Friday/ rain: way, way too much 🌊
Wow.
New York City has gotten two or three months’ worth of rain in one day, and there is nowhere for the water to go.
JFK airport recorded an unprecedented 8 inches of rain in 24 hours.

[Hiroko Masuike/The New York Times]
[Mike Segar/Reuters]
[Gregg Vigliotti/ The New York Times]
[Gregg Vigliotti/ The New York Times]
[Uli Seit/ The New York Times]
Thursday/ another shutdown? 🩻
It’s almost Sept. 30— and they never learn, those House Republicans.
Here it is: we don’t want the US government to shut down, and we don’t appreciate being held hostage to your delusions.

[Table posted by Steven Rattner @SteveRattner on X]
Wednesday/ aurora borealis 🌌

[Infographic by capturetheatlas.com]
Please note: a camera presents severe limitations when the lights appear in an animated fashion, and in the entire night sky overhead!
The photographer is Francois Theron and he used a Sony NEX-3 digital camera with a 10-second exposure.
Tuesday/ back in Rain City ☔️
The three friends made their way back to Seattle today, taking an early 7 am flight out of Fairbanks on Alaska Airlines.

Gold is mined in Alaska to this day, and the state’s largest mine is in fact 25 miles northeast of Fairbanks. The mine’s name is Fort Knox and it has been operating since 1996.
Monday/ at the museum 🏛
We made a brief stop in downtown Fairbanks today, and then headed to the The University of Alaska Museum of the North (the museum is on the campus of the university).








Sunday/ Alaska Route 2 🏞
Today we drove in a southeasterly direction from Fairbanks, on Alaska Route 2 South along the Tanana River.



Saturday/ Alaska Route 3 🏞
These pictures are from a four-hour roundtrip drive on Alaska Route 3 South— from Fairbanks to the Denali National Park Visitor Center.



The plaque on the monument reads as follows: During World War II under the leadership of Major “Muktuk” Marston and 21 paid staff, 6,368 volunteers from 7 native ethnic groups and European Americans, whose ages ranged from 12 to 80 years old, and including some 30 women, watched the northern shores of Alaska for enemy movements and were instrumental in the Battle for Attu, a foreign war battle fought on domestic soil. In commemoration of their personal sacrifices for our Freedom.






The summit of Denali is the highest mountain peak in North America, elevation 20,310 ft (6,190 m).
Friday/ Fairbanks, AK 🏞
It’s fall here in the Northern Hemisphere, and the three friends from Seattle made it out to Fairbanks, Alaska, for a long weekend.
Top to bottom: Stepping on board in Seattle; a glacier somewhere over Canada; approaching Fairbanks— and noticing fall’s colors in the woods; a bear at Fairbanks airport; the view from our rented cottage, some 15 miles outside Fairbanks.
Thursday/ friends 😚
Wednesday/ Pier 57 🛞
Tuesday/ Canoe Pass bridge 🛶
Two two-lane bridges (Canoe Pass Bridge and Deception Pass Bridge) on Washington State Route 20, connect Whidbey Island in Island County, to Fidalgo Island in Skagit County in Washington State.
The bridges opened on July 31, 1935.
[Source: Wikipedia]
These pictures of the Canoe Pass Bridge were all taken from Pass Island, looking south. The pictures were taken around 4.15 pm. The Salish Sea is to the west, and with high tide at about 6.48 pm today, the tide from the Pacific Ocean was still coming in.
Monday/ at the roastery ☕️
Here’s the scene at the Starbucks Reserve Roastery on Pike street.
We didn’t get to see the roasted coffee beans spill from the roasting barrel into the giant cooling pan, but the place was packed with tourists and locals (a guy wearing a shirt with an Amazon Web Services logo on, for example).
Coffees from Sumatra, Malawi and Viet Nam were being brewed, and we picked Malawi. (My friends that are visiting Seattle, are from South Africa).
Sunday 🪷
Saturday/ setting sail 🛳️
Here’s the Norwegian Bliss just leaving the pier in Seattle and setting sail for Sitka, Alaska, shortly after 5 pm this afternoon.
She will go as far as Juneau and then to Icy Straight Point 30 miles across the Alaskan Inside Passage, before turning back to Seattle.

Friday/ it’s Oktoberfest 🍺
Happy Friday.
Oktoberfest commences tomorrow (in Munich, Germany, of course).
The price of a beer* is expected to be between €12.60 and €14.90 ($13.45 and $15.90), an average of 6.12 percent more than last year.
*One liter of beer! (34 US fluid ounces or about two pints).

Thursday/ Mowich lake, one more time 🦌
I made a final run out to Mt Rainier National Park today, to pick up the Wonderland Trail hikers where they had started eight days ago: the campground at Mowich Lake.

The name “Mowich” derives from the Chinook* jargon word for deer.
*The Chinook Indian Nation is made up of the five western-most Chinookan speaking tribes at the mouth of the Columbia River.
Wednesday/ not too late for flowers
Tuesday/ Sourdough Ridge Trail ⛰
I made another run to Sunrise Visitor Center on the slopes of Mount Rainier on Monday morning. (My hiking party needed me to help them retrieve their food for the next four days. It was in a cache down by the White River Campground, an arduous trek by foot from where they were on the mountainside).
I took the opportunity to walk up to the Sourdough Ridge Trail to the north of the visitor center. The summit of Rainier is then to the west.
There was a little drizzle on the mountain early in the morning.
It took a while for the clouds and fog to clear, and for the snow-capped summit to reveal itself for a picture through the trees.
Monday/ may we never forget 🎀

[Posted at nbcnewyork.com Picture Credit: Jeff Swensen/ Getty Images]



























