Showing posts with label Cedar Street. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Cedar Street. Show all posts

Saturday, April 22, 2017

The Little House in McCleary

Apr. 21, 2017

Construction house on Rabbit Hill, Cedar St. This little place probably has the best panoramic view of the whole town.

McCleary has been going through a major building boom. One house appears to be nearly completed on Rabbit Hill and several more are planned.

Friday, August 26, 2016

What happened to the rabbits?

Aug. 26, 2016. Part of Rabbit Hill is being shaved, probably for more new houses. I didn't see any rabbits up there this morning.

Sunday, August 21, 2016

View of Hospital Hill

Dec. 8, 2010. From Cedar St. on Rabbit Hill. At the time this photo was taken Mark Reed Hospital, the building at the highest elevation, was still operating. The hills in the background are in Mason County.

No matter the season

Dec. 8, 2010. The view from Cedar St. up on Rabbit Hill, no matter the season, reveals McCleary to be a town carved into the forest. We are independent from sprawl, out here in the twilight zone where the Aberdeen and Olympia spheres of influence do not touch. McCleary is a dangerous town to underestimate, as so many of our more urban neighbors have done.

Blue sky in December

Dec. 8, 2010. How often does that happen?

Cedar Street view from Rabbit Hill.

Sunday, August 14, 2016

Forest fire smoke over Hospital Hill

Oct. 4, 2012. Taken from Cedar St. on Rabbit Hill. The fire was in Mason County and the smoke headed southwest.

Saturday, August 6, 2016

Cedar St. and Evergreen Pl.

Otherwise known, by me at least, as Rabbit Hill. July 29, 2016

Tuesday, August 2, 2016

Frank Lloyd Wrong

July 13, 2016

Cedar St., one realtor actually marketed this place as "Frank Lloyd Wrong." It had a flat roof. Why anyone would build a structure with a flat roof in western Washington is beyond me, especially in Grays Harbor County.

Friday, July 29, 2016

The view from Rabbit Hill

At least that is what I call the area of Cedar Street and Evergreen Place due to the fact rabbits outnumber people up there 500 to one. This is a view of McCleary looking northwest, where the Olympic Mountains taper off into hills. Mason County is in the distance. June 25, 2016