The Ever Fashionable Multnomah Falls #14
Two weeks till Multnomah Falls Makeover!
We are Counting Down!
If you were a raised planting bed with over pruned shrubs and overun by invasive weeds just steps away from the spray of Multnomah Falls, and tucked right between the architectural gem of Multnomah Falls Lodge and the world famous Historic Colombia River Hwy, you’d want a makeover too!
Saturday April 28th will be the first weekend for viewing the new plantings at the Multnomah Falls Lodge Plaza!
To celebrate we want to share some of the wonderful and interesting images that show how the falls have changed over the years. Actually, Multnomah falls hasn’t changed much at all, but the people have and with them the fashion! Oh the Fashion! You have to see what people were wearing for a day trip to the Gorge in 1930! And then, you have to plan yours!
But, before you go, read our Multnomah Falls Plant a Day posts to learn more about our favorite native plants for Multnomah Falls and your garden. The first post is already up!
Its going to be a busy two weeks! I can’t think of a better way to kick off spring.
The Ever Fashionable Multnomah Falls #15
The caption for this photo reads:
Multnomah Falls Viewers: 1937
I took this with a Super Ikomat A during a family trip from Ohio to Oregon in our 1937 Ford. The falls, along the Columbia River east of Portland, are the same today, but the fashions have surely changed.
I found 8,000+ Flickr tags for Multnomah Falls. Most images far better than this, but no people from the 1930’s”
Taken by Don O’brian. Click on the photo to see more of his flicker photo collection.
Kahoots is WBE & ESB Certified!
As a certified Women Business Enterprise and and a Teir -1 Emerging Small Business its easier than ever for us to serve our clients, colleagues and projects. Just one more way Kahoots is conspiring to create landscapes for the imaginative soul.
Introducing Mud Pie Play!
The Story of My First Fort
This week I’ve been drawing up some presentation boards on the value of imaginative play. It got me thinking about the first time I made a fort. Could I even remember? And then it dawned on me! It wasn’t me that built it!
My mom and dad had bought a new refrigerator one summer and mom took the card board refrigerator box along with some smaller boxes and showed me how to cut and tape them together to create a cave with windows and doors and secret hiding places. I was amazed and delighted at the transformation!
Do you remember your first fort? Tell us about it in the comments! Even better, draw us a picture and send it to us! We’ll post some of our favorites!
A Plant Moment.
I had a plant moment today.
What’s a plant moment? I was introduced to plant moments down at the UofO in plants class where we learned to not just remember plant names but to really respond to their unique qualities and beauty.
It was a homework assignment to illustrate and share a plant moment with the class. Mine was the fuchsia pink of the Flowering Dogwood in front of my parents house. I hated pink as a kid, but I could never stop staring out the window at that gorgeous hot pink explosion that happened every year around the 5th of May.
I was lucky to have many plant moments as a child. My mother would often find me climbing a tree while wearing my favorite dress. I relished my time amidst the branches of our Port Orford Cedars. I would peer out over the houses enjoying the view of the emerging suburban forest in our 40 year old neighborhood.
Other times I could be found lying in the grass looking up at the dark branching patterns of the black locust trees with their tiny leaves waving back at me. Or leaping about trying to catch yellow leaf as fell to the ground. My senses were mesmerized. A feeling that as an adult I find I have to work at, came so easily as a child.
Today it was easy. My plant moment came while looking out another window. My new apartment is on the third floor and looks out over the houses and tree canopies of another neighborhood. There are also three Honey Locusts right in front of my window and I find my eyes forever content to follow the winding patterns of their branches or watch the clouds float behind their dark silhouette.
What a gift it is to have a home that sits in the canopy of the trees again. Sort of my own grown up tree house.
Whats the view out your window? When was the last time you had a plant moment?
Where’s Your Camp Trading Post?
Camp Trading Posts are a favorite stop for young campers. I remember making the daily trek to check out what candy was available or to consider which T-shirt I wanted to buy before camp was over. It wasn’t often as a child that I had discretionary money to spend without my mom or dad standing over my shoulder. The camp store is an experience for campers. It’s where much of your branding comes to fruition and it’s an important source of camp revenue.
So where is it?
- Do campers see the store on their way to dinning hall every day?
- Do they get to linger at picnic tables nearby and eat their ice cream bars with a group of excited campers, all tasting that sweet independence of spending their camp allowance?
- Are camp wares displayed and easily visible? Are they available online too?
- Does it carry the wares your campers want to buy? (Check out FDL Camp Solutions for some more great ideas for making your Trading Post more profitable.)
- Is your store clearly signed? Does it’s “look” match your mission and brand?
Where your camp store is and how it’s designed is an important piece of it’s success as memorable part of the camping experience and its profitability.
Interview with I Live Here: PDX
American Camps Association Master Planning Presentation
It was such a treat yesterday to visit sunny Newport Beach California along with Martha Snyder and share the process of creating a Master Plan for Idyllwild Pines Camp with the camping community. It was a great discussion about big ideas and practical application, funding, and meeting your mission. I was reminded again that creating a master plan can seem so daunting at just the moment when it is most needed. Idyllwild Pines Camp get’s it and Martha did a great job sharing their story.
I am inspired and even more eager to give camps the courage and a clear path to Master Plan development.