I recently revisited shots I took at the Chihuly Garden and Glass in Seattle. I like this one. It’s as close as I generally get to a selfie. That’s Seattle’s iconic Space Needle photobombing my shot.
Category: Day Trip
A little winter color
Here’s a little something to brighten your day compliments of Dale Chihuly. This is at the Chihuly Garden and Glass in Seattle.
What’s a nudibranch?
The Feiro Marine Life Center in Port Angeles has a tank devoted to nudibranchs, also known as sea slugs. These are tiny invertebrates. For me, the closer you get the more beautiful they are. This little creature was only about an inch long.
I’m not an underwater photographer. Hopefully you can see the delicate form of this tiny and beautiful animal.
Here’s a more common sea star. I’ve added this one to the mix because it looks to me like a human on Superbowl Sunday after a few too many beers.
Indoor tidepooling
The Feiro Marine Life Center in Port Angeles allows visitors to take a close look at tidepool creatures without the hazards of slippery rocks and crashing waves. And the closer look an aquarium offers allows a glimpse at the stunning beauty and diversity of underwater life. For me anemones are a case in point.This one is aptly called an elegant anemone.
This is a giant green anemone.
And I think this is a fish eating anemone. They’re not as benign as they may appear.
Click here if you’d like more information about tidepool life and where to tidepool on the Olympic Peninsula.
Feiro Marine Life Center
I explored the Feiro Marine Life Center in Port Angeles recently. It is a small educational center with aquariums as well as several tanks that allow visitors to touch sea life. The Center offers a representation of the more typical marine life of our region: nudebranchs, echinoderms, and cnidarians. Tomorrow I’ll show you examples of some of these critters.
It’s all in the eye of the beholder
This is a bilge pump at Longship Marine in Pouslbo. It’s an entirely necessary and functional part of a boat. I think it looks like kind of a cute alien creature, don’t you?
Rope
Rope was just rope most of my life before I met my DH. Sure, rope ties stuff down. It has utility. But add it to boats and sails and rope takes on a life of its own. Tall sailing ships, like the Lady Washington, above, seem to consume it by the mile.
So it should be no surprise that Longship Marine sells lots of rope.
I consider it eye candy but a sailor has an entirely different opinion.
There are lots of different kinds of rope. An informed consumer could tell you more than you’d likely care to know.