Tulalip Tribes – The Hibulb Cultural Center
Monday, August 22nd, 2011This is an inside view of the Hibulb Cultural Center where I spent part of my 2011 birthday.
This is an inside view of the Hibulb Cultural Center where I spent part of my 2011 birthday.
Last Friday while parking my car on a street in Ballard, a small suburb of Seattle, I was confronted with a parking situation, which most of us know all too well. Who hasn’t experienced that someone takes your parking spot, though you’ve been first in line. Since the person, who took my parking spot, acted […]
I have, like many others, a phone answering system that I can remotely access by phone. You only have to assign a remote access code to the system so that you can access many features of your answering system remotely from a touch-tone phone. Yesterday, before I left my apartment, at least 4 messages were […]
If you ever visit Washington State, take also the time to tour Northeast Washington, which looks totally different than the Pacific side. Northeast Washington’s terrain was created by cataclysmic Ice Age Floods and left a deeply scarred plateau with hundreds of small lakes, flat top mountains, and canyons known as “coulees†(ravines and ancient basins […]
For the past few weeks I focused a little bit on writing a few eligible singles on the dating site that I’m a subscriber of, but after the initial e-mails no serious e-mail exchange developed thereafter. I’ve read that men are more visual than women, but I’m a visual person, too. Women’s preference may be […]
Quite a few of my dating encounters in the Seattle area belong also to my uncommon experiences. But I’m coming to the conclusion that these experiences are planned acts and are part of a system that is exercised here in this area. Since the divorce from my ex-husband I’m single and I live alone. I’m […]
You may have already read my post ‘Symbols and numbers’. There I outlined some of the connecting links of my numerological profile showing up in the number Pi. I just read the Washington State history on the web site historylink.org and I noticed quite a few data and dates that play a prominent role in […]
I just read on another site about the history of the Cape Flattery trail. Now it’s a very pleasant trail, but that hasn’t always been so. Jeff Logan writes on his site that the sightseers from all over the world hiked before the renovation “through a muddy, poorly maintained trail – and risked plunging off […]
Last week I took a few days off and toured the Olympic Peninsula with Kari who is originally from Norway. A couple years ago I met Kari at the Seattle Astronomy Club of which her husband is a member. We both like to travel and she accepted my proposal to explore together the unique countryside […]