As forecast, Sunday was a cloudy, rainy day. We went to Gracie’s Sea Hag for breakfast and then spent the day packing, reading, napping, and snacking. We had cocktails on a rainy balcony and dinner inside. The fridge is empty.
Oysters and Eggs
Eggs & Sausage
Side of Bacon
A Rare Rainy Day
It’s Monday morning now and soon we will be heading to Portland for the afternoon flight home. That will end the blog for this trip. The blog will be back for our Christmas trip to Dingle. Thanks to everyone for the nice comments. We both enjoy reading them all.
It had stopped raining when we got up on Saturday. That meant we could take our separate walks. (Separate because we go at different speeds and because Elaine likes to go as soon as she gets up whereas I do not.) More importantly, good weather means the Lincoln City Fall Kite Festival was a go! It’s great fun. It’s on the beach and the surf was pounding. A “sneaker wave” came in and swept a young boy off the beach. It could have been a disaster but a Portland firefighter at the festival saw what happened and went in and dragged him out from underwater. A lot of people got soaked by the wave. The show went on. Here are LOTS of videos and pictures. Especially watch the last video. That guy is a kite star. He had performed earlier, but here he was well off to the side just practicing techniques with no one watching (but me).
KITE FESTIVAL VIDEOS
KITE FESTIVAL PHOTOS
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As We Arrived
Single Kite
Another
Looks Like a Whale Breaching
Looking Down Beach
Día de los Muertos
Elaine Chats Up a Kiter
Quite an Array
That’s Not a Kite
Spectators
Mermaids
As We Were Leaving
We stayed for a couple of hours and then headed home. Given tomorrow’s forecast, today would be our last chance to enjoy sun on the balcony, so we did. The surf was pounding. We love watching the Pacific.
We went out to dinner at the Bay View Thai Kitchen. It’s really quite good. The servers are delightful and the food is authentic. Elaine had vegetarian red curry with coconut milk, bamboo shoots, eggplant, bell peppers, and basil. I had beef prik khing: stir-fried green beans with bell peppers, basil and red curry paste.. After dinner we stopped in at the eclectic Gracie’s Sea Hag for a cocktail. It’s our go to breakfast place in Depoe Bay, but we were last in the bar two or three years ago. It was like we had never left. It’s the only bar I know with an indoor fire pit. And the same Ray Charles imitator was still performing.
Thai Food
Gracie’s Fire Pit
Ray Charles?
Tomorrow (Sunday) is our last full day in Depoe Bay. Not much planned and the weather looks wet, so there may or may not be a final post. We fly home from Portland on Monday afternoon. Happy Columbus Day to all. Happy Thanksgiving to any Canadians reading this. Back in the day, this was often a weekend spent in Montreal.
Friday was our first all day steady rain – sometimes light, sometimes heavy. It’s the first day it rained from morning to night. We have just had fabulous weather. So, with the rain, we did almost nothing. We did go downtown to the Chowder Bowl for lunch since someone told us they had the best clam chowder around. They do not. It was just OK but the onion rings were great. Other than that, we stayed home. We watched the Red Sox squeak out game one against the dreaded Yankees.
We are hoping for a decent Saturday morning so we can enjoy the Lincoln City Fall Kite Festival. That’s really the last item on our agenda. We are about ready to head home. Our flight from Portland is Monday afternoon.
No pictures today. The camera never budged on Friday.
I can hardly believe Thursday was yet another perfect weather day! That streak is supposed to end tomorrow with rain forecast for most of the day.
Anyway, I haven’t given much credit to the state of Oregon for the wonderful job they do with their state parks and ocean viewpoints. Most are free. Some charge a $5 fee for day use if you don’t buy an annual pass. It is always $5 well spent. Kudos to Oregon. But today we visited one of our favorite spots, and it is not administered by Oregon but rather by the US Bureau of Land Management. (Trump has apparently not yet screwed up the BLM.)
