Tag: Everett

  • Celesten Does It Again, Stevenson Wins April Hitter Award: The AquaSox Prospect Pipeline Is for Real

    Celesten Does It Again, Stevenson Wins April Hitter Award: The AquaSox Prospect Pipeline Is for Real

    Q: Which AquaSox players won Mariners minor league awards for April 2026?
    A: Catcher Luke Stevenson won the Mariners Minor League Hitter of the Month, and right-hander Brock Moore won the bullpen award. Additionally, shortstop Felnin Celesten earned NWL Player of the Week honors for the second consecutive week in May.

    The AquaSox Prospect Pipeline Is Producing — In a Big Way

    Most Everett fans probably know Felnin Celesten is one of the more exciting young shortstops in the Mariners system. They might know Jonny Farmelo is a top-6 organizational prospect. But the 2026 AquaSox roster runs deeper than that — and April’s organizational awards, combined with Celesten’s back-to-back NWL Player of the Week honors, paint a picture of a High-A squad that is legitimately developed from top to bottom.

    Here is your guide to the names making noise right now at Funko Field.

    Felnin Celesten: Back-to-Back NWL Player of the Week

    Celesten earned Northwest League Player of the Week honors for the second straight week — an award announced on May 4 — making him the most recognizable name on the AquaSox right now outside of visiting pitchers on rehab assignments. His first POTW came after he went .471 (11-for-17) in five games against the Spokane Indians. He followed that with a .434 average in the Hillsboro Hops’ ballpark, recording at least one hit in every game of that road series and posting three multi-hit performances.

    Through the early part of May, Celesten is hitting .295 on the season — which undersells how hot he has been — while leading the entire AquaSox team in hits (26) and runs scored (18). The 20-year-old Venezuelan shortstop signed with the Mariners as an international free agent in 2023 and is already one of the youngest players in the Northwest League. Two consecutive POTW awards this early in the season is the kind of noise that accelerates prospect timelines.

    Watch his name carefully. The Mariners have been patient with his development, and nights like the ones he strung together in April and early May suggest the patience is being rewarded.

    Luke Stevenson: Mariners’ April Hitter of the Month

    Stevenson did not just have a good April — he had an elite April. The Seattle Mariners announced him as their Minor League Hitter of the Month for April 2026, and the numbers back it up completely: .321 batting average, six doubles, one home run, 10 RBIs, 20 walks, .500 on-base percentage, and a .982 OPS. Twenty walks in one month. That is a number you do not expect to see from a High-A hitter who was drafted just last year.

    Stevenson is the No. 35 overall pick from the 2025 MLB Draft out of the University of North Carolina — the Mariners’ catcher of the future, ranked as the organization’s No. 8 prospect. He is 22 years old, from Flemington, New Jersey, and plays with a veteran’s plate approach that belies his experience level. That .500 OBP is not an accident — it reflects elite pitch recognition and the willingness to work counts and take walks even when pitchers are challenging him.

    In Tuesday’s 8-6 win over Hillsboro, Stevenson delivered an RBI single in the first inning to give Everett the early lead — exactly the kind of contribution you want from your cleanup presence behind high-ceiling tools. He is setting the tone for an AquaSox offense that is beginning to find its rhythm on the homestand.

    Brock Moore: The Bullpen’s Secret Weapon

    If Stevenson is the headline, Moore might be the most dominant performer on the entire AquaSox roster right now. The 25-year-old right-hander from Carmel, Indiana — a seventh-round pick in the 2024 draft out of the University of Oregon — won the Mariners’ Minor League Bullpen Award for April, and the stats are borderline absurd:

    8.1 innings pitched. 20 strikeouts. 1 walk. 4 saves. 2.16 ERA. 0.48 WHIP. Three hits allowed all month. Two earned runs total.

    Twenty strikeouts against one walk in 8.1 innings. That is a 20-to-1 K/BB ratio, which is extraordinary at any level of professional baseball. Moore is attacking hitters and he is getting them out — consistently, emphatically, in high-leverage spots. Four saves in April means four times he was trusted to close out a game and delivered.

    Bullpen arms this reliable at High-A tend to move quickly through the system. Moore is a name to know before he’s in Tacoma.

    The Wider Picture: Farmelo, Jimenez, Washington Jr.

    The AquaSox roster extends well beyond the award winners. Tuesday night’s game gave a snapshot of the depth:

    Jonny Farmelo (Mariners No. 6 prospect) led off the third inning with a double that started the six-run explosion. He is a left-handed hitter with plus raw power and the kind of athleticism that scouts come to Funko Field specifically to see.

    Carlos Jimenez (Mariners No. 21 prospect) delivered a clutch two-run single with two outs in that same third inning, the kind of RBI situational hit that does not show up in a prospect profile but does show up in a player’s development. Jimenez has been building his RBI count steadily all spring.

    Curtis Washington Jr. launched his fourth home run of the season on Tuesday night — a three-run shot to right-center that was the decisive blow in the 8-6 win. His fourth homer is already a new single-season career high. Washington Jr. is not ranked among the Mariners’ top prospects on most lists, but he is producing like someone who wants to change that.

    Why This Matters for Everett Fans

    The AquaSox experience is more fun when you understand what you are watching. These are not just box scores — they are snapshots of the players who will wear Mariners uniforms in Seattle in two or three years. Celesten, Stevenson, Moore, Farmelo: these names will be familiar to Mariners fans by 2027 or 2028. Right now, they are playing at Funko Field in Everett, and tickets are affordable.

    Come watch them before they are too expensive to see.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    Q: Who won the Mariners Minor League Hitter of the Month for April 2026?
    A: Luke Stevenson, catcher for the Everett AquaSox, won the award with a .321 average, 20 walks, .500 OBP, and .982 OPS in April.

    Q: Who won the Mariners Minor League Bullpen Award for April 2026?
    A: Brock Moore, a right-handed reliever for the AquaSox, won the award after posting 20 strikeouts, 1 walk, 4 saves, and a 0.48 WHIP across 8.1 innings in April.

    Q: Has Felnin Celesten won NWL Player of the Week twice in 2026?
    A: Yes. Celesten earned NWL Player of the Week honors for two consecutive weeks in late April and early May 2026, batting .471 in his first award week and .434 in his second.

    Q: What are the top Mariners prospects on the 2026 AquaSox?
    A: Key Mariners organizational prospects on the 2026 AquaSox include Jonny Farmelo (No. 6), Luke Stevenson (No. 8), Carlos Jimenez (No. 21), and Felnin Celesten, among others.

    Q: Where can I watch AquaSox games in Everett?
    A: The AquaSox play their home games at Funko Field (Everett Memorial Stadium), 3802 Broadway, Everett, WA. The current six-game homestand against Hillsboro runs through Sunday, May 10. Tickets available at aquasox.com.

  • Your Complete Fan Guide to Silvertips vs. Raiders WHL Final: Game 1 Is Friday at Angel of the Winds

    Your Complete Fan Guide to Silvertips vs. Raiders WHL Final: Game 1 Is Friday at Angel of the Winds

    Q: When is the Silvertips WHL Championship Final Game 1?
    A: Game 1 is Friday, May 8, at Angel of the Winds Arena in Everett, with Game 2 on Saturday, May 9. The Silvertips face the Prince Albert Raiders in what is the first-ever WHL Championship matchup between these two franchises.

    Game 1 Is Friday Night at Angel of the Winds

    Two nights from now, Angel of the Winds Arena will be rocking for the biggest game in Everett hockey since the 2018 WHL Championship. The Silvertips are headed to the WHL Final — 12-1 in the 2026 playoffs, two sweeps and a statement 4-1 series in their rear pocket — and Friday night, May 8, Game 1 tips off against the Prince Albert Raiders. Game 2 follows Saturday, May 9, before the series shifts to Saskatchewan.

    This is the moment Everett hockey fans have been watching build all year. Here is everything you need to know heading into the weekend.

    Series Schedule

    The 2026 WHL Championship Series presented by Nutrien follows this format: Game 1 (May 8, Everett), Game 2 (May 9, Everett), Game 3 (May 12, Prince Albert), Game 4 (May 13, Prince Albert), Game 5 if needed (May 15, Prince Albert), Game 6 if needed (May 17, Everett), Game 7 if needed (May 18, Prince Albert). That means Everett gets Games 1, 2, and potentially 6 at home — the opener and a possible series-clincher.

    Tickets for Games 1 and 2 are available at silvertips.com and Ticketmaster. Do not sleep on these — a 12-1 team playing for the Ed Chynoweth Cup is a once-or-twice-a-generation event in this building.

