If you had an Earth Roamer, you could have stayed until the food was obviously running out.
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If you had an Earth Roamer, you could have stayed until the food was obviously running out.
It's not unusual for me to get up on weekend mornings before the wife and head to my home office. I flip on the TV and my Dish receiver anticipates what I watch against what's on...and there's Arial America on Smithsonian. There's usually nothing else on and I'm not in the mood for music while I'm on the computer, so I just let it run, and one of them was Idaho. I like history, I like Idaho, and who knows, maybe I accidentally learn something.
I'm not a fan of PBS, for a lot of reasons. Liberal political bias being tops on the list.
But the PBS station here runs a weekly series called "Outdoor Idaho". It's fantastic with no political bias at all. Turned on the episode from Thurs that was DVR'd while we were gone and it was about the history of Idaho's fire lookout towers. Really a fantastic piece and shed some good light on a few places we saw on our trip.
To piggy-back on the Idaho PBS thing, I didn't realize you can watch many of the Outdoor Idaho programs for free on the Idaho PBS website.
Here's a link to a program about some of the Idaho backroads, including a piece on the Magruder Corridor for anyone interested: https://video.idahoptv.org/video/out...ad-adventures/
And, if you're like me and don't like to watch most "normal" TV, here's a link to a ton of episodes. It really is good TV, fun to watch with the family: http://idahoptv.org/outdoors/oi_Library.cfm
Some of them are several years old but still worth watching.