
- Whitman County Growers
Town of Steptoe, seen from Steptoe Butte. - Dry Falls (Panorama)
Dry Falls, central Washington, the largest waterfall on earth during the prehistoric Missoula Floods. Six-shot pano. - Iron asterisk
- Jetty and James Island
- Sea Rock
- Sign of the Goat
- Sea Stack
- Beach Palisade
- Big Rocks
- Sea of Wood
- Little James Island
- It's a Hudson, and it's wet.
Hudson Wasp (1952-1954) - Tacoma Municipal Building
Tacoma City Hall since 1977; previously Rhodes Medical Arts Tower. Built 1930-1931 by John Graham & Associates. 17 stories. Though my camera was precisely centered, the bottom of the photo appears asymmetrical; this is because the building is built on a hillside. The two sides of the entrance are of unequal length, as the sidewalk slopes upward to the right. - Winthrop Hotel
Winthrop Hotel, 1925, now Winthrop Apartments. Tacoma. - Ray's on the water
Ray's Boathouse restaurant, with neon sign from 1952. Destroyed by fire in 1987, then rebuilt. - Decline
Ruin of a granary on the Palouse (beside highway 195, south of Pullman) - Hoge Building
Built in 1911 by James D. Hoge, owner of Union Trust & Savings Bank, located here. Tallest building in Seattle before Smith Tower's completion in 1914. - Cedar Waxwing
by the Columbia River, Wenatchee WA - Red Winged Blackbird
by the Columbia River, Wenatchee WA - Coyote Leads the Salmon up the River
Aluminum sculpture by Richard Beyer, Walla Walla Point Park, Wenatchee WA - Red Winged Blackbird
by the Columbia River, Wenatchee WA - Bostwick Building
A historical marker attached to the building reads: "IN HONOR OF ROSSELL G. O'BRIEN who in the Bostwick Building, Tacoma, Washington, on October 18, 1893, during regular session of the Washington Commandery of the Military Order of the Loyal Legion of the U.S.A., did originate the custom of standing during the rendition of the Star Spangled Banner, the national anthem of the United States of America." - Dead Inside
Abandoned granary south of Pullman, Washington. - Decline: Within
Inside the abandoned granary (see previous photo) - Bostwick Building
A historical marker attached to the building reads: "IN HONOR OF ROSSELL G. O'BRIEN who in the Bostwick Building, Tacoma, Washington, on October 18, 1893, during regular session of the Washington Commandery of the Military Order of the Loyal Legion of the U.S.A., did originate the custom of standing during the rendition of the Star Spangled Banner, the national anthem of the United States of America." - Calling the Healing Waters (Soap Lake)
Monumental sundial sculpture by David Govedere and Keith Powell, 2009 - Dry Falls Lake
- Soap Lake
- Windows on the Palouse
- Soap Lake
- Calling the Healing Waters (Soap Lake)
Monumental sundial sculpture by David Govedere and Keith Powell, 2009 - Pride and Sorrow
Seattle's Centurylink Field, after the Orlando massacre - Turtle Rock Island
Lake Entiat, WA - Rankos Drugs
- Flyover
Kenmore Air seaplanes fly directly over my apartment every day. I like it. - The trains come no more
Union Station, Seattle. Rail service to this station was discontinued in 1971. - Dry Falls in rain
Dry Falls, central Washington, the largest waterfall on earth during the prehistoric Missoula Floods. - Western Pacific Chemical Company, 1940
1436 Elliott Ave W, Queen Anne, Seattle. Built in 1940 for the Western Pacific Chemical Company, this two-story concrete building was designed in the Art Deco and Art Moderne styles by John Ivar Mattson. Later, it housed several chemical manufacturers, and in the 1970s, Superior Embroidery and McNamara Signs. - Top of the Pine
- Night Falls on Lincoln Rock
- Eastern Kingbird
by the Columbia River, Wenatchee WA - Ripple farm
- Lincoln Rock State Park
Washington state park on the Columbia River. The park is named for the rock formation on the hill at left. - Soap Lake
A remnant of the prehistoric Missoula Floods in Central Washington, this lake has layers of water that do not intermix and a high mineral content. The water was thought to have curative powers and many spas were erected nearby in the 19th and 20th centuries. - Lake Chelan
- Rocks for my bed
La Push, Washington - Municipal Building, Tacoma
Tacoma City Hall since 1977; previously Rhodes Medical Arts Tower. Built 1930-1931 by John Graham & Associates. 17 stories. - Lake Entiat
- Lincoln Rock and Swakane Canyon
Lincoln Rock, at the southeast end of Swakane Canyon, Wenatchee WA - Butte and St. Andrew
St. Andrews Episcopal Church, Chelan, and Chelan Butte