From Fallon, we traveled to Twin Falls, Idaho. We stayed at Carol Sherman's place, called Western Barns. Carol was not the most hospitable host we have experienced. I asked if she had an outhouse and she offered that the closest gas station was about two miles away or I was welcome to use one of the horse stalls. There wasn't any real riding nearby, but she said we could ride in the sugar beet fields behind her house. So, we did. This was an interesting experience as the sugar beet fields were crisscrossed with irrigation canals. The smell of sugar clung to our clothes. It felt like we were riding through cotton candy. It also was a bit of struggle keeping the horses from grabbing snatches of sugar beet to eat.
We went to the local IHOP for breakfast this morning. The waitress asked Ari how he wanted his eggs. Ari said, "Cooked". I had to explain to him that she meant scrambled, fried, sunny side up or over easy. The food was so slow getting to our table, the waitress kept coming over to apologize. After thirty minutes, she comped our orange juice. After 45 minutes, she came by to tell us she was giving us 10% off our meal. We weren't complaining, we were just sitting there. We figured if the kitchen took too long we would eventually get the entire meal for free.
On the way to our next stop - Pocatello, Idaho - we went to the Sawtooth National Forest. This was about three hours out of our way. The last hour was spent on a dirt road going between 10 and 20 mph. At one point, I got so frustrated by how long it was taking that I pulled the rig over to the side of the road and told Ari we could get to the forest faster if we rode there on horseback. So, we tacked up and tried to ride there and almost immediately hit a cattle guard. A cattle guard, for those of you who are unfamiliar, is a series of pipes laid parallel to each other. Cattles can't cross it because their legs will fall between the cracks and get stuck. Horses can't cross a cattle guard either without breaking a leg. So, we sucked it up, reloaded the horses and drove the remaining distance into the park.
It was worth the drive. The horses loved the trails. Oberon couldn't get enough of the grass. There was a nice creek that ran through the park. At one point on the trail, we found a catfish that had gotten caught trying to go downstream and had gotten hung up on the rocks. Ari dismounted, picked up the catfish and placed him downstream from the rocks.
We are in Pocatello tonight. Our horses are sharing a box stall at a barn in town. The barn is located near the race track and so Oberon and Laertes are bunking down with a bunch of race horses. They are sharing the same box stall because Oberon went nuts when we separated the two horses into stalls next to each other. Once Oberon was placed in the same stall as Laertes, he calmed down considerably.
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The Snake River near Twin Falls, Idaho |
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Shoshone Falls - Idaho claims this is the Yosemite of the area. While the falls are beautiful and impressive, Yosemite has nothing to fear - their reputation and beauty exceeds the Shoshone Falls. |
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Riding in the Sawtooth National Forest |
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Getting ready to ride in the Sawtooth National Forest |
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In the Sawtooth National Forest |
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We stopped to get some more feed for the horses in Kimberly, Idaho. The feed store had bins with chicks (1.50 each). If you hold one up to your ear, you hear "cheep cheep cheep". |
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Getting the horses ready to load up |
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The Perrine Bridge over the Snake River in Twin Falls, Idaho | | | |
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Tomorrow we plan to ride in the Cherry Springs Nature Reserve south of Pocatello and then head to Driggs and the Grand Teton Mountains.
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