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Smith/Pendleton Residence/Studio

Architect: Ned Sawyer

Year: 1981

Ned Sawyer designed this home in 1981 for Dr. Dubrow and his artistic wife, Gail. The H-shaped plan features a central atrium and was designed around mature trees already on the vacant site. Careful placement of glass minimizes solar heat gain while maximizing privacy. The triangular conversation pit is a big attraction at parties. The large studio with greenhouse-style northern light is any artist’s dream. The home is now owned by an architect/artist couple. Improvements include a new deck and art in the atrium. The home features art by Nancy Pendleton, Alan Hochman, Otto Rigan, Gary Slatter, Sherri Belassen, Frank Iberra, Many Ann Kalinsky, Joe Ray and James Cook.

 

Model-Zach, Ivre, Shannon

Jewlery-Katie Bailey Free Time Industries

Styling-Osiris Navaro

Makeup-Angel Dorr

CAMP PENDLETON, Calif. (March 1, 2013) - Cpl. Thomas Brun of Germany shoots the ball during a wheelchair basketball match. Nearly 300 Marines from the Wounded Warrior Regiment, in addition to veterans and allies, are competing in the Trials, which include swimming, wheelchair basketball, sitting volleyball, track and field, archery, cycling and shooting. The top 50 performing Marines will earn the opportunity to compete on the All-Marine Warrior Games Team in Colorado Springs, Colo., in May. (Photo by Patrick Onofre)

CAMP PENDLETON, Calif. (March 1, 2013) - Nearly 300 Marines from the Wounded Warrior Regiment, in addition to veterans and allies, are competing in the Trials, which include swimming, wheelchair basketball, sitting volleyball, track and field, archery, cycling and shooting. The top 50 performing Marines will earn the opportunity to compete on the All-Marine Warrior Games Team in Colorado Springs, Colo., in May. (Photo by Patrick Onofre)

Discontinued Native American Geometric Pattern. Black dominant background color, grey, red, white and blue. Reverses to a very striking contrasting complimentary side. Very soft, napped blanket. Black felt edging. ~80” x ~64”. 82% wool/18% cotton. I am sure pattern, although discontinued, can be easily identified. Condition of blanket is absolutely like new—like it just came out of the box. Only flaw are several very small moth damage spots, which do not detract at all as far as I am concerned. Photos attached. Beautiful blanket. Price: $250.00

Wounded, ill and injured Marines and international armed forces services participate in the USMC Warrior Games Trials at Camp Pendleton, California on March 1, 2019. (DoD Photo by Roger L. Wollenberg)

Driving to see the

 

Supporting the guys on their way back from Pendleton to MCRD, Day 2.

 

Our drive through Camp Pendleton.

 

Supporting the guys on their way back from Pendleton to MCRD, Day 2.

 

Our drive through Camp Pendleton.

Pendleton Cowl by Star Athena. Photography by Vivian Aubrey (Belletrism). Yarn: Malabrigo Lace. Knit pattern part of Stumptown Knits collection.

Creepy motel workspace. I guess you're supposed to scrawl the Great American Travel Log here.

Mud Run @ Camp Pendleton

100 percent virgin wool Umaitilla fabric Pendleton Woolen Mills Board Shirts, for men. This photo shoot is a preview of Pendleton's Fall 2011 Board Shirt Jac. They are modeled by Aaron and Desi for Greenspan's, 3405 Tweedy Blvd. South Gate, CA 90290 323 566 5124 www.greenspans.com, "Greenspan's has the world's best selection of Pendleton Board Shirts" SLM Oct. 2009. Photography by Josh Greenspan, with the cooperation of Razorbacks Barbershop, Long Beach, CA

Traditional Pendleton Serape Native American-Inspired shawl. Classic serape pattern of unbalanced stripes in varying widths.

@ Blackwater Falls State Park, West Virginia

Pendletons Island looking toward Deer Island from former Ward Pendleton homestead location - August 2007

CAMP PENDLETON, Calif. (March 1, 2013) - Nearly 300 Marines from the Wounded Warrior Regiment, in addition to veterans and allies, are competing in the Trials, which include swimming, wheelchair basketball, sitting volleyball, track and field, archery, cycling and shooting. The top 50 performing Marines will earn the opportunity to compete on the All-Marine Warrior Games Team in Colorado Springs, Colo., in May. (Photo by Patrick Onofre)

We tried turning on the right lamp.

