when I-90 temporarily closed for blasting./p>/div>/p>p>Travelers crossing Washington State’s Snoqualmie Pass during weekdays may find a section of the highway on the east side of the pass closed due to blasting in a construction zone./p>p>Twice I found the section closed between the hours of 7:00 PM and 8:00 PM on a Tuesday and a Thursday. Had I been 15 minutes earlier when this photo of westbound traffic was taken, I would have avoided the backup and arrived in Seattle 45 minutes earlier./p>p>But it was a pleasant day and the backup provided a chance to stretch the legs, relax and enjoy the respite from driving. This westbound scene is about one half mile from the south end of Keechelus Lake and about four miles east of Snoqualmie Pass summit. GPS coordinates: N 47, 19.4264; W 121, 19.5852./p>p>Travelers unfamiliar with Snoqualmie Pass might like to know that it is a popular year-round destination offering skiing, cross-country skiing and tubing in the winter, and hiking, backpacking and climbing during the summer. For more about the Pass and its many recreational opportunities, check out our web site at a titleSnowqualmie Pass hrefhttp://www.gonorthwest.com/Washington/cascades/Snoqualmie-Pass/snoqualmie_pass.htm target_blank>Snowqualmie Pass/a>./p>p> /p> /div>!-- .entry-content --> footer classentry-meta> This entry was posted in a hrefhttps://gonorthwest.us/category/washington/ relcategory tag>Washington/a> and tagged a hrefhttps://gonorthwest.us/tag/i-90/ reltag>I-90/a>, a hrefhttps://gonorthwest.us/tag/snoqulmie-pass/ reltag>Snoqulmie Pass/a> on a hrefhttps://gonorthwest.us/2013/05/02/i-90-construction-at-snoqualmie-pass-washington/ title7:37 pm relbookmark>time classentry-date datetime2013-05-02T19:37:26-07:00>May 2, 2013/time>/a>span classby-author> by span classauthor vcard>a classurl fn n hrefhttps://gonorthwest.us/author/admin/ titleView all posts by Jack High relauthor>Jack High/a>/span>/span>. /footer>!-- .entry-meta --> /article>!-- #post --> article idpost-552 classpost-552 post type-post status-publish format-standard hentry category-seattle category-washington tag-cle-elum-river tag-i-90 tag-roslyn-washington> header classentry-header> h1 classentry-title> a hrefhttps://gonorthwest.us/2013/05/02/i-9-to-seattle/ relbookmark>I-90 to Seattle/a> /h1> /header>!-- .entry-header --> div classentry-content> p>Driving westbound on I-90 toward Seattle and wondering if the darkening sky portends rain. About to cross the Cle Elum River and just ahead is the exit to Roslyn, a small town on the east side of the Cascade Mountains that served as the fictional town of Cicely, Alaska in the long-running TV series “Northern Exposure” that ran for a total of 110 episodes from 1990 to 1995 on CBS.img loadinglazy classaligncenter size-full wp-image-553 altDSC_4758 srchttps://gonorthwest.us/wp-content/uploads/2013/05/DSC_4758.jpg width450 height299 srcsethttps://gonorthwest.us/wp-content/uploads/2013/05/DSC_4758.jpg 450w, https://gonorthwest.us/wp-content/uploads/2013/05/DSC_4758-300x199.jpg 300w sizes(max-width: 450px) 100vw, 450px />/p> /div>!