The South Riding RV Travels

571

25th May 2010 - Clarkston WA to Bonners Ferry ID Washington

Washington is more prosperous than Idaho and has lower taxes. So the bulk of the business is in Clarkston rather than Lewiston. We returned across the Snake River through Lewiston and headed north again. The camp site has a pleasant outlook.
Taking the road and railroad across a river carrying shipping is a challenge, hence this old lifting bridge across the Clearwater river which joins the Snake at this point.
We quickly climbed high above the two towns and looked down and tried to trace the path of the old road. It is tortuous now, let alone in 1917 when the 10 mile grade was first built. We are at 2756ft.
Steamboats ran from 1866 to 1940 to these ports. Serious river transport restarted in 1975.
We think this is maybe rush skeleton weed - one of a number of invasive species which are causing a serious problem here.
One of the many neat looking farms on the endless prairie. It could almost be Amish owned since the style is right and there is a strong Amish and Mennonite presence here.
The next town up is Moscow. This is the city hall. Moscow is also home to Idaho State University, a very old institution.
We had a brief side trip to Potlatch, once home to the largest timber mill in the US. I thought we might find a Shay locomotive but we only found the railway station.
We did pass a nursery on the way out back to the main road. It is all conifer timber around here.
Jan liked the name of this tiny town. McCroskey state park is 4500 acres given to the state. The state accepted providing the benefactor maintained it for 15 years first. He was 79 at the time and faithfully maintained the park and its road until he died aged 94.
And so to Coeur D'Alene, a prosperous major town in the north of Idaho. It looks and feels like many small US cities. US 90 crosses our road here. We had thought to stop to visit Dawson Gardens but it turned out to be a suburb not a garden.
So we continued north towards Bonner's Ferry. We were joined by the twin tracks of the railroad heading over the border. This was the pusher loco at the back end of about 150 grain cars. It took about 10 minutes for us to overtake it.
This is at Sandpoint on the shores of Lake Pend Oreille, once the home to a 2 mile long wooden trestle bridge. This railway bridge is the third bridge to have been built and we are on the fourth, a road bridge. All are now sadly in concrete and steel.