Beautiful photos and great composition.
Are you using a tripod and slow shutter speed? It looks like you captured some good flow to the water.
Thanks. No, no tripod. And I used the brain-dead point-and-shoot "Auto" setting for the shots. I could have used a tripod and some manual settings for Multnomah Falls (Upper Falls - 542 feet, Lower Falls - 69 feet), as there was good footing there with the stone pathways and observation areas. There were several with tripods that day, as there are most days. But the footing was iffy at best along Wakeenah Falls (242 foot falls). That's just how fast the water was rushing down the hill.
Anyone coming out of Portland should take the detour to see these falls. And it's not even much of a detour. Big trucks can't fit, but straight trucks can. You'll see the sign for the Historic Columbia River Scenic Highway, which parallels and runs just a few dozens of feet to the south of the Interstate. The TA and Flying J at Troutdale is at Exit 17, and you get off at Exit 28 and get back on at Exit 35. You can get off at Exit 22 instead of 28, but it's quite a bit more curvy, however it also has some breathtaking views of the Gorge and some other falls. There's even a sit-down restaurant at Multnomah, the 1925-built stone Multnomah Falls Lodge, where they serve breakfast, lunch, dinner and Sunday brunch. Fine dining casual, not cheap, but very good. I've had the wild salmon, prime rib, and halibut fish and chips. My most recent visit I has the rainbow trout. It was awesome.
Pendleton, Oregon and Columbia Basin as viewed from Cabbage Hill
This is more impressive in the full-size picture, and is a panorama composite of 4 shots representing a little more than 180° field of view, with the building dead left and the rail dead right, both out of peripheral vision. all shot with a wide angle lens, which was probably a mistake.