Showing posts with label The Dalles. Show all posts
Showing posts with label The Dalles. Show all posts

Saturday, August 30, 2025

2025 E. Washington Road Trip 01 - The Dalles, Oregon

Road Trip! A chance to explore, see new places, learn about new geography. 


Ready to roll in a rented minivan (it is not quite tall enough for bikes)

We headed east in May of 2025 with a rented minivan, bicycles, and cameras. For our first stop, we crossed the Columbia River at Dallesport and stayed in The Dalles.

The Dalles is a city on the on the left (south) bank of the Columbia River in Oregon. The city has a dramatic setting as the gateway to the Columbia Gorge. The site was a historic trading center for native Americans as well as European travelers on the Oregon trail. It is still a major rail junction and center for agricultural products. 


BNSF rail yard (135mm ƒ/3.5 Pentax-M lens)

The city has a historic downtown with early 20th century commercial buildings. We walked around town and looked for the typical topics that interest me.  


Alley facing Wasco County second courthouse
Wall art, 1st Street
Warehouse, Jefferson Street (50mm ƒ/2 Rikenon lens)
Sunshine Mill, view east from 1st Street
Where are the cars? Jefferson Street (50mm ƒ/2 Rikenon lens)
Time for a breakfast coffee and croissant, 2nd Street (50mm ƒ/2 Rikenon lens)
Where is the horse? View east from Jefferson Street

This ends our all too short stopover in The Dalles. Nice town, and I want to return. 

I tool these pictures on Kodak Portra 160 film with a Pentax MG camera and several lenses. The 50mm scenes are from my $25 Ricoh 50mm ƒ/2 Rikenon lens. This is a compact mostly plastic lens that was sold with many K-mount Ricoh SLR cameras in the 1980s. It is a light weight 6-element double Gauss design, and the optical quality is excellent. No complaints! Please click any photo above to see more details.


Tourist Notes


Restaurant: The Dalles Thai Cuisine is excellent! We were surprised considering what rotten food we have had in many Thai restaurants in the USA. We had the roasted duck.

A comfortable place to stay downtown on W. 2nd Street: The Dalles Inn

Saturday, August 2, 2025

The Leica IIIG in Oregon and Eastern Washington (May 2025) (Abandoned Films 13d).

We were restless after a very wet March in Olympia. It was time for a road trip. And I wanted to exercise my Leica IIIG camera and try Kodak T400CN film again. Some of these expired rolls have looked fine, but others have deteriorated. The rolls I used in Greece looked great. I should give up on this long-expired film forever, but thought I would try one last  roll. I loaded a roll in the IIIG for some of the great expanses of Washington state east of the Cascades (plus an overnight in The Dalles in Oregon). 


The Dalles, Oregon



The Dalles is a busy rail junction. But areas of this rail yard now have bare sections and unused tracks.  Still, an interesting place. The mill became a winery?


Waiting for a horse

Columbia Hills State Park


Cross the Columbia River, drive past Dallesport, and ascent a gravel road up into the Columbia Hills. In contrast to the forested mountains of the Columbia Gorge closer to Portland, these hills are in the rain shadow and are a dry terrain. The area is famous for wildflowers in early spring.


Dalles Mountain Ranch (50mm ƒ/1.8 Canon lens, yellow-green filter)


Farmland and the Palouse, Washington


Head east out of Richland, and you drive through miles and miles of beautiful rich farmland. As you continue east, you enter a land of hummocky low hills composed of loess (wind-blown silt). This is the Palouse. It encompasses parts of western Idaho and central east Washington. 


Rail junction, Roosevelt (Canon 50mm ƒ/1.8 thread-mount lens, orange filter)
Pasco-Kahlotus Road north of Pasco (50mm ƒ/2 Jupiter-8 lens)
Historic schoolhouse, Pasco-Kahlotus Road (Jupiter-8 lens)
Silo, Kahlotus (Jupiter-8 lens, yellow filter)
Grain terminal, Oaksdale (Jupiter-8 lens, yellow filter)

The Grain Train, Oaksdale

This roll of T400CN was thin, and once again, it may have been mis-development by Photoland at The Evergreen State College. I will not use their services ever again. This old T400CN is grainy, probably much more so than when it was fresh. But I still like the tonality, and the ICE scratch removal in my Nikon Coolscan 5000ED scanner is a great convenience. As a substitute, I can try Ilford XP2, which is the only C-41 black and white film still in production.