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the gorge camping in all her glory

From Sasquatch Music Fest, 2017

#theshins

During Day 3 of the Sasquatch! Music Festival at the Gorge Amphitheater in Washington State, May 25, 2009.

Photo by Josh Lovseth

© www.soundonthesound.com - a seattle music blog

Photo Credit: Brittney Bush Bollay for KEXP

 

Listen to the full concert here: n.pr/mry8NU

Photo Credit: Mito Habe-Evans/NPR

 

Hear highlights from the concert here: n.pr/llWBi8

Photo Credit: James Bailey for KEXP

 

Find NPR music's entire coverage from the 2011 Sasquatch Music Festival here: www.npr.org/sasquatch/

 

Sasquatch sighting at Crater Lake

Sasquatch Festival

Gorge Amphitheatre, George, WA

2008-05-24

Photo Credit: Alex Crick for KEXP

 

Listen to and download the full concert here: n.pr/moOw6t

From Sasquatch Music Fest, 2017

#aesoprock

This was one of many art projects using and astronaut form with creative embellishments.

Neko Case and her band are troopers. They played for quite some time into the storm.

Sasquatch! Music Festival on May 28, 2011

Photo Credit: James Bailey for KEXP

 

Find NPR music's entire coverage from the 2011 Sasquatch Music Festival here: www.npr.org/sasquatch/

 

From Sasquatch Music Fest, 2017

#aesoprock

Photo Credit: James Bailey for KEXP

 

Find NPR music's entire coverage from the 2011 Sasquatch Music Festival here: www.npr.org/sasquatch/

 

Photo Credit: Alex Crick for KEXP

 

Listen to and download the full concert here: n.pr/jjiTIG

 

Photo Credit: Mito Habe-Evans/NPR

 

Find NPR music's entire coverage from the 2011 Sasquatch Music Festival here: www.npr.org/sasquatch/

  

Photo Credit: Alex Crick for KEXP

 

Find NPR music's entire coverage from the 2011 Sasquatch Music Festival here: www.npr.org/sasquatch/

 

Leon is a friendly and gentle Yeti. He'd like to be your friend today. Just be careful, he's been known to crush a few friends because he just has too much love to give.

photographed for the Stranger at the Gorge during Sasquatch 2014. [ slog.thestranger.com ]

Sasquatch Festival

Gorge Amphitheatre, George, WA

2008-05-25

Since it was dark, setting up camp wasn't the easiest. We survived.

Sasquatch Festival 2014

Pocono Raceway. Pennsylvania 2015.

A representative soil profile of a Sasquatch soil. These soils form in colluvium and residuum derived from sandstone and mudstone. The thick, dark surface is the dominant feature of soils that form under a thick cover of swordfern. (Soil Survey of Redwood National and State Parks, California; by Joseph P. Seney and Alaina C. Frazier, Natural Resources Conservation Service, and James H. Popenoe, Department of the Interior, National Park Service, Retired)

 

The Sasquatch series consists of very deep, well drained soils that formed in colluvium and residuum derived from sandstone and mudstone. Sasquatch soils are on mountains and hills and have slopes of 5 to 75 percent. The mean annual precipitation is approximately 2030 millimeters (80 inches) and the mean annual temperature is approximately 11 degrees C (52 degrees F).

 

TAXONOMIC CLASS: Fine-loamy, mixed, superactive, isomesic Typic Palehumults

 

Soil moisture: The soil is usually moist in all parts in the soil moisture control section in most years, but becomes dry in the upper part for a time less than 30 days cumulative from approximately September 15 to October 15 in most years. The soils have an udic moisture regime.

Soil temperature: The mean annual soil temperature at 50 centimeters is 10 to 13 degrees C (50 to 55 degrees F). The difference between mean summer and mean winter temperature is 2 to 4 degrees C. The soils have an isomesic temperature regime.

Base Saturation: between 15 and 35 percent by sum of cations at 125 centimeters below the upper boundary of the argillic horizon.

Reaction: moderately to very strongly acid throughout.

Organic matter: greater than 0.9 percent organic carbon in the upper 15 centimeters of the argillic horizon.

Umbric Epipedon: 25 to 110 centimeters

Particle-Size Control Section (weighted average):

Rock fragments: 0 to 35 percent gravel, 0 to 7 percent cobbles, and 0 to 20 percent paragravels.

Clay content: 27 to 35 percent.

 

USE AND VEGETATION: This soil has been used for commercial timber production, wildlife, and watershed. Natural vegetation includes redwood, Douglas-fir, tanoak, western hemlock, Sitka spruce, rhododendron, evergreen huckleberry, redwood sorrel, and sword fern.

 

DISTRIBUTION AND EXTENT: California Coastal Redwood Belt; MLRA 4B. The series is not extensive.

 

For additional information about the survey area, visit:

www.nrcs.usda.gov/Internet/FSE_MANUSCRIPTS/california/CA6...

 

For a detailed soil description, visit:

soilseries.sc.egov.usda.gov/OSD_Docs/S/SASQUATCH.html

 

For acreage and geographic distribution, visit:

casoilresource.lawr.ucdavis.edu/see/#sasquatch

 

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