
- Root Dweller
Me, in the roots of a downed tree at the Grove of the Patriarchs, Mount Rainier National Park (photo by Ben Cade) - Watching and listening
- Seattle & Ship
- Lower Snoqualmie
Snoqualmie falls and Snoqualmie River, from below - Grand Coulee Dam
- Tree of My Night
On the shore of Green Lake, Seattle - Boat before warehouse
Albers Brothers Warehouse (1908) in La Conner, Wa, now abandoned. - Leap Day
- Red for Seattle University
Space Needle lit in red for the 125th anniversary of Seattle University - Alien sky needle
Sunrise, February 10 2016 - Ancient Lake
Ancient Lakes, near Quincy, Washington - Angel of the Morning
Maude, age ten. - Sun Crescent
2017 Eclipse, Seattle - Myrtle Edwards Park
- I'm just a boy, standing in front of a corpseflower, asking it to open for me.
Corpseflower (Amorphophallus Titanum, which means "big misshapen dick"), not yet in bloom, Seattle Volunteer Park - Silver Falls
Silver Falls, on the Ohanapecosh River, Mount Rainier National Park - 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) - Descent into the Temple of Tiki
Three Dots and a Dash entryway, Chicago - That's a big waterfall
Silver Falls, on the Ohanapecosh River, Mount Rainier National Park - Turtle Rock Island
Turtle Rock Island near Lincoln Rock State Park. Originally a simple rocky hill on the south bank of the Columbia River, US Highway 2 ran through it. The construction of the Rocky Reach Dam in 1960 caused the formation of Lake Entiat around this hill, cutting it off from the rest of the south bank, submerging the old US Highway 2, and creating Turtle Rock Island. It is now a protected wildlife area accessible only by boat. - Silver Falls
Silver Falls, on the Ohanapecosh River, Mount Rainier National Park - Lake of Glass
Green Lake at night - Grand Coulee Dam
- Seattle Bainbridge Ferry
- Silver Falls
Silver Falls, on the Ohanapecosh River, Mount Rainier National Park - Ancient Cedar
Western Red Cedar at the Grove of the Patriarchs. - River of Light
- Reed Wright
- Buckaroo Tavern
Formerly in Fremont, the rescued and restored neon is now at Seattle Tavern & Pool Room, Georgetown - Rooftops
- Pool on 14
When the Junior Olympic sized swimming pool at the Medinah Athletic Club in Chicago was completed in 1929, it was a remarkable feat of engineering - on the 14th floor of a skyscraper, it was then highest pool in the world (above ground level). Some call it the "Johnny Weissmuller Pool", as the Olympic gold medalist and Tarzan actor trained here. The building is now the Hotel InterContinental Magnificient Mile, and the pool is part of a fitness center available to hotel guests. It spans the entire width of the south tower. On the far wall is a terra cotta "Fountain of Neptune", surrounded with Spanish majolica tile. Though the fountain is currently dry, the hotel management have been careful to preserve all of the 1920s architectural detail of the space. 3-shot HDR, handheld. - Grand Coulee Dam
- You've got red on you.
- 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). - Ruby Beach, at the end of the day
- Silver Falls Plunge
Silver Falls, on the Ohanapecosh River, Mount Rainier National Park - Open the cargo bay doors
- Ghost Trap
Original Ghostbusters prop at Seattle EMP museum - UPS was here (they left a note)
Original headquarters of UPS in Seattle, before they went national - now a city park. - Enter now the Tribune
- All Aboard the Doughnut Train
- Carroll's Clock
Carroll's Diamonds & Watches clock near MOHAI - Forest Swirly
Accidentally pressed the shutter while the camera was rotating at my side, on a trail in the woods. - Keep Portland Weird
- 101 Auto Body
- Chihuly Ceiling
- Silver Falls
Silver Falls, on the Ohanapecosh River, Mount Rainier National Park - Grand Coulee
- 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. - "A" and Convergence