Part III: The Illustrated "Zen & the Art of Motorcycle Maintenance" Chapters 16 thru 26.  

Although This Is Clearly a Logging Road, It May Or May Not ,Have Been the Narrator’s.

…[.“The logging road is sandy, so I keep in low gear with feet out to prevent a spill. We see side roads off the main logging road but I stay on the main one until after about a mile we come to some bulldozers. That means they’re still logging here. We turn back and head up one of the side roads. After about half a mile we come to a tree fallen across the road. That’s good. That means this road has been abandoned.“ ] (Cont.Next)

Alternate Dirt Logging Road, Forested Mountains, Lochsa River Canyon, ID. Starting at Lolo Pass, this was the second available turnoff I found. But as shown /\ Above /\ Photo, this logging road has logs, a view of the highway, and looks less like what the Narrator calls “dirt road.” For these reasons, this is less likely to be the Narrator’s choice. ..
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….*** (Interesting Added Information About Lewis & Clark.)***

…. “Nearly All The Men Sick!” Lewis and Clark Meet [And Eat] The Camas Root. By Frances Hunter July 26, 2011.
….But when The Lewis & Clark Corps stumbled half-starved from the Rocky Mountains and onto the Weippe Prairie in September 1805, they were ready to eat anything. It was then that the Nez Perce introduced them to a new Native American staple: the camas root. Click Here To Read This Very Good Article, With 5 Good Photos Of Camas. For Suggesting This Article, thanks go to David J Matos, Our ZMMQ Facebook Creator, Who Knows Lots About Lewis & Clark!

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(Photo = 110-1070z.5 ...... ZMM Page = 243 ...... WayPt = 265i1. Photo at 269w 2376ft)


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