What are they? Rumblings, ‘booms’ heard anew on parts of the Peninsula

The rumbling of stomachs eager to take in a Thanksgiving meal last week didn’t seem to be the only such noises heard across the central part of the North Olympic Peninsula.

Residents between Port Angeles and Sequim reported hearing low, sustained rumblings and in some instances loud booms from Tuesday to Thursday last week.

At least 15 people posted comments to the Peninsula Daily News’ Facebook page describing the sounds, which some say have been heard up and down the Strait of Juan de Fuca for months, if not longer.

“Yeah, it’s kind of strange,”said John Robinson, who lives off Finn Hall Road along the Strait between Port Angeles and Sequim.

“Everybody around here hears it. It rattles windows.”

Robinson said Friday neither he nor his family members ever see any ships in the Strait nor planes overhead accompanying the rumbling sounds, which he described as being heard “just about every day” last week.

“If you’ve never heard it before, it almost sounds like a big ship maybe reversing propeller,” Robinson said.

Others living in the Graysmarsh area of Sequim and up on Black Diamond Road also reported the rumblings Tuesday and Wednesday night.

“It’s just another peculiarity of the North Olympic Peninsula,” one person wrote on the PDN’s Facebook page.

A Diamond Point resident said that people in that area hear “this all the time.”

Mike Welding, public affairs officer at Naval Air Station Whidbey Island, said Navy jets were practicing all last week, except on Thanksgiving, and for most of November at the station’s Ault Field, just north of Oak Harbor and about 60 miles east of Port Angeles.

“I can’t say definitely that that’s what they heard,” Welding said.

“All I can do is confirm that we’ve been having operations.”

EA0-6B Prowlers and EA-18G Growlers pilots practicing day and night for aircraft carrier landings at the air station might sound like rumbling, though Welding said no aircraft flying to and from the station would produce booms.

“We aren’t doing anything you could really characterize as a loud boom,” Welding said.

“That’s not characteristic of normal aircraft operations.”

Welding said questions from the PDN about rumblings in the area came not too long after similar inquiries from a news website on Orcas Island.

“I can tell you that over [on] Orcas Island, they were hearing rumbling in the distance, and we were doing operations at that time,” Welding said.

Lt. Paul Pendergast, public affairs officer for Canada’s Maritime Forces Pacific based at the Canadian Forces Base in Esquimalt, B.C., said no Canadian naval ships were practicing firing on any of the base’s test ranges.

Once such range is in the Strait of Juan de Fuca area, he added.

“The ranges were not active this week at all,” Pendergast said.

Robinson said the sounds he’s heard have not been booms and have not sounded like aircraft.

“It doesn’t sound like jet aircraft to me,” Robinson said.

“I’ve heard a lot of jet aircraft, and that’s not the way I would describe it.”

Last week was just one in a long list of multiple reports of mysterious booms or rumblings in the central part of the Peninsula.

Rumblings earlier in August were thought to be Navy jets at Whidbey Island, while booms heard along the Dungeness River in April 2012 were attributed to a propane cannon set up to protect newly planted fields from birds.

“We have not pulled [the cannon] out to use [on] Thanksgiving or anytime recently,” said Patty McManus, co-owner of Nash’s Organic Produce in Sequim.

“No, it wasn’t us.”

A series of booms around Port Angeles in 1982 was blamed on naval exercises in the Strait.

Unexplained booms were reported in Port Angeles in 2006 and 2007. Booms were heard in Dungeness, with houses shaken and a report of at least one broken window.

In 2009, Port Angeles was again shaken by unexplained booms.

In 2011, reported booms were determined to have been thunder.

________

Reporter Jeremy Schwartz can be reached at 360-452-2345, ext. 5074, or at jschwartz@peninsuladailynews.com.

More in News

Oliver Pochert, left, and daughter Leina, 9, listen as Americorp volunteer and docent Hillary Sanders talks about the urchins, crabs and sea stars living in the touch tank in front of her at the Port Townsend Marine Science Center. Pochert, who lives in Sequim, drove to Port Townsend on Sunday to visit the aquarium because the aquarium is closing its location this month after 42 years of operation. (Steve Mullensky/for Peninsula Daily News)
Aquarium closing

Oliver Pochert, left, and daughter Leina, 9, listen as Americorp volunteer and… Continue reading

Tree sale is approved for auction

Appeals filed for two Elwha watershed parcels

Port Townsend City Council to draw down funds in 2025 budget

City has ‘healthy fund reserve balance,’ finance director says

Man flown to hospital after crash investigated for DUI

A 41-year-old man was flown to Olympic Medical Center in… Continue reading

Signal controller project to impact traffic

Work crews will continue with the city of Port… Continue reading

Cities, counties approve tax hikes

State law allows annual 1 percent increase

Health officer: Respiratory illnesses low on Peninsula

Berry says cases are beginning to rise regionally

A puppy named Captain Kirk is getting ready for adoption by Welfare for Animals Guild after it was rescued near Kirk Road. An unsecured makeshift kennel fell out of a truck on U.S. Highway 101 last month and was struck by another vehicle. (Welfare for Animals Guild)
Puppy rescued from wreck to be adopted

A puppy named Captain Kirk is about to boldly go… Continue reading

Festival of Trees raises record $231,000

The 34th annual Festival of Trees, produced by the… Continue reading

Man flown to hospital after single-car collision

A 67-year-old man was flown to an Everett hospital after… Continue reading

Lost Mountain Station 36 at 40 Texas Valley Road recently sold to a neighbor after Clallam County Fire District 3 was unable to recruit volunteers to staff the station. Its proceeds will go toward future construction of a new Carlsborg Station 33. (Matthew Nash/Olympic Peninsula News Group file)
District sells one fire station

Commissioners approve 2025 budget