The Yaquina Head Outstanding Natural Area
Yaquina Head Outstanding Natural Area really is its name. There is a fee for entering, but it’s covered by our National Parks lifetime Golden Age Passport. The name of the park is well deserved. I’ll let pictures tell most of the story. The Lighthouse can be visited by private tour only. Cobble Beach is down a long flight of steps from the parking lot. Salal Hill is 0.7 mile hike up from the parking lot. Quarry Cove really was a quarry where they excavated basalt rock. There is a great Interpretive Center. They have a telescope where you can view an inhabited falcon nest. This is an easy area to fall in love with. (Preposition ended sentence noted)
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The Beautiful Pacific
Yaquina Head Light
Elaine at the Light
Big Rocks
Cobble Beach
Cobble Beach from Above
The Stairs Down to the Beach
Cobble Beach from Top of Stairs
Looking North
Climbing the Hill
View from the Top
Yaquina Head Light from the Top
Enjoying the Thin Air
That’s My Favorite Light
Private Tours Only of the Light
Looking North Again from the Top
Good Wave Action
Flowers and the Light
Wild Flowers on the Hill
Last Look
Quarry Cove
At Quarry Cove
A Tree Grows Out the Side of the Rocky Hill
At home on the balcony we watched the surf and enjoyed cocktails in the sun. The sunset was as spectacular as usual.
Wednesday was perfect from start to finish although it was much cooler. It was also another “do little” day. Walks in the morning. Jig saw puzzle start for Elaine. Near lunch time we drove to Cape Foulweather for a look see. We hadn’t been there yet this year. Named by Captain Cook (of Whitby, UK fame), it’s only 10 minutes from our condo. Then we drove 10 miles to the Lincoln City Wells Fargo for Elaine to make a withdrawal. And I got some vodka to keep the gimlets flowing until the end of the trip. And we stopped at Mo’s, an Oregon restaurant icon, for lunch. Clam chowder for Elaine; grilled Yaquina Bay oysters for me. I’ll spare you more sunset pictures today.
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Seattle was fun. A bit hectic, busy everyday. Time to get back to our USA home away from home – Depoe Bay. (Dingle is our non-USA home away from home).
It’s about a five hour drive from Seattle to Depoe Bay using I-5. We decided to do I-5 about halfway and then cut over to the Oregon coast at Astoria. Once again we crossed the Columbia River near Astoria. It rained most of the way, sometimes lightly, sometimes steady, with one brief appearance of the sun complete with rainbow. We stopped in Astoria for three things:
One: The Hanthorn Cannery Museum – It’s really just an old building on the water with information about canneries and some old equipment. Bumble Bee had a huge operation here canning salmon until the salmon stocks were severely over-fished. There were a couple of interesting old videos. No admission; no one around.
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Two:The Columbia River Maritime Museum – a new and interesting museum about the Columbia River. Lots about sea rescues. Lots about fishing. And here we learned about the Columbia Bar – that spot where the roaring Columbia meets up with the raging Pacific Ocean thus making for one of the most dangerous places in the world for waves, wind, and currents for shipping and navigation. A ship needs a special pilot on board to cross the Bar and then a different pilot for its journey up the Columbia to Seattle. There is also an exhibit of Japanese flags with writing on them. It seems that when a man went off to war in Japan, his family would all sign good wishes for a safe return onto a Japanese flag which the soldier or sailor would always keep with him for luck. American soldiers would take and keep the flag as a souvenir when a Japanese fighter was killed or captured. Since then, many Americans have realized that the flags would be important to the Japanese families. Many have made a conscientious effort to return the flags but, of course, it is difficult to locate appropriate family members.
Trois – Costco for lunch (where else can you fill up for $8 total for the both of us). Elaine had the standard hot dog and drink; I had their newest option – chili. And we stocked up on wine for the last week in Depoe Bay.
Just as we arrived in Depoe Bay, the rain stopped and we had some clear skies for cocktails on the balcony. Elaine made a sort of Shepard’s pie for dinner. It was delicious. We’ll have the leftovers another night.
Tuesday morning was cloudy but dry. We both took our separate walks. I stopped for a hot chocolate and a lemon muffin at the Pirate Coffee Company. There were whales just off our balcony all morning and a barking sea lion also performed. First time we ever saw a sea lion here. This was to be a do nothing day, and it was. We did drive into Newport for lunch at our favorite spot, Local Oceans. We split halibut ceviche for a starter. Elaine had rockfish tacos and I had my standard rockfish Italiano sandwich. Other than that, we enjoyed the bright sunshine at the condo.
