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Salmon Days 2017 | Photos

Published 1:30 am Monday, October 9, 2017

Salmon Days 2017 | Photos
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Salmon Days 2017 | Photos
Kids enjoy a train ride in front of the Field of Fun. Nicole Jennings/staff photo
Competing robots from the Issaquah High School Robotics Society and the Skyline Spartabots. Nicole Jennings/staff photo
Kids have a ball in giant hamster balls. Nicole Jennings/staff photo
Youngsters toss beanbags at Darigold’s tent in the Field of Fun. Nicole Jennings/staff photo
At the Issaquah Salmon Hatchery, people could observe salmon in their yearly migration. Nicole Jennings/staff photo
Friends of the Issaquah Salmon Hatchery volunteer Dave Waggoner gives tours at the Salmon Hatchery. Nicole Jennings/staff photo
Children admire the new community-made mural at the Issaquah Salmon Hatchery.
Attendees peruse the booths and food stands along East Sunset Way, closed to vehicular traffic for Salmon Days Weekend. Nicole Jennings/staff photo
Blown glass for sale along West Sunset Way. Nicole Jennings/staff photo
Produce for sale along First Avenue. Nicole Jennings/staff photo
‘Tis the season for pumpkins and gourds. Nicole Jennings/staff photo
Gladiola flowers from Fall City’s Sweet Blissful Blooms. Nicole Jennings/staff photo
A boy blows up a balloon at a booth along East Sunset Way. Nicole Jennings/staff photo
Norwegian artist Bergljot Hals, who hails from Issaquah’s sister city of Sunndal, Norway, teams up with the Issaquah Sister Cities Commission and Sons of Norway booth. Nicole Jennings/staff photo
A child slides down the giant slide in the Field of Fun. Nicole Jennings/staff photo
A soccer star-in-training tests her skills in the Field of Fun. Nicole Jennings/staff photo
Kids run through the obstacle course at the Eastside Fire and Rescue tent. Nicole Jennings/staff photo

The Grande Parade was just the start of the Salmon Days fun.

Throughout Olde Town, vendors offered artwork, fresh produce and baked goods from around the Pacific Northwest.

Kids played to their hearts’ content in the Field of Fun behind City Hall, where the Puget Sound Dock Dogs also performed their tricks.

At Foods of the World next to the Issaquah Trolley Museum, 40 different kinds of fare from Europe, Asia, Africa and Latin America were devoured by hungry festival-goers.

At the Issaquah Salmon Hatchery, residents and tourists gathered to observe the creatures of the hour, the migrating salmon themselves.