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- Sheriff's Department (Twin Peaks)
Building used for the filming of the TV series Twin Peaks, as the office of Sheriff Truman. It now belongs to Dirtfish Rally School. Special thanks to Lisa (pictured) for letting me explore. - Ronette Pulaski Bridge (Twin Peaks)
Reinig road trestle bridge, also called "Ronette Pulaski Bridge" after the character who was found walking along it, dazed and brain-damaged, after escaping the killer. Originally a railway bridge over the Snoqualmie River, built to service the saw mill (see previous posting), the railroad was ripped out after the mill closed (1989), the elevated approach on one side of the bridge torn down, and the bridge converted to a foot bridge, part of a nature trail. A stairway leads up to it on the Reinig Road side, the second stairway built on the site after the first was destroyed by an arsonist. - Ronette Pulaski Bridge (Twin Peaks)
Reinig road trestle bridge, also called "Ronette Pulaski Bridge" after the character who was found walking along it, dazed and brain-damaged, after escaping the killer. Originally a railway bridge over the Snoqualmie River, built to service the saw mill (see previous posting), the railroad was ripped out after the mill closed (1989), the elevated approach on one side of the bridge torn down, and the bridge converted to a foot bridge, part of a nature trail. A stairway leads up to it on the Reinig Road side, the second stairway built on the site after the first was destroyed by an arsonist. - Ronette Pulaski Bridge (Twin Peaks)
Reinig road trestle bridge, also called "Ronette Pulaski Bridge" after the character who was found walking along it, dazed and brain-damaged, after escaping the killer. Originally a railway bridge over the Snoqualmie River, built to service the saw mill (see previous posting), the railroad was ripped out after the mill closed (1989), the elevated approach on one side of the bridge torn down, and the bridge converted to a foot bridge, part of a nature trail. A stairway leads up to it on the Reinig Road side, the second stairway built on the site after the first was destroyed by an arsonist. - Ronette Pulaski Bridge (Twin Peaks)
Reinig road trestle bridge, also called "Ronette Pulaski Bridge" after the character who was found walking along it, dazed and brain-damaged, after escaping the killer. Originally a railway bridge over the Snoqualmie River, built to service the saw mill (see previous posting), the railroad was ripped out after the mill closed (1989), the elevated approach on one side of the bridge torn down, and the bridge converted to a foot bridge, part of a nature trail. A stairway leads up to it on the Reinig Road side, the second stairway built on the site after the first was destroyed by an arsonist. - Snoqualmie in the mist
Salish Lodge and Snoqualmie Falls, as seen about 9 am, before the morning mist clears. - Top of Snoqualmie Falls
- Fire and Needle
- Won't get trolled again
Fremont Troll, under the Aurora Bridge, Seattle. - Tasty Volkswagen
- Immovable and Movable
Aurora Bridge (background) and Fremont Bridge (foreground), the latter raised to permit a barge to pass underneath. - Aurora Bridge
Aurora Bridge, 167 feet above the water level of Lake Union. Officially called the George Washington Memorial Bridge, it opened on George Washington's 200th birthday in 1932. Between its construction and 2011, when 8-foot fences were added on either side of the pedestrian walkways, there were 230 known suicides here, a grim record exceeded only by the Golden Gate Bridge. Photographed from the east walkway of the Fremont Bridge. - Fremont Bridge, Aurora Bridge
- Thin steel grid between me and death
- Center of the Universe
- Fremont Bridge
- You've got red on you.
- Excellence
Nine times winner of the Monty Burns Award of Excellence, for Excellence in the Naming of Boats - Fine Feathered Friend
- Swing at the edge
Swing at the edge of a 70-foot bluff, Magnolia, Seattle - New Dungeness Lighthouse
Located 5 miles out from the mainland; shot from shore at 400mm, cropped to 1/3rd. - Cape Flattery Light
Tatoosh Island, Cape Flattery - That's Me in the Corner
Population of the contiguous U.S. north and west of me: Zero. Cape Flattery, WA, northwesternmost point of lower 48. - Sea Caves
Cape Flattery, Washington, Northwesternmost point in the continental U.S. - Corner of the Country
Cape Flattery, northwesternmost point in the continental United States - Cape Flattery
Cape Flattery, Washington, Northwesternmost point in the continental U.S. - Cape Flattery
Cape Flattery, Washington, Northwesternmost point in the continental U.S. - Last Rocks before Canada
- Edge of America
Looking north from the Olympic Peninsula, across the Strait of Juan de Fuca, towards Vancouver Island. - Beaver Lake
Beaver Lake, Clallam County, Olympic Peninsula, Washington - James Island, La Push
- Sunset on James Island
- Little James Island
- First Beach, La Push WA
- First Beach, La Push WA
- James Island, La Push WA
- First Beach, La Push
- First Beach, La Push
- Squall at La Push
A tiny storm approached the coast at La Push, Washington, bringing about ten minutes of intense hail and rain. - Forks Totem Pole
Totem Pole in Forks, WA. - Forks Totem Pole
Totem Pole in Forks, WA. - Lake Quinault Lodge
Lake Quinault Lodge, Olympic Peninsula, Washington. - Lake Quinault Lodge
Lake Quinault Lodge, Olympic Peninsula, Washington. - Lake Quinault Lodge
Lake Quinault Lodge, Olympic Peninsula, Washington. - Hills, two.
Near Lake Quinault Lodge, Olympic Peninsula, Washington. - Treetops in the Mist
Colonel Bob Trail, near Lake Quinault, Olympic National Forest - Colonel Bob Trail
Colonel Bob Trail, near Lake Quinault, Olympic National Forest - The Fallen One
Colonel Bob Trail, near Lake Quinault, Olympic National Forest - Forest of Trees
Colonel Bob Trail, near Lake Quinault, Olympic National Forest - Colonel Bob Trail
Colonel Bob Trail, near Lake Quinault, Olympic National Forest