Trip Report: Hood River to Portland
This is posted in reverse order of the trip. I recommend you scroll down to the first Trip Report and read up from there. Sorry :(
Hood River to Portland

Our flight didn't leave Portland until the afternoon of the next day. So our original plan was to stay another night in Hood River, and camp one last time. But somehow that night in the hotel spoiled us. That and logistics and practicality reared their silly heads. So instead, we went into Hood River to a coin laundry and washed the suitcase full of "civilization clothes" - everything we packed for Texas. Then while they were in the wash, we went next door to the UPS store (with PLENTY of loading and unloading space) bought a box and through our camping clothes into the box and mailed them back for only slightly more than it would've cost in luggage fees from American. Then we re-taped and shored up the poor box that we had sent our camping gear out in (but had arrived looking like it had visited an industrial blender) and mailed our camping gear back. Really, just thinking about that nice shiny UPS store standing next to the coin laundry like a beacon of hope and adequate parking - we couldn't bear to say we were camping one more night and going to try to fight our way to the UPS store in Portland to mail things back and still make our flight to Denver the next day. So with our house in order, we headed back to Portland to get a hotel room for the night in the city.
First we stopped by the local cemetery. My father's mother's ashes and his sister who died as an infant are buried in Hood River. My grandma was buried at a time when the VA side of the family couldn't make it out for the service, so Brett and I went to pay our respects at the plot. A pleasant surprise was finding out that I have family in the area and they keep the grave up with flowers for the holidays, so they had put some flowers on for Memorial Day since it's also my grandfather's marker and he was a vet. It was all around a really nice visit and time of remembrance.
On our way back we went back on the historic highway and stopped at the Bonneville Dam (check out the movie here). They're open for visitors to come and look at the salmon ladders and they have a lot of educational information about what they do to conserve the environment. One of the more obvious is that the salmon in the area need to swim upstream to spawn when the time comes, so they've build a series of platforms that they have to fight over (they always pick the hardest way to go) that will get them around the damn. Then they replaced the turbines in the dam so the little "Fingerling" fish that are the product of the spawn can make it back to the sea without getting hurt. You can sit, as we did, for hours and just watch the fish swim by in underwater viewing areas. One guy even sits by everyone and counts the species as each one goes by. There were quite a few fish while we were there - and it wasn't even peak spawning season. I'm sure that gets to be a hectic job during those months.
Unfortunately the old power house was closed, so we didn't get to tour that but we did get some fun pictures of giant sized circuit pieces for Brett to show his Electricity and Magnetism class.
After touring the damn and watching the fish, we headed over to the Bonneville Fish Hatchery. It's a project run by the hydroelectric company as a way to help the environment. Native Americans still have fishing rights along the Columbia but because of human intervention the fish populations have never fully recovered. In order to help with that, the hatchery takes some of the spawning salmon out of the fish ladder and uses them to make nurseries full of fish that they can reintroduce. They do the same with the rainbow trout when it's not salmon spawning season. For a quarter you can feed the baby trout a handful of fish food - which we did. But having seen "Dirty Jobs" I can say - I washed my hands immediately afterward. I know what that stuff is made of! :D They also have a pond where they keep a few prize specimens including Herman the 11' 70-year-old sturgeon and a couple of 3' rainbow trout. Talk about crazy! The trout were so large their bodies were arced and they couldn't hold their tails up. Mostly Brett just licked his chops and wondered if they would still taste as good. :D
Links to pics here