    Why the Silvertips Are a Legitimate Cup Contender

    The 2025-26 Silvertips had one of the best regular seasons in franchise history — a 57-8-2-1 record, first in the WHL Western Conference by a country mile. In the playoffs, they have been dominant: a first-round sweep, a 4-1 series win over the Kelowna Rockets, and a second-round sweep of the Penticton Vees in the Western Conference Final. They have outscored opponents 51-12 across all playoff games entering the Final, and goaltender Anders Miller has been nothing short of spectacular.

    Miller’s playoff numbers are historic. He is posting a .948 save percentage — the best mark in WHL playoff history for a goaltender with nine or more games played. The defense in front of him, anchored by 16-year-old Landon DuPont, has been the backbone of everything that works about this team.

    This is the Silvertips’ third appearance in the WHL Championship Final, following runs in 2004 and 2018. They have never won the Ed Chynoweth Cup. That is the storyline hanging over everything this week.

    5 Silvertips to Watch

    Landon DuPont, D — The first defenseman in WHL history to receive Exceptional Status, DuPont has 17 points (4G-13A) in 13 playoff games. He is 16 years old. He is the best player on the ice most nights and one of the best defensive prospects in North America. His skating and poise under pressure have defined the Silvertips’ playoff run.

    Matias Vanhanen, F — The Silvertips’ playoff scoring leader with 19 points (10G-9A). He provides the offensive engine that DuPont enables from the back end. When Vanhanen is scoring, Everett wins games.

    Carter Bear, F — A Detroit Red Wings prospect with 16 points in 13 games, Bear plays a two-way game that makes Everett’s depth dangerous. You cannot key on DuPont and Vanhanen without Bear making you pay.

    Anders Miller, G — .948 playoff save percentage. WHL record for a goaltender with 9+ GP. The rest of the team could play well enough to win most series; with Miller, they can win them convincingly. He has been the backbone of the most dominant playoff run in recent Silvertips history.

    Landon DuPont (again) — Yes, he deserves two entries. He has 13 assists in 13 playoff games. He is a generational talent playing on the biggest stage junior hockey has. Watch him every shift.

    Know Your Opponent: The Prince Albert Raiders

    The Prince Albert Raiders won the WHL Championship in 1985 and 2019, and they are coming to Everett having just knocked off the Medicine Hat Tigers in the Eastern Conference Final. This is a dangerous, well-coached team with the best individual scorer remaining in the 2026 WHL Playoffs.

    Daxon Rudolph, D — Raiders’ 18-year-old defenseman who leads the ENTIRE WHL Playoffs in scoring with 23 points (9G-14A) in 15 games. He is ranked fifth among North American skaters in NHL Central Scouting’s final 2026 NHL Draft rankings. Rudolph is a 6-foot-2, 202-pound blueliner who reads the ice like a veteran. This is the matchup within the matchup: Rudolph versus DuPont, two generational defensive prospects competing for a championship.

    Owen Corkish — Corkish had a hat trick in the Raiders’ ECF Game 5 win over Medicine Hat. He can score in bunches and will be looking to carry that momentum into the Final.

    The Raiders are appearing in their third WHL Championship, and they have won both previous trips. Everett needs to be aware of that institutional experience and match it with the confidence of a team that has been the best in the WHL all year.

    History: Everett Has Never Won This Trophy

    The Silvertips first reached the WHL Final in 2004, losing to the Kelowna Rockets. In 2018, they returned, losing to the Swift Current Broncos. Both times: close, but not there.

    This is year three of what fans hope is different. The roster is better, the goaltending may be the best in Silvertips playoff history, and a 16-year-old defenseman is leading the way. It is not a stretch to say this is the best team the franchise has fielded heading into a WHL Final. The Cup belongs in Everett. Friday night, the Silvertips get their first shot at proving it.

    How to Watch and Attend

    Tickets: Available at silvertips.com and Ticketmaster for Games 1 (May 8) and 2 (May 9) at Angel of the Winds Arena, Everett. Buy before they’re gone — this is a playoff Final at a 10,000-seat arena and demand will be high.

    Broadcast: Check silvertips.com and CHL.ca for streaming and TV options. The WHL Championship is typically available on TSN for Canadian viewers. U.S. streaming options will be listed on the Silvertips’ official channels.

    Angel of the Winds Arena: 2000 Hewitt Ave, Everett, WA 98201. Doors open approximately 90 minutes before puck drop. The building will be electric.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    Q: When is Silvertips WHL Final Game 1?
    A: Game 1 is Friday, May 8, at Angel of the Winds Arena in Everett. Game 2 follows Saturday, May 9.

    Q: Who are the Everett Silvertips playing in the 2026 WHL Championship Final?
    A: The Silvertips are facing the Prince Albert Raiders. It is the first time these two franchises have met in the WHL Final.

    Q: What is the Silvertips’ 2026 playoff record?
    A: 12-1 entering the WHL Final, with two series sweeps and a 4-1 series win over Kelowna.

    Q: Who leads the Silvertips in playoff scoring?
    A: Matias Vanhanen leads with 19 points (10G-9A). Landon DuPont has 17 points (4G-13A) from the blue line. Carter Bear has 16 points.

    Q: Has Everett ever won the WHL Championship?
    A: No. The Silvertips reached the WHL Final in 2004 and 2018 but did not win either time. The 2026 Final is their third chance.

    Q: Where can I buy tickets for the Silvertips WHL Final?
    A: Tickets for Games 1 and 2 are available at silvertips.com and Ticketmaster.

  • Curtis Washington Jr. Goes Off: AquaSox Beat Hillsboro 8-6 in Series Opener

    Curtis Washington Jr. Goes Off: AquaSox Beat Hillsboro 8-6 in Series Opener

    Q: What happened when the AquaSox opened the Hillsboro series on May 5, 2026?
    A: Curtis Washington Jr. hit a three-run home run — his fourth of the season — as part of a six-run third inning, and Everett beat the Hillsboro Hops 8-6 at Funko Field. Wyatt Lunsford-Shenkman earned the win and Casey Hintz notched his second save of the year.

    Curtis Washington Jr. Lights Up Funko Field

    The Everett AquaSox are home, and Tuesday night at Funko Field felt like a reminder of exactly why this roster is worth watching. Curtis Washington Jr. blasted a three-run home run to right-center in the third inning — his fourth of 2026, a new career single-season high — as the Frogs took Game 1 of the Hillsboro Hops series 8-6 in front of 754 fans on a spring night in Everett.

    This was a game with some sloppiness, a five-run Hops comeback in the fifth that made it interesting, and ultimately a bullpen that held the door shut. The kind of 8-6 win that leaves you feeling good about the roster depth even while knowing there’s work to be done.

    How It Unfolded: The Six-Run Third

    The AquaSox took a 1-0 lead in the bottom of the first when Luke Stevenson (Seattle Mariners’ No. 8 prospect) singled home Carter Dorighi, who had reached on a Hillsboro fielding error and advanced on a wild pitch. Clean, efficient, the kind of early RBI Stevenson has been delivering all month — no coincidence he just earned the Mariners’ Minor League Hitter of April award.

    Hillsboro answered in the top of the third. Adrian Rodriguez walked, Trent Youngblood and Yassel Soler singled to load the bases, Brady Counsell hit a sacrifice fly, and Yerald Nin doubled into the left-center gap to put the Hops up 2-1. It looked for a moment like Hillsboro starter David Hagaman — Arizona’s No. 8 prospect — might settle in.

    He didn’t. The bottom of the third became a six-run avalanche. Mariners No. 6 prospect Jonny Farmelo led off with a double. Josh Caron walked. Luis Suisbel walked to load the bases with two outs. Then Carlos Jimenez (Mariners No. 21 prospect) lined a two-run single to right, scoring Farmelo and Caron to tie it at 3. Austin St. Laurent followed with an RBI single to make it 4-2. And then Washington Jr. stepped in and sent one to right-center — a three-run shot that made it 7-2 and sent the small but enthusiastic crowd home happy before the fifth inning even arrived.

    The Hops Made It Interesting

    Credit the Hillsboro Hops: they didn’t fold. The top of the fifth saw a four-run explosion that cut the lead to 7-6. Slade Caldwell (Arizona’s No. 3 prospect) walked, Counsell knocked an RBI double, Nin added an RBI single, Avery Owusu-Asiedu hit an RBI double, and Modeifi Marte brought home one more with a single to right. Suddenly it was a game again.

