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July 28, 2006

Peek-a-boo!

Bombs away

During the heat-wave last weekend, I removed the cover on our front room ceiling hatch. As a historical note about the boat, this hatch was apparently installed in order to put in a retractable ladder to the upper deck (for reasons lost to the mists of time...) but was since covered over with a lid. I discovered the lid was still mobile, so we pulled it off to help vent the hot air. This worked well for about three days, but then Jasper discovered that he could make the jump from the kitchen table out the hatch, so the cover is back on until I investigate some proper sunroof options.

Quickly! Call Saint George!

Dragonfly

We've had an impressive amount of wildlife on the docks, considering how disturbed the natural layout of the lake is. As mentioned previously there's now a bald eagle in the neighborhood, who is apparently hunting the coho salmon which are running right now. There was a two-foot salmon dead in the marina yesterday, and where there's one we're sure to smell more in the next few days. There are also lots of small samon fry in the marina, swimming around in small schools between the boats.

There have also been a clutch of eight baby mallards that have frequented the marina for the past month, growing rapidly and making quite the ruckus whenever they get separated. They're almost as large as their mother now, and likely to be off fledgling in the next few weeks.

The garden has attracted the usual suspects - bees, aphids (argh!), ladybugs, and ants, but it has also drawn some big, beautiful painted-wing dragonflies and their smaller plain-winged cousins (as pictured above.) They're tough to get a good picture of because they're almost always flitting to-and-fro, resting on plants for just a moment before continuing onward.

The glut of big, beautiful blooms is nearly at its end, but the tomatoes, sunflowers, and wildflowers will continue to draw some wildlife as summer progresses. If any eagles catch fish which caught dragonflies which ate aphids in the marina, we'll be sure to let you know.

July 19, 2006

Time to hide the cats

There I was this evening, on the top deck grilling some bean burgers and I notice an unusually large crow drifting overhead... with a white head and tail.

Right, that's a mature bald eagle, cruising directly over our little marina in the middle of a huge city. It made a few lazy turns around the parking lot out front, then continued gliding toward downtown, doing more loops over the south portion of Lake Union before turning back north, passing directly overhead yet again (by this time I had the binoculars out to get a good view), then cruised north and out of sight toward Fremont.

It turns out this isn't the bird's first trip through the marina, either. Our neighbor saw it last weekend being chased by crows while carrying a very large fish, which it proceeded to drop back into the water, not more than fifty feet from our boats.

I'll try to get a picture if it comes by again, but I suspect it's going to turn out like one of those "polar bear in a white-out" images.

July 5, 2006

Ferocious

Ferocious

Smoke on the water

For the Fourth of July, we had every element - wind, water, earth and fire. A lot of fire. Nature started things out early with a thunderstorm in the wee hours, sending me scrambling out of bed to close a few windows and cover a cardboard box that was sitting outside on the front deck. That passed by rapidly enough and the morning was partly cloudy. Decent weather to set everything up for fireworks, and to tend to the plants and do some weeding.

The afternoon was beautiful, with the sun out and almost every boat on the lake occupied by crowds ready for a party. Shortly before the fireworks a second thunderstorm rolled through with about fifteen minutes of rain and lots of impressive bolts of lightning, which is plenty unusual for Seattle. Things cleared up again in time for the fireworks, which I'm sure Kristin has lots more to say (and post pictures) about.

Little did we know the real adventure of the evening was to follow about two hours later. Kristin returned from retrieving Delia (who was safely housed elsewhere due to the evening's noise) and commented about something apparently burning across the lake. I went out on the pier to discover this:

Fire

That's a massive four-alarm dock fire directly across the lake. Lots more pictures and background below the fold.

Continue reading "Smoke on the water" »

July 3, 2006

The calm before the storm

BOOM!

Late to the party

Wait for me!

This lemon queen sunflower heard there were going to be lots of photos and a post about all the plants and rushed to pop out. Alas, she's a little slow. A late bloomer, if you will.