WEST SEATTLE CRIME WATCH: Gunfire investigation at 29th/Myrtle

Shortly after multiple 911 calls reporting suspected gunfire in the area, police report finding proof of it at 29th SW and SW Myrtle [map]. They’ve found casings and have Myrtle blocked off as they look for more. No injuries reported so far. Police told dispatch that witnesses reported a 4-door silver Mazda sedan was involved.

BIZNOTE: West Seattle Tattoo’s ‘grand reopening’

“We have moved into the heart of West Seattle: the Alaska Junction,” declare Daniel and Julie Sas, owners of West Seattle Tattoo, looking ahead to their “grand reopening” in a new location this Saturday (September 27), Here’s their story:

We moved here in 2019 and worked at Blue Geisha Tattoo until they had to close down months later due to COVID. Once we were allowed to in 2020, we opened a private studio in the ActiveSpace building by the bridge for a year before opening West Seattle Tattoo. Since 2021 for the last 4 years we have been at 3902 California Ave SW, in the house with the lawn next to Olympia Coffee. Right in the middle of the [Admiral and Alaska] Junctions. But we are excited to be entering our 5th year in business and 4th as a street shop. The new address is 4517 California Ave SW. We are in the breezeway next to Supreme Pizza on the second floor. Our Grand Reopening is September 27th from 12-5, where all of our entire flash-art wall is %25 off. We have a fun plinko board people can play for the designs in a Get What You Get game or they can just choose.

From guns to license plates, City Council committee to consider new laws Tuesday

The City Council’s Public Safety Committee meets at 9:30 am tomorrow, with an agenda including their first look at various proposals to change city laws and/or create new ones, in many cases just making city law match up with state law. This memo from council staff gets into key points including:

Firearm & Weapon Restrictions

This bill would adopt various changes made to state law in recent years concerning firearms and other weapons. Generally, firearms regulation is an area of law where cities and other local government entities are preempted from enacting their own unique restrictions, but may choose to adopt changes made by the Washington State Legislature. This bill would adopt RCW 9.41.010 and 9.41.390 which, taken together, prohibit with limited exceptions the manufacture, import, distribution, and sale of a category of firearms known as “assault weapons” defined by reference to a list of specific firearms in combination with a descriptive schema based on certain firearm features. Violations of these assault weapon provisions would be a gross misdemeanor.

This bill would also create a civil infraction in the amount of $1,000 for failing to report the theft of a firearm within 24 hours to the Seattle Police Department.

Finally, the bill would also add libraries, zoos and aquariums, and transit stations and facilities to the existing list of places where weapons are prohibited. Violations of City place-based weapons restrictions would be punishable as a gross misdemeanor. Statutory changes related to firearms and other weapons described above were made to RCW by the state legislature during the 2023 and 2024 sessions.

Then there’s a bill addressing traffic laws – CB 121081 – including these proposals among others, as summarized in the staff memo:

Covered License Plates
This bill would update vehicle license plate requirements to prohibit the use of license plate covers. Existing SMC prohibits plate frames, holders, or other materials that “change, alter, or make a license plate [illegible],” but does not explicitly ban plate covers (e.g. tinted plastic covers commonly in use). This change would mirror a state law change adopted by the legislature in 2024 which was intended to address an increase in the use of plate covers which obscure license plate legibility by law enforcement officers and automated tolling cameras.

Negligent Driving with Vulnerable User Victim
This bill would establish new offenses of negligent driving with a vulnerable user victim in the first and second degrees. “Vulnerable user of a public way” would be defined to mean, in sum: a pedestrian; person riding an animal; or, a person operating a wheeled vehicle other than an automobile. The new first degree offense would be triggered by negligent driving that is likely to endanger a person or property, and results in the death of a vulnerable user. The second-degree offense would be triggered by similar conduct that results in great or substantial bodily harm to a vulnerable user, rather than death. The new first-degree offense would be a gross misdemeanor with a $1,000 mandatory minimum fine and a 90 day license suspension. The new second degree offense would be a traffic infraction. These changes would mirror state law changes adopted by the legislature in 2023.

The full agenda for tomorrow morning’s committee meeting includes how to watch and comment (as well as the other items the councilmembers will consider, including what’s ahead for the Community Safety Initiative).

WEST SEATTLE CRIME WATCH: Man shot at 27th/Cambridge

(Added: Photo by Tim Durkan)

3:15 PM: SPD and SFD are at the scene of a shooting in the 9400 block of 27th SW, just north of Roxbury. They’re searching for a suspect, though we haven’t heard a description yet, and one person is reported injured, being taken to Harborview Medical Center. Officers have reported that the casings they’ve found at the scene “are from a long gun.”

3:20 PM: The shooter is believed to have left the scene in a black car last seen headed east on Roxbury.

3:37 PM: No word yet on the condition of the victim. Added a photo above – note the multitude of casing markers in the shadows on the ground.

4:31 PM: SFD tells WSB the victim is a 31-year-old man, assessed in serious condition when transported. Archived radio exchanges include police reporting that he was shot multiple times.

