
- Fryingpan Creek to Banshee Peak
Fryingpan Creek, from the Sunrise Road bridge, with Banshee Peak and Sarvant Glacier in the distance. - South from Sunrise Point
View from Sunrise Point, Mount Rainier National Park. Mount Adams is in the distance; in the foreground are Governors Ridge, Barrier Peak, and Tamanos Mountain. - Mount Adams (from Rainier)
View from Sunrise Point, Mount Rainier National Park. Barrier Peak is in the foreground. - Sunrise Point
View from Sunrise Point, Mount Rainier National Park - Palisades Lakes Trail
View from Sunrise Point, Mount Rainier National Park - Sunrise Lake and Palisades Peak
Marcus Peak and Palisades Peak, above Sunrise Lake. Looking north from Sunrise Point (6130ft), Mount Rainier National Park. - Sunrise Lake
From Sunrise Point (6130ft), Mount Rainier National Park. - A spot of colour
From Sunrise Point (6130ft), Mount Rainier National Park. - Palisades Peak
Palisades Peak (7000ft), named for it columnar basalt formations resembling a defensive wall. Looking northwest from Sunrise Point (6130ft), Mount Rainier National Park. At right, Mount Baker can be seen on the horizon, about 125 miles north. - Snags
Standing dead trees, looking north from Sunrise Point (6130ft), Mount Rainier National Park. - Sunrise Lake
Sunrise Lake (5730 ft), looking north from Sunrise Point (6130ft), Mount Rainier National Park. - Rainier from Sunrise Point
Rainier summit, looking west from Sunrise Point (6130ft), Mount Rainier National Park. - Lenticular
Lenticular cloud, looking east from Sunrise Point (6130ft), Mount Rainier National Park. - Sunrise Road
- Sunrise Road
- Sourdough Ridge Peak
6951-foot unnamed peak west of Antler Peak. - Sourdough Ridge
Viewed from trails near Sunrise visitor center. Unnamed 6951-foot peak, and 7017-foot Antler peak. - Rainier from Sunrise
- McNeeley Peak
McNeeley Peak (6786 feet) and Huckleberry Basin, seen from Sourdough Ridge Trail, west of Sunrise Visitor Center. - McNeeley Peak
McNeeley Peak (6786 feet) and Huckleberry Basin, seen from Sourdough Ridge Trail, west of Sunrise Visitor Center. - McNeeley Peak
McNeeley Peak (6786 feet) and Huckleberry Basin, seen from Sourdough Ridge Trail, west of Sunrise Visitor Center. - McNeeley Peak
McNeeley Peak (6786 feet) and Huckleberry Basin, seen from Sourdough Ridge Trail, west of Sunrise Visitor Center. - Myrtle Falls, Mount Rainier
72 foot drop. Near Paradise Visitor Center - Top of Myrtle Falls
- Louise Lake, Mount Rainier National Park
Mount Rainier's summit is off to the left, and was obscured by cloud for most of this day. The red flowers in the foreground are Western Columbine (Aquilegia formosa). Photo was taken from the edge of Stevens Canyon Road. Probably was named for Christine Louise Van Trump (1880-1907), daughter of Rainier explorer Philemon Van Trump. - Sunset on the Tatoosh Range
- Morning at Kautz Creek
Mount Rainier National Park - Cool Mist
From Paradise Visitor Center, Mount Rainier National Park. As I watched, a cloud settled on the mountain, and remained there most of the day. - Paradise
Paradise Visitor Center, Mount Rainier - Pinnacle of the Tatoosh
Left to right, an unnamed peak, Pinnacle Peak, and Plummer Peak, of the Tatoosh Range. - Falls Creek Falls (Rainier)
A small roadside waterfall near the southeast entrance of Mount Rainier National Park. - Sunshine Creek
Stevens Canyon Road, near Louise Lake, Mount Rainier National Park - Stevens Canyon
- Sailors' Delight
Sunset on the Olympic Mountains, shot from a sailboat on Puget Sound. Title comes from "Red Sky at Night, Sailors' Delight", and indeed this delighted the four of us amateur sailors. - The Black Sloop
- West Point
West Point Lighthouse, Seattle - Sun & Cloud
- Look to the West
My home Tiki bar. - My Dinner with Bruce
Bruce Lee's table at Tai Tung restaurant, Seattle. After he became famous he would always sit at this table in a secluded corner of the restaurant, near the bathrooms. There was a curtain that could be drawn for privacy. After his death in 1973 the table was decorated with photos, posters, and a cardboard cutout of Lee, in his memory. - Buddha of the Lobby
- Louisa Hotel Lobby
Reflected: Milwaukee Hotel - put out my hand and touched the face of god
Mount Baker, with Black Buttes on the right. - East of Mount Baker
- top of glacier peak
- you can always go (over) downtown
- Buckaroo Tavern
Formerly in Fremont, the rescued and restored neon is now at Seattle Tavern & Pool Room, Georgetown