Aug. 7, 2018.
This path on the SW corner of Maple and Main goes through the Pines. But where are trees, you might ask.
The Pines was a name applied by Cal Clark in the 1950s to the final incarnation of one of the old-time two-story false buildings in downtown McCleary until it was closed by the IRS who padlocked the doors and then later burned (allegedly by kids playing with matches) after being abandoned for a few years in the 1980s.
On this lot at different times in history was a gathering spot for the local Greeks, it was also a house of prostitution upstairs, a topless bar in the 1960s, a family restaurant, a meeting spot for labor agitators in the 1920s-1930s, and a card room where Cecil "Primo" Boling was the dealer with his giant hands.
I recall watching the high flames shoot up from the roof which pretty much gutted the place. The burned out derelict remained standing for far too long as a wrecked reminder of McCleary's colorful past.
The former Timbear Cafe stands across Maple St.
Random images & musings from the metro of McCleary, Grays Harbor County, Washington
Where the sidewalk unbends
Aug. 5, 2018
This sidewalk is only a couple years old at best, but the elements are already catching up to it fast. On 4th near Simpson.
This sidewalk is only a couple years old at best, but the elements are already catching up to it fast. On 4th near Simpson.
Moron!
Aug. 5, 2018
Political comment found on the Post Office bulletin board. In the same handwriting the bottom of the article (snipped from the Olympian) is inscribed "traitor."
I'm shocked, shocked, I tell you, to see that someone out there ... is still reading a newspaper in hardcopy form.
Political comment found on the Post Office bulletin board. In the same handwriting the bottom of the article (snipped from the Olympian) is inscribed "traitor."
I'm shocked, shocked, I tell you, to see that someone out there ... is still reading a newspaper in hardcopy form.
And you think moss on your roof is a problem? Check this out.
Aug. 3, 2018
For a company that has a long history in cutting down forests, it is somewhat amusing to see several young broadleaf trees apparently thriving on the roof of the Simpson lumber dry kilns.
For a company that has a long history in cutting down forests, it is somewhat amusing to see several young broadleaf trees apparently thriving on the roof of the Simpson lumber dry kilns.
The Three Bears
Aug. 3, 2018
Bear icons in front of the Bear's Den.
Maybe they could somehow include a Goldilocks figure with a word balloon saying, "The food in this restaurant is just riiiight."
Bear icons in front of the Bear's Den.
Maybe they could somehow include a Goldilocks figure with a word balloon saying, "The food in this restaurant is just riiiight."
Squaxin Island Tribe bus
Aug. 3, 2018
The Squaxin Island Tribe bus, which includes McCleary as a stop, has my vote for the most amazing and truly Northwest transportation logo in these parts. If you look closely you can pick out the seven animals representing the seven clans of the Tribe, all united into the form of a fish. There is a lot of history behind that graphic.
The Squaxin Island Tribe bus, which includes McCleary as a stop, has my vote for the most amazing and truly Northwest transportation logo in these parts. If you look closely you can pick out the seven animals representing the seven clans of the Tribe, all united into the form of a fish. There is a lot of history behind that graphic.
8 Aberdeen
July 29, 2018
I have lost track how long this detour thing has been going on. Long enough for me to get used to seeing these orange signs be part of the normal landscape.
The detour has resulted in more people from out of town using the eccentric intersection of Simpson/Summit/Third/Main streets, which has now become a case study in anarchy.
The black "up" arrow next to a white silhouette of our first president which has a big "8" numeral in it on an orange background is something Marcel Duchamp would have loved.
I have lost track how long this detour thing has been going on. Long enough for me to get used to seeing these orange signs be part of the normal landscape.
The detour has resulted in more people from out of town using the eccentric intersection of Simpson/Summit/Third/Main streets, which has now become a case study in anarchy.
The black "up" arrow next to a white silhouette of our first president which has a big "8" numeral in it on an orange background is something Marcel Duchamp would have loved.
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