A photo series of the Mount Si High School National Honors Society volunteering on Friday, April 17.
Snoqualmie band LocoMotive is prepping for its premiere Seattle show with the Americana, Seattle-based band Massy Ferguson at the Triple Door on Saturday, April 25. Graduating from low-key pubs to acclaimed music venues is a praise-worthy feat for any band, but when its members are still in middle school and most of their peers are heading to soccer or baseball tournaments, it’s practically legendary.
I’m still reeling from Jim Reitz’s Rattlesnake Lake cover photo last week, which is what I love about the Valley – there’s so much to see here.
What does Northwest rock ‘n’ roll darling Jim Hendrix have in common with farming?
On Friday, April 10, more than 100 guests joined the Snoqualmie Valley Hospital staff for the official ribbon cutting at the new hospital.
“When I get involved in things, I really like to get involved,” Denise Stone stated in her North Bend home, where she’s been hand-sewing 15 Civil War-era gowns and long-tail tuxedos since March.
Snoqualmie’s Public Works Director Dan Marcinko described the city’s annual Centennial Fields Park egg hunt as, “Six weeks of work for 30 seconds of entertainment.”
An on-going photo essay from new staff-reporter/photographer Allyce Andrew.
For an industry that started declining in the 1950s, the Northwest Railway Museum is picking up steam, literally.
An escaped flock of sheep in Wilderness Rim are looking for their shepherd.
Jeanne Hansen Park officially opens in Snoqualmie.
Nels Melgaard said the Nursery at Mount Si started from a simple sign, planted 17 years ago: “Plant Sale, 1 Mile.”
Valley monuments are pretty obvious: Mount Si, a roving elk herd, the Snoqualmie Falls – but when talking to residents about Frankie’s Pizza, it’s hard not to group it with local landmarks.