I meant to have the next chapter of Escape done, my darlings, but I got busy cleaning and didn’t stop until it was time to meet up with Funny Diva. And once I got groceries, got home, and finished making the bed and packing book orders, my body decided it needed a hot soak before my muscles ganged up and murdered me. Then my computer was being an asshole. So what you’re going to get today are really pretty photos taken from the Burke-Gilman trail while storm clouds built. You are also going to get an awesome video with a bathing seagull, a seaplane, and a kayak.
Right, then. So you can actually walk from the Town Center in Lake Forest Park all the way down past Log Boom Park and over to Pagliacci Pizza, which is just what we did. It’s quite a haul for someone who’s been rather sedentary up until a furious cleaning spree, and it was raining intermittently, but it was worth it. Here’s a glimpse of Lake Washington from between trees as we got to Log Boom Park:
When we reached the docks, we were extremely fortunate to get there just as a heron was flying past.
How fabulous is that, with all those subtle colors? I’m astonished the shot came out. I’d just started turning the camera on, and it wasn’t yet fully booted when I spotted the heron, aimed, and fired. It didn’t even have a real chance to focus. Yet it turned out wonderfully.
Here is a crop of the heron:
I don’t think I’ll ever get tired of seeing great blue herons.
As we reached the end of the dock, we spotted the rotting piles of the old pier. The colors were lovely.
As we walked past the industrial buildings, we spotted a cloud raining into the sky, but the rain evaporated before reaching the ground.
And then there was a crow that looked like it was trying to out-fly a roiling, boiling steam eruption, but it was actually just lazily flapping towards where it roosts for the night. There were a great many crows all doing the same.
(Speaking of crows, I spotted one playing lifeguard at Juanita Beach just a couple days ago. So adorbs!)
Funny Diva and I crossed the road and had ourselves some pizza at Pagliacci before heading back. While we were inside, it poured rain. It had stopped by the time we got out. Our luck was very much in, and it was a delightful time, made even more delightful by this seaplane landing while we were at Log Boom Park. How often do you get a chance to film a seaplane, a kayak, and a bathing seagull all at once?
First time for me. Loved it. And I deliberately made the title sound like the set-up to a silly joke, so you lot can have at in the comments if you think of good jokes to tell. I’m going to go finish Chapter 4 of In the Path of Destruction and pass right out. Oy.
Nice pictures! And who doesn’t love Great Blue Herons?
There’s a word for that – it’s called virga. I learned a few things by reading the Wiki article about it.
That’s what it’s called, thank you!
I experienced virga once and only once, on a late spring drive to Carlsbad Caverns in NM. Raining on top of the car, but the road was totally dry. It was such a strange phenomenon that I had to get out and touch to assure myself I wasn’t seeing things.
Virga is a regular occurrence here in Az. :) As much as I loved living in the PNW (I was in the Everett/Mukilteo area), I feel at home again in Southern Az.