Hello. Here I am in my 60's and have never visited Oregon or Idaho. I have a new camera (Sony A7II) and would love input on "where to go, what to see" in Oregon and Idaho. I am planing an early Spring trip, flying into Portland, renting a car and driving east. Any suggestions would be very appreciated. Dave
Your pictures are great; the second one is simply fantastic.
I really dislike corn, but love your photograph. Congratulations on a fantastic picture.
Just a fantastic picture. The "grayness" of it all makes it even better. Adds a surreal feeling to it.
WOW. Just a fantastic shot. You have to frame this one.
Thank you everyone for your kind welcome. Very much appreciated. -David
Hello, and good to meet you.
WOW, talk about a small world. I ran the night defensive positions on the pass (think it was called xan von pass) overlooking Qui Nhon during Tet, 68. I transfered to the 1st Cav immediately after Tet (most of the ARVN PF's took off during Tet). Only spent 5 days in An Khe (3 in processing and 2 going out). I worked the battalion TOC (tactical Operations Center) for 1st Battalion, 7th Cavalry out of Camp Evans and was part of the move to Tay Ninh (near Cambodian border) in November. 68. Thanks again for your service, and Welcome Home.
Thank you for your service and your son. I am smiling over your old NCO's jealous and envious comment about the 1st Cav Patch. For what its worth, the 11th had tracks, we had helicopters.
No Sir. It's the 1st Cavalry Division (1st Bn, 7th Cav). The patch is bright yellow with a black horse head above a slanted black line.
Where did you take R&R? I did Sydney, AUS in 1968. I can still remember the lady's name.
May I strongly suggest you add a battery operated "small" GPS unit and a little notebook. Often, one forgets where a picture was taken. A quick note with coordinates refreshes memories, and years from now, when you are old and gray, and someone asks, "where was that?" You'll be able to "remember."
Hi there. Just joined this site and want to introduce myself. Recently retired with a new Sony A7II. Sure beats my old 35mm that I bought at a PX in Vietnam in 1968. I am looking to make new friends here and hope to join the 21st century regarding "modern" cameras. I'm in Philadelphia.