This barn in Agnew is familiar to anyone traveling on Old Olympic Highway. Set behind an assortment of power vaults, a swaybacked roof and thick moss are telling indicators of its age.
It’s another one that’s slowly but surely biting the dust.
Views of Sequim, the Olympic Peninsula. . .and beyond
This barn in Agnew is familiar to anyone traveling on Old Olympic Highway. Set behind an assortment of power vaults, a swaybacked roof and thick moss are telling indicators of its age.
It’s another one that’s slowly but surely biting the dust.
This one will do.
And it even has a darling barn.
What do you say, Santa?
I’ve been good.
The light on this farm was irresistible but it took a minute before I could safely stop. By then it was fading. {{Sigh}}
Some of the most beautiful views in our valley are from our farmlands. I have no doubt that factored into the original homesteading decisions.
It seems to me that there’s something about animals out grazing in a field that makes it seem all is right with the world.
We first saw this barn from behind, this perspective. The look of stripes caught my eye.
The “stripes” are strips of wood that have been applied. It may not have the look of a new barn but someone’s using and maintaining this one. That’s nice to see.
I’ve posted this barn before but it’s been a while. It’s such a classic it bears repeating. I love the lines of its roof and that silo in the back.