
- Emergence #Seattle #Monorail #SeattleMonorail #EMPMuseum
via Instagram ift.tt/1TPP2Kt - Head for the Mountains
via Instagram ift.tt/1Sv1VV9 - Dark River
via Instagram ift.tt/1SKCI9x - The Low Lands
via Instagram ift.tt/1WoNJmG - Standing Tall
via Instagram ift.tt/1WoLMXe - They grow on trees
via Instagram ift.tt/1MqRndt - Tiny Falls by the Duckabush River
via Instagram ift.tt/1oSxRv5 - Gurgle Gurgle
via Instagram ift.tt/1T0yqgS - By the river, the trees
via Instagram ift.tt/1YqNC8s - Duckabush River near the Olympic National Forest
via Instagram ift.tt/1qF1y4g - Get off my lawn!
- Blue sky moon
- Under seagulls
- We float, Georgie
- Rainbow Bridge after dark
- Hotel Planter, La Conner 1907
- Among the living
- Sir William
- Sir William
- Up the ladder to the roof
Abandoned warehouse on the waterfront, La Conner WA - Something escaped
Abandoned warehouse on the waterfront, La Conner WA - Iron Bridge
Skagit County WA - Green wood
Abandoned warehouse on the waterfront, La Conner WA - 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. - Rainbow Bridge
At La Conner, Washington - Island Corner
Hat Island, Near Anacortes, WA - Refinery refuge
Anacortes refinery - Washington Tulips
At Roozengaarde, Skagit County WA - Washington Tulips
At Roozengaarde, Skagit County WA - Washington Tulips
At Roozengaarde, Skagit County WA - Tree on the point
Hat Island, Near Anacortes, WA - Tulip Season
at Roozengaarde - Madrones
Hat Island, Near Anacortes, WA - Washington Tulips
At Roozengaarde, Skagit County WA - Big Pipes
Hydroelectric power station at Snoqualmie Falls - How green is my tree
- Washington Tulips
At Roozengaarde, Skagit County WA - I hear the rains down in Quinault
Rain guage at Lake Quinault Lodge - marked in feet, not inches - Lake Quinault Lodge
- Lake Quinault
As viewed from grounds of Lake Quinault Lodge - Lake Quinault Lodge
- Lodge
- 17 feet of rain
Rain guage at Lake Quinault Lodge - marked in feet, not inches - Tree and Moon
That's all, just a tree and a moon, just like it says in the title. I think it's a fir or a hemlock or something like that. It has big cones that you can see if you zoom in a bit. - 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. - Douglas Fir Cathedral
Olympic Peninsula, Washington - 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. - Flight
Near Anacortes, Washington - Murhut Falls
- 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.