-- .entry-content --> footer classentry-meta> This entry was posted in a hrefhttps://gonorthwest.us/category/washington/seattle/ relcategory tag>Seattle/a>, a hrefhttps://gonorthwest.us/category/washington/ relcategory tag>Washington/a> and tagged a hrefhttps://gonorthwest.us/tag/cle-elum-river/ reltag>Cle Elum River/a>, a hrefhttps://gonorthwest.us/tag/i-90/ reltag>I-90/a>, a hrefhttps://gonorthwest.us/tag/roslyn-washington/ reltag>Roslyn Washington/a> on a hrefhttps://gonorthwest.us/2013/05/02/i-9-to-seattle/ title7:05 pm relbookmark>time classentry-date datetime2013-05-02T19:05:22-07:00>May 2, 2013/time>/a>span classby-author> by span classauthor vcard>a classurl fn n hrefhttps://gonorthwest.us/author/admin/ titleView all posts by Jack High relauthor>Jack High/a>/span>/span>. /footer>!-- .entry-meta --> /article>!-- #post --> article idpost-536 classpost-536 post type-post status-publish format-standard hentry category-idaho tag-hells-canyon tag-hells-canyon-nra tag-idaho tag-ncita tag-north-central-idaho tag-salmon-river tag-snake-river tag-white-bird-idaho> header classentry-header> h1 classentry-title> a hrefhttps://gonorthwest.us/2012/11/08/536/ relbookmark>Visiting North Central Idaho/a> /h1> /header>!-- .entry-header --> div classentry-content> p>div idattachment_537 stylewidth: 460px classwp-caption aligncenter>a hrefhttps://gonorthwest.us/wp-content/uploads/2012/11/DSC_0101-2.jpg>img aria-describedbycaption-attachment-537 loadinglazy classsize-full wp-image-537 titleWhite Bird Canyon srchttps://gonorthwest.us/wp-content/uploads/2012/11/DSC_0101-2.jpg altWhite Bird Canyon and the town of White Bird in the distance. width450 height299 srcsethttps://gonorthwest.us/wp-content/uploads/2012/11/DSC_0101-2.jpg 450w, https://gonorthwest.us/wp-content/uploads/2012/11/DSC_0101-2-300x199.jpg 300w sizes(max-width: 450px) 100vw, 450px />/a>p idcaption-attachment-537 classwp-caption-text>White Bird Canyon and the town of White Bird in the distance as seen from a pullout near the White Bird Summit Lodge./p>/div>/p>p>Go Northwest! attended yesterday’s General Membership Meeting of the a hrefhttp://www.visitnorthcentralidaho.org/>North Central Idaho Travel Association/a> (NCITA) held at the a hrefhttp://www.whitebirdsummitlodge.com/>Whitebird Summit Lodge and Guest Ranch/a>, Grangeville, Idaho and came away impressed by all the many things to do and see in that area of the state. At the top of the list are the amazing opportunities for outdoor recreation including hiking, backpacking, fishing, canoeing, rafting and jet boat trips./p>p>In additional to those activities, the area plays host to numerous festivals and events sponsored by various local groups including the several chambers of commerce representing cities and towns of the region./p>p>And if you are looking for scenery, consider that North Central Idaho is home to several scenic byways, the deepest river gorge in the country (Hells Canyon) and the longest free-flowing river in the lower 48 (Salmon River of No Return) plus numerous wilderness areas and thousands of square miles of forests./p>p>To learn more about the region, you also can visit our web site at gonorthwest.com and follow the links to our pages on a hrefhttp://www.gonorthwest.com/Idaho/northcentral/idnc.htm>North Central Idaho/a>./p>p>div idattachment_540 stylewidth: 460px classwp-caption aligncenter>a hrefhttps://gonorthwest.us/wp-content/uploads/2012/11/IMG_1838_4502.jpg>img aria-describedbycaption-attachment-540 loadinglazy classsize-full wp-image-540 titleNCITA Meeting srchttps://gonorthwest.us/wp-content/uploads/2012/11/IMG_1838_4502.jpg altNCITA Meeting width450 height299 srcsethttps://gonorthwest.us/wp-content/uploads/2012/11/IMG_1838_4502.jpg 450w, https://gonorthwest.us/wp-content/uploads/2012/11/IMG_1838_4502-300x199.jpg 300w sizes(max-width: 450px) 100vw, 450px />/a>p idcaption-attachment-540 classwp-caption-text>Members of the North Central Idaho Travel Association listen to presentations and hold discussions about plans to promote the region to vacationers and other travelers./p>/div>/p> /div>!