    Everett answered in the sixth. Washington Jr. reached on a hit-by-pitch, stole second, advanced to third on a passed ball, and Dorighi drove him home with a sacrifice fly to left. 8-6 AquaSox.

    Pitching: Lunsford-Shenkman and Hintz Slam the Door

    Taylor Dollard started and went four innings. Armbruester tossed one frame. Then Wyatt Lunsford-Shenkman came on and was filthy — two scoreless innings, picking up his second win of the season. Casey Hintz closed it out with two more scoreless innings for his second save. The Hops had 12 hits on the night but couldn’t string them together enough in the late innings to tie it up.

    Hillsboro’s pitching staff — Hagaman (2.2), Russell (0.1), Aracena (2.0), Brown (3.0) — eventually settled down, but the damage was already done by the bottom of the third.

    Prospect Watch: Names to Know

    Three Mariners prospects showed out in the box score tonight. Jonny Farmelo (M’s No. 6) set the third inning in motion with his leadoff double. Carlos Jimenez (M’s No. 21) delivered the clutch two-run single with two outs. And Curtis Washington Jr. provided the headline play with his three-run shot. Add in Luke Stevenson (No. 8) providing the first-inning RBI, and you’ve got a prospect showcase tucked inside an 8-6 box score.

    This comes on the heels of Stevenson winning the Mariners Minor League Hitter of the Month award for April (.321 BA, .500 OBP, .982 OPS, 20 walks) and Brock Moore winning the bullpen award (8.1 IP, 20 K, 1 BB, 4 SV in April). The talent pipeline feeding through Everett right now is genuinely impressive.

    Tonight: Bryce Miller on the Mound

    Wednesday night is must-see baseball at Funko Field. Seattle Mariners pitcher Bryce Miller is making his second AquaSox rehab start of 2026 at 7:05 PM, continuing his recovery from the oblique inflammation that sidelined him before the season. His April 24 AquaSox outing (3 IP, 1 H, 0 R, 1 BB, 6 K, 47 pitches) was excellent. Tonight, he faces the Hops in what may be his final tune-up before rejoining the Seattle rotation.

    What’s Coming This Week

    The six-game Hillsboro homestand runs through Sunday, May 10, with something every night worth showing up for. Coors Light Throwback Thursday is Thursday, Star Wars Night on Saturday, Sunday Fun Day closes the week, and the AquaSox Mother’s Day Picnic rounds it out. Tickets are available at aquasox.com. All games at Funko Field, 7:05 PM first pitch (Sunday at 1:05 PM).

    The Frogs are building something interesting in Everett this spring. Come watch it in person.

    Box Score

    Hillsboro Hops: 0-0-2-0-4-0-0-0-0 = 6 R, 12 H, 1 E
    Everett AquaSox: 1-0-6-0-0-1-0-0-X = 8 R, 9 H, 1 E

    Win: Lunsford-Shenkman (2-0) | Loss: Hagaman (0-1) | Save: Hintz (2)
    Everett pitching: Dollard 4.0 IP, Armbruester 1.0 IP, Lunsford-Shenkman 2.0 IP, Hintz 2.0 IP
    Time: 2:49 | Attendance: 754

    Frequently Asked Questions

    Q: Who won the AquaSox game on May 5, 2026?
    A: The Everett AquaSox beat the Hillsboro Hops 8-6 in the series opener at Funko Field.

    Q: Who hit the home run for the AquaSox on May 5?
    A: Curtis Washington Jr. hit a three-run home run to right-center in the third inning — his fourth of the 2026 season and a new career single-season high.

    Q: Who got the win for Everett on May 5?
    A: Wyatt Lunsford-Shenkman earned the win (now 2-0) with two scoreless innings; Casey Hintz earned his second save with two more scoreless frames.

    Q: Is Bryce Miller pitching for the AquaSox this week?
    A: Yes — Mariners right-hander Bryce Miller is scheduled to make a rehab start Wednesday, May 6, at 7:05 PM at Funko Field against the Hillsboro Hops.

    Q: What promotions does the AquaSox homestand have?
    A: Coors Light Throwback Thursday (May 7), Star Wars Night (May 9), Sunday Fun Day, and the Mother’s Day Picnic (May 10). All games at Funko Field — 7:05 PM weeknights/Saturday, 1:05 PM Sunday.

    Q: Who are the Mariners prospects on the AquaSox in 2026?
    A: Standout prospects on the 2026 AquaSox include Jonny Farmelo (No. 6), Luke Stevenson (No. 8), Carlos Jimenez (No. 21), Felnin Celesten, Brandon Eike, and Curtis Washington Jr., among others.

  • Capers + Olives Is the Best Italian Restaurant in Downtown Everett, and It Changes Its Menu Every Two Weeks

    Capers + Olives Is the Best Italian Restaurant in Downtown Everett, and It Changes Its Menu Every Two Weeks

    Quick answer: Capers + Olives (2933 Colby Ave, Everett) is a seasonal Italian-inspired bistro run by chef/owner Jimmy Liang, who trained at The Herb Farm. Menu changes every two weeks based on local farms. Hours: Mon–Sat 4pm–9pm. Happy hour 4–5pm and 8–9pm. 4.6 stars, 413+ Yelp reviews. (425) 322-5280.

    Capers + Olives Is the Best Italian Restaurant in Downtown Everett, and It Changes Its Menu Every Two Weeks

    There’s a restaurant at 2933 Colby Ave in downtown Everett that’s been quietly earning 4.6 stars on Yelp from 413-plus diners over several years, and if you haven’t heard of it, that’s partly by design. Capers + Olives doesn’t market itself hard. Chef and owner Jimmy Liang doesn’t chase trends. The menu changes every two weeks, sometimes more often, based on what local farms and suppliers have available. If something isn’t right this week, it doesn’t go on the menu this week.

    This is how great Italian restaurants have always worked. It’s just not how most restaurants in Everett work. Which is why Capers + Olives is the one we keep coming back to.

    The Chef: Jimmy Liang and The Herb Farm

    Jimmy Liang’s origin story is a good one. He started in Asian cuisine — which you can taste in the precision and restraint that shows up in his Italian preparations — but his first love was always Italian food. His culinary anchor was an internship at The Herb Farm, the legendary Woodinville destination that essentially wrote the rulebook for Pacific Northwest farm-to-table dining over its 30-plus years in operation.

    The Herb Farm’s influence shows in Liang’s sourcing philosophy: nothing goes on the menu until he’s talked to his farmers and suppliers. The menu is seasonal not as a marketing claim but as a literal operating constraint. If peonies are blooming and the ranunculus is done, the menu reflects that rhythm. If fennel sausage is available from the right supplier, it appears. If it’s not, it doesn’t.

    What to Order (With the Caveat That It Might Not Be There Next Week)

    The menu shifts fast enough that specific dishes are moving targets, but certain things tend to anchor the experience. The homemade focaccia is almost always present, and it’s the best version of itself: properly blistered, oily in the right way, crusty enough to serve as a structural element in the meal. Order it. Don’t share more than necessary.

    The Castelvetrano olives are a house constant — bright, buttery, mild, not the jarred-grocery-store version. The homemade burrata with pear, currant, and pistachios is the kind of dish you think about the week after you had it. The contrast between the fresh dairy, the fruit, and the nuttiness of the pistachios is the dish in a sentence.

    The pasta with fennel sausage and cabbage is a recurring seasonal anchor — hearty and precise and less showy than it sounds on paper. And then there’s Liang’s signature: a three-ingredient spaghetti made with pasta imported from Italy, where the point is not complexity but perfection. Three good things, made right, nothing hidden. It’s the dish that makes you understand why he trained where he trained.

    All pasta beyond the imported spaghetti is made fresh in-house daily. This matters. You can taste the difference between fresh pasta made that morning and pasta that came out of a bag three days ago, and at Capers + Olives it always tastes like this morning.

    The Space: Small, Warm, Serious

    Capers + Olives is a small room — bistro-scale, intentionally so. The energy is warm and slightly hushed in the good way restaurants get when the food is the main event and the décor doesn’t compete with it. Cozy armchair atmosphere isn’t how we’d describe it; it’s more like: the lighting is right, the tables have space between them, and whoever is running the front of house knows the menu well enough to answer questions confidently.

    It’s a good first date restaurant. It’s a good “we just got promoted / got engaged / need to mark the occasion” restaurant. It’s not a loud group party venue — bring four people max and keep the conversation to the table.

    Hours, Happy Hour, and When to Go

    Open Monday through Saturday, 4pm to 9pm. Closed Sunday. Happy hour runs 4–5pm and again 8–9pm — the split happy hour is an unusual and generous move. The 4–5pm window makes this one of the better after-work stops in downtown Everett. The 8–9pm late happy hour is for people who ate dinner somewhere else and want to end the night right.