Newport Harbor
The Yaquina Bay Bridge
Elaine Enjoys a Beer
Halibut Ceviche
Rockfish Italiano Sandwich
Rockfish Tacos
After a quiet afternoon at home we enjoyed cocktails on the balcony and then cheese, cold cuts, and crackers for dinner. The sunset was beautiful.
Sunday was last full day in Seattle. Cloudy all day but dry. Lunch was at the third of three seafood icons in Seattle: Ivar’s Acres of Clams. We split great coconut shrimp with a stunning lime cilantro dipping source. We both had fish and chips, mine with halibut. Elaine drank marionberry cider and I had Old Seattle Lager.
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From the Table Window
From the Table Window
Da Drinks
Ivar’s
Seattle Over the Years
Outside Ivar’s
There is an interesting story about Ivar’s. Back in the 1954 Seattle supposedly toyed with the idea of submarine passenger transportation options around Seattle. Ivar’s immediately jumped on the bandwagon and hired a company to install underwater billboards that the submarine passengers (and divers) would see. The plan for submarines never came to be. In 2009 Ivar’s hired divers to try to recover the signs. They found one and raised it to the surface. It was great publicity Great story, huh? It was all reported in the newspapers as fact.
Alas, two months or so later it was exposed as a publicity hoax. Story here.
We had only one destination today, the Museum of Pop Culture, better known here as MoPOP. Big emphasis on Seattle music with a special exposition on Marvel Superheros. All the memorabilia and costumes are authentic. Pictures:
Everything Pearl Jam
Everything Nirvana
Drawing by Kurt Cobain
Everything Jimi Henrdicks
Everything Marvel Superhero
Science Fiction and Horror
Miscellaneous Pop Culture
Tomorrow morning we head back to Depoe Bay for our last week. No post on Monday since it’s a travel day. See you Tuesday.
Another sunny morning in Seattle on Saturday. It being the weekend, we braved driving into the city (25 minutes) to see a couple of things. First stop was the Smith Tower. We found a parking spot on the street right across the street from the tower. (Pay and Display using credit card – it cost $8.50 for the two hours – cheap compared to parking lots).
The Smith Tower, Seattle’s original skyscraper, was built in 1914 and contains 38 floors. It was the tallest building west of the Mississippi when it was built. It remains a working office building but also contains the Observatory, a 360 degree outdoor viewing platform at the top complete with a full bar. The street level entrance contains historical information before you ride to the top in a restored Otis elevator. The views of downtown Seattle from the top are outstanding. It’s not as tall as the Space Needle, but you get a totally different perspective of the city.
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Smith Tower Now
Smith Tower Then
Hello?
Poster of the Era
Number Please
How Many WPM?
At the Top
The Wishing Chair
From the Observation Platform
Odd Building That
Downtown
Space Needle in the Distance
Rooftops Below
Last Look
The Bar
After descending from the Observatory at the Smith Tower, we walked around Pioneer Square a bit. On this Saturday the tourists outnumbered the homeless . . . just barely. The area started to get busy as there was a Seattle Mariner’s game this afternoon at nearby Safeco Field. (The Seahawks, away this weekend in AZ, play at CenturyLink Field which is practically next door to Safeco Field.) So we hopped into Blue and headed to our next stop.
Pioneer Square
A Neighborhood Mural
Eclectic Clothing
Flowers, Lights, & Totem Pole
Chief Seattle
Seattle’s Oldest Restaurant
In the Neighborhood
On our tour with Ken and Greg, we drove along Alki Beach. We decided to return there to take some Seattle skyline pictures and have lunch. No traffic problems getting there and plenty of free on-street parking. Alki is known as the birthplace of Seattle as it is where settlers first landed. We made a brief visit to the Log House, a tiny museum run by the West Seattle Historical Society. It’s very small and has just two focuses (foci?): Seattle fire departments and Seattle music. Seattle was home to the Ventures (Walk Don’t Run, Telstar), Nirvana and Kurt Cobain (Smells Like Teen Spirit), Jimi Hendrix (Hey Joe, Purple Haze), Eddie Vedder and Pearl Jam (Elderly Woman Behind the Counter in a Small Town), Quincy Jones (we Are the World, Billie Jean), Kenny Loggins (Footloose, Whenever I Call You Friend), Ray Charles (Hit the Road Jack, I Can’t Stop Loving You), and lots more.