9:26 PM: Police have just added a short summary to SPD Blotter, with a few additional details:

At 2:57 p.m., a caller reported gunfire in the [9400] block of 27th Avenue Southwest. Officers arrived, found the man with multiple gunshot wounds to his left arm and leg, and provided medical aid. Seattle Fire Department medics transported him to Harborview Medical Center in serious condition.

Bullets also struck two vehicles and a building. Officers searched the area but did not locate the suspect or any involved vehicle.

Detectives with the Gun Violence Reduction Unit are leading the investigation and are working to determine the circumstances surrounding the shooting.

Anyone with information is asked to call the Seattle Police Department’s Violent Crimes Tip Line at 206-233-5000.

Incident Number: 2025-277371

FOLLOWUP: Drumroll! Total from Saturday’s Recycle Roundup, and date for next one

September 22, 2025 2:49 pm
|    Comments Off on FOLLOWUP: Drumroll! Total from Saturday’s Recycle Roundup, and date for next one
 |   Environment | Fauntleroy | West Seattle news

(WSB photo, Saturday)

Were you among the hundreds who dropped off recyclables at Fauntleroy Church during this past Saturday’s Recycle Roundup? Here’s the grand total – and the date for the next one:

Area residents and businesses cast a strong vote for the environment on Saturday by dropping off 11 tons of recyclables during Saturday’s Recycle Roundup at Fauntleroy Church. That brings to 395 tons that the congregation and zero-waste recycler 1 Green Planet have collected since partnering for these free community events in 2010. The spring roundup is set for Saturday, April 25, 9 am-3 pm in the church parking lot (9140 California Ave. SW).

The airport next door: Another chance this week to learn about options proposed for Boeing Field’s future

(From kingcounty.gov)

Boeing Field – aka King County International Airport, “one of the busiest non-hub airports in the nation” – is just east of West Seattle, both visible and audible to many here – with aircraft from cargo jets to Blue Angels – and is continuing the process of planning its future. Your next chance to plug in is this Thursday – here’s the announcement:

King County International Airport-Boeing Field (KCIA) is gathering input about future airport plans at an open house on Thursday, September 25, from 5:30 to 7:30 p.m., at the KCIA Flight Service Station, 6526 Ellis Ave. S.

KCIA invites airport tenants, airport users, and community members to provide input on draft alternatives the airport is considering in the Vision 2045 Airport Plan. Attendees can stop by any time to talk with the study team and share their feedback. The goal is to have a plan that will allow KCIA to adapt and evolve to meet changing aviation demand over the next 20 years. …

More information about the open house:

Get more details and register (optional): kciaplanning.com.

There will be no formal presentation. Free parking is available in the building’s parking lot and on nearby streets. A King County Metro bus stop at Ellis Ave. S and S. Warsaw Street, across from the KCIA Flight Service Station, serves the 124 and 60 lines. Interpretation will be available in Spanish, Mandarin, Cantonese, Khmer, Vietnamese, and Tagalog.

If individuals are unable to attend the open house, the study team has posted information for comments on the project website, including the draft alternatives. The study team will accept comments on the alternatives through 5 p.m. Pacific Daylight Time (PDT) on Oct. 17. These comments will be considered in the second draft of alternatives that will be available for public comment in November.

The study team will host additional open houses and engagement opportunities throughout the process, which continues through mid-2026.

Volunteers get Fauntleroy Creek ready for spawning salmon

(Photo by Dennis Hinton: Gerry Goit finishes clearing channel so spawners coming in under ferry trestle can reach the creek’s mouth)

By Judy Pickens
Special to West Seattle Blog

Saturday’s work party to clear the way for coho spawners to reach the mouth of Fauntleroy Creek was mostly about weeding. A dozen volunteers moved a few drift logs mired in the sand, then turned to addressing beach vegetation chocking the channel. They had the way cleared an hour later but will keep an eye out to make sure it stays open through spawning season.

(Photo by Diana Spence: Fred Fleischmann and fellow volunteers survey magnitude of weeding task)
Salmon Watch 2025 will officially start with the annual drumming on Sunday, Oct. 26, at 4 pm at the house below the fish-ladder viewpoint (SW Director & upper Fauntleroy Way SW). A few volunteers will get a head start by monitoring Fauntleroy Cove for schooling spawners, then two dozen watchers will begin checking the spawning reach daily.

The first spawners in modern history came into the creek in 1994. Since then, 20 has been typical for this small urban creek. Last year was anything but typical, however, when a record 347 had come in by Nov. 24.

If spawners come in, the Fauntleroy Watershed Council will host a weekend open creek for the general public and we’ll announce it here.