    Call ahead or check their website before you go — the restaurant is small enough that on a busy Friday or Saturday, walk-ins can face a wait. (425) 322-5280.

    How It Fits in Everett’s Italian Landscape

    We covered Luca Italian Restaurant & Wine Bar on Hewitt Avenue earlier this season — Bepi from Florence, Vincenzo from Sicily, a deep Italian wine list, the real cream-free carbonara. Luca is fine dining, European-trained, occasion-worthy in the “special dinner” sense.

    Capers + Olives is something different: casual-elegant, PNW-informed, rotating with the seasons. The two restaurants don’t cannibalize each other. Luca gives you Florence and Sicily. Capers + Olives gives you the Pacific Northwest filtered through an Italian sensibility. They’re solving different problems.

    If you’ve only been to one and not the other, you’re missing half the picture of what Italian food in downtown Everett actually is in 2026.

    The Verdict

    Jimmy Liang built a genuinely excellent restaurant in downtown Everett and has been running it at a high level for years without much fanfare. The menu philosophy — seasonal, local, changes every two weeks, the farmers decide before the chef does — is the right one, and the execution reflects it. The pasta is fresh. The focaccia is worth the trip. The burrata will follow you home.

    Capers + Olives deserves to be fully booked on a Friday. Go, and tell someone about it.

    Capers + Olives
    2933 Colby Ave, Everett, WA 98201
    (425) 322-5280 | capersandolives.com
    Mon–Sat: 4pm–9pm | Closed Sunday
    Happy Hour: 4–5pm and 8–9pm

    Frequently Asked Questions

    Where is Capers + Olives in Everett?

    2933 Colby Ave, Everett, WA 98201 — downtown Everett, between Everett Ave and Pacific Ave.

    What cuisine does Capers + Olives serve?

    Seasonal Italian-inspired farm-to-table cuisine. The menu changes every two weeks based on what local Pacific Northwest farms and suppliers have available.

    Who is the owner of Capers + Olives Everett?

    Chef and owner Jimmy Liang, who trained at The Herb Farm, one of the Pacific Northwest’s most respected farm-to-table restaurants.

    What are Capers + Olives hours?

    Monday–Saturday 4pm–9pm. Closed Sunday. Happy hour 4–5pm and 8–9pm daily.

    Does Capers + Olives take reservations?

    Call (425) 322-5280. The restaurant is small — calling ahead on weekends is strongly recommended.

    What should I order at Capers + Olives?

    The homemade focaccia, Castelvetrano olives, burrata with pear and pistachio, and whatever pasta is on the rotating menu. The three-ingredient imported spaghetti is the signature.

    How is Capers + Olives rated?

    4.6 stars across 413+ Yelp reviews as of February 2026.

  • The Everett Farmers Market Opens This Mother’s Day — Here’s How to Make a Full Morning of It

    The Everett Farmers Market Opens This Mother’s Day — Here’s How to Make a Full Morning of It

    Quick answer: The Everett Farmers Market opens for the 2026 season on Sunday May 10 — Mother’s Day — at 2930 Wetmore Ave, Everett. Hours: 10:30am early access (seniors/high-risk), 11am general. Free admission. Fresh flowers, spring produce, baked goods, local honey, artisans, and live music every week through October.

    The Everett Farmers Market Opens This Mother’s Day — Here’s How to Make a Full Morning of It

    Every year the Everett Farmers Market opens on the second Sunday in May. Every year that Sunday is Mother’s Day. And every year this coincidence creates the best morning in Everett’s calendar: the whole city turns out, the flower vendors are stacked, and downtown smells like fresh bread and spring greens before noon.

    This Sunday, May 10, is that morning. The 2026 season opens at 2930 Wetmore Ave at 10:30am (early access for seniors and high-risk customers) and 11am for everyone else. Here’s how to make it count.

    The Flowers: This Is the Move

    If you are going to the Everett Farmers Market on Mother’s Day, you are going for the flowers. Full stop.

    The market’s Hmong farmer vendors are there every single Sunday with fresh-cut seasonal flower bouquets — and on opening day, which lands on the biggest flower-buying holiday of the year, they arrive loaded. These aren’t grocery store bouquets wrapped in cellophane. They’re cut that morning, arranged right there, priced to move, and the kind of thing you hand someone and they immediately want to know where you found them.

    In early May in the Pacific Northwest you’re looking at tulips wrapping up their final weeks, ranunculus in full bloom, anemones, sweet peas just starting, and the first cutting peonies of the season depending on the growing year. Get there at 10:30 if you can — the best bouquets go to the early arrivals on opening day.

    What’s Fresh in Early May

    The first week of the season is never peak abundance — that’s July and August when the tables are buried in tomatoes and stone fruit. But May has its own season, and it’s worth knowing what you’re shopping for.

    Look for: spring greens (arugula, spinach, mix lettuces, kale), radishes, green onions, asparagus if the season has been warm, greenhouse starts (tomato and pepper seedlings if you’re planting), and fresh herbs. The baked goods vendors are there year-round — look for sourdough, pastries, and local honey. Several local farms bring eggs and early season jams.

    The vendor map is updated by Saturday noon before each Sunday market, so check everettfarmersmarket.com Saturday evening to see exactly who’s coming Opening Day.

    The Opening Day Energy Is Different

    We want to be clear: the Everett Farmers Market in August, when every table is overflowing and the line for the corn guy wraps around the block, is incredible. But Opening Day has something you can’t get any other week.

    Vendors who haven’t seen each other since October are catching up. Regulars who’ve been driving to Arlington or Edmonds for their farmers market fix all winter are finally home. The musicians who play live every Sunday are in the first-day-of-school mood. And the sheer density of people who turn out for Opening Day on Mother’s Day makes the corner of Wetmore feel like a neighborhood that knows itself.

    It’s loud and it’s crowded and it smells like fresh bread and it’s exactly what a farmers market is supposed to be.

    How to Plan the Morning

    Here’s the move: arrive at 10:30 if anyone in your group qualifies for early access. 11am works fine otherwise — just know the flower situation will have thinned slightly. Budget an hour at the market. Buy flowers. Buy something for breakfast if the pastry vendors have what you need. Then head to the waterfront.

    Jetty Bar & Grille at Hotel Indigo (1028 13th St) has Mother’s Day brunch specials this Sunday — Brioche French Toast, Spanish Quiche, mimosas, and their full marina-view brunch. From Wetmore Ave to the waterfront is under 10 minutes by car. You arrive with flowers. You sit down to a view of Possession Sound. That’s the morning.

    If you prefer coffee and a walk, The Loft Coffee Bar on Hewitt Ave is open and a 10-minute walk from the market. STRGZR Coffee & Kitchen at 1422 Hewitt is another solid option if you want breakfast burritos alongside the coffee.

    The Bigger Picture: Why This Market Matters

    The Everett Farmers Market has been running since the early 1990s and has become one of the anchors of downtown Everett’s summer identity. Every vendor at that market is a small business — a farm family, an artisan baker, a beekeeper — and every dollar spent there goes directly to the people who grew or made what you’re buying. No middleman, no distributor markup.

    The market runs through October at the same location, every Sunday, 11am to 3pm. If you make it a weekly habit this season, you’ll notice how the market changes week to week as the growing season advances — from the delicate May greens all the way to the full-load harvest tables of September. Worth the habit.

    Everett Farmers Market — 2026 Season
    2930 Wetmore Ave, Everett, WA 98201
    Every Sunday May 10 through October
    10:30am early access (seniors/high-risk) | 11am–3pm general
    Free admission | (425) 422-5656 | everettfarmersmarket.com

    Frequently Asked Questions

    When does the Everett Farmers Market open in 2026?

    Sunday May 10, 2026 — Opening Day is Mother’s Day. The market runs every Sunday through October at 2930 Wetmore Ave.

    What time does the Everett Farmers Market open?

    10:30am early access for seniors and high-risk customers; 11am general opening. Market closes at 3pm.

    Does the Everett Farmers Market have flowers?

    Yes — Hmong farmer vendors bring fresh-cut seasonal flower bouquets every Sunday. On Opening Day / Mother’s Day expect the biggest flower selection of any single market day.

    Is the Everett Farmers Market free?

    Yes, admission is free. 2930 Wetmore Ave, Everett, WA 98201.

    What can I buy at the Everett Farmers Market in May?

