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Lazy 3L Photography | all galleries >> Galleries >> Seascapes, Landscapes, Waterfalls & Streams > Broughton Flume
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16-MAR-2006 Lawn

Broughton Flume


Along the rims of the Washington side of the Columbia Gorge, sections of this "old" flume
are visible. On my way up the Gorge today, I opted to stop and take a couple photos of it.
The reason that I put the word old in quotation marks is because it is, in this case a
context dependent word. This flume was the last operating log flume in the United States,
floating lumber from Willard, Washington, to the Broughton mill located about 2 miles west
of Bingen. The flume was slightly over nine miles long with a total vertical drop of 1000
feet. It took the lumber and logs about one hour to travel the length of the flume. As much
as 150,000 board feet of lumber per day were moved in this way . The flume operated from 1923
to December 19, 1986. Scenes from the movie, Sometimes a Great Notion,
were filmed using portions of this flume.


Nikon D1x
1/40s f/10.0 at 300.0mm ISO 320 hide exif
Full EXIF Info
Date/Time16-Mar-2006 09:37:43
MakeNikon
ModelD1x
Flash UsedNo
Focal Length300 mm
Exposure Time1/40 sec
Aperturef/10
ISO Equivalent
Exposure Bias0.30
White Balance
Metering Modematrix (5)
JPEG Quality (6)
Exposure Programaperture priority (3)
Focus Distance

other sizes: small medium original auto
comment | share
Bob Foisel17-Mar-2006 15:53
I love walking around old flumes, just to see how they did them.