Fall equinox sunset watch, comedy show, music quiz, more for your West Seattle Monday (updated)

(The classic end-of-summer flower, photographed by Theresa Arbow-O’Connor)

Here’s our end-of-summer/start-of-fall list of what’s happening and NOT happening, mostly from the WSB West Seattle Event Calendar (got something to add? please let us know!):

ANTIQUE MALL OF WEST SEATTLE SALE: 11 am to 5 pm today, last day of four-day sale. (4516 California SW)

BABY STORY TIME: Southwest Library‘s noon story time is back! (9010 35th SW)

CITY COUNCIL MEETING: Regular 2 pm Monday “briefing meeting”; no public comment, but the agenda explains what’ll happen and how to watch/listen.

HIGH-SCHOOL SPORTS: Only local competition on the calendar is West Seattle HS golf teams vs. Bishop Blanchet at West Seattle Golf Course at 3:30 pm.

FALL EQUINOX SUNSET WATCH: After fall officially arrives this morning, educator/expert skywatcher Alice Enevoldsen will lead her change-of-seasons sunset gathering tonight at Solstice Park, 6:15-7:15 (the sun is likely to set behind the trees around 6:50 pm). It’s educational, entertaining, interactive, free, all ages; gather uphill at the park (7400 Fauntleroy Way SW).

CRAFTING & CREATIVITY NIGHT HIATUS: On hold while The Missing Piece moves to new Junction location.

D&D: Long-running weekly D&D at 6:30 pm at Meeples Games (3727 California SW). All welcome, first-time players included!

LISTENING TO GRIEF SUPPORT GROUP: 6:30 pm, ongoing weekly group for people experiencing grief – participate once, occasionally, or every week. Fee; book a spot here. (4034 California SW)

MONDAY NIGHT TRIVIA X 4: Four places to play tonight! Easy Street Records‘ every-other-week Music Quiz, 6:30 and 7:30 pm (4559 California SW) … 7 pm at The Good Society (California/Lander) … 7 and 8 pm Sporcle Pub Quiz at Three 9 Lounge (4505 39th SW), 21+ … 7:30 pm with QuizFix at The Skylark (3803 Delridge Way SW)

COMEDY AT OTTER ON THE ROCKS: Tonight’s the night for the monthly show! See who’s headlining, and get tickets, by going here ASAP. 7 pm. (4210 SW Admiral Way)

ALKI MEDITATION CANCELED: Update, not happening this week.

POOL TOURNAMENT: Play in The Corner Pocket‘s weekly pool tournament starting at 7 pm. $10 buy-in. (4302 SW Alaska)

FAUNTLEROY MEDITATION: More Monday night meditating – free weekly Zen sitting/meditation in the chapel at Fauntleroy UCC (9140 California SW), 7 pm-8:30 pm.

JAZZ AT THE ALLEY: Live music with The Westside Jazz Trio, 8 pm at The Alley (behind 4509 California SW), 21+, no cover.

MONDAY KARAOKE 9 pm Mondays, sing karaoke at Talarico’s Pizzeria (4718 California SW).

Thanks to EVERYONE who sends info for our calendar; if you have something to add or cancel (or otherwise update), please send the info to westseattleblog@gmail.com – thank you!

CAN YOU HELP? Spaces remain in special West Seattle blood drive honoring Susie Tennant

If you can donate blood, here’s a special chance to do it in West Seattle! We checked and as of this morning, spaces remain in this one-day drive announced just before the weekend:

SMASH Seattle & Music’s In Our Blood are coming together to honor Susie Tennant (RIP), a beloved member of the Seattle music community, with a blood drive on Sunday, October 5, from 9 am-3 pm in the West Seattle Junction.

We’re joining forces with our friends at Easy Street Records, Sub Pop Records, Top Pot Doughnuts, Molly Moon’s Ice Cream, the West Seattle Neighborhood Farmers Market, the West Seattle Junction and the Tennant/Swenson Family to celebrate her legacy and save lives.

Our collective goal is to sign up 48 West Seattleites to donate blood, enjoy free swag, eat sweet treats, and be part of this special tribute.

Blood donors must sign up ahead of time at this link: donate.bloodworksnw.org/donor/schedules/drive_schedule/98124

Each blood donor will receive:

(1) Limited-edition West Seattle Hard Core Susie Tennant t-shirt, donated by Sub Pop
(1) Limited-edition Musics In Our Blood t-shirt
(1) Scoop of Molly Moon’s Ice Cream
(1) Top Pot Doughnut or Coffee
(1) Easy Street Records sticker

Blood Drive facts & inspo

-It takes 1,000 blood donors every day to maintain blood inventory at our local hospitals.
-Only 62% of the population is eligible to donate blood – for a variety of reasons – and of those, only 3% donate blood.
-It takes 1 hour to donate 1 pint of blood that could save 1-3 lives. (15 minutes to give blood, and 45 minutes for paperwork and prep).
-Every 2 seconds someone in our country needs a blood transfusion.
-You can donate blood every 56 days.
-When you donate blood, you’ll also find out your blood type, which is good to know in case you need blood in an emergency.

Susie’s been gone since early last year. If you didn’t know her, this remembrance talks about her life.

