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The End is Near
After a day and a half of travel, it is the last night.
The sun will go down, while the train is passing through
Montana, and will not rise again until we are well within
Washington state. We will pass through a little sliver of Idaho,
unseen in the dark, around one in the morning. Sleep is
the order of the day, or rather, of the night. After a day on
the train, there is a certain anticipation of the journey's end,
and an odd sort of fatigue. There is also a desire to be well
rested for the first day in Seattle. In the meantime, there are
my books, music, and a good meal in the dining car, as well as a
nice breakfast to start what will be the first day in Seattle. |
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Above:
The platform side of the classic old station at Whitefish
Montana. Whoever designed this station was a genius. It looks
like what an alpine trains station should look like.
Left:
Other than the suspended ceiling, the station interior appears
to be original. |
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An old time scales sits next to a new fangled
public Internet station. |
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The night has brought us through the
mountains and into Washington State. |
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Mountains are everywhere out here, as is
water. The updrafts of the mountains make for plentiful rain.
The same fault that causes the famous earthquakes of California
pushes these huge mountains up everywhere. Washington, and the
shoreline up to Alaska are also earthquake zones. |
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Washington state has a fair amount of
agriculture. Further east, in the interior of the state, there
is quite a bit of ranching. |
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Lots of ship building and ship handling goes
on here too. Seattle is a major port, and the closest shipping
port to Japan. he combined total fo Seattle, and adjacent Tacoma
are about equal to that of Los Angeles. |
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A look out across the sound towards the
ocean. This was my first really good view of it from the train. |
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The sound is a boater's paradise. It is
enclosed from the ocean, yet the ocean is accessible It is also
filled with coves, islands, inlets, and lots of other
interesting places. |
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I wish I knew what this was. I would guess it
is an old Liberty ship that was just not needed after WWII
ended.
I thought it would be easy to find out; but it turns out the
Seattle area is a huge ship graveyard. There are over 200
abandoned ships in the area. |
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An oil refinery, probably for some of the
Alaskan oil. |
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Left:
The Sea, the land, and the mountains.
Below:
One of many marinas. This is a year round boating area, as the
sound does not freeze over. |
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The whole area north of Seattle has a bunch
of picturesque towns that look like little resort towns. |
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Everett Washington. The last stop before
Seattle. |
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The venerable station at Seattle. This is one
of the classic old train stations - a palace to travel. The
station was in the midst of a restoration. A magnificent
ceiling, long covered by ceiling tiles for a more "modern" look,
is seeing the light fo day for the first time in decades. |
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Marble and beautiful plaster work revealed
and restored. To many of these amazing old stations have been
torn down, mutilated, or refaced. it is great to see one being
brought back to life. |
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