    Spring greens, radishes, asparagus, fresh herbs, greenhouse plant starts, eggs, local honey, baked goods, fresh flowers, and artisan crafts.

    How do I find out which vendors are at the Everett Farmers Market?

    The vendor map is updated by Saturday noon the week before each Sunday market. Check everettfarmersmarket.com/all-vendors/ for the current list.

  • Jetty Bar & Grille: The Everett Waterfront’s Hidden Best Table

    Jetty Bar & Grille: The Everett Waterfront’s Hidden Best Table

    Quick answer: Jetty Bar & Grille (1028 13th St, Everett, inside Hotel Indigo Waterfront Place) serves Salish Sea-inspired seafood with marina views. Weekend brunch Sat–Sun 7am–3pm. Mother’s Day specials May 10 — Brioche French Toast, Spanish Quiche, mimosas. Reserve at (425) 535-4414 or OpenTable.

    Jetty Bar & Grille: The Everett Waterfront’s Hidden Best Table

    The Port of Everett’s Restaurant Row has been getting a lot of well-deserved press over the last 18 months. Tapped Public House with its rooftop deck. Marina Azul’s 100-tequila back bar. Anthony’s halibut season. South Fork Baking’s scratch pastries. The waterfront has become a destination, and that’s a sentence nobody was saying three years ago.

    But one waterfront table has been quietly delivering four-star seafood and marina views the entire time the newer spots were opening: Jetty Bar & Grille, the restaurant inside Hotel Indigo Seattle Everett Waterfront. Located at 1028 13th St in the heart of Fisherman’s Harbor, Jetty has been here since the hotel opened — and it keeps getting underrated in the conversation about where to eat on the water. We’re here to fix that. Especially this Sunday.

    The Setting: Right on the Marina

    Hotel Indigo Everett Waterfront is the glass-and-steel building that anchors the north end of Waterfront Place, and Jetty occupies its ground-floor dining space with direct access to an outdoor patio overlooking the Port of Everett Marina. On a clear May day you get an unobstructed line of sight across Possession Sound toward the Olympic Mountains. The nautical décor inside isn’t overdone — warm wood tones, blue accents, floor-to-ceiling windows — and it feels like you’re actually on the water without being weather-dependent.

    Parking is free in the Waterfront Place lot, and you’re a short walk from the marina docks if someone in your party wants to admire the boats before or after eating.

    What to Order

    The menu focuses on approachable Pacific Northwest seafood sourced from local purveyors. This isn’t white-tablecloth fine dining — it’s well-executed casual-to-midrange that genuinely knows what it’s doing with fish.

    Start with the smoked salmon chowder. It’s thick, properly smoked, and local — not the gluey tourist version you get at some waterfront spots. Follow it with the olive oil poached halibut, which arrives delicate and seasonal and makes a case for halibut prepared simply rather than buried in sauce. The fish and chips set a legitimate benchmark: light batter, fresh fish, crisp fries.

    The cocktail program leans local too — handcrafted drinks, Pacific Northwest spirits where available — and the daily happy hour runs 3pm to 5pm, making the waterfront patio genuinely affordable on a weekday afternoon.

    Brunch: Their Secret Weapon

    Weekday brunch runs Monday through Friday from 6am to 3pm. Weekend brunch is Saturday and Sunday from 7am to 3pm, and it’s where Jetty makes its most compelling argument: the morning light across the marina, a mimosa in hand, avocado toast or eggs Benedict with smoked salmon — this is the strongest brunch case in Snohomish County at this price point. We’ll stand by that.

    Mother’s Day Brunch This Sunday — Reserve Now

    This Sunday, May 10, is Mother’s Day, and Jetty is running brunch specials alongside the regular menu: Brioche French Toast and Spanish Quiche, with mimosas and the full marina view. If you want a reservation for Sunday brunch, do not wait — call (425) 535-4414 or book through OpenTable today. Jetty holds 4.4 stars across more than 400 OpenTable diners, and waterfront Mother’s Day tables at this price go fast.

    Here’s a full morning plan we’d recommend: start at the Everett Farmers Market’s opening day (10:30am, 2930 Wetmore Ave — also Mother’s Day), grab flowers from the Hmong farmer vendors, then walk or drive to the waterfront for Jetty brunch. Flowers in the car, mimosas at the marina. That’s a complete Mother’s Day at a very reasonable cost.

    Dinner Service

    Dinner runs Sunday through Thursday 4pm to 9pm and Friday through Saturday 4pm to 10pm. The seafood focus continues through the evening — the poached halibut and chowder carry over from lunch — joined by a broader selection of Salish Sea fish preparations and a full cocktail menu. This is the restaurant you bring out-of-town guests when you want to show them what Everett’s waterfront actually looks like from inside a good meal.

    The Verdict

    Jetty Bar & Grille has been the quiet backbone of Waterfront Place dining since Hotel Indigo opened. While newer Restaurant Row tenants got bigger marketing pushes, Jetty has been doing consistent, honest Salish Sea seafood with one of the best marina views in the county. Four-point-four stars across 400-plus OpenTable diners over multiple years doesn’t happen without getting the fundamentals right.

    If you haven’t been, this Mother’s Day weekend is the prompt you needed. Make the reservation. Start at the farmers market. Do the mimosa with marina views. Come back in the summer for the patio at sunset. Tapped Public House and Rustic Cork are great neighbors for a waterfront evening that runs long.

    Jetty Bar & Grille
    1028 13th St, Everett, WA (inside Hotel Indigo Waterfront Place)
    (425) 535-4414 | OpenTable reservations
    Brunch: Mon–Fri 6am–3pm | Sat–Sun 7am–3pm
    Dinner: Sun–Thu 4–9pm | Fri–Sat 4–10pm
    Happy Hour: Daily 3–5pm

    Frequently Asked Questions

    Where is Jetty Bar & Grille in Everett?

    1028 13th St inside Hotel Indigo Seattle Everett Waterfront, at Fisherman’s Harbor in the Waterfront Place development.

    Does Jetty Bar & Grille serve brunch?

    Yes — weekdays 6am–3pm, weekends 7am–3pm. Weekend brunch is their strongest meal.

    What are Jetty Bar & Grille’s Mother’s Day 2026 specials?

    Brioche French Toast and Spanish Quiche added to the regular brunch menu Sunday May 10. Reserve at (425) 535-4414 or OpenTable.

    What is Jetty Bar & Grille’s best dish?

    Smoked salmon chowder to start, olive oil poached halibut as the main. For brunch, eggs Benedict with smoked salmon or avocado toast with the marina view.

    Is there parking at Jetty Bar & Grille?

    Free parking in the Waterfront Place lot adjacent to Hotel Indigo.

    What is Jetty Bar & Grille’s rating?

    4.4 stars across 400+ OpenTable diners (as of May 2026).

  • May Is Navy Gold Star Remembrance Month — How NAVSTA Everett Honors the Surviving Families of Sailors

    May Is Navy Gold Star Remembrance Month — How NAVSTA Everett Honors the Surviving Families of Sailors

    What is Navy Gold Star Remembrance Month? May is the Navy’s official month to honor surviving families of Sailors who died on active duty. The program — called Navy Gold Star — provides long-term support to spouses, parents, children, and siblings, regardless of branch, location, or manner of death. At Naval Station Everett, the All American Restaurant in Building 2025 is serving special Gold Star–inspired meals every Tuesday this month, and the Region Northwest Navy Gold Star Coordinator is reachable through the Fleet and Family Support Center at 425-304-3735.

    The blue star, then the gold one, then the silence. Most civilians know the Gold Star symbol from the small banner that hangs in a window after a service member dies on duty. What fewer people in Everett realize is that the Navy runs an entire month — every May — to make sure those families are not left to grieve alone. Navy Gold Star Remembrance Month is officially observed Navy-wide in May, and at Naval Station Everett the program shows up in small, deliberate ways: a featured Tuesday menu at the base restaurant, a dedicated coordinator at the Fleet and Family Support Center, and a standing invitation to surviving families to walk back through the gate any time they want, for as long as they want.

    If you’re new to the Pacific Northwest as a Navy spouse, parent, or sibling — or if you’re a civilian neighbor wondering how to honor the families behind the uniforms in your community — here is what May means at NAVSTA Everett, where to call, and what’s available year-round.

    Tuesdays at the All American: A Quiet Way the Base Says “We Remember”

    The most visible NAVSTA Everett observance this year is happening at the All American Restaurant, the Morale, Welfare and Recreation–run dining facility in Building 2025. According to Naval Station Everett’s Fleet and Family Readiness page announcing the observance, the All American is serving special meals every Tuesday in May “inspired by their stories and traditions” — meaning each Tuesday menu is built around a Gold Star Sailor remembered through the dish.

