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Fremont Bridge
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Never Again is Now
"Never Again is Now", mural on Seattle Betsuin Buddhist Temple, by Erin Shigaki. -
Falls Creek Falls
Mount Rainier National Park, east side -
Decline: Within
Inside the abandoned granary (see previous photo) -
Immovable and Movable
Aurora Bridge (background) and Fremont Bridge (foreground), the latter raised to permit a barge to pass underneath. -
Dead Inside
Abandoned granary south of Pullman, Washington. -
Cascade Creek
Lake Quinault, Olympic National Park, WA -
Louise Lake, Mount Rainier National Park
Mount Rainier's summit is off to the left, and was obscured by cloud for most of this day. The red flowers in the foreground are Western Columbine (Aquilegia formosa). Photo was taken from the edge of Stevens Canyon Road. Probably was named for Christine Louise Van Trump (1880-1907), daughter of Rainier explorer Philemon Van Trump. -
Spoon Creek Falls
Olympic National Forest, Washingto -
Cascade Creek
Lake Quinault, Olympic National Park, WA -
Forks Totem Pole
Totem Pole in Forks, WA. -
Columbia rocks
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Olympic Keyhole
Ruby Beach, Olympic Peninsula. -
Flyover
Kenmore Air seaplanes fly directly over my apartment every day. I like it. -
Super Blood Wolf Moon 2019
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74th Street Ale House
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Spoon Creek Falls
Olympic National Forest, Washingto -
Decline
Ruin of a granary on the Palouse (beside highway 195, south of Pullman) -
Connor MacLeod (1518-1992?)
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Super Blood Wolf Moon 2019
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Beach Logs Kill
Kalaloch Beach -
top of glacier peak
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King Street Station
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Alweg Monorail
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Coyote Leads the Salmon up the River
Aluminum sculpture by Richard Beyer, Walla Walla Point Park, Wenatchee WA -
Christmaspaceneedle
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Forks Totem Pole
Totem Pole in Forks, WA. -
Damen on the Blue Line
Taken from the Robey Hotel rooftop -
Dry Falls Lake
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No Linen
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Latourell Falls
Columbia Gorge, near Portland Oregon. 244-foot drop. -
Glaciers in Moonlight
Mount Rainier at Reflection Lake in the light of the full moon -
Turtle Rock Island
Lake Entiat, WA -
Rainier Raven
It's a corvid. -
Nooksack Ridge
Nooksack Ridge, near Mount Baker. Part of the ridge, at left, is Mount Sefrit at 7191 feet. -
McNeeley Peak
McNeeley Peak (6786 feet) and Huckleberry Basin, seen from Sourdough Ridge Trail, west of Sunrise Visitor Center. -
Alki Spud
Alki Spud Fish & Chips, West Seattle. Brothers Jack and Frank Alger started selling fish and chips (ten cents for two pieces of ling cod and fries in a cardboard boat) out of their Alki Avenue garage in 1935, cutting a takeout window in the side of the building. During WWII, rationing made oil for frying difficult to obtain, and Spud nearly had to close, but neighbors banded together to donate their oil ration tickets, saving the fish and chip stand. After the war, Spud replaced the old garage with a modern building of a nautical design, including portholes. By 1961 they had replaced this with the current Googie-inspired building featuring an upswept roof. Spud has since expanded to other neighborhoods and cities around Seattle, but the Alki location is the original. -
Chicago Flatiron
Flatiron building, Chicago, as seen from the Robey Hotel -
Northern Pacific Hotel Lobby
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Silent sentinels
Ruby Beach, Olympic National Par -
Top of the Pine
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Look at the colours
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Roozengaarde
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MSC Nerissa in the Port of Seattle
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Top of Cascade Falls
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Painter of Tulips
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Are you looking at me?
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Kalaloch Tree of Life
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McNeeley Peak
McNeeley Peak (6786 feet) and Huckleberry Basin, seen from Sourdough Ridge Trail, west of Sunrise Visitor Center. -
Hoge Building
Built in 1911 by James D. Hoge, owner of Union Trust & Savings Bank, located here. Tallest building in Seattle before Smith Tower's completion in 1914.