-- .entry-content --> footer classentry-meta> This entry was posted in a hrefhttps://gonorthwest.us/category/idaho/ relcategory tag>Idaho/a> and tagged a hrefhttps://gonorthwest.us/tag/hells-canyon/ reltag>Hells Canyon/a>, a hrefhttps://gonorthwest.us/tag/hells-canyon-nra/ reltag>Hells Canyon NRA/a>, a hrefhttps://gonorthwest.us/tag/idaho/ reltag>Idaho/a>, a hrefhttps://gonorthwest.us/tag/ncita/ reltag>NCITA/a>, a hrefhttps://gonorthwest.us/tag/north-central-idaho/ reltag>North Central Idaho/a>, a hrefhttps://gonorthwest.us/tag/salmon-river/ reltag>Salmon River/a>, a hrefhttps://gonorthwest.us/tag/snake-river/ reltag>Snake River/a>, a hrefhttps://gonorthwest.us/tag/white-bird-idaho/ reltag>White Bird Idaho/a> on a hrefhttps://gonorthwest.us/2012/11/08/536/ title1:07 pm relbookmark>time classentry-date datetime2012-11-08T13:07:26-07:00>November 8, 2012/time>/a>span classby-author> by span classauthor vcard>a classurl fn n hrefhttps://gonorthwest.us/author/admin/ titleView all posts by Jack High relauthor>Jack High/a>/span>/span>. /footer>!-- .entry-meta --> /article>!-- #post --> article idpost-531 classpost-531 post type-post status-publish format-standard hentry category-montana tag-115 tag-ennis tag-three-forks tag-us-hwy-287> header classentry-header> h1 classentry-title> a hrefhttps://gonorthwest.us/2012/10/30/531/ relbookmark>Rusty Montana Car/a> /h1> /header>!-- .entry-header --> div classentry-content> p>It’s not unusual to see old dilapidated log cabins, barns, tractors and other early-day farm and ranch equipment when traveling the highways and byways of Montana. But this is the first auto we’ve seen to become a home to a young tree. Maybe you will see it too between the towns of Three Forks and a hrefhttp://www.gonorthwest.com/Montana/southwest/ennis/ennis.htm>Ennis/a> when traveling toward Yellowstone National Park via US Highway 287./p>p>a hrefhttps://gonorthwest.us/wp-content/uploads/2012/10/DSC_0047.jpg>img loadinglazy classaligncenter size-full wp-image-532 titleDSC_0047 srchttps://gonorthwest.us/wp-content/uploads/2012/10/DSC_0047.jpg alt width450 height299 srcsethttps://gonorthwest.us/wp-content/uploads/2012/10/DSC_0047.jpg 450w, https://gonorthwest.us/wp-content/uploads/2012/10/DSC_0047-300x199.jpg 300w sizes(max-width: 450px) 100vw, 450px />/a>/p> /div>!-- .entry-content --> footer classentry-meta> This entry was posted in a hrefhttps://gonorthwest.us/category/montana/ relcategory tag>Montana/a> and tagged a hrefhttps://gonorthwest.us/tag/287/ reltag>287/a>, a hrefhttps://gonorthwest.us/tag/ennis/ reltag>Ennis/a>, a hrefhttps://gonorthwest.us/tag/three-forks/ reltag>Three Forks/a>, a hrefhttps://gonorthwest.us/tag/us-hwy-287/ reltag>US Hwy 287/a> on a hrefhttps://gonorthwest.us/2012/10/30/531/ title2:23 pm relbookmark>time classentry-date datetime2012-10-30T14:23:36-07:00>October 30, 2012/time>/a>span classby-author> by span classauthor vcard>a classurl fn n hrefhttps://gonorthwest.us/author/admin/ titleView all posts by Jack High relauthor>Jack High/a>/span>/span>. /footer>!