It was time for the wedding party to finally go their separate ways. Most of the guests left the day after the wedding. Now, two days after, the bride and groom left on their extended honeymoon that will include stops at Glacier National Park, and into Canada to Banff National Park. Jamie's mother needed a ride to the airport in Portland, so we drove her there this morning. She was taking all the extra wedding supplies and suitcases back with her, so our pickup just barely had room for her.
Of course, a rose would get extra points for the best color and pretty buds.
Extra points were awarded if a rose was multi-colored.
We didn't see all the roses in this massive garden, but we did enjoy many of them. We noticed that the gardeners were trimming some of the blooms, and Carter found an almost perfect bloom they had cut off this morning.
She had planned to take it home, as another momento from our trip. She asked the ladies trimming if she could keep it, and they told her that no roses could leave the garden. Later, we found the sign that said "removal of the roses punishable by $500.00 fine." That could have been an expensive momento!
As we drove further down the narrow old highway 30, we found some open parking spots at Horsetail Falls.
While we shared the view with others, it was nothing like the crowds at the easier-to-get-to waterfalls right along the road. We tried to continue our hike along the river gorge. But the burned trees spoiled some of the views. So we returned to Ponytail Falls. We had wandered through more of God's wonders.
We saw the crazy crowds in the Columbia River Gorge, and this was on a week-day afternoon. It would be even worse on the weekend. In order to manage that situation, the forest service started a reservation system for the parking lot closest to Multnomah falls during the popular summer season. Starting in 2025, a reservation was required to park in the lot off Highway 84. When we tried to get a reservation earlier in the day, the earliest time available was 4:00. We went to the rec.gov website to make the $2 reservation, but didn't know if we would actually stay around long enough to use it. With our hike to Ponytail Falls, it worked out that we were there longer than expected. So we circled back on I-84 to use our reservation. We were a little disappointed when there was no ranger at the parking lot to confirm we had that reservation. But when we left our car and walked through the tunnel under the road towards Multnomah Falls, they were checking for those reservations. So we found that it was possible to park here without a reservation, but you wouldn't be allowed to actually get to the falls. It was still very crowded even at 4:00, but we finally made our way to the viewpoint to look up at the famous bridge and the falls.
Since Denisa loves all kinds of fruit, and loves even more buying them directly from the people that grow them, this was an important stop in our driving tour. We enjoyed driving through the miles of orchards, with the views of the snow-capped mountains behind them. We were hurrying to get to the fruit loop, and specifically the Packers Fruit Stand before they closed at 6:00. Known for the generous samples of all their jellies and fruit products, they had already closed down their tasting stations by the time we arrived. We felt like they were hurrying us out even at 5:30, so we didn't purchase any of their peaches that were $2 each, or their cherries that were $7 per pound. Their pies were $28, and a pint of ice cream was $15, so we bought a minimum at our hurried stop.

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