A Walk in Elton Bennett Park

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(Edited)

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I took the camera for a walk today, to Elton Bennett Park in my hometown of Hoquiam, Wash.

The plan was to participate in the Wednesday Walk with @tattoodjay and the worldwide community that has gathered around his #wednesdaywalk challenge.

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A local tourist guide describes Elton Bennett Park as “a 9-acre wooded site located in north central Hoquiam, providing a picturesque mile-plus hiking trail through (a) densely forested landscape.”

The park is on a hillside, and the trail loops generally up and back down, with plenty of dips and rises and trickling streams in between. There are a myriad of ‘picturesque’ nooks and crannies in the park, and they present an interesting challenge, for me, in learning how to capture through a camera the beauty I see just walking through.

The first thing I noticed today is the skunk cabbage blooming in a line along the stream. You can’t see the stream, but it’s there in the little dip on the right.

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And here’s a view of a particularly grand skunk cabbage that I found a little ways up the trail.

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Heading up....

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… and looking back down.

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Usually I ignore the handful of signs in the park, especially when I’m taking photos, but today this one caught my eye. It does offer a fuller sense of the park to share it, I suppose.

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The parks department has some work to do, when they can get around to it.

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Here you can actually see one of the trickling streams I referred to earlier. Hoquiam is on the Pacific Coast in western Washington. We have a Mediterranean climate, with two seasons: rainy and not-so-rainy. It’s still the rainy season, so there’s plenty of water running down the hill.

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A place to sit...

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...and a place to walk.

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Below, and in the headline shot, that’s Elton Bennett’s former house peeking through the trees. According to what I’ve pieced together, from oral tradition and some reading, Elton Bennett was a
silkscreen artist and local teacher. He owned the land the park is on and loved walking there, as I think we can all understand. After he died in 1974, in a plane crash, his daugther gave the land to the city of Hoquiam for a nature park.

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And finally, I’ll leave you with my view just before heading home, looking down Grand Avenue from the trailhead.

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Recent Photography from Hoquiam, Wash.

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Dog Marsh

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Port of Grays Harbor

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Simpson Avenue Bridge

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Old Cannery Park

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Immanuel Baptist Church



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