TRAFFIC CAMS, WEATHER, ROAD WORK, TRANSIT: Change-of-seasons Monday

September 22, 2025 6:01 am
|    Comments Off on TRAFFIC CAMS, WEATHER, ROAD WORK, TRANSIT: Change-of-seasons Monday
 |   West Seattle news | West Seattle traffic alerts

6:01 AM: Good morning! It’s Monday, September 22, 2025 – fall officially arrives at 11:19 am (and Alice’s quarterly sunset watch is tonight).

WEATHER + SUNRISE/SUNSET TIMES

Sunny and in the upper 60s today. Sunrise will be at 6:56 am; sunset, at 7:06 pm.

ROAD WORK

59th SW in Alki is closed for at least three more weeks by the school-construction zone.

-“Natural drainage” construction toward the east end of Sylvan Way is under way.

-California SW’s Fauntleroy Creek culvert gets a month of emergency repair work starting as soon as tomorrow.

TRANSIT TODAY

Metro buses – On regular schedule and routes today.

Washington State Ferries – WSF has three-boat service on the Triangle Route, with M/V Kittitas, M/V Issaquah, and M/V Sealth. Vessel Watch will show you which boat is where.

Water TaxiRegular West Seattle service; summer/early fall schedule, with later runs on Friday and Saturday nights through October 10.

SPOTLIGHT TRAFFIC CAMERAS

High Bridge – Here’s the main camera, followed by the Fauntleroy-end camera:

Low Bridge – Here’s the view looking west. Also note, opening info is again available via X (ex-Twitter):

1st Avenue South Bridge:

Delridge cameras: In addition to the one below (Delridge/Genesee), cameras are also at Delridge/Juneau, Delridge/Henderson, Delridge/Oregon, and video-only (so you have to go to the map), Delridge/Holden and Delridge/Thistle.

MORE TRAFFIC CAMS: All functioning traffic cams citywide are here (including links to live video for most); for a quick scan of West Seattle and vicinity-relevant cameras, see this WSB page.

See a problem on the bridges/streets/paths/water? Please text or call our hotline (when you can do it safely, and after you’ve reported to authorities if they’re not already on scene) – 206-293-6302. Thank you!

Admiral Church has moved out of its old building. Demolition is not imminent. Here’s why it won’t become a vacant eyesore

By Tracy Record
West Seattle Blog editor

Today was the third Sunday that Admiral Church worshipped in its temporary home at St. John the Baptist Episcopal Church. It’s moved out of its longtime home at 4320 SW Hill, as has the preschool that had occupied its basement. All this, as the next step in the site’s transformation to affordable homeownership with a new home for the church and the community organizations it hosts.

While the plan in partnership with Homestead Community Land Trust is progressing, demolition is not imminent – midyear 2026 at the soonest. But you won’t see the old church building morph into a tagged, squatter-occupied shell of a building.

It’s already morphed, in fact … into the Admiral HUB.

Part of the HUB is a continued home, for now, for the aforementioned community organizations. You’ll see the Admiral Neighborhood Association there this Tuesday, for example; ANA has met there for years.

But it’s not just about meetings. What inspired us to ask for a chat about the building’s interim status was a reader tip about the heart of it: @ Bear Island.

At the heart of @ Bear Island is someone whose work you have probably seen, even if you don’t immediately recognize his name: Mike Henderson.

He’s an Admiral Church congregant, and prolific artist. We published an in-depth story about him by WSB senior contributor Christopher Boffoli last year, when he was still painting enigmatic messages in highly visible spots, such as a retaining wall on California south of Andover.

Admiral Church’s Anita Shaffer explained that when they decided against leaving the building vacant, after discussions with Homeland CLT and their insurance company, Henderson seemed like the ideal caretaker: “He’s such a creative guy.”

(Anita Shaffer and Mike Henderson in the HUB/Bear Island kitchen)

For starters, he and others have “been de-preschooling the basement,” as Shaffer puts it, although the colorfully painted rooms already seem naturally suited to creativity.

“So we have this massive space and at least seven months to make it up as we go along,” Henderson explains. “The exciting challenge is to use the whole buffalo.” That means opening the space to a wide range of possibilities, with people collaborating.

One of the early collaborators, Celeste, elaborates: “We want to bring the community together to see what people can do.” Workshops, for example, might not take the typical format that some might find “scary” when asked to teach what they know. Maybe just spending a little time planting a seed and sharing their skills.

Henderson recounts the thrill of inviting passersby to participate in his murals – “give people the (paint) roller and give them the chance to make art” – and hopes @ Bear Island will be a place where people can “try things.”

There’ll be music, too, a weekly jazz jam starting next month in what was the church sanctuary and will now be known as “the theater.” (The church’s pastor Rev. Andrew Conley-Holcom says they’ve had a ceremony to “de-consecrate” that space, and there’ll soon be a ceremony about removing the sanctuary’s cross and its “complicated” symbolism.) While the Admiral Church organ is going into storage for now, the piano is staying. The space will have “theatrical lighting and sound.” It’ll be open for rentals as a concert venue, too.

What Henderson most wants you to know is that, rather than fleshing out a set of ideas by finding people to make them happen, they want to find people and then let the ideas happen. “Just be in the same room and plug into the creative energy.” He expects it will be “magical.”

