In downtown Edmonds, you get some Victoria stations, plus the big three from the Bellingham area, clearer than most of the Seattle signals. And signals from Olympia and southward come in, too, adding to the jumble over the Vancouver signals. IDowntown edmonds is called the "Edmonds Bowl," since it's down a long slope to the waterfront. That slope not only means it might be above freezing by the water next month, and below freezing up the hill, but it shades most of the Seattle FM signals, coming in from the southeast, causing the heavy multipath distortion you're referring to.
Anyone know why no one has (to my knowledge) put in a booster on-channel repeater for their signals, aimed at Edmonds, Everett, and other coastal areas that have trouble with clear FM reception? Like many San Francisco stations do in Contra Costa County and a few other Bay Area communities shielded by hills? I think a repeater, whether on-channel or adjacent, from the south end of Whidby Island or Kingston/Port Gambell, aimed across the water at Edmonds, could boost signal clarity for a lot of potential listeners in Snohomish and Island Counties.
Then again, KUOW's multipath problems are even worse, and it's because of their poor transmitter set up. They don't get a clean signal much beyond 10 miles from their 100kw transmitter site.