Pacific NW News Since 1992 Online
Earth from 35,000 feet and NO we were not there but a friend was there on a standard Airline in First Class and thought this would look pretty cool on our web site. It does as long as I'm not the one up in the sky. I like Amtrak.
A Legend Passes
Pacific Northwest Inlander
Gonzaga University is expecting an overflow crowd at the 800-seat St. Aloysius Church Friday for a memorial service honoring Spokane native and former U.S. ...
A Legend Passes
Pacific Northwest Inlander
Gonzaga University is expecting an overflow crowd at the 800-seat St. Aloysius Church Friday for a memorial service honoring Spokane native and former U.S. ...
Spokane announces warming center locations
KXLY Spokane
Each fall, the City of Spokane tunes up the snow plows, orders liquid de-icer, and makes other preparations for the cold of winter. The winter needs of our ...
Sand pile collapses on, kills 7-year-old Wash. boy - Spokane, North ...
KHQ Right Now
ELLENSBURG, Wash. (AP) - Authorities say a 7-year-old boy who was digging alone in a sand pile near his central Washington home died after the pile ...
Ghost towns of Washington: Selleck
October 29, 2013
For the third
installment of the 'Ghost Towns of Washington' series, we explore an old
mill nestled in the foothills of the Cascades in the Pacific States
Lumber company town of Selleck.
... Winter Storm Watch in effect from Friday afternoon through
Sunday afternoon above 4000 feet...
The National Weather Service in Spokane has issued a Winter Storm
Watch above 4000 feet... which is in effect from late Friday
afternoon through Sunday afternoon.
* Snow accumulations: 6 to 14 inches in the mountains. By Sunday
morning light accumulations of snow are possible down to valley
floors.
* Winds: southwest 10 to 20 mph with gusts up to 40 mph.
* Timing: snow will begin in the high Cascades late Friday
afternoon and continue through Saturday evening... with snow
levels lowering during the day Saturday. Snow will begin over
The Kettle mountains and selkirks during the day Saturday.
* Locations: Chesaw Road... Highway 20 Wauconda Summit... Boulder
Creek Road... Sherman Pass... schweitzer Mountain Road... Blewett
Pass... flowery trail Road.
* Hazard elevation: above 4000 feet.
* Snow level: 5000 feet lowering to 2500 feet.
* Impacts: heavy snow accumulations on mountain roads will make
travel difficult and hazardous.
Sunday afternoon above 4000 feet...
The National Weather Service in Spokane has issued a Winter Storm
Watch above 4000 feet... which is in effect from late Friday
afternoon through Sunday afternoon.
* Snow accumulations: 6 to 14 inches in the mountains. By Sunday
morning light accumulations of snow are possible down to valley
floors.
* Winds: southwest 10 to 20 mph with gusts up to 40 mph.
* Timing: snow will begin in the high Cascades late Friday
afternoon and continue through Saturday evening... with snow
levels lowering during the day Saturday. Snow will begin over
The Kettle mountains and selkirks during the day Saturday.
* Locations: Chesaw Road... Highway 20 Wauconda Summit... Boulder
Creek Road... Sherman Pass... schweitzer Mountain Road... Blewett
Pass... flowery trail Road.
* Hazard elevation: above 4000 feet.
* Snow level: 5000 feet lowering to 2500 feet.
* Impacts: heavy snow accumulations on mountain roads will make
travel difficult and hazardous.
Patty Cruttendens Picture in Twin Falls Idaho
The world is so much scarier for the younger generation. The earth itself just keep chugging along but people define themselves much differently. Death is the enemy. Nobody wants illness or death but they think they can avoid illness. WE have to test the foods we eat. Now we read one group saying fish in the Pacific are tainted with radio active material and another group saying no. Why must everything be an argument.? Why are we getting along less and less. WE need to do just the opposite to show the world we are still the US of A.
Kathy Meader has been taking pictures for us for a few years now. A great photographer in nature she seems to talk to the animals. Ive seen her 10 feet from a bull moose and nobody budged nor were they afraid. Great work Kathy!
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