10 Best Places to Live in Washington
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10 Best Places to Live in Washington.
The state of Washington is just about everything the photos and movies make it out to be, only better. From deep lush greenery, to stunning mountains, to rain hipster neighborhoods, Washington has the best of all things nature based as well as metropolitan inspired. Seattle is the obvious tourist hub with its iconic Space Needle and birthplace of Starbucks Coffee, however there are dozens of Pacific Northwest gems surrounding landmarks such as Mount Rainier, Puget Sound, the Grand Coulee Dam, the Hoh Rainforest, and more. Enjoy everything its geography offers, and experience a world of culture in these 10 best places to live in Washington.
1: Sammamish
2: Richland
3: Bainbridge Island
4: Kirkland
5: Redmond
6: Bellevue
7: Kennewick
8: Olympia
9: Issaquah
10: Mercer Island
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Top 10 North America Scenic Drives - Washington State
One of the Top 10 North America Scenic Drives is in the Cascade Mountains of Washington State. I-20 snakes it's way through the Cascade National Park to an elevation where even in the July heatwave, there are snow patches by the road. If travelling by motor-home or motorcycle, take note that the road surface is excellent.
Just when you think the scenery of rugged peaks, wildflowers and green alpine slopes can't be topped, the road brings you to Diablo Lake. Fed by glaciers the water takes on a blue color that just doesn't seem real. Memorable and truly one of the Top 10 North America Scenic Drives.
Music: Someone Else's Memories by Revolution Void
Let's Talk Parks Canada Halifax!
Register today on the Let’s Talk Parks Canada Halifax! website:
The Let’s Talk Parks Canada Halifax! consultations are an opportunity for everyone to shape the management plan/future of the Halifax Citadel and the four other historic sites that, together, make up the Halifax Defense Complex.
We’d like to hear your suggestions for a name for the roads that encircle the Halifax Citadel. A name that speaks to the site’s rich history, while making it easier for visitors locate the front entrance today. #NameThisStreet
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driving through the grand coulee - great scenery
this is the path cut by the floods of Lake Missoula during the Ice Age. in Washington state.
Small Town Alberta half an hour North of Calgary
Main Street Beiseker
INSIDE THE LAST CHANCE SALOON IN WAYNE, ALBERTA
WAYNE BAR, LAST CHANCE SALOON,
Driving Oakbank, Manitoba, Canada
Oakbank is a small community in Manitoba, Canada located about 15 km east of the provincial capital Winnipeg, in the Rural Municipality of Springfield. It has a population of about 4,600 persons and serves as a dormitory town or bedroom community for Winnipeg, as a majority of the residents work in Winnipeg. Oakbank's rapid population growth is representative of small towns in the Winnipeg Capital Region, as two new housing developments are being expanded in the town.
From Wikipedia.
Google road trip Irma,Alberta,Canada to Carbon,Alberta,Canada
Music: Hank Williams Jr. 1985 - Five-O 06 - Lawyers, Guns And Money, Picked randomly. Images from Google Street View, due to some longitude and latitude issues some times it will appear to run in reverse
Minot, ND. November 2016 in HD!!
Minot came into existence in 1886, when James J. Hill's Great Northern Railway ended its push through the state for the winter, after having difficulty constructing a trestle across Gassman Coulee. It was the end of the railway's line, so whenever a train came into the town and the stop was announced, the conductor would call out Minot, this is Minot, North Dakota, prepare to meet your doom. A tent town sprang up overnight, as if by magic, thus the city came to be known as the Magic City, and in the next five months, the population increased to over 5,000 residents, further adding to the nickname's validity.[citation needed]
The town site was chosen by the railroad to be placed on the land of then-homesteader Erik Ramstad. Ramstad was convinced to relinquish his claim, and became one of the city leaders.
The town was named after Henry D. Minot, a railroad investor, an ornithologist and friend of Hill. Its Arikara name is niwaharít sahaáhkat [niWAharít sAhaáhkAt, niWAharít shaáhkAt];[9] its Hidatsa name is dibiarugareesh, (Plum Coulee).[10]
The city was incorporated on June 28, 1887.
The Minneapolis, St. Paul and Sault Ste. Marie Railroad (Soo Line) later built a line from Valley City up to Canada. While initially their plan was to cross the Souris River at Burlington, local interests and arguments convinced them otherwise; landholders along the new route donated the right-of-way. They reached Minot in 1893.
Minot and its surrounding area were wide open throughout 1905-20. Population grew rapidly due to railroad construction and availability of unclaimed land. Nearly complete court records of Ward County and Minot document the prevalence and different types of criminal activity, and offer strong support for the dubious title of crime capitol of North Dakota. State attorney general William Langer helped clean up the town in 1917-1920, but by the time Prohibition had arrived in the 1920s the city had become a center of illegal activities associated with the High Third district, which were exacerbated due to the city being a supply hub of Al Capone's liquor smuggling operations. The hotbed of alcohol bootlegging, prostitution, and opium dens that sprang up in the Downtown area soon led people to give Minot the nickname Little Chicago. The Smugglers used a network of underground tunnels (some of which were previously built for heating or deliveries) to transport and conceal the illicit cargo entering from Canada.[11]
20 Glacial Potholes at Askola Finland (Hiidenkirnut)
Total of 20 cylindrical potholes have been found at the area of Kirnukallio in Askola. The largest of them is the pothole named ”Jättiläisen kuhnepytty” (The Giant’s Tub) (15:50) which has a diameter of 4,2 m and is 10,3 m deep. There are also three other large potholes beside the Giant's Tub. Professori Okko(15:20) has a depth of 4 m. And a special triple-pothole named Kohiseva(17:30), a Finnish term for the sound of a waterfall. The pothole Vakka(19:10) is 3,2 m deep.