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A plant found commonly in Alaska which closely resembles the Cow Parsnip. Both have broad leaves but Devil's Club develops berries in late summer while Cow Parsnip has white flowers. This plant will sink its teeth in if you grab hold. The prickly spines will embed themselves into the skin. A cousin of ginseng which is being researched as a treatment for blood sugar issues like diabetes. Beware of bears that love the berries. Oplopanax horridus
3. Meisterschaftsrunde, Herren 5. Liga KF:
Red Devils – UHC Tuggen-Reichenburg II 11:2
Steg, Pfäffikon.
© Rico Züger
Country Devils at the 2013 Hot August Blues & Roots Music Festival in Cockeysville, Maryland. Photo by Kathleen Hill.
I'm in a wacky dance group called The Devil-Ettes. My hubbby has a kid's indie pop band called The Time Outs. We both got to perform together at this year's Maker's Faire. It was pretty fun!
Pictures PROPERTY of Steve Gunn (c)shotbyagunn photography DO NOT COPY OR USE WITHOUT OWNERS PERMISSION
Hells Canyon Motorcycle Rally in Historic Baker City
Hells Canyon Motorcycle Rally the second weekend of July in historic Baker City, Oregon. Riding the many scenic byways and back roads through Baker County including the Hells Canyon Scenic Byway and the infamous Devils Tail along the cliffs of the Snake River to the bottom of Hells Canyon. For more information about the Hells Canyon Motorcycle Rally visit www.hellscanyonrally.com.
For more information about other Baker County events and attractions including Baker County’s three spectacular Oregon Scenic Byways, visit the Baker County tourism website at www.basecampbaker.com or like www.facebook.com/basecampbaker
The food pantry will be open to all students who struggle with food insecurity. They will have the opportunity to pick up non-perishable items in a shopping-style format.
Devils Postpile National Monument - lava was at the bottom & middle of a glacier & formed perfect Hexagonal Columns as the basalt lava erupted into the ice. Absolutely amazing. At the very top the tops are glass smooth by touch as a result of the glacier polishing them & in some pictures you can see the markings from the glacier movements on the rock faces. — with Chris Smith at Devils Postpile National Monument.
The Devils Postpile is a dark cliff of columnar basalt near Mammoth Mountain in eastern California. The postpile was created by a lava flow sometime with the last 100,000 and 700,000 years. The source of the lava is thought to have been somewhere near Upper Soda Springs campground at the north end of Pumice Flat on the floor of the Middle Fork of the San Joaquin River, from where it flowed to the site of the Postpile, was impounded by a moraine, and reached a thickness of 400 to 600 feet. The lava that now makes up the Postpile was near the bottom of this mass.
Because of its great thickness, much of the mass of pooled lava cooled slowly and evenly, which is why the columns are so long and so symmetrical. Columnar jointing occurs when certain types of lava cool - the joints develop when the lava contracts during the cooling process.
In 1911, President Howard Taft made the area into a United States National Monument. The John Muir Trail and Pacific Crest Trail pass through the monument.
The columns average 2 ft in diameter (the largest being 3.5 ft) and many are up to 60 ft long. Together they look like tall posts stacked in a pile, hence the feature's name. Compared with other examples of columnar jointing, the Postpile has more hexagonal columns than most.