This post is probably pretty boring and lengthy. Actually, no, it
is for SURE lengthy. I just need to log everything we did, before my weak mind
forgets it all! Pictures at the bottom, so just scrooooooll.
This is a travelogue of our trip a couple
of weeks ago; a road-trip spanning Utah to Vancouver and back, with stops and
stays along the way :) We went with my sister and brother-in-law and they were
great travel companions. Of course, it is hard to live with anyone in a 200 sq.
foot or less area for a few hours, let alone a week, so I thought all in all,
it went well.
Day .5: Drove from SLC through the night
to San Francisco. We passed through Tahoe on the way, and it was SNOWING and
the roads were icy! It was so strange, when Utah had been so hot, and is really
not that far away. We reached SF at 8 AM, EXHAUSTED. We all had trouble
sleeping, contrary to our switch-off plan.
Day 1: We tried to get into Alcatraz
bright and early for stand-by tickets. They only take the first 50 people and
the guys took a super long time parking, so we were too late, by the time we
were all together. We started the day at Fisherman's Wharf, spent some time at
the old arcade at the farthest end, saw Lombard Street, Painted Ladies, and a
lot of cool downtown architecture. We have been to SF before and seen some of the
bigger things, so this was a nice little "mop-up" day for us. Golden Gate Park was a huge highlight for me. i didn't even know this was here, and how..it is massive. Around
8 PM, we started driving a little way toward Redwoods Nat'l Park, looking for a
stop to camp for the night.
Eats of the Day: Eagle Cafe (Fisherman's
Wharf), Chantal Guillon-BEST MACARONS, Suzu Noodle House(Gross).
Day 2: Camped the night along a rest stop
and weren't bothered by anyone! We got up and drove through the Humboldt
Redwoods Preserve and Avenue of the Giants. It was GORGEOUS. It was the one
part of the trip that still holds a reverence and a pause with me. I'm very
glad we had this day. A day to just reflect and take it all in. I've never seen
so many ferns in my life. And I am a nerd and had so much fun learning about
the antibacterial, antimicrobial, anti-fire properties of Redwood/Sequoia
trees. We had so many stops this day; it was a whirlwind. We also saw the
Eternal Tree House, World's Largest Totem Pole, Trinidad Lighthouse, hiked Lady
Bird Johnson Grove (learned so much about how the Redwoods were basically saved
at this dedication), and did another hike at Fern Canyon (some of Jurassic Park
was filmed here). Our Fitbit's loved our 24K steps and I haven't been that sore
in a while. We camped at the end of this day as well, on Oregon Trail road.
Quite fitting, for our first trip to Oregon.
Eats of the Day: Eel River Cafe, Perlita's
Mexican restaurant and a LOT of junk food and snacks
Day 3: Portland certainly is weird. A lot
of panhandlers, but everyone was very welcoming and friendly. I tried my first
cannabis (weed) cream on my always sore shoulder/neck at a dispensary and it
worked. Too well. I need some, I think. Let me know the next time one of you
folks, is passing through ;) We went to the International Rose Test Garden,
where all of your mom/pop's front yard roses probably came from, back in the
day. They test all of the roses here for hardiness, viability, scent, color,
disease/drought resistance, etc. Next stop was Powell's Books. They have a few
locations, but this famous one is an actual block
wide. I wished we had
half a day to just spend walking that bookstore. I've never seen so many books
in my life; I probably never will. Some people come to Portland and spend an
entire day there; I get it. Last stop of the day was Multnomah Falls, which was
breathtaking and semi-vertigo-inducing, standing from the first falls. We
finally spent a night at a hotel (poor hygiene, anyone?) just outside of
Seattle and swam/showered and just relaxed.
Eats of the Day: Screen Door Cafe (one of
my favorite eats of the trip), Voodoo Donuts, I can't quite remember
Day 4: Seattle was my kind of a city, and
I really loved the atmosphere. Probably because there are endless food options,
water, and no heat/cold. Seattle was touristy for us, but it was our first
time, so....yes. Pike Place, waterfront Puget Sound cruise, Gum Wall, Space
Needle, Chihuly Glass Museum, and the EMP Museum. I would have loved to do the
zoo, eat at more places, fish, whale watch...but we just simply didn't have
enough time.