Pendleton Underground Tours ( P.U.T.) is a non-profit corporation that started in 1989, giving tours of Pendleton’s red light district. The tour was very controversial because part of the subject matter is about gambling, the Chinese, bootlegging and prostitution. In 1990, after opening the “Cozy Rooms” bordello, Chinese jails and the Opium Den, the tour became even more questionable. The history of legal and illegal businesses operating in the same area for over 100 years makes the tour unique and like no other tour anywhere. The history of the Chinese in Eastern Oregon and their role in building the west is also unique. The tour is entertaining and interesting to all ages from 6 years old to 95 years old there is something for every member of the family. P.U.T. has become Eastern Oregon’s #1 year around tourist attraction. A tour that people once questioned, has now been featured on television and radio shows around the world. The great success and popularity of P.U.T. is the wonderful well-trained and educated Historians who guide tourists back in time to learn history that isn’t taught in school, but was very much a part of the early west and the lives of our ancestors. According to P.U.T. nothing is artificial or fabricated / Pendleton is a city and the county seat of Umatilla County, Oregon. A European-American commercial center began to develop here in 1851, when Dr. William C. McKay established a trading post at the mouth of McKay Creek. A United States Post Office named Marshall (for the owner, and sometime gambler, of another local store) was established April 21, 1865, and later renamed Pendleton, after politician and diplomat George H. Pendleton (1825–1889), who served as a U.S. Representative and Senator from Ohio. The city was incorporated by the Oregon Legislative Assembly on October 25, 1880. By 1900, Pendleton was the fourth-largest city in Oregon. The Pendleton Woolen Mills and Pendleton Round Up became features of the city captured in early paintings by Walter S. Bowman. Like many cities in Eastern Oregon, where thousands of Chinese immigrant workers built the transcontinental railroad, it had a flourishing Chinatown that developed as the workers settled here. The sector is supposed to have been underlain by a network of tunnels, which are now a tourist attraction. The authenticity as a Chinese tunnel system has been questioned. The town is the cultural center of Eastern Oregon. Pendleton's "Old town" is listed as a Historic District on the National Register of Historic Places. The Confederated Tribes of the Umatilla Indian Reservation (CTUIR) have their property nearby. They have established the Wildhorse Resort & Casino and golf course on the reservation to generate revenue for development and welfare. They have also built the Tamástslikt Cultural Institute, for education and interpretation of their cultures. Pendleton Woolen Mills is a maker of wool blankets, shirts, and an assortment of other woolen goods. Founded in 1909 by Clarence, Roy and Chauncey Bishop, the company built upon earlier businesses related to the many sheep ranches in the region. A wool-scouring plant opened in Pendleton in 1893 to wash raw wool for shipping. In 1895, the scouring mill was converted into a mill that made wool blankets and robes for Native Americans. Both businesses failed to survive, but the Bishops, with the help of a local bond issue, enlarged the mill and improved its efficiency. They developed a successful line of garments and blankets with "vivid colors and intricate patterns."

Pictured: Pendleton wheat grower Tom Sorey (left) and NRCS agronomist Nick Sirovatka discuss Tom's conservation plan.

 

PENDLETON, Ore. – Sometimes you just can’t keep doing things the old way. That’s Tom Sorey’s approach to farming 6,000 acres of winter wheat in Pendleton, Oregon.

 

“The biggest challenge in this area is going from the old style to a conservation-minded method,” Tom says. “I’m working against a 100-year tradition, where things were always done a certain way for generations.”

 

Tom is a fourth generation farmer. He took over the farm in 1990, building on the legacy of his father, grandfather and great grandfather. And now, in an industry increasingly reliant on science and technology, Tom wants to find the right balance between tradition and tech to help the land—and his bottom line.

 

For the last few years, Tom has been transitioning the land from a conventional summer fallow to a chemical fallow system. He’s working with his local USDA Natural Resources Conservation Service (NRCS) through the Conservation Stewardship Program (CSP) to help make the change.

 

It’s been a challenge so far, especially since Tom’s land only receives 10 to 12 inches of annual rainfall. Even so, he’s determined to find a solution.

 

“I believe there are two types of conservation: ground conservation and operator conservation,” Tom says. “I’m working to find the right balance between the two. CSP helps keep the ball rolling as I make the transition to chemical fallow.”

 

Housing wasn't prepared before we got to Camp Pendleton in Jan 05, so they put us in this hotel just outside the main gate.

 

Edit: Since we stayed here it has been bought by another chain and remodeled from my understanding.

From Jenny Walker Sisson; one of the Pendleton-Gazette Facebook visitors: This years parade was exceptional! Everyone took time to really decorate the floats and all the pink shows what a great community we have. And, we won the game!!!

Notice the face in this finial on Pendleton Hall (see note).

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