
- We Got This, Moon
- Seal of Goon Dip
Milwaukee Hotel in Seattle, built by Goon Dip, 1911. - Hex
Ceiling of former Noel State Bank (1921) in Chicago; now a Walgreens drugstore - Watching and listening
- Among the living
- Double crested cormorant
- Double crested cormorant
- Water's edge
- No one lives there
- Valley of the Daffodil
- Valley of the Daffodil
- Look at the colours
- Roozengaarde
- Valley of the Daffodil
- Painter of Tulips
- Tulips 2017
- Soon they will be gone
- Man lives in the sunlit world of what he believes to be reality.
Infrared - Gas Works
Gas Works Park, Infrared. - Gas Works
Gas Works Park, Infrared. - Murhut Falls
- Douglas Fir Cathedral
Olympic Peninsula, Washington - New Dungeness Lighthouse
Located 5 miles out from the mainland; shot from shore at 400mm, cropped to 1/3rd. - Corner of the Country
Cape Flattery, northwesternmost point in the continental United States - Immovable and Movable
Aurora Bridge (background) and Fremont Bridge (foreground), the latter raised to permit a barge to pass underneath. - From Jose Rizal Bridge
- Double R Diner (Twin Peaks)
Twede's Cafe in North Bend, filming location for the Double R Diner. - Double R Diner (Twin Peaks)
Twede's Cafe in North Bend, filming location for the Double R Diner. - Double R Diner (Twin Peaks)
Twede's Cafe in North Bend, filming location for the Double R Diner. - Double R Diner (Twin Peaks)
Twede's Cafe in North Bend, filming location for the Double R Diner. - Double R Diner (Twin Peaks)
Twede's Cafe in North Bend, filming location for the Double R Diner. - Double R Diner (Twin Peaks)
Twede's Cafe in North Bend, filming location for the Double R Diner. - Double R Diner (Twin Peaks)
Twede's Cafe in North Bend, filming location for the Double R Diner. - Welcome to Twin Peaks
Site of the "Welcome to Twin Peaks" sign from the opening credits of the TV series. Reining Road, Snoqualmie. - 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. - Before the Falls
Snoqualmie River, near Tanner, Washington, upstream from the famous waterfall. Fast-moving, with a great fresh smell. - Snoqualmie Falls