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  • Crewmen use 14-foot aluminum pike poles to sort logs for bundling. (George Carkonen / The Seattle Times, 1970)
    Sorting for bundling
  • Miles of wind-swept beauty along a highway near Goldendale in Klickitat County. (The Seattle Times, 1950)
    Klickitat County seat
  • The Montlake Cut, a section of the Lake Washington Ship Canal that connects to the Puget Sound.<br />
<br />
Gabriel Campanario / The Seattle Times
    Montlake Cut
  • Portage Bay as seen from the west side of the Montlake Bridge. A two-masted sailing craft, moved into the sun-stream. (Josef Scaylea / The Seattle Times, 1961)
    Bridge over Montlake Cut
  • More than 800 sailboats and power craft paraded through the Montlake Cut to Lake Washington in the Seattle Yacht Club's Opening Day Regatta. This aerial photograph shows sailboats forming for the parade. The Seattle Yacht Club moorages on Portage Bay are at lower right. (Josef Scaylea / The Seattle Times, 1952)
    Seattle Yacht Club's Opening Day Regatta
  • This five-story rocket sits on the corner of Evanston Avenue North and North 35th Street in Seattle’s Fremont neighborhood. A piece of fuselage repurposed from a military aircraft forms the whimsical spaceship. It comes with a mission: “De Libertas Quirkas — Freedom to Be Peculiar. (Gabriel Campanario / The Seattle Times)
    Soaring symbol of Fremont’s quirky s..irit
  • Coneflowers (Ron Wurzer / The Seattle Times)
    Coneflowers
  • (Gabriel Campanario / The Seattle Times)
    Boats of all sorts
  • After being trapped underground and broken, a cutting head assembly is finally brought to the surface for repairs, temporarily stopping some workers in their tracks.<br />
<br />
Ken Lambert / The Seattle Times
    Bertha Surfaces
  • A crew member of the ship carrying Bertha, the giant boring machine, is in red (far right) dwarfed by the 57 1/2-foot cutting face of the machine. <br />
Alan Berner / The Seattle Times
    Bertha
  • Fog drifted along Seattle’s waterfronts and waterways before the sun broke through for a spring-like day.  Two paddlers head down the Montlake Cut below the Montlake Bridge. (Steve Ringman / The Seattle Times)
    Paddling in the Montlake Cut
  • Freshly cut Rhubarb. (Erika Schultz / The Seattle Times)
    Rhubarb
  • Agapanthus praecox erupt in color in mid-July. The flowers of the pampass grass, Cortaderia fulvida, at left, are cut directly after flowering to prevent reseeding. All help bring into scale the expansive view of Puget Sound beyond. (Benjamin Benschneider / The Seattle Times, 2005)
    The view beyond Heronswood
  • Gabriel Campanario / The Seattle Times
    "Dawg Boat" in the Montlake Cut
  • In the early easterly morning light, rowers navigate Westbound from Union Bay into the Montlake Cut.<br />
<br />
Greg Gilbert / The Seattle Times
    Early Morning Row
  • A welder cuts a section of pipe for a temporary viaduct support beam. (Steve Ringman / The Seattle Times, 2008)
    Reinforcement for viaduct
  • Assumptions that the trees of this property would be cut were wrong. Plans filed with the city and other public records indicate that the tall beech tree in front of the house will be preserved. (Gabriel Campanario / The Seattle Times)
    As city booms, leafy giants at risk.tiff
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