Rev. Conley-Holcom agrees – seeing it as a “play space” most of all.

So how do you get involved? Henderson says they have open hours during which you can just “wander in.”

Another participant in our conversation with the key players added, “It’s very easy to get plugged in here. Just show up!”

One possibility for the space is a continuously open “pay what you can” thrift shop to raise money for @ Bear Island; Celeste already has sparked some of that energy by having a vintage sale there. (Shaffer notes that the HUB remains under Admiral Church’s “nonprofit banner,” and that the church donated $1,000 to get it launched, as well as helping apply for grant money to underwrite the jazz jams.)

What @ Bear Island has in abundance already is the spirit of fun. Henderson laughs that while the @ Bear Island name is a tribute to the Native name Me-Kwa-Mooks, the mascot is not a bear but a rabbit. “I like the confusion!”

The pastor says what he likes most about it is that it “embodies one of my core values, relationship first” and Henderson, he says, is an ace relationship-builder: “He’ll introduce you to people HE didn’t even know.”

This will all lead to one thing, Henderson says:

“Joy.”

You can “wander in” 4-7 pm Tuesdays-Fridays for now; find @ Bear Island updates here.

WEEK AHEAD: Emergency culvert repairs to start in Fauntleroy

September 21, 2025 6:59 pm
|    Comments Off on WEEK AHEAD: Emergency culvert repairs to start in Fauntleroy
 |   Fauntleroy | Utilities | West Seattle news

Though Seattle Public Utilities had said the emergency culvert repairs beneath California SW in Fauntleroy could start tomorrow, the “no parking” signs in the area all are dated to start Tuesday (September 23). Whenever the crews arrive, remember that the repair work will change things up for about a month in the Fauntleroy Church/Y/Schoolhouse area, which is also a key connector between Delridge, 35th SW, and the Fauntleroy business district and ferry dock. The repairs – as announced in August – are intended to keep the culvert that carries Fauntleroy Creek under California from failing before permanent replacement work can begin. (For more on the replacement project, which will first focus on 45th SW, don’t miss the recently announced community meeting on October 2.)

WEST SEATTLE BIRDS: Postgame gallery!

The football game’s over but not too late for a game-day bird gallery! Let’s start with some real-life hawks:

Jerry Simmons photographed those two juvenile Cooper’s Hawks – and this non-juvenile, bathed in sunrise light, too:

Lorabeth Lawson shows us a California Scrub-Jay examining a bogus bird:

Jon Anderson sent this House Finch photo much earlier in the summer, but hey, beauty is timeless:

Look closely for the burst of color from the prey this Great Blue Heron photographed by Gary Jones is holding:

Kim Petram caught a Hummingbird at work:

Even an everyday Gull can look noble in the sunset glow – Theresa Arbow-O’Connor sent this photo:

Big thanks to everyone who kindly shares photos so we can share them with you, from birds to blossoms to breaking news! westseattleblog@gmail.com unless it’s urgent, in which case you can text 206-293-6302 – thank you!

WEEK AHEAD: Seattle School Board president @ Admiral Neighborhood Association meeting

September 21, 2025 2:29 pm
|    Comments Off on WEEK AHEAD: Seattle School Board president @ Admiral Neighborhood Association meeting
 |   Neighborhoods | West Seattle news

Often on Sundays, we look ahead to notable events in the coming week. This Tuesday (September 23), the Admiral Neighborhood Association invites community members to its every-other-month general gathering. Here’s the ANA preview:

Our special guest will be Seattle Public School Board President Gina Topp, who will be with us to talk about the state of the District as we begin a new school year. The meeting will now be held at 7 pm at the “Admiral Hub” (formerly Admiral Church) building on SW Hill Street and 44th Ave SW. Also present will be one of our friends from the SW Precinct. We will have some highlights from our Summer events as well as a look ahead to Fall/Winter.

P.S. The Admiral Hub itself – and what’s happening with the building now that the church and preschool have moved out – will be the topic of a WSB story we hope to publish tonight.

WEST SEATTLE WEEKEND SCENE: Outdoors for All adaptive-cycling demos at Seacrest

Thanks to Dave Townsend for the photo! Also happening right now, Outdoors for All is back in West Seattle with another chance to try adaptive cycling for free. They’re there until 2 pm “for folks to come out and ride the trike, tandem, or handcycle that works best for them. The event is for kids as young as 7 and adults, and there is no charge – just a short registration on-site”

VIDEO: West Seattle gathering for International Peace Day ‘human banner’

9:34 AM: We’re at the Pier 1 property in the 2100 block of Harbor Avenue SW, where, as previewed again last night, West Seattle Indivisible is organizing a “human banner” this morning in honor of International Day of Peace. As of our arrival about 10 minutes ago, more than 300 people are here. … and Dave Gershgorn‘s photo for WSB shows they’re already spelling out PEACE (though the speaking program hasn’t begun yet):

10:00 AM: Lots of chanting – “say it loud, say it clear, peace and justice, now and here” – while official speakers are awaited.

