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  • The Olympic Mountains loom in the distance as seen from Ebey Road, between Coupeville and Ebey’s Landing. Ebey’s Landing National Historical Reserve takes in public and private lands stretching across a narrow neck of Whidbey Island between Admiralty Inlet and Penn Cove. (Mike Siegel/The Seattle Times)
    Worth the Trip: Ebey’s Landing
  • A plane lands at SeaTac International Airport in a day of heavy fog. (Ellen M. Banner / The Seattle Times)
    Airplane lands in the fog
  • Float planes that take off and land on Lake Union. (Mark Harrison / The Seattle Times)
    Floatplane
  • (Gabriel Campanario / The Seattle Times)
    Pier 57
  • Two seaplanes, arriving and departing at the Kurtzer mooring ramp, were typical of aerial activity on Seattle's busy Lake Union. (Josef Scaylea / The Seattle Times, 1958)
    Seaplanes on Lake Union
  • A small private jet has a landing with a spectacular view of Mt. Rainier at Boeing Field. (Ken Lambert / The Seattle Times)
    Landing with a view
  • A bumblebee comes in for a landing on lupine in full bloom Thursday along the North Fork of the Teanaway River. A hot April and cool May have led to a bonanza of blooms in the high country. (Steve Ringman / The Seattle Times)
    Bumblebee landing
  • Ride the Ducks land and water tours.<br />
Gabriel Campanario / The Seattle Times
    Ducks on the Road
  • A polar bear framed by the remains of a dead bowhead whale sniffs the air near the coast of the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge. The 3,800 polar bears that live off Alaska's coast face an uncertain future as global warming melts more of the Arctic's summer sea ice each year, forcing them to spend more time on land competing with grizzly bears and people. (Steve Ringman / The Seattle Times, 2005)
    Polar bear and whale bones
  • Wild horses dash on the high desert on the Warm Springs Reservation below Mount Jefferson's peak that reaches 10,497 feet. (Alan Berner / The Seattle Times)
    Wild, wild horses
  • A scene from Lake Crescent on Oct. 13, 1968. (Josef Scaylea / The Seattle Times)
    Lake Crescent in Olympic national Park
  • At the Museum of Flight a restored, non-flyable, FM-2 Wildcat used by the U.S. Navy in combat in World War II's Pacific Theater, is ready to be displayed.<br />
<br />
Ken Lambert / The Seattle Times
    Restored WWII FM-2 Wildcat
  • The F5 Tower rising behind the old First United Methodist church building. (Gabriel Campanario / The Seattle Times)
    Fifth Avenue, Madison Street
  • A coal train approaches SAM’s Olympic Sculpture Park in Seattle. (Ken Lambert / The Seattle Times)
    Seattle coal train
  • Gertrude, a 26-year-old hippopotamus at the Woodland Park Zoo, makes a mouthful of one of the pumpkins donated annually to the zoo the day after Halloween by two local supermarkets. An additional 15 pumpkins were fed to the elephants. (Richard S. Heyza / The Seattle Times, 1989)
    Bite of Seattle
  • Ride the Ducks on Lake Union.<br />
Gabriel Campanario / The Seattle Times
    Ducks on Lake Union
  • A Rocky Mountain elk on sunrise ridge at Mt. Rainier National Park. (Mike Siegel / The Seattle Times)
    Elk at sunrise
  • Looking across Swift Creek Reservoir near the base of Mount St. Helens. (Steve Ringman / The Seattle Times)
    Swift Creek Reservoir
  • An East African crown crane. (Veronica  Decker / The Seattle Times, 1989)
    Fantastic fowl
  • Alaska white geese fly over wetlands on the Alaskan tundra just outside Teshekpuk Lake. Steve Ringman / The Seattle Times, 2005)
    Arctic birds flying
  • Gabriel Campanario / The Seattle Times
    Seattle shoreline street-ends
  • Gabriel Campanario / The Seattle Times
    Seattle shoreline street-ends
  • The coastal plain of the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge, with the Brooks Range in the distance, is visible across the sea ice from Barter Island in Alaska. (Steve Ringman/The Seattle Times)
