Seattle Mag

Take a Road Trip to Lake Chelan for Water, Wine, Art and More

Take a Road Trip to Lake Chelan for Water, Wine, Art and More

The lake is just the start of this eastern Washington getaway

Get a good view of the Chelan area from the top of Chelan Butte

June Hike of the Month: Talapus and Olallie Lakes

June Hike of the Month: Talapus and Olallie Lakes

If you’re a hiking newbie, this trail is for you

Stop one: Talapus Lake

Ballard Artisan Teaches You How to Make Your Own Chef's Knife

Ballard Artisan Teaches You How to Make Your Own Chef’s Knife

Want to learn how to create your own 6-inch high-carbon steel chef knife?

STRAIGHT TO THE POINT: Fire Horse Forge’s custom knives, designed with high carbon steel blades, beefwood handles and bronze spacers, include (at top) the 8.25-inch “Peacock Feather” and the 6.75-inch “Damascus”

The Best Walking Tours in Seattle

The Best Walking Tours in Seattle

Get an inside view into your favorite things with these tours

Inside the Amazon Spheres

Must List: Pacific Northwest Ballet's 'Themes & Variations,' Bite of Greece, More Than Pink Walk

Must List: Pacific Northwest Ballet’s ‘Themes & Variations,’ Bite of Greece, More Than Pink Walk

Your weekly guide to Seattle's hottest events

PNB principal dancers Lesley Rausch and Jerome Tisserand in Price Suddarth’s ‘Signature’

This Week Then: Looking Back on the Seattle SuperSonics

This Week Then: Looking Back on the Seattle SuperSonics

Plus: This week's nautical anniversaries

This story was originally published at HistoryLink.org. Subscribe to their weekly newsletter. Champion Team Forty years ago this week, on June 1, 1979, the Seattle SuperSonics beat the Washington Bullets 97-93 in Washington, D.C., and brought home the team’s first (and only) NBA championship. It was the city’s first major professional-sports trophy since the Seattle Metropolitans hockey…

Tech Addiction Is on the Rise in Seattle and Beyond

Tech Addiction Is on the Rise in Seattle and Beyond

When a Seattle boy couldn’t stop playing video games, his parents came to a hard truth: Their son was addicted. And he’s not alone. In our tech-focused city—and the nation—more people are seeking help for this condition. But there’s no easy fix.

This article appears in print in the June 2019 issue and is produced in collaboration with Crosscut. Click here to subscribe. * The names of the family members have been changed to protect their privacy. Laura and Dave Johnson* had always known that their older son, Eric, was different than other kids. Diagnosed with severe ADHD at a…

Il Corvo Chef Opens New Restaurant in Resurrected West Seattle Landmark

Il Corvo Chef Opens New Restaurant in Resurrected West Seattle Landmark

Behold, the second coming of a beloved West Seattle landmark— and one of the year’s most anticipated restaurant openings

MASTERMIND: Chef Mike Easton says his new restaurant, Il Nido, will retain the spirit of the Alki Homestead

20 Best Things to Do in Seattle in June 2019

20 Best Things to Do in Seattle in June 2019

Our handpicked list of the best bets for entertainment this month

Catch Ludovic Morlot’s farewell concerts this month

Seattle's Bicycle Benefits Program Offers Cyclists Discounts Across the City

Seattle’s Bicycle Benefits Program Offers Cyclists Discounts Across the City

Cycling to work can get you deals at your favorite neighborhood coffee shops, breweries and restaurants

May is National Bike Month, and among all the obvious reasons biking is great (exercise, lessening carbon emissions and reducing transportation costs) the Bicycle Benefit Program is another incentive to get people pedaling around the city.  To join the program, cyclists must make a one-time $5 sticker purchase from any participating location and stick it…

Spend Your Summer in the Heart of Washington Wine Country

Spend Your Summer in the Heart of Washington Wine Country

The Tri-Cities offers plenty of summer attractions for visitors of all stripes

Enjoy a horseback ride through a vineyard with stops for wine tastings and a picnic lunch

This Week Then: Giving a Hoot About Northern Spotted Owls

This Week Then: Giving a Hoot About Northern Spotted Owls

Plus: Honoring Washington state residents who lost their lives in combat

This story was originally published at HistoryLink.org. Subscribe to their weekly newsletter. Giving a Hoot On May 23, 1991, U.S. District Court Judge William Dwyer blocked timber sales in national forests to protect the northern spotted owl, after the National Audubon Society and the Sierra Club Legal Defense Fund challenged the U.S. Forest Service’s 1986 Forest Management…

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