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  • The Dunn Gardens, a historic treasure in northeast Seattle, was designed by the Olmsted Brothers Landscape firm in 1915. A little waterfall flows into a pond as the sun sets. (Mike Siegel / The Seattle Times)
    Dunn spring pond
  • Colorful arrays of flowers, including these grape hyacinth, center, and primroses, right, are part of the displays at the annual Northwest Flower & Garden Show. (Mike Siegel/The Seattle Times)
    Ready to bloom
  • (Betty Udesen / The Seattle Times, 2006)
    Topiary fish
  • Gabriel Campanario / The Seattle Times
    Beacon Hill
  • The Kubota Garden in the Rainier Beach neighborhood offers one of best locations in the Seattle area to watch the fall colors. (Gabriel Campanario / The Seattle Times)
    Heart Bridge, Kubota Garden
  • Kubota Garden in the Rainier Beach neighborhood is considered one of the best locations in the Seattle area to watch the fall colors. (Gabriel Campanario / The Seattle Times)
    Kubota Garden fall palette
  • A fake partridge in a pear tree. Plenty of live birds keep the pretender company. (Mike Siegel / The Seattle Times)
    Partridge in a pear tree
  • Gabriel Campanario / The Seattle Times
    Amazon Campus Glassybaby artists
  • Gabriel Campanario / The Seattle Times
    Amazon Nitro Towers
  • Gabriel Campanario / The Seattle Times
    Wallingford architecture
  • Gabriel Campanario / The Seattle Times
    Columbia City
  • Gabriel Campanario / The Seattle Times
    Ammazon Doppler Building
  • Gabriel Campanario / The Seattle Times
    Amazon Campus Glassybaby artists
  • The Moon Bridge invites a moment of reflection. According to the self-guided tour map it symbolizes the difficulty of living a good life. “Hard to walk up and hard to walk down.” (Gabriel Campanario / The Seattle Times)
    Moon Bridge, Kubota Garden
  • Discovery Park, Seattle. (Benjamin Benschneider / The Seattle Times)
    Discover Discovery Park
  • 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
  • Gabriel Campanario / The Seattle Times
    Dose Terrace stairway
  • As the cold weather persists, spray from Snoqualmie Falls forms icicles on the cold rock walls surrounding the falls with the base pool filled with chunks of ice. In the morning when only a small patch of sunlight hits the upper rim, the surrounding area stays in a very cold shade. (Steve Ringman / The Seattle Times)
    Snoqualmie Falls make icy landscape
  • In the Snoqualmie Valley near Fall City, The fog lifts to reveal a landscape covered with water from the flooding Snoqualmie River. (Steve Ringman / The Seattle Times)
    Fog and flooding in Snoqualmie River..lley
  • 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
  • South Fidalgo Island is a storybook landscape of farm, lake, forest and nearby islands. (Benjamin Benschneider / The Seattle Times)
    South Fidalgo Island
  • As many as 100 ancient floods roaring through the Northwest at the end of the last Ice Age carved much of the landscape we see today, including Palouse Falls. Here, the Palouse River drops 198 feet before it enters the Snake River in Eastern Washington. (Steve Ringman / The Seattle Times)
    Falls into the Palouse River
  • As many as 100 ancient floods roaring through the Northwest at the end of the last Ice Age carved much of the landscape we see today, including Palouse Falls. Here, the Palouse River drops 198 feet before it enters the Snake River in Eastern Washington. (Steve Ringman / The Seattle Times)
    Palouse Falls
  • The bark of a Northern Chinese red birch tree shows an abstract landscape. (Alan Berner/The Seattle Times)
    A visit to the UW Botanic Gardens Jo..rden
  • Grain in shocks near Toledo, Lewis County. The shocks and Mount St. Helens, whose graceful lines resemble those of Fujiyama, gave the scene the appearance of a Japanese landscape. (Josef Scaylea / The Seattle Times, 1968)
    Grain shocks
  • The city is on the move, getting bigger, building up and reaching out. The emergence of a new generation of white-collar workers has changed the socioeconomic landscape of Seattle. Its resource-extraction and manufacturing past is being overshadowed by the work of the so-called creative class in science and technology.<br />
Marcus Yam / The Seattle Times
    Growing Pains in Jet City
  • A view to the south from the central Moses Coulee reveals the rugged, almost-alien landscape of the Three Devils Grade, an ancient scar of the spectacular Ice Age floods that formed Central Washington’s Channeled Scablands. (Steve Ringman / The Seattle Times)
    Moses Coulee
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