    It is a small gesture and a meaningful one. The All American is open to authorized patrons for breakfast, lunch, and dinner on weekdays, with brunch and supper on weekends and holidays. For menu details, hours, or to confirm a specific Tuesday’s offering, the restaurant’s direct line is 425-304-3943.

    If you’re a surviving family member who hasn’t been on base in a while: the program supports your continued use of base facilities through your existing dependent ID, and if you’ve lost track of how to keep that current, the Region Northwest Navy Gold Star Coordinator at Everett FFSC will walk you through it.

    What Navy Gold Star Actually Is — And Who Qualifies

    The Navy Gold Star program is the service’s official long-term support program for the surviving families of Sailors who die on active duty. Three things make it different from how most civilians imagine “veteran services”:

    • It is not branch-restricted on the receiving end. If your loved one served in any branch, Navy Gold Star coordinators will help you connect to the appropriate branch’s survivor services. The program describes itself as “inclusive — regardless of your loved one’s military branch, location, or manner of death.”
    • It is not time-limited. Coordinators provide outreach and assistance for as long as the surviving family member desires. There is no expiration.
    • It does not change your benefits. Participation does not grant additional entitlements beyond what the survivor was already eligible for; it adds support, not paperwork.

    Eligibility is broader than many families realize. The Navy Gold Star program lists the following eligible relationships to a fallen Sailor: widow or widower (remarried or not); each parent — including stepparents, adoptive parents, and foster parents who stood in loco parentis; each child, including stepchildren and adopted children; and each sibling, including half-siblings and step-siblings. If you wondered whether you “count” — you probably do.

    How to Reach the Region Northwest Coordinator at Everett FFSC

    The Navy Region Northwest Gold Star Coordinator is housed within the Fleet and Family Support Center system, and Naval Station Everett’s FFSC routes Gold Star inquiries the same way it handles every other family-support request: through Centralized Scheduling.

    • NAVSTA Everett FFSC Centralized Scheduling: 425-304-3735
    • FFSC email (Region Northwest): ffsp.cnrnw@navy.mil
    • Navy Gold Star national line: 1-888-509-8759

    The same FFSC team that supports active-duty families through deployment, PCS, financial counseling, and the Sexual Assault Prevention and Response program also handles Gold Star outreach. That continuity matters — if you were already a part of the FFSC family before your loss, the same building, same number, and (often) the same people are still there for you.

    Gold Star Lapel Buttons and Next of Kin Pins

    The small lapel pin you sometimes see on a parent or spouse — the gold star on a purple background, or the gold star on a gold background for next of kin — is issued by the Department of Defense, not purchased privately. If your pin was lost, damaged, or never reached you, replacements are available.

    Eligible family members can request a replacement Gold Star Lapel Button or Next of Kin Lapel Pin two ways: by contacting the Region Northwest Navy Gold Star Coordinator through Everett FFSC for assistance, or by submitting DD Form 3 (“Application for Gold Star Lapel Button”) directly to:

    Navy Personnel Command
    Navy Casualty Office (PERS-00C)
    ATTN: Long Term Assistance Program
    5720 Integrity Drive
    Millington, TN 38055

    Bells Across America and the Survivors of Suicide Loss Group

    Two Navy Gold Star programs run year-round and are worth knowing about even if your loss is not recent.

    Bells Across America for Fallen Service Members is an annual remembrance ceremony held each spring across Navy installations and partner communities. The names of Sailors lost in the previous year are read aloud, and a bell is rung after each name. The Region Northwest event is coordinated through the Gold Star program; ask the Everett coordinator for the year’s date and location.

    The Survivors of Suicide Loss Virtual Support Group is a Navy Gold Star–facilitated peer support group specifically for surviving family members of Sailors lost to suicide. It runs virtually, which matters in a region as geographically spread out as Navy Region Northwest — you do not have to drive to Everett or Bremerton to attend.

    For Civilian Neighbors: How to Honor Without Intruding

    Snohomish County is a Navy town in ways that don’t always announce themselves. There are Gold Star families in Mukilteo, Lake Stevens, Marysville, Edmonds, and every neighborhood in Everett. If you want to honor the month without overstepping, three quiet things help:

    • Recognize the symbol, not the story. If you see a Gold Star Lapel Pin or a Gold Star banner in a window, a nod or a “thank you” is welcome. Asking for the story is not — let the family raise it if they want.
    • Support the local infrastructure. The same nonprofits that show up for veterans show up for Gold Star families: American Legion posts and VFW posts, the USO Northwest, and Snohomish County’s Veterans Assistance Program at the Drewel Building. Volunteering or donating to these organizations supports surviving families directly.
    • Show up Memorial Day weekend. The county’s Memorial Day observances at Tahoma National Cemetery, the Eternal Flame at the Drewel Building, and Lake Stevens Post 181 are the formal closing of Gold Star Month — and showing up is the most visible thing a civilian neighbor can do.

    Connecting the Month to Memorial Day

    Navy Gold Star Remembrance Month deliberately bookends Memorial Day. The month builds toward the federal holiday on Monday, May 25, when ceremonies will be held at Tahoma National Cemetery in Kent at 1 p.m. and at the Eternal Flame outside the Robert J. Drewel Building in downtown Everett. The Gold Star program’s framing is that Memorial Day is a single day; remembrance is a continuum, and the families who carry it deserve a month of visibility and a year-round line they can call.

    For families newly assigned to NAVSTA Everett — including those arriving during the spring PCS season as Military Spouse Appreciation Day approaches on May 8 — this is the month to put the Gold Star coordinator’s number in your phone, even if you never need it. Your neighbor on base, in the chapel pew, or in the carpool line might.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    Is Navy Gold Star only for families of Sailors killed in combat?

    No. Navy Gold Star supports surviving families of Sailors who died on active duty regardless of the manner of death — combat, training accident, illness, or suicide. The program is explicit that it is “inclusive — regardless of your loved one’s military branch, location, or manner of death.”

    If I remarried, do I lose access to Gold Star support?

    No. The Navy Gold Star program lists “widow (remarried or not)” and “widower (remarried or not)” as eligible. Remarriage does not end your participation in the support program.

    My loved one wasn’t Navy. Can the Region Northwest coordinator still help?

    Yes. Navy Gold Star coordinators help connect surviving families to the appropriate branch’s survivor services regardless of which branch the service member belonged to. Call 1-888-509-8759 or the Everett FFSC at 425-304-3735 to be routed.

    How do I get a replacement Gold Star Lapel Pin?

    Submit DD Form 3 (“Application for Gold Star Lapel Button”) to Navy Personnel Command, Navy Casualty Office (PERS-00C), ATTN: Long Term Assistance Program, 5720 Integrity Drive, Millington, TN 38055 — or contact the Region Northwest Navy Gold Star Coordinator through the Everett FFSC for help with the application.

    When are the All American’s Gold Star Tuesday meals served?

    Every Tuesday in May 2026 during regular meal hours at the All American Restaurant in Building 2025 at NAVSTA Everett. For the specific menu on a given Tuesday, call 425-304-3943.

    Is Bells Across America held at NAVSTA Everett?

    The Region Northwest Bells Across America observance rotates and is coordinated through the Navy Gold Star program. Contact the Region Northwest coordinator through Everett FFSC at 425-304-3735 for the current year’s date, location, and how to attend or read a name.

    Where do Memorial Day observances happen in Snohomish County?

    The two largest Snohomish County–accessible observances are Tahoma National Cemetery in Kent (1 p.m. Monday, May 25) and the Eternal Flame ceremony at the Robert J. Drewel Building in downtown Everett. Smaller services run at Lake Stevens American Legion Post 181, Floral Hills Cemetery in Lynnwood, and Evergreen Cemetery in Everett.

  • For Visitors Flying Into Paine Field From Portland: A 2026 Everett Weekend Guide for the New June 10 Nonstop

    For Visitors Flying Into Paine Field From Portland: A 2026 Everett Weekend Guide for the New June 10 Nonstop

    If you live in the Portland metro and have been wondering whether Everett, Washington is worth a weekend, June 10, 2026 changes the answer. That’s the day Alaska Airlines resumes daily nonstop service between Portland International (PDX) and Paine Field (PAE) — landing you 25 minutes north of downtown Everett at a small, walk-to-the-gate terminal that bypasses SeaTac entirely. This guide is the Everett itinerary the new route makes practical for the first time.

