Monthly Archives: September 2011

Mud Bay Lighthouse

A tiny beacon


Just catching up on posts I missed this summer when I was away from my computer. While Mud Bay, or Dyes Inlet for that matter, doesn’t need a lighthouse, it has one now (see photo). I got it at the Allyn Days festival in July. I had some birthday money to spend and bought it on a whim. The lighthouse was made by a woodworker named Mike who runs a small business called Laughing Dolphin Keepsakes. The little light at the top is solar powered. The lighthouse doesn’t emit enough light to warn any kayakers who might get too close, but it does lend a nautical look to my deck.

Total Video Is Closing Soon

A total loss for the neighborhood


I don’t rent DVDs during the summer so I was probably one of the last people to notice that Total Video on Kitsap Way is closing soon (see photo). The store stopped renting movies and games a few weeks ago and is in the last stage of selling off its stock of DVDs and VHS tapes. Everything that’s left is on sale for $2. Yesterday I picked out a couple of DVDs to zero out the small balance in my rental account.
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The Little Pour

Where did the dirt go?


Last September I posted an entry about patching my driveway called The Big Pour. By the amount of cement used, yesterday’s pour was nowhere near as big a job. But the patch covers a far more serious problem (see photo)—one that I hope went away as mysteriously as it appeared.
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Hunting Big Game in Silverdale

Clear Creek elephant


You can hunt big game along Silverdale’s Clear Creek Trail. Of course any shooting needs to be done with a camera as there’s no way to get a Washington hunting license for the animals I bagged yesterday (see photos). Constructed of several sheets of ¾-inch plywood, the animals tower over a field of tall grass in the Clear Creek Valley just north of town. A series of crop circle-like paths through the grass allow for close-up photos.

A passing hiker told me that the animals were put up by a private party who wanted to create a memory of his trips to Africa. It worked for me. With just a bit of imagination I was transported to the Serengeti Plain. The best part was the total surprise. I had no idea that there are life-sized animal-shaped billboards along the Clear Creek Trail. Having my camera with me wasn’t luck. As I have said in other posts, a small digital camera should always be included as standard equipment when you go to Silverdale.

There’s one more photo after the jump.
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Elwha River Trip

End of the hike---Whiskey Bend

End of the hike---Whiskey Bend

I had been planning one last trip to see the dams on the Elwha River before the removal project started. The trip didn’t happen. Demolition of the Glines Canyon and Elwha dams began last week. The project, which has the lofty goal of restoring one of the largest watersheds on the Olympic peninsula to its pre-dam glory, is proceeding slowly and will take years to complete. So while there’s plenty of time to go see most of what remains of the two dams and the lakes behind them, the best I can offer for now are sketchy memories of a hiking trip I took several decades ago with three companions (see photo).
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Do Mud Bay Tidelands Qualify?

A wildlife habitat home on Rocky Point


Is your property a certified wildlife habitat? A home on Rocky Point that I pass by on walks and bike rides proudly displays a sign that it qualifies (see photo). Their sign made me wonder how many of the basic habitat elements (food, water, cover, and places to raise young) my property provides. Also whether owning the Mud Cat, a stealthy but rarely successful stalker of songbirds and rodents, is a no-no.
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