Sunday, November 24, 2019

My City

 Corvallis Farmers Market shows off it's colors on NW 1st St each week for the community to shuffle through products made by Corvallis locals. Every Saturday from 9am to 1pm local farmers and artists will set up personal booths to advertise their unique products.
Within the Riverfront Commemorative Park located in Corvallis stands Louise McDowell’s “The River of Life,” which statue includes a girl interacting with wild salmon, beavers, and geese. The statue is placed in the Monroe Plaza in 2002 next to a unique jungle-gym specifically known in Corvallis. People are welcomed to come and walk through the sculpture and see each side of the eloquently sculpted artwork.

Just on the outskirts of Corvallis lays rolling green hills of green lush farmland. The everlasting road pushes through the grass and draws a divide of pure earth on NW Highland Dr. Despite the busy "college life," Corvallis offers more than just the crowded antique shops of downtown or the natural chaotic life of OSU life. Just a twenty-minute drive and you will meet a horizon of rolling fields with total contrast of bumper-to-bumper traffic.



Rows of young vegetation blankets acres of land off of NW Highland Dr. in Corvallis prooving that there is more to the city than the colors orange and black. 

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