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- Tommy, can you hear me?
The Who performing selections from "Tommy" at Key Arena, Seattle, May 2016. Foreground, left to right: Simon Townshend (red shirt), Roger Daltrey (black shirt), Pete Townshend (white jacket). Zak Starkey, behind them, on drums. - White River
- Mukilteo Lighthouse
As seen from a departing ferry. - Cranemakers
- just standing on a post, watching the boats
- Spinning wheels
Prayer wheels in motion at earthsanctuary.org - M/V Kittitas
WSDOT Ferry, on the Mukilteo-Whidbey Island run - The Fallen One
Blade from a Vestas V80 wind turbine, damaged during construction, now an exhibit at the Wild Horse Wind Farm visitor center. 129 feet long. The open end, where it would attach to the hub, is about 6 feet in diameter. - Georgia State Capitol
- Fly-by
Kenmore Air seaplane, over Lower Queen Anne, Seattle - Mountain Snow
- Under Magenta Sky
- Ship of Excellence
Photographed from a small sailboat that had to get out of this ship's way. - Copper creek
- Interbay
(sky colour was heavily manipulated) - Vista House
- Taken from the Cleaners
Auditorium Cleaners operated from 1930 to 1991 in the Odd Fellows Lodge #86 building in Fremont, Seattle. When they closed the neon sign (stripped of its glass) was relocated from the front of the building to the alley behind. (Directions: just southeast of the Lenin Statue) - Tavern Sasquatch
Naches Tavern, Enumclaw Washingto - Angel of the Morning
Maude, age ten. - Malt House
- Through the Mountain
Tunnel through Seymour Peak, about 3800 feet, WA-123 near Mount Rainier National Park - Lights Out for Chris
Space Needle goes dark for an hour in honour of Chris Cornell, a day after the musician's death. - Grove of the Patriarchs Trail
Mount Rainier National Park - Light and Lighthouse
Discovery Park - Sign for the Signmakers
National Sign Corporation, Seattle. Features neon, colour-changing LED skyline, and clock with illuminated hands. Installed 2015 for their 100th anniversary celebration. - UPS was here (they left a note)
Original headquarters of UPS in Seattle, before they went national - now a city park. - Falling water
Mount Rainier National Park, Ohanapecosh trail - Road to Rainier
- Birth of a crane
- Mountain Caravan
- Snow in May? You must be mad!
WA-123, Mount Rainier National park, about 3800 feet. - Mount Rainier
From the east - Eagle on post
- Road around rock
- Dim Sum Daily
- Vine & Cedars
Vine Maple (foreground), western red cedar (background), in the Grove of the Patriarchs - Laughingwater Creek
- Ohanapecosh
Ohanapecosh River, Mount Rainier National Park - Laughingwater Creek
So called because of the way the water bounces and gurgles in the rocky cascade. - Eyes on the Water
- Ancient Lake
Ancient Lakes, near Quincy, Washington - Immigration station
INS building in Seattle International District. - Skookum Falls
- Ancient Cedar
Western Red Cedar at the Grove of the Patriarchs. (The broad bright leaves at lower right belong to another tree that is intertwined with the cedar). - People's Storage
Fremont, Seattle. 1945. As of 2021 the storage facility is under new management and has changed its name. The sign is still present but dark. - Skookum Falls and White River
- Turbines
Wild Horse Wind Farm, with Vestas V80 turbines, each with a 221-foot tower and 129-foot blades. - Buddha of the Sidewalk
- Whorls within whorls
Ring detail of an ancient fallen tree