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  • A circular tube like web of a spider found along the River Loop trail off of the North Cascades National Park's visitor center. (Steve Ringman / The Seattle Times)
    Tangled sunlight
  • Helicopters dump water from the Columbia River onto the Mills Canyon wildfire Thursday. (Photo by Bettina Hansen / The Seattle Times, 2014)
    Evacuations ordered in Washington st..fire
  • Northeast Tolt Hill Road crosses the Snoqualmie River one mile west of Highway 203 near Carnation. (Mike Siegel / The Seattle Times)
    Tolt Hill Bridge
  • A young bald eagle is buffeted by the wind as it perches along the Skagit River on Fir Island near Conway.  (Mark Harrison / The Seattle Times)
    Eagle in the wind
  • Flames blanket the hillsides on Twisp River Road just outside of the town of Twisp early in the morning Thursday, Aug. 20, 2015. <br />
<br />
Erika Schultz / The Seattle Times
    Flames Blanket Hillsides in Twisp
  • Windmills that dot the landscape above Vantage, west of the Columbia River and along I-90, stand starkly against a rainstorm as it blows through Central Washington. (Dean Rutz / The Seattle Times)
    Windmills in the storm
  • 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
  • In the Columbia River Gorge, Beacon Rock towers some 848 feet high and was sculpted in part by the Ice Age floods. The core of an ancient volcano, Beacon Rock helped early travelers mark the distance to the Pacific Ocean 150 miles away. Lewis and Clark camped at its base in 1805 and named it.<br />
(Steve Ringman / The Seattle Times)
    Beacon Rock
  • Near Othello, a farmer irrigates a field with water that has traveled hundreds of miles from the Columbia River. (Tom Reese / The Seattle Times, 1991)
    Thirsty fields
  • EIGHTH STREET, looking southwest toward the harbor from its intersection with J Street. Along the street are the City Hall, the post office and many business establishments; at the harbor end is the railroad station. At its northeast end is the Eighth Street Bridge across the Hoquiam River. (The Seattle Times Co., 1951)
    Hoquiam, WA
  • Left behind when the Skokomish River floodwater receded, a male chum salmon takes his last gasps in a puddle under a tree that will grow stronger from the nutrients deposited by his rotted flesh. (Mark Harrison / The Seattle Times)
    Pacific chum
  • An orchard on the banks of the Columbia River, at Orondo, near Wenatchee. (Benjamin Benschneider / The Seattle Times)
    The other Rainier
  • Dripping mosses hanging from a tree totally consumed by moss along the Hoh River Trail, Olympic National Park. (Steve Ringman / The Seattle Times)
    Mossy tree
  • There's no way to pole your way from Puget Sound to the Mississippi River. But that hasn't stopped two fishermen from, constructing their own Huck Finn-style raft for exploring the Sound. The young men used driftwood from Richmond Beach to fashion the raft, which features something Huck and his friend Jim lacked -- a motor. (Jimi Lott / The Seattle Times, 1985)
    Gone fishin'
  • They call them "hidden gems" for a reason. Several parks mantained by the Port of Seattle near terminals in Harbor Island and the Duwamish River are not easy to find. With names like Terminal 18 Public Access Park or Duwamish Public Access at Terminal 105, don't bet on Google maps to navigate you either. (Gabriel Campanario / The Seattle Times)
    Terminal 18 Public Access Park
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