Eats of the Day: Etta’s (delicious fish),
The Confectional, Beecher's Cheese, Ellenos Greek Custard, Fogon Cocina (great
Mexican/horrible Mexican 'server')
Day 5/6: Vancouver was the destination I
was most excited for, and a place that we could finally just relax and not have
to rush off to the next location from. We stayed downtown. Like, downtown.
Beach street, one block from the beach and about 5 minutes walking to the ferry
to Granville Island, or 5 minutes driving to Stanley Park, if you've been to
Van City, as the locals call it. It was such a nice Air BnB, and I highly
recommend the brothers if you ever head that way.
The first day, we drove over Lion's Gate
Bridge to Lighthouse Park and did a little hike. The homes in this area (North
Van; a different city then Vancouver), are just SO awesome. They remind me of
Eastern US, colonial/Tudor style with really fresh paints/trim. We just bought
a house, so I was super into the color schemes and styles. Next we went to
Capilano suspension bridge, but didn't end up doing it as it was packed with
people and was timewise/$$ it didn't make sense for the day. We went to Grouse
Mountain next and rode their Gondola to the top of the mountain. It's the
tallest point in Vancouver. We saw a bird show, and orphaned bears that are now
native residents to the mountain. We checked out the Lonsdale Quay Market,
which tries to be like Pike Place but is like 1/10th as awesome and then drove
back into town, hit up the beach and called it a night.
The second day we hit the bus system
early. We went out to Van Dusen Gardens first. This was probably my favorite
attraction in Vancouver. Keep in mind though, I am nerdy, sometimes enjoy
quite/solitude and some of my favorite things to do include plants/animals. I
think Ike was ready to leave the moment we got there. Our next stop was the
Aquarium, which was great and Ike's favorite part. It was hard to move through,
since I swear it was Elementary School Appreciation Day, but we survived the
crowds and only were rained on a few times, sporadically. Next stop was Science
World. We only had an hour here until close, and we both thought that would be
plenty of time to play $30 a person and plunge through the museum in record
time. WRONG. I could have definitely used a few hours here. On the mind puzzles
in the lobby. It was really unique and they did a really unique and creative
job at this science museum though. Then we went to Kitsilano beach, the most
famous beach in Vancouver and called it a night.
Eats in Vancouver: Pizza Garden (twice),
it was easy and cheap and just too convenient when you are exhausted from
walking/driving around all day. Twisted Fork (need the recipe of those asiago
cheese biscuits), Tim Horton's (Dunkin Donuts, anyone?), Flying Pig, Taqueria Pinche
(craving currently and highly recommend), Halima Garden(meh).
On the way home, we had vouchers to the
Seattle Aquarium that we weren't able to use a few days earlier, so we stopped
there on the way home. We hit horrible, awful traffic in Tacoma, Washington and
were stuck in literally the same half mile of road for 2.5 hours. Definition of
insanity. We drove through the night again, (the quicker, less scenic way) and made it home first thing
Saturday morning to our kids and families :) Wonderful, whirlwind trip, and now
we know exactly which areas to deep-dive into more next time. Thanks to my awesome in-laws for watching my kiddos!
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| Avenue of the Giants |
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| Chihuly Gardens-handblown glass gardens |
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| Just standing next to a giant |
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| View from Grouse Mountain |
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| Obligatory Gum Wall photo |
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| Multnomah Falls |
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| Kitsilano Beach, Vancouver-the weather was either sunny or like this 7-8 times per day |
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| Lombard Street, SF |
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| Painted Ladies- park was closed though, so no cliche park pics; such a bummer |
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| Can you spot Ike on the World's Largest Paul Bunyon?! |
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| This was the view in the morning from our "rest area". Not too shabby. |
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| Nostalgic being in a tree of this size. Then traumatic seeing all of the millions of bugs crawling around me. |
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| Seattle skyline |
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| Just a little Space Needle |
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| World's Largest Totem Pole |
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| Trinidad Lighthouse, CA |
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| Van Dusen Gardens, Vancouver |
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