SHOW us YOUR PIX here .... Odd, WeiRd ,UnUSuAl or EyE CaTchIng things from your rides

what's wrong with this picture? it looks like its off one of the nike bike rentals. but how often do you see a missing bike with the battery left behind?
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With harvest season in full swing, we typically see more local traffic along the narrow stretches of rural roads where we ride. This large combine with its high-capacity grain header is much too wide to legally transit to another nearby field so it simply detaches and tows it from behind.

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I didn't have this on my bingo card for Tuesday.

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Maybe this owl heard about the US Fish and Wildlife plan for mass extermination of barred owls. If word spreads I imagine the raptor response could reach Hitchcockian proportions.

 
Watched this hunk truck loose its loads right in traffic.
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Hard to imagine someone who's hauled junk for money even twice driving off with a load like that.

A different made-up story popped into my head. Looks more like part of a household than random junk on the white SUV. A lot of low- and even middle-income people are getting pushed out of their apartments and homes these days — sometimes through no fault of their own.

This is what it looks when that happens to someone with no experience and no mechanical sense. You don't develop much of the latter growing up on screens.
 
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There was a small plane crash 2 miles from the Troutdale Airport about an hour before we got here. The vertical line was where we were and the horizontal was to the airport 2 miles away. I was surprised I did not see the smoke it took out 4 houses and power to 10,000 we were headed to the airport to see the planes land and then ride a path next to a slough
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A couple of days ago, we came across this dried-out bed underneath a road bridge nearby the route where we ride. We’ve had very little moisture over the summer and this is further proof to how dire it’s been. The water that you see originated from the nearby wetlands that inhabit the roadside ditches and fields. We had no idea that there were even fish living among the cat tails and marsh grasses. Since these fish aren’t native, I suspect people were releasing their aquarium captives into the water where they flourished and as a result multiplied until their untimely demise.

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The majority of motorists that pass us along rural roads and highways have been accommodating to say the least. Occasionally we’ll have a few close calls particularly with those who drive larger vehicles. Trucks and trailers hauling grain during this time of the season are a common sight and as long as they respect the lateral distance between and decrease their speed when overtaking then it’s all good.

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On roads where marked shoulders do not exist then it becomes more of a challenge particularly when drivers tend to increase their speed to pass when they see another vehicle in the opposing lane. The turbulence that these B-trains create as they whiz by can result in a few anxious moments.

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We were passed by two of these tractors this morning hauling high capacity fully automatic hay balers (center) and accumulators (rear). Hay baling in the field couldn’t be any easier. With the machinery pulled from behind, the cut crops are fed into the Baler’s front auger where they are compressed into neat square forms, knotted then fed into the bale chamber. The accumulator at the very back (when unfolded) holds the bales and drops them back onto the field depending on the dump pattern chosen by the operator. This cuts down on the time that is required to collect them and also reduces the amount of wheel compaction on the field. Pretty slick.

The canola crop to the right has yet to be combined. Moisture content for canola needs to be 10% or lower in order to be sellable. With the month long spell of dry weather we’ve had, perhaps this landowner is waiting for the optimal time to harvest which saves aeration time when the grain is being binned.

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