
- Reach for the skies
- River Ohanapecosh
- River Ohanapecosh
- Road around rock
- Road to Rainier
- Roadside flow
- Rocky takeoff
- Root Dweller
Me, in the roots of a downed tree at the Grove of the Patriarchs, Mount Rainier National Park (photo by Ben Cade) - Seymour Peak
As seen from Highway 123, east side of Mount Rainier National Park. 6337 feet. - Seymour Peak
As seen from Highway 123, east side of Mount Rainier National Park. 6337 feet. - Silver Falls
Silver Falls, on the Ohanapecosh River, Mount Rainier National Park - Silver Falls
Silver Falls, on the Ohanapecosh River, Mount Rainier National Park - Silver Falls
Silver Falls, on the Ohanapecosh River, Mount Rainier National Park - Silver Falls
Silver Falls, on the Ohanapecosh River, Mount Rainier National Park - Silver Falls
Silver Falls, on the Ohanapecosh River, Mount Rainier National Park - Silver Falls
Silver Falls, on the Ohanapecosh River, Mount Rainier National Park - Silver Falls Plunge
Silver Falls, on the Ohanapecosh River, Mount Rainier National Park - Skookum Falls
Near Mount Rainier - Skookum Falls
- Skookum Falls and White River
- Snow in May? You must be mad!
WA-123, Mount Rainier National park, about 3800 feet. - Spinning wheels
Prayer wheels in motion at earthsanctuary.org - such verticals
- Tavern Sasquatch
Naches Tavern, Enumclaw Washingto - That's a big waterfall
Silver Falls, on the Ohanapecosh River, Mount Rainier National Park - Through the Mountain
Tunnel through Seymour Peak, about 3800 feet, WA-123 near Mount Rainier National Park - Through the mountain is better than over
- 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. - Train Tahoma
Mount Rainier, as seen through the window of an Amtrak train - Two Thousand Years
Ancient Douglas-fir trees at the Grove of the Patriarchs, Mount Rainier National Park. Both are over one thousand years old, and have just barely enough remaining foliage to keep them alive. One was truncated by a storm; the other has a dead crown. - Under Magenta Sky
- Vine & Cedars
Vine Maple (foreground), western red cedar (background), in the Grove of the Patriarchs - Volcanic ejecta
- Was it something we said?
- White River
- White River Entrance Arch
On the Mather Memorial Parkway, Mount Rainier National Park - Whorls within whorls
Ring detail of an ancient fallen tree