-- .entry-meta --> /article>!-- #post --> nav idnav-below classnavigation rolenavigation> h3 classassistive-text>Post navigation/h3> div classnav-previous>a hrefhttps://gonorthwest.us/page/2/ >span classmeta-nav>←/span> Older posts/a>/div> div classnav-next>/div> /nav>!-- #nav-below .navigation --> /div>!-- #content --> /div>!-- #primary --> div idsecondary classwidget-area rolecomplementary> aside idtext-3 classwidget widget_text> div classtextwidget>script typetext/javascript>!--google_ad_client ca-pub-8974270936436419;/* 120x600 Blog */google_ad_slot 1154586815;google_ad_width 120;google_ad_height 600;//-->/script>script typetext/javascriptsrc//pagead2.googlesyndication.com/pagead/show_ads.js>/script>/div> /aside>aside idcategories-3 classwidget widget_categories>h3 classwidget-title>Categories/h3> ul> li classcat-item cat-item-135>a hrefhttps://gonorthwest.us/category/activities/>Activities/a>/li> li classcat-item cat-item-138>a hrefhttps://gonorthwest.us/category/attractions/>Attractions/a>/li> li classcat-item cat-item-104>a hrefhttps://gonorthwest.us/category/british-columbia/>British Columbia/a>/li> li classcat-item cat-item-137>a hrefhttps://gonorthwest.us/category/activities/fish/>Fishing/a>/li> li classcat-item cat-item-3>a hrefhttps://gonorthwest.us/category/montana/glacernp/>Glacier National Park/a>/li> li classcat-item cat-item-152>a hrefhttps://gonorthwest.us/category/hells-canyon/>Hells Canyon/a>/li> li classcat-item cat-item-41>a hrefhttps://gonorthwest.us/category/idaho/>Idaho/a>/li> li classcat-item cat-item-60>a hrefhttps://gonorthwest.us/category/washington/leavenworth-washington/>Leavenworth/a>/li> li classcat-item cat-item-1>a hrefhttps://gonorthwest.us/category/montana/>Montana/a>/li> li classcat-item cat-item-47>a hrefhttps://gonorthwest.us/category/nez-perce/>Nez Perce/a>/li> li classcat-item cat-item-143>a hrefhttps://gonorthwest.us/category/oregon/>Oregon/a>/li> li classcat-item cat-item-65>a hrefhttps://gonorthwest.us/category/oregon/oregon-coast/>Oregon Coast/a>/li> li classcat-item cat-item-6>a hrefhttps://gonorthwest.us/category/pacificnorthwest/>Pacific Northwest/a>/li> li classcat-item cat-item-118>a hrefhttps://gonorthwest.us/category/salmon-river/>Salmon River/a>/li> li classcat-item cat-item-150>a hrefhttps://gonorthwest.us/category/washington/seattle/>Seattle/a>/li> li classcat-item cat-item-42>a hrefhttps://gonorthwest.us/category/tours/>Tours/a>/li> li classcat-item cat-item-141>a hrefhttps://gonorthwest.us/category/washington/ titleThe State of Washington.>Washington/a>/li> /ul> /aside> /div>!-- #secondary --> /div>!-- #main .wrapper --> footer idcolophon rolecontentinfo> div classsite-info> a hrefhttp://wordpress.org/ titleSemantic Personal Publishing Platform>Proudly powered by WordPress/a> /div>!-- .site-info --> /footer>!-- #colophon -->/div>!-- #page -->script typetext/javascript srchttps://gonorthwest.us/wp-content/themes/twentytwelve/js/navigation.js?ver1.0 idtwentytwelve-navigation-js>/script>script typetext/javascript srchttps://gonorthwest.us/wp-includes/js/wp-embed.min.js?ver5.7.12 idwp-embed-js>/script>script srchttps://stats.wp.com/e-202440.js defer>/script>script> _stq window._stq || ; _stq.push( view, {v:ext,j:1:9.6.3,blog:168601355,post:0,tz:-7,srv:gonorthwest.us} ); _stq.push( clickTrackerInit, 168601355, 0 );/script>/body>/html>
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