10:54 AM: The event has just concluded after about 45 minutes of speeches, including Mayor Bruce Harrell quoting Mother Teresa, Gandhi, and Danny Glover among others. (video added)

Volunteers at the main gate estimate a final count around 450 participants.

12:12 PM: Adding video, starting with Malou Chávez of the Northwest Immigrant Rights Project, saying that this isn’t a time of “crisis” – because “in a crisis, you can see the end” – but rather, a time of chaos:

Rev. Andrew Conley-Holcom of Admiral Church preached a bit, presided over a moment of silence, and gave a closing blessing. Here’s part of what he said:

Toward the conclusion of the event, bagpipers played “Amazing Grace“:

Earlier, for a global perspective, Irene Danysh spoke, identifying herself as the daughter of Ukrainian refugees, a recent Ukraine resident, but talking about Gaza more than Ukraine:


Hamdi Mohamed, the Seattle Port Commissioner and city Office of Immigrants and Refugees director who came to the U.S. at age three as a refugee, emceed – here’s how she began:

WSI’s leaders, including this event’s organizer Laurie Reinhardt, had stressed in the early going, “We’re sending a message today.”

The International Day of Peace, Mohamed noted, has been an annual observance on September 21st since 1981.

WEST SEATTLE SUNDAY: 18 notes!

September 21, 2025 6:07 am
|    Comments Off on WEST SEATTLE SUNDAY: 18 notes!
 |   West Seattle news | WS miscellaneous

Good morning – here’s what’s up for your Sunday, featuring some one-time-only experiences, mostly from the WSB West Seattle Event Calendar and inbox:

ORCA HALF: This big running event, starting at Lincoln Park and ending at Don Armeni Boat Ramp, is spread across two days this year, and today is Day 2. No road closures, but be watchful of runners. Participants start in waves beginning at 7:30 am; course map and other information can be found on the Orca Half website.

GARAGE/YARD SALES: Check for listings in the WSB Community Forums. (If you have a sale to add, but don’t have a WSB Forums login, go to westseattleblog/log-in – thanks!)

INTERNATIONAL PEACE DAY ‘HUMAN BANNER’ As previewed here again last night, West Seattle Indivisible invites everyone 14+ to join in forming a “human banner” on the waterfront in the 2100 block of Harbor Avenue SW, where the gate opens at 8:30, with music, speakers, food trucks promised, and aerial photography once everyone’s in place. Rain or shine.

WESTIES RUN CLUB: This week’s 9 am Sunday Funday run leaves from Highland Park Corner Store (7789 Highland Park Way SW).

(Photo sent by Eddie – West Seattle Art Tour stop #2, with five artists!)

WEST SEATTLE ART TOUR, DAY 2: This free, self-guided tour of local artists’ studios features 14 sites from North Admiral to Arbor Heights to Highland Park, and more than 30 artists, open 10 am-5 pm again today. Here’s the guide to who you’ll find at each site and what kind of art; here’s the printable map; here’s the interactive map; here’s our Day 1 coverage.

ANTIQUE MALL OF WEST SEATTLE SALE: 10 am to 5 pm today, third day of four-day sale. (4516 California SW)

AMERICAN MAH JONGG: The Sunday games are on hiatus until The Missing Piece reopens in its new Junction location.

WEST SEATTLE FARMERS’ MARKET: Find the market on California between Oregon and Alaska, 10 am-2 pm, now in end-of-summer produce season (stone fruit, berries, tomatoes, peppers, greens, roots), plus lots of baked goods, cheeses, meats, fish, prepared foods, condiments, flowers, more.

CELEBRATE FLCWS MUSICAL TRANSITIONS: First Lutheran Church of West Seattle (4105 California SW) welcomes all on this special day:

On Sunday, September 21st, The West Seattle community is invited to celebrate musical transitions at First Lutheran Church of West Seattle. Luncheon is being served after the 10:30 a.m. morning service, to introduce Dana Robinson as our new Organist and Choirmaster, and honor Deacon Emeritus Dean Hard as our retiring Choirmaster.

‘SUN DAY’ AT WSUU: 10:30 am, mark Sun Day by watchimg the recently recorded stream of Bill McKibben’s Town Hall talk on his new book “Here Comes the Sun” and talk about it, at Westside Unitarian Universalist Congregation. (7141 California SW)

FREE NIA CLASS: 10:30 am, first class free if you pre-register. At Inner Alchemy Sanctuary/Studio (3618 SW Alaska)

‘WILD MOON’ BOOK LAUNCH: 11 am at Paper Boat Booksellers (4522 California SW), local author Andie Powers launches her new nonfiction picture book, “Wild Moon: How the Lunar Phases Light Up Our World.”

WEST SEATTLE TOOL LIBRARY: Need a tool but don’t need to, or can’t, buy it? You’ll probably be able to borrow it from the Tool Library, open 11 am-4 pm on the northeast side of Youngstown Cultural Arts Center. (4408 Delridge Way SW)

WEST SEATTLE RESISTS: Sunday signholding in The Junction (California/Alaska), 11:30 am-1:30 pm.