    Arctic Refuge
  • Snow geese look for a spot to set down in a farmer's field on the north side of Fir Island in Skagit Valley.  (Alan Berner / The Seattle Times)
    Snow geese landing
  • Jeff Miller, who helps oversee functional tests of the 747 engine and landing gear, lines up engine No. 3 with the mount on the final new 747 as he slowly drives it into place under the giant wing.  (Jennifer Buchanan / The Seattle Times)
    Lining up Engine No. 3
  • A white water lily pokes its flower skyward at the Washington Park Arboretum as a honeybee comes in for a landing.<br />
Steve Ringman / The Seattle Times
    Skyward Water Lily and Honeybee
  • Gary Bowers, who helps oversee functional tests of the 747 engine and landing gear, walks past engine No. 3 as he and other employees work to hang it on the wing on Nov. 8. (Jennifer Buchanan / The Seattle Times)
    Walking past Engine No. 3
  • The sun sets on an era of aviation manufacturing as the very last Boeing 747 lands at Paine Field after a Jan. 10 test flight. (Jennifer Buchanan / The Seattle Times)
    Sun sets on last test flight
  • Snow geese look for a place to land in the farmlands of Skagit Valley off Fir Island Road.    The Fraser River delta is an important wintering spot and heavily used by the birds that will migrate to Wrangel Island to breed. (Alan Berner / The Seattle Times)
    Snow geese on the wing
  • A Cardinal Meadowhawk dragonfly lands on a perch near a pond at Magnuson Park Seattle. At least 19 species of the insects call the park on Lake Washington home. (Steve Ringman / The Seattle Times)
    Summertime takes flight on a dragonf..ings
  • Some of the original loops of the meandering Duwamish River were still visible in 1922 after dredging had opened up a straight, deepened waterway. The river once swung all the way from the West Seattle bluff to Beacon Hill. The old loops were eventually filled to create industrial land. (Seattle Times archives, 1922)
    Duwamish River, 1922
  • The Seattle Times World's Fair Souvenir Page (Sunday, April 8, 1962)
    Alaska | Land of breathtaking beauty
  • Under cloudy skies, a few pigeons look for a place to land on some wires along S. Graham St. near Martin Luther King Jr. Way S. in Seattle. (Ellen M. Banner / The Seattle Times)
    Up on the high wire
  • Chinook Country is where the land and forest give way dramatically to river and ocean. (Steve Ringman / The Seattle Times)
    West down the Columbia River
  • The sun barely illuminates the land under a thick fog of red smoke as seen from Highway 97 just south of Okanogan Friday August 21, 2015.<br />
<br />
Bettina Hansen / The Seattle Times
    Smoky Skies at Sunrise
  • A hillside across shows the scars of fire and ash that claimed the land a year ago in 2014's Carlton Complex fire.<br />
<br />
Dean Rutz / The Seattle Times
    Carlton Complex Fire - One Year Later
  • Steamboat Rock, which rises 525 feet in the flood chasm called the Grand Coulee, was once surrounded by the Ice Age Columbia River that ran here. The land is now Steamboat Rock State Park, where hikers can climb to the top and see the former flood and river course. The rock is bounded on three sides by Banks Lake, used to store irrigation water. (Steve Ringman / The Seattle Times)
    Steamboat Rock
  • Gnarled and silvery sagebrush once covered much of the arid lands of the Northwest.  (Ken Lambert / The Seattle Times, 2003)
    Sage plant
  • A Delta Air Lines 747 that will retire by year end [2017], one of the last of these jumbo jets to fly for a U.S. carrier, visits its birthplace, Everett, on a farewell tour of the country. The jumbo jet lands at Paine Field on a wet and rainy morning. (Mike Siegel/The Seattle Times)
    Delta Boeing 747 farewell tour
  • A butterfly lands on crabapple blossoms. (Benjamin Benschneider / The Seattle Times).
    Butterfly on crabapple blossoms
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