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Moscow
 

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The thirty miles of US-95 between Lewiston and MOSCOW wind through the beautiful rolling hillsides of the fertile Palouse Valley - a patchwork of green lentils, bright yellow rape, soft white wheat and (100ft-thick) black topsoil. Roadside red barns and farmhouses complete a marvelous rural picture.

With ten thousand year-round residents and a similar number of University of Idaho students, Moscow is a friendly, culturally rich town that makes a good overnight stop. Bookstores, galleries, bars and sidewalk cafes line up along tree-shaded, part-pedestrianized Main Street , the only shopping thoroughfare. Theater, music and avant-garde cinema are on offer throughout the year, while summer sees a sprinkling of big-budget arts festivals.

The town's name might raise a few eyebrows, but it's pretty ordinary compared to the first settlers' choice of Hog Heaven. A proposal to rename it Paradise was seen as a trifle over-the-top; the present title comes from one early resident's hometown in Pennsylvania


Other useful information for tourists (each section contains more specific sub-sections):




United States,
Idaho,
Moscow