WELCOME ROAD WINERY: Kick back and enjoy your Sunday afternoon at this West Seattle tasting room (with a patio!) open 2-5 pm, kids and dogs welcome. (3804 California SW; WSB sponsor)

COMMUNITY NOTARY DAY: Need something notorized? Bring it to West Seattle (Admiral) Library 3-5 pm today. (2306 42nd SW)

HARP MUSIC AT C & P: Greensleeves harp and Irish flute student showcase at C & P Coffee (5612 California SW; WSB sponsor), no cover, all ages.

LIVE MUSIC AT THE ALLEY: 8-10 pm, Sunday night music with the Triangular Jazztet at The Alley (behind 4509 California SW).

Are you planning, organizing, and/or publicizing something that we could feature on the WSB community event calendar – one-time or recurring? Please email us the basic details – westseattleblog@gmail.com – thank you!

VIDEO: Little volunteers, big check highlight WestSide Baby ‘Sip and Sort’ event

September 20, 2025 10:53 pm
|    Comments Off on VIDEO: Little volunteers, big check highlight WestSide Baby ‘Sip and Sort’ event
 |   West Seattle news | White Center

Need some inspiration? Check out more than 100 people joining forces to help local kids! Everywhere you turned at WestSide Baby‘s White Center warehouse/HQ this past Thursday night, volunteers of all ages gathered to “Sip and Sort.” They spent hours sorting donations – and none were more energized than the kids sorting “stuffies” to be distributed:

That young volunteer was impressed by the size of the stuffed shark. This one, even younger, was very adamant about sorting stuffies into age-appropriate piles – she was heard shouting “Baby safe! Baby safe!” multiple times.

Adult volunteers were busy too, readying dozens of car seats so they can be given to families to protect babies and toddlers:

One little-known fact about WestSide Baby that was spotlighted during Thursday night’s volunteer event: It doesn’t just serve babies. They serve older kids and even teenagers. That is at the heart of the current Gear Up for Fall” campaign, although some Thursday sorters did deal with baby gear, like this huge box full of all types of bottles collected by Ridwell:

In addition to the 100+ volunteers giving WS Baby a boost on Thursday night, they got major support from King County too – a proclamation in honor of Diaper Need Week (which concludes tomorrow), and a $25,000 check, presented by County Councilmember Teresa Mosqueda and accepted by WS Baby’s executive director Allie Lindsay Johnson and development director Morgan McGinn before a short round of speaking:

WestSide Baby accepts donations from anyone – money and/or items – and diapers perennially top the need list. Or if you want to volunteer, at a one-time event like this or on an ongoing basis, here’s info on that.

TRAFFIC ALERT: Motorcycle crash blocking part of 8th SW at Barton

Near Westcrest Park, a motorcyclist is seriously injured after crashing at 8th SW and SW Barton. Police have closed northbound 8th until the scene is cleared. They have said they believe no other vehicles were involved.

See the site where West Seattle’s ‘human banner’ will take shape on International Peace Day tomorrow

By Tracy Record
West Seattle Blog editor

The words PEACE FOR ALL are outlined on the ground at the Harbor Avenue property known as Pier 1, as shown in the drone photo taken by West Seattle Indivisible today, in advance of their International Day of Peace mega-gathering tomorrow morning.

If 1,000 people show up, they’ll line all the letters, three across, as a “human banner” in honor of Peace Day. If fewer show up, organizer Laurie Reinhardt says, no worries, they have contingency plans, all the way down to 100 people filling out a single letter at a time, then moving to the next, and the next.

We visited the site today for a look at where Reinhardt’s idea will take shape, one way or another, whatever size it turns out to be. She stresses that it’s not meant to be a feel-good quick photo-op – it’s meant as a metaphor for the fact that, individually, people can only do so much, but together, “we are greater than the sum of our parts.” She hopes those who show up to be part of it will “really feel that” before leaving to go back to their everyday activities.

Before we get into how the event will unfold, some logistics points. A banner marks the fence by the main entrance to the property, 3 1/2 acres that have been long up for lease (after housing a crane yard for a while), being borrowed for this event with the owner’s permission.

Reinhardt and 70+ volunteers will get there first thing in the morning, but the gates won’t open for participants until 8:30, so don’t show up before then. Parking is on the street (though a small part of the west/north end of the property is set aside for volunteers to park, maximizing the number of street spaces available for participants).

After checking in, participants will move further into the site, which has an unbroken waterfront view – we asked Reinhardt to pose in the middle of one of the letters in PEACE:

They’ll have some amenities for the crowd – food trucks and portable toilets. Each letter will have a captain to show you where to stand and to hand out the flags made at the event we mentioned last weekend. The photo won’t be taken at one specific moment – there’ll be at least four drones photographing multiple times while the crowd listens to music and speeches, emceed by Port Commissioner Hamdi Mohamed, addressing global, national, regional, and local issues and possibilities. There will be a moment of silence, led by Admiral Church’s pastor Rev. Andrew Conley-Holcom. The speeches and photography aren’t expected to happen until some point after 9:30 am – when they are pretty sure everyone who’s showing up has arrived.

