
Another locum; in the west. This time at Washington State University, the home of the Cougars, in Pullman Washington; 8 miles from Moscow, Idaho. I've been trying to get a handle on the terrain in this area since we started talking about coming here. Although several people mentioned the wheat, soybeans and field peas that are grown in this area, I was still tainted by a former faculty member from WSU who I had tried to recruit several years ago whose response was; "Why should I leave WSU when I can go bear hunting with my bow after work". Now this guy might be known to stretch the truth a bit in

fun, but that image was stuck in my mind. Our first brush with displacement occurred when we recognized Lake Michigan out the plane window just after we took off from O'Hare. We assumed it was Chicago, but then the pilot announced that it was Milwaukee (See first photo). As we flew over the northern part of the country including the Dakotas and Montana, we noticed that the cornfields started changing to more and more of the yellow squares and circles that were wheat fields. The further west we went, the larger they got. Then we recognized the cascade mountains that had become so familiar to us on our trips to Oregon. All of a sudden Georgia noticed a

mountain peak poking through the clouds. She commented that it looked like (our beloved) Mount Hood. Then another and another. We asked about them and the pilot responded that his device for remembering was RASH; Ranier, Adams, St.Helens. And Mount Baker was some where in there. So we tried to relate this with the view leaving Portland where we saw Mount Hood, and the 3 sisters. Then we came into Seattle and got a handle on all the water in and around the city that is bordered by mountains. Looks like a pretty neet place. We left Seattle on a smaller plane to fly to Spokane. On this flight we got to see the ever increasingly large wheat,

etc. fields ready for harvest. We began to see the beauty of the "amber waves of grain". Regarding wheat fields, I had Kansas and the Dakota's in mind, but that is primarily flat land. As we drove the 70+ miles from Spokane south to Pullman, we got some real up close views of these beautiful hills of amber interspersed with fields already harvested and readied for replanting. I have to wonder how they run those large machines up and down those hillsides. You can see our present ride, the red Chevy Cobalt with a wheatfield background. Now we are in Pullman where we can look out one window and see a beautiful WSU situated on a hilltop and out another to see a

wheatfield at the edge of town. I had my first day at work. Great people to work with. Nice setup for interaction and case management. I enjoyed it. Oh, I discussed walking to work with my host. He says, " I live very near where you are staying, how about I walk by and we go to work together." So we had an invigorating half hour walk to work this morning. Not to far, but pretty much up hill. Tonight after a hard day of work, we got to walk downhill. One day down and 9 more workdays to go for this trip. We have already identified more local sights to see than we will be able to work in this next weekend. One interesting fact! As we discussed coming here, the term "the Palouse"

came up. I also knew that the noble Nez Perce indians lived in this area and that they had developed the great Appaloosa Horse. So as a person who is constantly trying to tie things together, I asked this morning if there was a connection between the name Palouse and the Appaloosa horse.... Yes, that is where the name comes from. Obvously there is need for further study to unearth the richness of this piece of history.


