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The on-line Nugget does not feature all the stories of our print edition. For all the news, subscribe here. ©
2002 Display
Advertising The
contents of the on-line edition of The Nugget represent a selection
among the stories that appear in the weekly print edition. |
Sisters
couple keeps highway clean
Barbara and Lloyd
Gust have been keeping Highway 242 clean for years.
During the summer season they
have contracted with ODOT to do litter patrol between mileage markers
79 and 81 on the Old McKenzie Highway.
Motorists may have seen their
names on the small ODOT signs placed near their highway pickup area.
The couple, now in their 70s,
usually get up on the highway four or five times per summer for litter
pickup.
"We find old tin, rusted nails,
cans, cigarette butts, plastic items and other debris along the road,"
said Lloyd. "ODOT let us up here just before the highway opened this past
July.
"The wildflowers were delightful
to see."
Asked why they chose this
particular section to clean, Lloyd and Barbara agreed that, "This is a
beautiful area and the old highway is a real gem."
Lloyd worked the area in his
student days at the University of Oregon where he majored in Business
Administration and Business Law.
"We love it here and want
to pay back a little for all the beauty it has provided us," he said.
"My dad, in the old days (circa
1915), led cattle drives over the pass before there was a highway," said
Barbara. "I have a special fondness and memory for this area. Later (circa
1940) we carried fruits and vegetables from the valley over the pass and
sold them in Bend. Generally, most were sold before Bend to people along
the way."
Barbara, who also was a student
at the Univeristy of Oregon, graduated with a degree in Accounting.
Their area for cleaning is
near Windy Point, about three miles from the Dee Wright Observatory at
the summit.
"We took some graffiti off
the rocks at Windy Point," said Barbara. "It was very hard to wash off
so we used some gray spray paint and matched the rocks rather well."
The couple remarked that bear
scat and cougar tracks have occasionally been seen along their cleanup
route.
"Parts of the highway are
narrow and curving and can be dangerous because of speeding drivers,"
said Lloyd. "We've seen 18-wheelers try to navigate the road (that's illegal).
Bicyclists tend to be the most careful about littering the highway."
The Gusts live in Bend and
continue hiking. Barbara enjoys knitting, and both enjoy musical events.
"I've also done a lot of rock
hounding in these mountains in earlier years," said Lloyd. |
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