Side note: While we chatted at the site this afternoon, Reinhardt said the original idea was to “think big” and see if this could be done on the West Seattle Bridge. She even got so far as to fill out a “25-page application,” before, she said, city officials including Mayor Harrell himself (who is also scheduled as a speaker on Sunday) realized it wasn’t that great an idea, especially on a day with a home Seahawks game.

So instead, “human banner” participants – all ages ages 14+ welcome – will gather on a West Seattle waterfront site frequented by “real” Seahawks (Ospreys are among the birds Reinhardt said they’d seen while at the site earlier, and we heard Bald Eagles’ distinctive call while talking). They’d appreciate it if you pre-registered, but you’re also welcome to just show up in the 2100 block of Harbor Avenue SW.

PREVIEW: Alice Enevoldsen’s quarterly change-of-seasons sunset watch set for Monday

(WSB photo from 2024 autumn equinox sunset watch)

Fall officially arrives Monday morning with the equinox moment at 11:19 am – and that means West Seattle educator/expert skywatcher Alice Enevoldsen will be at Solstice Park on Monday evening to commemorate the change of seasons with one of the quarterly sunset-watch events she’s been leading for more than 15 years. It’ll include her interactive demonstration of what “equinox” really means, as well as an opportunity to see how the placement of markers and paths at the park lookout are meant to align with the sunset on equinoxes (and solstices). If you haven’t been to one of Alice’s events before, the Solstice Park lookout is uphill from the tennis courts (7400 Fauntleroy Way SW). She’ll be there 6:30-7:30 pm, with the actual sunset as seen from that site expected around 6:50-7 pm, though the official sunset is 7:06 pm. It’s free, fun, educational, all ages, happening whether the sun’s visible or not (heavy rain is the only weather that will cancel this).

CONTINUING SUNDAY: West Seattle Art Tour 2025. Here’s our first-day coverage

12:46 PM: Look for banners like that one marking the 14 stops on this year’s free, self-guided West Seattle Art Tour, on until 5 pm today and again 10 am-5 pm tomorrow. Each stop has multiple artists, usually including the host whose studio/workspace is on the map. Our first stop today was the southernmost site, #4, where you’ll find printmaker Diane Kappa (WSB sponsor):

In her backyard studio, she showed us and other visitors a linoleum print she’s working on – she explained that it’s painstaking, but she puts on her headphones, turns on her music, and gets lost in her work.

(As noted here, Diane teaches classes too, so when you visit during the Art Tour, you can talk with her about those!)

She’s hosting three other artists at her Arbor Heights studio/backyard as part of the Art Tour, including another. printmaker, Sahily Anais Perez McMillan:

Sahily is also a printmaker, with subjects including birds, like this Spotted Towhee:

She told us she’s a bird advocate and has volunteered with Birds Connect Seattle, so they’re more than just subjects! Also at this site in Arbor Heights (see the map for the address) are artists Tanya Knannlein and Shelly Sazama, who both work in textiles. In addition to the clickable map we’ve linked to (which includes artists’ websites and short descriptions of their work), there’s a printable map on the Art Tour website too. We’re headed to the north end next and will add more Art Tour sights later.

2:50 PM: Thanks to Eddie for this photo from northernmost stop #12 on the map, in North Admiral:

This stop is hosted by colored-pencil artist Jan Koutsky, with visiting artists Johanna Lindsay (jewelry), relief block printer Theresa Neinas, and ceramics/pottery artist Jody Wally.

4 PM: Our last stop of the first day was Daniel Bernunzio‘s home studio in Highland Park, easternmost stop on the Art Tour, #1 on the map.

In our photo below is the host at center, with visiting artists Cat Brooks (left) and Eric Eschenbach (right) – all three are painters:

Each has an individual tent showcasing their work – Daniel:

Cat:

And Eric:

As with everyone else on the Art Tour, they’re there until 5 today, and again 10 am-5 pm on Sunday.

WEST SEATTLE WEEKEND SCENE: Fauntleroy Church’s almost-fall Recycle Roundup off to ‘nonstop’ start

(WSB photos)

The second hour of today’s six-hour Recycle Roundup at Fauntleroy Church has just begun. We were there for photos half an hour ago and one volunteer told us it had been “nonstop.” However, no backup – it’s always a very efficient operation with partner 1 Green Planet, with multiple bins, trucks, and boxes ready for whatever you’re dropping off:

Here again is the long list (PDF) of what you can bring for free recycling (and a shorter list of what they won’t accept). They’ll be there till 3 pm.

But don’t wait until the last hour unless that’s absolutely the soonest you can get there – they try to avoid an end-of-day backup. The church offers this service to the community twice a year; if you miss today’s Recycle Roundup, watch for advance announcement of the date for the next one, in spring.