Friday 30 September 2011

a busmans holiday for hugh

Next stop, couch surfing in Seattle with Hugh and Bob.  They live in a lovely suburb of Seattle in a house full of fish tanks.  Hugh is a zookeeper at Woodland Park Zoo in Seattle.  He very kindly offered to give us a guided tour of some of the sights.

Caution fish passing


Fish ladder built to allow salmon to pass between fresh and salt water, and to navigate the locks. Glass panels below the water line make it possible to watch the fish as they swim through the ladder.

The Hiram M. Chittenden Locks, built in 1911 and often nicknamed the Ballard Locks, provides a link for boats between the salt water of Puget Sound and the fresh water of the Ship Canal, which connects eastward to Lake Union and Lake Washington.


Wave to the camera Fiona


Hugh, Bob and Fiona at the top of the pass


There is an underground viewing area where we watched Coho salmon swimming upstream past the windows.  There are five different species of salmon returning at different times of year so that there are always some passing the windows no matter when you visit.


A random rocket


Gasworks park was a highlight of Seattle.  A former gasification plant, its now a public park, all the parts have been left behind and painted.




Lake Union, a great view of downtown including the space needle, the houseboats around the edge of the lake were in the film Sleepless in Seattle.


Trying out the living sundial in the park.  The bird in the background is a remote controlled one!



Live action role play (LARP) in the park, it was genius, every so often they would walk into the bushes and knock the hell out of each other


Hugh had a lot of fish


This pipe fish was our favourite


Cool whiskey bottle lamp



Hugh and Fiona at the orangutan enclosure


There's an orang in there somewhere


Funky!


Pete and his wife Nina an old married couple and don't really get on.  They were both caught as babies in the wild 43 years ago, they now have several children and grandchildren!  The gorillas that we met and Hugh looks after can be seen at this link


Some of the gorillas were very small


On top of the gorilla and bear house


yum, yum, gorilla food


Not impressed with the prospect of seeing better in the dark


Hugh and Fiona above the gorilla enclosure



The new sun bear had been ripping up his enclosure so some maintenance was required


Randy the snoozing sloth bear


An awesome tree kangaroo


The grizzly enclosure was very elaborate, it was quite weird seeing them in captivity


Going to see the sloth, Fiona was still in shock from the lion roaring at us, it was pretty intense as the sound was amplified by the small concrete building.  A young lion had just arrived from another zoo and was still unsettled.  We attempted to visit it by walking backwards so we didn't make eye contact but it roared so loudly that we had to give up, the noise went right through us.


The caged beast.  Poor Mocha thought he was hidden well away from nosy people right at the back of the cage, then we came along behind the scenes and lifted some camouflage netting to reveal a smiley sloth.

So long and thanks for all the fish............

So our two months in Alaska were up and all that remained was our 5 day ferry trip back to Bellingham.


A guy from the US coast guard station in Kodiak was going through his fishing gear, there was a lot of it.  Kodiak coastguard station is the largest in the world.


Osprey perching on the ship, we also saw a peregrine flying around the ship



This is Yakutat at night, one of the stops


Lamin the guy who worked at the till on the ferry, his female colleagues thought this bear looked like him and it is a pretty good likeness!


A last look at Juneau from the ferry.  Right in the middle of the picture is Mendenhall Glacier.


Nancy and Bill - Nancy was an anthropologist and had come up with a theory about japanense influences on the native american (Zuni) people of new mexico.



Ferry through the Inside Passage








Another great sunset from the back of the boat.  We saw a 'super-pod' of dolphins on the last night as we came alongside Vancouver Island.


Ketchikan, the last Alaskan town on our 2 month Alaskan tour, just a quick trip off the ferry into town as they were trying to make up for time we lost due to bad weather.  We went to town hoping to get a photo of 'double Leon', a pair of poodles identical to Leon from New York state but failed to find the shop we'd seen them in on the way up.  


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A blacksmith in ketchican selling recycled stuff, he also did viking reinactments


This made me chuckle as it is supposed to be the lowest level of threat at the ferry terminal, out of 4 or 5. I can only think that the next couple beyond this are certain attack, imminent attack and run away!


This trailer was 35 ft long, god knows what was in it


A guy we met on deck had a great money saving idea, they told him it was $750 to take the bike on the ferry so he paid someone else $50 to load it on the back of their truck - genius




This last paragraph is awe inspiring and highlights why I hated the book so much - God bless the USA!