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#3 | ||||||
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Yes. She is second from the bottom. The one in back was my father's cousin Edna who was also my mother's best friend. Back in those times a cross-country road trip wasn't hitting the Interstate and setting your cruise control! I wish I'd have paid more attention to the stories but from the photo album there was three carloads of workers and my grandmother went along and cooked and kept house for them. I know from the photo album they came or went via Yellowstone National Park.
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| The Following 2 Users Say Thank You to Dave Noreen For Your Post: |
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#4 | ||||||
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What a great story and picture Dave.
All of this talk of sardines and such brought back memories of my mom cooking Smelts we ate them fried bones and all. |
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#5 | ||||||
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One year during my college years the fire danger was so high in Eastern Washington that the Game Department delayed the opening of dove season. So, for Labor Day weekend I went with some old Cub/Boy Scout friends to their cabin on Camano Island and raked smelt. I don't remember how Elmer prepared them but probably fried.
What I remember most about that weekend was the six nice grain fed Columbia Basin mallards I brought that Mrs. Lundstrom roasted in the woodstove and all of us sitting out on their deck high above Utsalady Bay eating duck and tossing the bones over the side! |
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| The Following 3 Users Say Thank You to Dave Noreen For Your Post: |
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#6 | ||||||
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I’m guessing the girls were having fun posing like the sardines they packed.
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| The Following User Says Thank You to Phillip Carr For Your Post: |
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#7 | |||||||
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Quote:
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