Archive for June, 2005

Fremont Fair this weekend

Despite my crowd-induced claustrophobia, one of my favorite things about Seattle is the summer festival season. This weekend marks one of the most venerable – the Fremont Fair.

Now in it’s 34th year, the Fremont Fair is a festival of food, arts, crafts, music and general celebration. Drop a dollar in the collection bins located at all entrances – your money goes to the Fremont Public Association to provide shelter, food, and advocacy for low income residents of Seattle and King County. Last year’s fair raised $26K.

The Fremont Fair kicks off with the annual Solstice Parade at noon. More than just naked bikers, the Solstice Parads (accompanied by the Seattle Art Car Blowout ) helps prove that colorful personal expression is still alive and well even in these days of corporate homogenity. For a complete schedule of events, check out the Fair’s website.

A word to the wise: driving to the fair’s impossible. King County Metro offers many convenenient shuttles to Fremont.

Zen in the City

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image: Tibetan Nuns Project
Welcome to Seattle!

Good energy in people, places and things draw me close, and likewise, bad vibes repel me and will immediately send me dashing out of the room [and yes, even out of cyberspace] faster than you can click your mouse. You’ll either have me at hello or not. There’s nothing in between.

I’m not into the “new-age” practice by all means, though I dabble in all things that give me positive energy and take me out of the daily stress and the hustle and bustle of the norm.

In Seattle, we’re fortunate to be surrounded by nature

Summer Weekends: Forever in a Day

[skye:] New Yorkers “are what they wear.” Chicagoans “are what they eat.” Here in Seattle, “we are our summer weekend,” and we are sharing the experience, one passion at a time.

If you’re only just tuning in, where have you been? We’ve been using a five-question format to play with a one-dimensional idea. Seattle Metblogs’ own Cat Nilan blazed a trail to take you hiking and camping. PNW Flying group’s ace pilot David Herman made room for you in his two-seater Cessna for his tenth trip around the horn. Now Eastside Photography group’s organizer John Wilbanks immortalizes that moment-by-moment beauty that is our state.


Chuckanut Drive
Sammish Bay at the south end of Chuckanut Dr, with Orcas Island in the background.

John G. Wilbanks is a photographer based out of the Seattle area. When not photographing high end real estate for local clients you can find him pursuing his true passion: photographing nature. His travels have taken him all over the Western U.S. and Canada along with a number of trips to Europe. His next goal? Getting up into Canada’s Yukon Territory to photograph the Mackenzie Mountains.

1) What’s your summertime weekend activity?

I’m usually trying to find new places to go. I have a tendency to travel out of state a lot but realize Washington has so much to offer if I would just spend some time locally. The drive up Chuckanut Drive toward Bellingham is beautiful with plenty of opportunity to pull off and get a quick shot of the bay and Islands; sunset is without a doubt my favorite time to go. Of course, being not much different than most Seattleites, the convenience of the Alpine Lakes has a strong pull…half an hour and you’re at the trailhead ready for a day hike or a quick trail run.
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Fighting the good fight


For years I would tell people that I had a brown thumb, but in fact I actually have a green thumb and a forest of blackberry vines in my backyard in support of this statement. Blackberry is always so contradictory, with half of us trying to pound it out of existence and the other half out on the roadside, not 5 feet from cars driving by (can I get a chorus of “ewwww” please?) harvesting its sweet berry goodness.

On Thursday I accepted the City of Bellevue’s invitation to attend their FREE weed workshop and for over an hour, Laurie and Sasha held a lively lecture about what weeds would be around in my neck of the woods, and how best to get rid of them. Basically this involved putting a name to the little devils, telling me which ones were “annuals” and which were “perennials” and what to do with each. Unfortunately, none of the options involved a cleansing by fire, but I suppose you can’t have everything.

One of the interesting things I learned is that we create a lot of our weed problems because they sell them in nurseries. We’re all such a trusting crowd that we assume that we can just go to Home Depot and get anything in a pot and plant it in the ground, but in fact some of that pretty stuff you can buy does so well that it propogates itself all over the place and the next thing you know, there it is, everywhere you go. And that’s how Yellow Archangel got on their “next best bet to become an invasive weed” list. And butterfly bushes! When she said that, I colored up guiltily. I have two. In my defense, they came with the house. If it had been up to me, my garden would have been a wasteland by now. So before you plant, check out all their weed lists and laws.

