What's All This About, Then?
(aka Your Many Questions Indelicately Answered)
(hint #1: scroll down and this won't be as hard to read. You're welcome.)
We go on trips. Road trips. Other trips. But mostly road trips. Sometimes (ideally) long ones. Sometimes not.
Yes, this is the same blog as the one about the Oregon Trail. Yes, it used to have a stagecoach and a dusty feel to it, which went along with the Oregon Trail very nicely. Yes, that was a great trip. That was three years ago. (the blog is still here if you want to read it...it starts here)
So...as we embark on the latest chapter of our roamin' ways, we want to invite you to come along. First, we might get lonely. I mean, we don't really get lonely much, but it's possible. Second, you might miss us. Third, you just might be nosy. And fourth, we are notoriously and and historically bad at sending postcards, circulating photos, keeping up with a scrapbook; as a matter of fact, with documenting our trip in most every way. We figured this might be the 21st century solution. It worked for the last trip, which was (as you know) three years ago (sniff). So we're keeping it going.
We hope you'll pop in, read about where we are, what we're doing, see photos of our adventures, and experience our gypsy hardships (like no room service) vicariously! Most importantly, we hope you'll add your comments and greetings, which we will get when we get to one of our stopping points. Souvenir requests will receive due consideration (Hint #1: Success is highly correlated with tackiness).
For those so inclined (you know who you are), we will also list links to related sites so that you can learn with us as we learn on the road, and maybe visit some of the same sights in the future!
Happy Trails to us all!
Love, Phoebe and Robin
Sunday, August 5, 2007
The Blues
After a rousing breakfast at an aptly named local place, we took off for the National Oregon Trail Interpretive Center. While it was a great place, and its location was beautiful, I would have to respectfully disagree that this was the museum "not to be missed", as suggested by several sources. We didn't find it as interactive as we imagined, though the displays and the movies were good. To be fair, there is a lot of repetition for us, as it is assumed that few people have been on anywhere near the whole trail, and therefore they would have not been to the various interpretive centers and museums along the way. For example, we went to one presentation on food and cooking along the trail, and they asked how many in the group of about 40 had been to Independence Rock, and Phoebe and I were two of the three who had. Phoebe got called on to tell people about it, which was thrilling.
The one thing we learned a lot about in this particular museum that we hadn't seen before was the written guides that emigrants followed as they traversed the trail--very interesting stuff, with advice about how and where to cross rivers, what to bring, how to deal with different situations. We bought a reproduction copy of one of those guides, so that we could read it more thoroughly.
Today, we saw our first sight of tall pine trees--lots of 'em in the Blue Mountains--and wondered at how the pioneers must have felt seeing such a sight after months crossing the dry prairie. Phoebe immediately pointed out that the childrens' job of walking next to the wagon and collecting buffalo chips to make fires was over (for now, at least) as the forest meant that firewood was plentiful. There are many diaries that speak of how struck they were by the area's beauty. It was a relief even to us, and our journey has been so painless by comparison.
When we arrived in Pendleton (home of the famed wool shirts and blankets), we headed straight for the Tamastslikt Cultural Center, imagining that we could take it in in the hour and a half we had before it closed. Ha! This is a wonderful (and large!) place, the only interpretive center on the entire trail that is owned by Indians. This photo was taken in their garden, at the beginning of a large display of tipi-like structures that illustrates the evolution of housing over the history of the tribes--this is one of the oldest. Just for a little perspective--the Oregon Trail pioneers were here about 150 years ago. These peoples report that they have lived here for 10,000 years. History, like all things, is surely relative.
The museum focuses exclusively on the culture of the surrounding Indian tribes, the impact on the Indians of the westward expansion, and the importance of preservation of language, traditions, and culture. We are going back tomorrow in order to try to take more of it in, and maybe, just maybe, to buy a few hanks of gorgeous seed beeds available in the store there (I can't help myself). There is spectacular beadwork on display in the museum. I've put a link to the center in the links section, so you can read more about it. It was wonderful to spend a good portion of a day (and then another day) focusing on the story from a different angle, from a different voice. I was very moved by what I saw so far, and look forward to seeing it at less than a sprinter's pace, as well as to have the time to talk with Phoebe about what all of this means.
One last note...at the gift shop at Tamastslikt, I found a picture book to share with Phoebe (and hopefully with some of you), called The Great Change.
It's a Native American story, with beautiful watercolor illustrations, in which a grandmother explains death to her granddaughter, when the child asks why things die, and most pointedly why her grandfather had to die. She explains that it must happen so that the circle of life will not be broken. It jumped out at me from the shelf, and I flipped open to a page on which the grandmother says that "...the 'special part' of Grandpa became part of everything that lives, my girl!". And it was done--as you can imagine.
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4 comments:
Dear Robin, What a beautiful book about a grandfather and the circle of life! What wonderful timing, but that's how things happen! I have enjoyed the writings, details and photos so much! Thank you for the diligence you both have had to share this trip with us, and be able to remember it later, too!
Chris
I can't wait to hear more about the Indian experience and your conversations with Phoebe about it. The book looks marvelous. I've looked at the link, and it's fabulous.
Wow, you two have been very busy this last week. At this point, I think Phoebe could work at that Center!
That book looks like a treasure - glad you found it.
We are just back from Family Week in Provincetown, where we missed seeing all of you.
Safe travels and thanks for including us all.
Thanks, everyone for writing! Hope the meeting tonight went well, Chris--let me know what happened.
And especially great to see you back here, Ellen, Nancy & Lily! Delighted that you're still reading! We missed seeing you at Family Week too--how was it this year with the Rosie-fication? (especially missed that floating lounge chair!!)
Robin
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