n_vivida: An antique store, near Thorp, WA
n_vivida: Wind power, Washington
n_vivida: Columbia River
n_vivida: Columbia River
n_vivida: Driving through Northern Idaho
n_vivida: Montana, Big Sky Country
n_vivida: Montana, Big Sky Country
n_vivida: Missoula, Montana (T's birthplace)
n_vivida: Florence Hotel, Missoula
n_vivida: Florence Hotel, Missoula
n_vivida: Florence Hotel, Missoula (T's mother once worked here.)
n_vivida: Sunset, Missoula
n_vivida: Clark Fork River, Missoula (The river is full and muddy)
n_vivida: A fly-fishing store, Missoula
n_vivida: A yarn store, Missoula
n_vivida: Looking for Garnet, a ghost town
n_vivida: Garnet, Montana's Best-preserved ghost town
n_vivida: Every chair tells a story.
n_vivida: old wood stove
n_vivida: Logging, along with ranching and mining, was one of the most common occupations in late 19th-century Montana.
n_vivida: Even though times were hard and money was scarce, Victorian-era sensibilities demanded fancy clothes for the annual school picture.
n_vivida: baby walker
n_vivida: Another chair.
n_vivida: Game: Matching bottles with plates, Garnet Town Visitor Center
n_vivida: Montana, Big Sky Country
n_vivida: Montana, Big Sky Country
n_vivida: Both Striking Woman, Winold Reiss (1886—1953), pastel, 1927
n_vivida: Moccasins, Gros Ventre
n_vivida: Montana Historical Society, Montana's Museum, Helena, Montana