Eyehike Gallery

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A tugboat pushes a barge against the wind and the current moving cargo upriver as far as Idaho.

aan.jpg Signs near Recognition Plaza and at Cottonwood Beach tell about Lewis and Clark's encampment in 1806.ThumbnailsLooking downriver from Cottonwood Beach shows the river banks to be mostly free from development.Signs near Recognition Plaza and at Cottonwood Beach tell about Lewis and Clark's encampment in 1806.ThumbnailsLooking downriver from Cottonwood Beach shows the river banks to be mostly free from development.Signs near Recognition Plaza and at Cottonwood Beach tell about Lewis and Clark's encampment in 1806.ThumbnailsLooking downriver from Cottonwood Beach shows the river banks to be mostly free from development.Signs near Recognition Plaza and at Cottonwood Beach tell about Lewis and Clark's encampment in 1806.ThumbnailsLooking downriver from Cottonwood Beach shows the river banks to be mostly free from development.Signs near Recognition Plaza and at Cottonwood Beach tell about Lewis and Clark's encampment in 1806.ThumbnailsLooking downriver from Cottonwood Beach shows the river banks to be mostly free from development.Signs near Recognition Plaza and at Cottonwood Beach tell about Lewis and Clark's encampment in 1806.ThumbnailsLooking downriver from Cottonwood Beach shows the river banks to be mostly free from development.Signs near Recognition Plaza and at Cottonwood Beach tell about Lewis and Clark's encampment in 1806.ThumbnailsLooking downriver from Cottonwood Beach shows the river banks to be mostly free from development.

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