    Why Paine Field is the right airport for an Everett trip

    Most Pacific Northwest visitors arrive into SeaTac and immediately face a decision: drive 90 minutes north against I-5 traffic, or skip everything north of Seattle entirely. Paine Field changes that calculation. It is a small commercial terminal in Snohomish County that opened in March 2019, operated by Propeller Airports. There is no remote parking shuttle. There is no terminal-to-terminal monorail. You walk from the gate to the curb in roughly the time it takes to clear a single TSA line.

    From the curb, a rideshare to downtown Everett is roughly 25 minutes. To the waterfront — about 30. To the AquaSox stadium at Funko Field — under 30.

    The weekend itinerary the new nonstop makes possible

    Friday evening — Land, drop, and walk to dinner. Land at Paine Field by early evening on Alaska’s daily PDX-PAE nonstop. Drop bags at a downtown Everett hotel, then walk to Hewitt Avenue. The dining stretch on Hewitt has rebuilt itself in 2026 — R Harn Thai opened earlier this year and is the right call for a first-night meal. Order the khao soi.

    Saturday morning — Waterfront and Jetty Island. Drive 10 minutes to the Port of Everett’s Waterfront Place — the redeveloped working waterfront with restaurant row, marina access, and the seasonal Jetty Island ferry. Jetty Island is a free 20-minute walk-on ferry to a two-mile sand spit in Possession Sound. Bring a windbreaker even in June.

    Saturday afternoon — Funko HQ and downtown. Funko’s Everett headquarters sits in a converted historic downtown building and is open to visitors. The retail experience is unlike any other corporate flagship in the Pacific Northwest. Combine with a walk through the surrounding gallery district — the Everett Art Walk runs the third Thursday of each month if your trip aligns.

    Saturday evening — AquaSox or Silvertips, in season. The Everett AquaSox play at Funko Field downtown (Mariners High-A affiliate, summer schedule) and the Everett Silvertips play at Angel of the Winds Arena (WHL major junior hockey, fall through spring playoffs). Either is a low-cost, high-energy minor-league experience you cannot reproduce in Portland.

    Sunday — Boeing Future of Flight or a North Cascades day trip. The Boeing Future of Flight aviation museum sits adjacent to Paine Field — convenient to a Sunday departure. For a longer day, Everett is the gateway to Mukilteo, Whidbey Island via the Mukilteo-Clinton ferry, and the western foothills of the North Cascades. None of these are easy out of SeaTac.

    Why this works as a weekend the previous schedule didn’t allow

    Without a PAE-PDX nonstop, the Portland visitor’s only option for an Everett weekend has been to fly into SeaTac and drive 90+ minutes north. The drive eats Friday evening and most of Sunday morning. With the new daily Alaska nonstop, you can land in Everett by 6 PM on Friday and depart by mid-day on Sunday and not lose either bookend to airport time.

    The June 10 launch lands during AquaSox season, before the worst summer Mukilteo ferry queues, and during the most active stretch of the Port of Everett’s outdoor programming.

    Practical details for Portland-area visitors

    • Airport: Seattle Paine Field International Airport (PAE), Everett, WA. Operated by Propeller Airports.
    • Tickets: alaskaair.com
    • Service start: June 10, 2026, daily.
    • Rideshare to downtown Everett: ~25 minutes.
    • Hotels: Downtown Everett options cluster around the Hewitt Avenue corridor and the waterfront.

    Frequently asked questions for visitors

    Is Paine Field a real commercial airport?

    Yes. Seattle Paine Field International Airport (PAE) opened its commercial terminal in March 2019. It is operated by Propeller Airports and serves Alaska Airlines and Avelo Airlines. After the June 10, 2026 Portland launch it will run 13 daily commercial departures across nine nonstop destinations.

    How far is Paine Field from downtown Everett?

    Roughly 25 minutes by rideshare. The terminal sits on the southwest edge of Everett near Mukilteo.

    What is there to actually do in Everett for a weekend?

    Waterfront Place at the Port of Everett, Jetty Island (seasonal ferry), Funko HQ in downtown, AquaSox baseball at Funko Field (summer) or Silvertips hockey at Angel of the Winds Arena (fall through spring), the Everett Art Walk on third Thursdays, and Boeing Future of Flight adjacent to Paine Field for a Sunday departure-day stop.

    Do I need a rental car?

    For a Friday-to-Sunday Everett-only itinerary, rideshare is enough. If you want to add Mukilteo, Whidbey Island via ferry, or any North Cascades day trip, rent a car at the airport.

    What’s the closest hotel to Paine Field?

    The airport area itself has limited lodging. Most visitors stay downtown Everett or near the waterfront — both are roughly 25-30 minutes from the terminal.

    Related Exploring Everett coverage for visitors

  • Paine Field’s Portland Nonstop Returns June 10: The Complete 2026 Guide to What Alaska Airlines’ Relaunch Means for Everett

    Paine Field’s Portland Nonstop Returns June 10: The Complete 2026 Guide to What Alaska Airlines’ Relaunch Means for Everett

    Quick answer: Alaska Airlines resumes daily nonstop service between Seattle Paine Field International Airport (PAE) in Everett and Portland International Airport (PDX) on June 10, 2026. The route brings Paine Field to nine nonstop destinations and 13 daily commercial departures — the busiest schedule the Snohomish County commercial terminal has run since it opened in March 2019. Tickets are on sale at alaskaair.com.

    What’s actually changing on June 10

    Paine Field has had no nonstop option to Portland since the route was discontinued earlier in the terminal’s history. Alaska’s relaunch closes the Pacific Northwest’s most-asked-about gap in the PAE schedule. Portland is the second-largest metro in the region and the natural sister-city pairing for Everett’s commercial terminal — the I-5 drive between Everett and PDX is roughly four hours in light traffic and routinely six on a Friday. A daily nonstop reframes that calculation entirely.

    Propeller Airports, the operator of the Paine Field commercial terminal, announced the relaunch on December 19, 2025. The June 10, 2026 first-day schedule was confirmed in subsequent press materials. The route operates daily.

    Why this matters specifically for Everett

    Three reasons this is more consequential than a single new route would suggest at most airports.

    • Connection geometry. Portland is one of Alaska’s hub-style operations. A nonstop from Paine Field into PDX opens efficient one-stop connections through the Alaska network to cities like Houston, Nashville, Orlando, Dallas, Bozeman, Spokane, and Austin — destinations PAE does not serve nonstop and probably never will at this terminal’s scale. The connection bank, not the destination itself, is the real product.
    • The 13-departure threshold. Paine Field opened in 2019 with a deliberately small commercial footprint. The June schedule lands the terminal at 13 daily commercial departures — the highest count since opening. That is the threshold at which the terminal stops feeling like a boutique alternative and starts functioning as a primary regional airport for North Puget Sound.
    • The Boeing factor. Many Boeing executives, suppliers, and customer representatives based out of Renton, Kent, and Tukwila routinely fly to PDX for business. A PAE-PDX nonstop is the first time that traveler can credibly fly out of Everett rather than detour to SeaTac. The aerospace business case for the route is structural, not speculative.

    The Paine Field route map after June 10

    With the Portland addition, Paine Field’s nonstop network reaches nine destinations across Alaska Airlines and Avelo Airlines schedules. Connection efficiency varies — some markets benefit dramatically from the new PDX option (Texas, Tennessee, Florida), others remain best served via Alaska’s existing PAE nonstop network or a SeaTac drive.

    What the SeaTac comparison actually looks like

    For an Everett resident, the practical question is whether the PDX nonstop is worth choosing over a SeaTac drive plus a SeaTac-PDX flight. The Paine Field math has always been: 25-minute drive vs. 60-90 minute drive, no remote parking shuttle, smaller TSA wait, walk-to-gate terminal experience. The trade has been fewer destinations.

    For Portland specifically, the PAE option after June 10 is roughly an hour and 45 minutes door-to-door from north Everett to gate-to-gate boarding versus three hours through SeaTac. For connection itineraries, the PDX-via-PAE option is competitive with PDX-via-SEA for any onward destination Alaska serves out of Portland.

    What this signals about the terminal’s trajectory

    Paine Field’s commercial terminal opened with two airlines and 24 daily departures in early plans, before COVID compressed the operation. The path back to that scale has been incremental — destination by destination, frequency by frequency. The June 2026 Portland addition pushes the terminal to its highest commercial activity since opening, but it is still well below the 24-departure plan that originally permitted the terminal. The structural ceiling is still there. The trajectory between now and that ceiling is what local travelers will be watching.