For the juicy-gossip portion of the lecture, Laurie shared the news that she’d been able to get a grant for 50% matching on native plants for lakeside/streamside owners, not to mention various (some sort of clearing) permits waived and other concessions. That’s probably just for Bellevue, but you never know, and you should definitely always ask if you’re planning to go native. Not only that but they have plenty of ideas for plants you can put down that won’t go nuts and take over the state, and also, landscape templates.

But back to blackberry. The route I think I’m going to go with is the manual way they suggested. First, cut everything back with loppers, and go in and find as many of the root balls as you can. Put down mulch. Wait. When the sprouts start showing their heads, dig up as many root balls as you can find, and wait. Repeat as necessary.

Lastly, we have to give props to the Glendale country club who not only provided a space, but also came through with free cheesecake. Mmmm, free cheesecake.

Signs around Bellevue: you had me at “free”

It’s so nice to see people happy on a Friday. And the guys at the bank were greeting everyone by name! Everyone but me, that is — cus I’m all antisocial, and I use the ATM. I’m just here for the free coffee.

World Naked Bike Ride, June 11, 2005


Join participants in over 50 cities worldwide in protesting oil dependency and celebrating nakedity by slapping on some body paint (or not) and riding your bike from Gas Works park through various Seattle neighbourhoods. The ride itself starts at high noon, and there will be a Pre-ride bodypainting/bike-decorating party starting at 9am at the north end of the park.

While the weather forecast doesn’t look great, don’t let that stop you from participating (and don’t forget the sunscreen, just in case!) or at the very least cheering the riders on. [WNBR Seattle]

cross marketing cinema

Too much sun at Folklife made me so sick I was incapacitated for a while. My recovery has involved going out to see lots of movies. Now, I love movies but I hate going to the movie theater most of the time. Periodically I can be drawn out by a movie I just can’t wait to see, or the promise of air conditioning. And now I’ve got a whole new reason not to wait for the video: Cinevend.

A friend and I headed down to the Landmark Metro for a movie last week. As we’re wont to do, we arrived early and as I’m wont to do, I spent my waiting time wandering about the theater where I discovered this fascinating vending machines with DVDs and soundtracks for sale. It’s a simple process–insert credit card, open slot, remove purchase and you’re good to go. I know I’m not the only person who has left a movie wanting to buy the soundtrack and now I’m glad I no longer have to make mad late night rushes to the record store.

weekly weekly reader : late edition

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the Stranger, Seattle Weekly : skimmed, didn’t read

Sorry kids. Because of a little power outage at Metblogs Central Command, the site wasn’t up when you might have been expecting your regular preview/review of what’s in the weeklies. This bit of server downtime seemed like the perfect excuse to skip the feature for this week,1 especially since both papers now have their tables of contents online for your general enjoyment.

Plus, they really seem awfully similar this week, don’t they? Both feature cover stories about nature, death, and destruction have glowing reviews of the Hold Steady; and include Rossi Court Loss takedowns inside.

Naturally, all of the differences you’ve come to know and love are still there: the Stranger is cautiously optimistic in the face of new monorail cost estimates while the Seattle Weekly uses the higher prices to break out it’s gloom and doom dance of joy; the column from the Weekly’s editor is about how Greg “MetroKyoto” Nickels hates trees,1 while Dan Savage’s column is about foot fetish parties.

Once again, the “Mossback” column really tells you a lot about the philosophical differences at the two papers. Knute Berger describes a trip to Freeway Park: “. . . but braving Freeway Park at midday, wandering its odd passageways under the green canopy, you find a really wonderful, forgotten concept . . . ” while the Stranger used it as their inaugral entry in their “Topography of Terror” series [#].

(1) On a personal note, I have a bit of bad news for the three of you who actually like this compare and contrast feature. I’ll be on hiatus for the next couple weeks; so unless I can find someone crazy enough to “guest ‘blog” for me, you’ll need to brave the weekly waters on your own until I get back.

street scene | our own look book

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metblogs caption contest!
(note: “is that a severed deer head in your napsack or are you just happy to see me?” is off-limits.

Observed on Olive Way: a backpack with its own antlers. What do you think? Is this the next big thing, a natural extension of animal prints or does it go too far?

Get SLAMmed

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The Seattle Poetry Slam
meets every Tuesday night
at 8 pm at The Mirabeau Room.

I’ve followed the Seattle Poetry Slam since its early days

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