I was at the western end of route 20 yesterday and traveled on it from Newport to Corvallis and then to Bend this morning, so I have covered about 200 of those 3,300 miles. But I won’t see route 20 again until Nebraska.

Wickiup reservoir in the late afternoon 
A waterfall on the Duschenes River 
Hiking next to the Duschenes River 
Two lava “snowballs” 
A whole field of lava on the hillside 
Lava that came from Lava Butte and what’s left of the Butte 
A forest of ponderosa pines 
An old schoolroom in the Historical Society 
Cabin and barn at the Hugh Desert Museum 
Read here about that exhibit on animal navigation 
Still some snow on the mountains 
A lake under the morning sun
I will be visiting Roy’s family in Seattle Sunday and I am checking out two of their regular spots in Oregon, Cannon Beach tomorrow and Bend today.
First, I visited the High Desert Museum, which has outdoor and indoor exhibits and many dioramas that describe how the American settlers got to Oregon and how the native peoples have reacted to all the resulting changes.
But what I found most interesting (as someone who has planned and is undergoing a big journey) was an exhibit on scientific study of how animals navigate and how that could help humans. I knew but still marvel that both sea turtles and salmon travel thousands of miles somehow by memory to spawn and lay eggs exactly where they were born. Even more amazing, the monarch butterflies that happen to still be alive at the end of summer migrate on their own to somewhere they’ve never been before.
The other highlight of the day was hiking around and up an extensive lava field under Lava Butte, a volcano that erupted thousands of years ago – look at the photos. Then I ended the day hiking and taking pictures at mountain streams and reservoirs around the Scenic Cascade Lakes Highway.
Today’s song is “Oregon Trail” by Woody Guthrie.
































































































