Fall came to the Northwest in a blaze
of color. Derrille and I don’t remember the rich colors of the maple and alder
trees during the years we called Kitsap Country home. Were our lives too busy to notice the beauty
of fall trees? Or is this year’s
display more a product of the intensely hot summer and the sudden drop in
October’s night temperatures? The
Albertson’s Grocery Store in Kingston put out this great display of fall
offerings.
Bins of pumpkins flanked the festive display
with pots of asters in dazzling fall colors to catch your eye.
These trees at the Kingston Ferry
terminal remind me of the coral trees in San Diego. Our Chula Vista resort trees bloom like
this. Interestingly the coral trees only
lose part of their leaves at a time. They will maintain green leaves all
winter. Since we are leaving soon, I’ll
not have the opportunity to see if these Kingston trees do the same.
We took the ferry to Lynnwood for a
family gathering. Fall showed a colorful display along our route.
More color along the streets of Lynnwood.
I decorated the front window for the
Harvest Season.
Murphy got up on the dash for his
afternoon nap. He looked around with a
sense of questioning…What is going on here????
Then he settled done for a snooze.
Ashley just enjoys the softness of my
stuffed pumpkin.
Both cats just rearrange my arrangements
when it comes to naptime.
Driving the highways of the peninsula
offer some stunning shots on the days when the sun peeks through. As we drive back to the RV the deciduous
trees shout out their color from the evergreen forests.
Fall color showed around the
Costco parking lot in Silverdale, WA and add color to another foggy day.
More color around Silverdale. Because NW forests grow mostly evergreen trees, our fall color can't compete with Upper
State Michigan or Ontario or New England, but the color can make you stop and
appreciate the wonders of nature.
Color around Poulsbo showed vividly on the
bright days. These bright red trees
to the right stand outside the Poulsbo Athletic Club where DK exercises and I do my PT.
Fall also brings in the fog. Some days the heavy fog lifts about noon and
the sun peeks through. Fog horns can be
heard around harbor entrances.
Fog came and stayed longer than usual
in October. Its presence in Seattle
caused Seattle International Airport to ground their flights. This in turn
messed up air travel around the world.
Following the weeks of fog, came the
gale force winds. Our 33,000 pound RV
rocked and rolled in the wind as did the small Airstream next door. Gusts came in about 45 MPH we think. When Derrille went to the club one
morning the road was littered with limb debris.
When we went out again later, the heavy traffic on this road had cleared
each lane, and moved the debris to the center line and shoulders.
Here in the park some tall skinny fir
trees dropped this debris on one site and on the RV parked there. One of the trees even bumped the rig. That family has moved to a different
site. The trees will be taken down soon.
After the wind, the beautiful leaves
have been blown from the trees, leaving more bare branches. The trees are
moving into their winter dress code. It also makes this nearby bay more visible as we drive to and from town.
These photos taken by our door looking toward Highway 305 show the trees behind our rig and the nearness of the highway. Look carefully and you can see how close the highway cars pass. A white vehicle is passing by in each photo. Imagine big semi-truck and trailers rolling by with enough weight to vibrate our floors and bed. Road noise here is worse than when we sleep at the Flying J Truck Stop on the grapevine at Frazier Park, CA.
This views the area between the
highway and the park. Notice the fence...the one that backs our site.
Ice on the grass at the athletic club one mid-day shows how cold it still was around noon. Thankfully the sun was out making everything look beautiful.
As fall moved through the weeks,
storms blew in and out. The clouds caught my fascination one day on a trip to
and from Bremerton.
A huge cloud seemed to fill the sky over Silverdale.
Unfortunately, I missed the clouds so
loaded with rain it hung heavy over the freeway. But these clouds show a little
of the rain laden clouds floating among the fluffy white ones. The winds were
moving the clouds quickly across the sky.
While fall in the Northwest continues
to morph into winter, we excitedly plan our departure on November 19th
in search of the sun. A sunny fall day in the Pacific
NW remains a beautiful, exhilarating, brisk experience, but still a little too cool for those of us who have acclimated to the
warmer temperatures of the southwest.
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