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Backyardnotes

~ All things botanical in photos and words—in my West Seattle garden and elsewhere; seeing and creating art and assorted musings.

Backyardnotes

Category Archives: The beach

EASTSIDE, WESTSIDE

12 Thursday Aug 2010

Posted by backyardnotes in Canning & Preserving, Jams, Jellies & Preserves, Summer!, The beach, Washington travels

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apples, cherries, clouds

The view east, after crossing Washington Pass.

WE LEFT THE COOL, CLOUDY WEST SIDE OF THE CASCADES BEHIND at the end of July and were greeted with warmth and mostly clear skies as we drove across the North Cascades Highway. We spent our first night below Washington Pass at Lone Fir (USFS) campground along Early Winters Creek.

A very unusual pink sunset made for striking silhouttes overhead.

Next morning we took two hikes, a three mile from the campground and another three mile one farther east off of Hwy 20 to Cedar Creek Falls. The second hike was too close to noon and hot, hot, hot. The saving grace was the ability to refresh ourselves in a pool above the falls.

After our hike to Cedar Falls we headed toward Bridgeport State Park on the Columbia River; nice park but full up in the middle of summer. Same story at Alta Lake so we headed for our friend’s place on Lake Chelan a day early. HOT! 98° at 5:00 p.m. Automatic dive-in-the-lake temperature!

We saw fantastic cloud formations that evening and over the next few days, along with plenty of smoke blowing down lake from the Rainbow Bridge fire just above Stehekin at the north end of the lake. Very colorful sunsets, blood-red moon and sunrises, too.

This cloud was a precursor to a wild three hour lightning and thunderstorm on Saturday afternoon that dumped plenty of rain and cleared the air of smoke for the rest of the day and into Sunday. The rain also helped to slow down the fire, thankfully. (Here is a useful fire tracking site for western states: inciweb.org)

Before leaving Chelan for home on Monday morning, we stopped and bought some beautiful local Lodi apples (10# box), melons, tomatoes, and bing cherries (4#).

The apples became Apple-Maple Preserves (from the Jamlady Cookbook); quite delicious spooned over plain yogurt.

Cherries in Wine (from Well Preserved).

After a few days at home we headed west to Ocean Park at the edge of the Pacific Ocean to visit Renée and friends; cool, cloudy, and drizzly weather. Talk about contrasts in temperature! Sunday turned out to be lovely and warm.


Always carry the camera—you never know what you will find. Pristine gull  feathers, a  necklace of orange seaweed or a pair of Bald Eagles perched above the beach.

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THE BEST 30 MILE FIREWORKS SHOW ANYWHERE

12 Monday Jul 2010

Posted by backyardnotes in July, The beach, Travel

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WE SPENT INDEPENDENCE DAY weekend with our friends in Ocean Park at the north end of the Long Beach peninsula. Saturday, sister Renée and I went to Astoria, Oregon so I could find a gift for my niece and her husband-to-be at RiverSea Gallery, a very cool collection of local (Oregon, NW) artist’s works. We wandered around Astoria, bought some local (Washington) fruit (unbelievably sweet raspberries from Woodland and apricots from Maryhill) from a roadside stand in Chinook, and checked out an antique store in Klipsan Beach. By late afternoon the sun was shining and it was warm. We all had hopes of clear Fourth of July Sunday.

Our friends have oceanfront  property so it is a short walk to the beach and spectacle of Fourth of July fireworks. They have been hosting a potluck dinner the past four years that includes neighbors, family, and friends, and has now grown to about 25-30 people in all. After dinner most of us head down the beach like everyone else on the peninsula.

Late in the afternoon, folks begin staking their claim to spots on the beach for fireworks and bonfires and settle in for the evening and coming darkness. About dusk the fireworks show begins and goes on until midnight—for nearly thirty miles along the length of the beach! It has to be the most spectacular fireworks show anywhere.

A final look southward towards Long Beach.

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PICK AND EAT! GREEN, GARDEN TREATS

18 Friday Jun 2010

Posted by backyardnotes in Native plants, Rain, The beach, Travel, Weather

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Tags

beach glass, fava beans, Gardening, peas, rain

WHERE DID THE LAST MONTH GO? I can hardly believe it has been that long since the last post!

THE PEAS ARE IRRESISTIBLE, PLENTIFUL AND THERE HAS BEEN A LOT OF PICKING AND EATING straight away–no cooking needed! The peas that I have growing are snow peas and snap peas. I have not cooked a single one yet as we have eaten them in the raw state in green salads and as a salad, in a slight variation of the pea and bacon salad found at deli counters over the last fifteen years. On Friday I picked nearly four pounds of peas and over nine pounds of fava beans! Bountiful!

Once the fava beans are shelled, the weight drops considerably. At this stage they are ready for blanching and then slipping off the bitter outer skins to reveal the sweet, tender, green bean inside.

The blanched and shelled beans make a tasty spread for bread when puréed with a touch of garlic, lemon and olive oil. Today I will finish picking the peas and favas so I can finally plant tomatoes, peppers, eggplant, and squash plants. The weather has been so rainy and below normal temperatures for June. But, wishful thinking, summer is just a couple of days away! This might be the latest I’ve gotten the tomatoes into the ground.

Time for a little catch up on what has bloomed over the last few weeks!

Astrancia ‘Ruby Wedding’

Papaver somniferum in lavender

and a frilly red one.

An unknown mushroom that popped up last week after rain. It is eight inches across!

And speaking of rain, it beads up perfectly on the leaves of this hosta ‘Abiqua Gourd’.

LAST SATURDAY we took a trip north to Port Townsend to meet Erynn and a friend and walk to Glass Beach at the foot of McCurdy Point on the Strait of Juan de Fuca. It is a three mile walk each way and with a minus tide there is plenty of time to search for glass treasures and check out sea life that is hidden half of the day.

Beach glass, pottery shards and assorted treasures!

There were thousands of these little sand spirals and piles. Worms?

After walking the beach we checked in at Fort Worden State Park a late 19th and early 2oth century coastal artillery fort on the Strait of Juan de Fuca. It is one of three forts that guarded the entrance to Puget Sound. It is an interesting place to explore and has great views north to the San Juan Islands and Whidbey Island to the east. The old concrete batteries for gun emplacements make for great exploring and photographing,

Lots of dark places down stairs and behind big metal doors.

The lighthouse at Pt. Wilson, just a short walk from the campground.

The lovely, dainty Nootka rose.

Time now for gardening, the weather today is fair and looking good for at least acouple more. We may even have temperatures in the normal range of 70°! Some of the first lilies are in bloom and a pale blue delphinium too. So much to do!

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