    Propeller has not announced additional routes beyond Portland in the June schedule, but each addition like this tightens the case for the next one. Spokane, Boise, and Sacramento have circulated as candidates over the years; June 10 is the first new destination announcement since the terminal added Avelo service.

    Frequently asked questions

    When does Alaska Airlines start the Paine Field to Portland nonstop?

    June 10, 2026, with daily service. Tickets are on sale at alaskaair.com.

    How many daily flights will Paine Field have after the Portland route launches?

    13 daily commercial departures, across nine nonstop destinations. That is the busiest schedule the Paine Field commercial terminal has run since opening in March 2019.

    What connections does the new Paine Field-Portland route open up?

    Portland is one of Alaska’s hub-style operations. The new PAE-PDX nonstop offers efficient one-stop connections to cities including Houston, Nashville, Orlando, Dallas, Bozeman, Spokane, and Austin via the Alaska network.

    Was there ever a Paine Field to Portland nonstop before?

    The route had been discontinued. June 10, 2026 is a relaunch — the first time PAE has had nonstop service to PDX in years.

    How long does it take to drive from Everett to Portland?

    Roughly four hours in light traffic, six or more on a Friday afternoon. The flight reframes that math entirely for travelers who can use the new daily nonstop option.

    How does this compare to flying from SeaTac to Portland?

    For a north Everett resident, the door-to-gate time at PAE is roughly an hour and 45 minutes versus three hours through SeaTac. Connection itineraries via PDX out of PAE will be competitive with SEA-PDX for Alaska-served onward destinations.

    Who operates the Paine Field commercial terminal?

    Propeller Airports operates the commercial terminal at Paine Field. Snohomish County owns the airport itself.

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  • Boeing’s $3 Billion Free Cash Flow Math: A Complete 2026 Guide to How the Everett 737 North Line, Rate 47, and Q1 Results Connect

    Boeing’s $3 Billion Free Cash Flow Math: A Complete 2026 Guide to How the Everett 737 North Line, Rate 47, and Q1 Results Connect

    Quick answer: On Boeing’s April 22, 2026 Q1 earnings call, CEO Kelly Ortberg reaffirmed full-year free cash flow guidance of $1 billion to $3 billion and said the company is on track for the upper end of that range. Reaching the upper end depends on Boeing Commercial Airplanes ramping 737 production from a stabilized 42 per month today to 47 per month this summer, and ultimately to 52 per month — a rate Boeing has said publicly cannot be reached without activating the new 737 North Line in Everett. Q1 itself was a $1.5 billion free cash flow usage, in line with seasonal first-quarter patterns and ahead of Boeing’s own prior guidance.

    Why this matters specifically to Everett

    Most Boeing financial coverage skips the geography. The Q1 numbers are reported as a corporate aggregate — $22.2 billion in revenue, all three segments growing simultaneously, free cash flow recovery from the wiring rework. But the production math the company is committing to publicly only works if a specific factory in Snohomish County starts producing 737 MAX jets at a meaningful rate before the end of 2026.

    That factory is the 737 North Line, the second 737 final assembly line Boeing is standing up inside the Everett widebody factory — the same building that has historically built the 747, 767, 777, and 787. The North Line is not adding factory floor; it is repurposing capacity inside the existing building. And it is the structural piece that turns 47 jets per month (Renton’s current ceiling under the FAA cap, raising to 47 this summer) into 52 jets per month at the company level.

    The Q1 2026 numbers, in context

    According to Boeing’s April 22, 2026 first-quarter results release and the earnings call transcript:

    • Revenue: $22.2 billion, with growth across all three segments (Commercial Airplanes, Defense Space & Security, and Global Services).
    • Q1 free cash flow: A usage of approximately $1.5 billion, reflecting seasonal corporate expenditures and planned capital spending tied to growth investments at other Boeing sites. Ortberg called the cash result “notably better” than the company had communicated the prior month.
    • 737 deliveries momentum: 143 commercial deliveries in the quarter as 737 production ramps toward 47.
    • Full-year FCF guidance: Reaffirmed at $1 billion to $3 billion. CEO targets the upper end.

    The production rate ladder

    Boeing has been explicit on three rate steps:

    • 42 per month — today. Boeing Commercial Airplanes has been producing at this stabilized rate since the FAA-imposed cap that followed the January 2024 Alaska Airlines door plug incident.
    • 47 per month — this summer. Ortberg told analysts this rate moves up at Renton this summer.
    • 52 per month — enabled by Everett’s North Line. Boeing has said publicly that the move to 52 per month is enabled by activating the 737 North Line in Everett. The North Line will start later this year at a low initial rate to demonstrate conformity to the FAA under Boeing’s current production certificate, then ramp “when the entire production system is ready.”

    Translation: every dollar of incremental free cash flow above the $1 billion floor depends on rate progression. Every meaningful jump in the rate ladder above 47 per month depends on a building in Everett.

    How free cash flow actually gets generated on a 737

    The mechanism Boeing has explained on multiple earnings calls works roughly like this. A 737 takes cash to build — supplier payments, labor, components — starting roughly 12-18 months before delivery. Cash comes back at delivery, when the customer pays the bulk of the contract price. The company is also working through inventory of jets built during the prior production pause, which converts into cash as those jets are delivered without requiring new build expense.

    That is why production rate matters disproportionately for free cash flow rather than just revenue. Each additional jet delivered at a stable cost structure converts more directly to cash than the revenue line might suggest. The Everett North Line’s contribution to free cash flow shows up about 12-18 months after it produces its first jets at meaningful rate — which means the upper end of 2026 guidance is partially priced on Renton hitting 47 cleanly, while the second-half-2027 free cash flow run rate is what gets unlocked by Everett.

    Snohomish County’s stake in this number

    Boeing is the largest private employer in Snohomish County. The Everett factory is the largest building in the world by volume. Adding the 737 North Line to that footprint does not require a new building permit, but it does require staffing, training, supplier coordination, and what Boeing has called “production system readiness” across the wider Puget Sound aerospace ecosystem.

    The free cash flow target is the public-facing number that Wall Street tracks. The signal it sends to Everett is operational: ramp the North Line successfully and the city’s aerospace economy gets a structurally larger production base for the first time since the 787 program. Miss the ramp and the upper end of 2026 guidance slips, which puts pressure on capital spending and hiring decisions at every Boeing site — Everett included.

    What changes between now and the end of 2026

    Three milestones to watch from Everett’s vantage point. First, Renton hitting 47 per month this summer — the company has framed this as the precondition for the second-half cash inflection. Second, the North Line achieving its initial low-rate production demonstration to FAA standards under the existing production certificate. Third, the rate increase “when the entire production system is ready” — which is the language Ortberg used and is meaningfully softer than committing to 52 per month by a date.

    The Q2 earnings call in late July will be the next public update on whether Renton is at 47 yet and whether the North Line schedule still tracks to the year. That call is the next inflection point for the city’s most consequential employer.

    Frequently asked questions

    What is Boeing’s 2026 free cash flow guidance?

    Boeing reaffirmed full-year 2026 free cash flow guidance of $1 billion to $3 billion on its April 22 Q1 earnings call. CEO Kelly Ortberg said the company is on track for the upper end of that range.

    What was Boeing’s Q1 2026 free cash flow?

    A usage of approximately $1.5 billion, reflecting seasonal first-quarter patterns and capital spending. Ortberg said the cash result was “notably better” than the company had communicated the prior month.

    What is Boeing’s 737 production rate today?

    Stabilized at 42 per month, with a planned increase to 47 per month this summer at the Renton factory. The next step to 52 per month requires activating the new 737 North Line in Everett.

    When will the 737 North Line in Everett start producing?

    Boeing has said the North Line will start later in 2026 at a low initial rate to demonstrate conformity to the FAA under the current production certificate, with rate increases to follow when the production system is ready.

    How does the 737 North Line affect Boeing’s free cash flow?

    Free cash flow scales with delivery rate. The Renton ramp to 47 is what supports the upper end of 2026 guidance. The Everett North Line is what enables the next step to 52 per month and the structurally higher cash run rate that follows in 2027.

    Why is Boeing’s Everett factory important for the 737 program?

    The 737 North Line is being stood up inside the existing Everett widebody factory — the same building that has historically built the 747, 767, 777, and 787. It is repurposing existing factory capacity to add a second 737 final assembly line that the FAA-capped Renton site cannot itself accommodate.

    What’s the next public update on this?

    Boeing’s Q2 2026 earnings call in late July, which will provide the next public read on whether Renton is at 47 yet and whether the North Line schedule still tracks to the year.

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