The Palouse is a beautiful landscape, with its rolling hills of green during spring and gold before summer harvest. It also feel inviting, in that there is probably less barbed wire in the Palouse ...
It’s fall in the Palouse, when the sun burnishes the rolling landscape of Washington’s wheat country. But there’s a lot to the region besides farming. Here’s a scenic Palouse drive that includes a ...
This article appears in print in the October 2018 issue, as part of the Scenic Fall Road Trips cover story. Click here to subscribe. Driving east on forlorn little State Route 23 in southeastern ...
Now a resident of the Palouse, she created “Loess” as part of a larger project, “Unnamed Shapes.” ...
ALBION, Wash. — Near the small town of Albion, Washington, in the rolling farm country of the Palouse, volunteers recently planted nearly 4,000 trees and shrubs with the goal of creating habitat that ...
After being out of print for more than a decade, a masterful history of the land and people of the Palouse is back in print, and just in time for its 30th anniversary. Celebrating Palouse Country: A ...
Photographer’s description: “In June, July and August, my girlfriend walked across Washington, starting in La Push and ending at the Idaho border. I ran support for her during this time, which gave me ...
• Between 18,000 and 13,000 years ago, Glacial Lake Missoula formed near present-day Missoula, locked in by an ice dam. At its largest, the lake was deeper than 2,000 feet deep and held as much water ...
New signs at Palouse Falls State Park are blunt. “Warning — People have died here,” one says. “We want you to live — Stay back from cliff edge.” The signs and additional fencing are the latest attempt ...
Evergreen trees shrouded in a light mist, a cloudy morning with an 8 a.m. sunrise, the churning sea, the rolling hills of the Palouse: landscape takes a central role in the anthology "Evergreen: Grim ...
Researchers know that adding natural buffers to the farm landscape can stop soil from vanishing. Now a scientist has found that more buffers are better, both for pleasing the eye and slowing erosion.