View from Alki Beach
Again
Cruise Ship in Harbor
Yard Display of Pottery Shards & Shells
The Log House
Seattle’s Birthplace
Fire Department Memorabilia
Old Fire Truck Picture
Jukebox
Music Fest
History
Nirvana
Walk Don’t Run
More History
Along Alki Beach
Wood Fire Pits All Along the Beach
Seals Are People Too
After the museum we headed to another Seattle institution for food, Duke’s Chowder House, for lunch. It would be our main (and only) meal of the day, served outside on the upper deck. We both had their famous clam chowder (delicious!). Elaine had a salmon sandwich with sweet potato fries. I had wild Alaskan cod with new potatoes and veg. It was accompanied by a nice Willamette Valley pinot noir.
Duke’s Chowder House
View from the Deck
The All Important Wine
Cod
Salmon Sandwich
Then we headed back to our digs for a nap – my first in Seattle. By early afternoon it had clouded up and remained cloudy the rest of the day. It was cool on the balcony, but we were out there for cocktails. And off in the distance there was a glorious sunset behind Vachon Island with the Cascades in view.
Friday was another beautiful sunny day all day long. The plan was to first visit the Boeing Museum of Flight for a couple of hours and then move on to other things. We got to the Museum right at 10:00 when it opened. When we left, it was after 4:00 in the afternoon. What a place! So, if your not interested in looking at planes, you can sign off and wait for tomorrow’s post.
We started off by watching two 25-minute movies: one on the operation of an aircraft carrier and the other on the rings of Saturn. Both were entertaining, informative, and enjoyable. Then we went and had bowls of chili in the Wings Café. At that point the idea was this would still be just a ½ day visit at most and then we would head for Alki Beach for a walk, pictures, and an early dinner. After lunch, eaten at an outside table, we engrossed ourselves in the museum and next thing you know, it was 4:00 pm.
The Museum of Flight covers everything about aviation. It’s a museum of airplanes, of airplane manufacturers, of Boeing itself, of space exploration, of airplanes in WWI, of airplanes in WWII, of airplane art, of airplane pilots and crew, and of aces of fighter planes. Prepare now for a plethora of aviation pictures.
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As we leaving the house, I took a picture of a couple of spider webs on the way to Blue’s reserved parking spot.
Boeing’s Museum of Flight is outside downtown Seattle near I-5. It is a large part of Boeing Field, a working airport.
Arriving at the Museum of Flight
Watching the Movie
The Charles Simonyi Space Gallery
Charles Simonyi was a Hungarian who emigrated to America and became the head of Microsoft’s Application Software Group and oversaw the development of Microsoft Office (including Word and Excel). He later became the fifth space tourist (i.e., he paid his way to ride the shuttle – twice). His estimated net worth is $3.1 billion.
The Story of the Man After Whom the Gallery is Named
NASA Full Fuselage Trainer
Two Spacemen
Space Man and Space Woman
This Simulator is HUGE
Russian Soyuz Return Capsule
A Satellite
Elaine in the Bay
The Thrusters
The Aviation Pavilion
Boeing B-17F Flying Fortress
Boeing B-17F Flying Fortress
Boeing B-17F Flying Fortress
Boeing B-17F Flying Fortress
Boarding the Concorde
Tight Space Inside
It’s a Long Thin Fast Plane
Air Force One – Eisenhower to Johnson
An Overview
Air Force One
Seating
Presidential Command Center
Presidential Crapper
Safes (for the Nuclear Codes?)
Air Force One Cockpit
Me, Nixon, & Chairman Mao
787 Dreamliner
787 Dreamliner
787 Cockpit
Elaine with 787 Engine
The Original 747
The Original 747
F9F-8 Cougar
F9F-8 Cougar
Pan Am (RIP)
The Bridge Back to the East Pavilion
And So Much More
A random gallery of uncaptioned pictures.
Dinner was on the balcony at home on a beautiful night. Lasagna and Salad.
About a year ago Elaine and her sister Caroline did a tour of Ireland together. Two of their favorite people they met on their tour group are from Seattle. One of them, Ken, visited us awhile back in Scottsdale. So today we met up with both of them, and they were our tour guides for the day. We drove to Greg’s house to meet them. We were in Ken’s car for the day. First stop was at the Washington Park Arboretum, a site near the University of Washington that is jointly administered by the city and UWA. After a short walk from the parking lot directly under the Interstate we were at the shores of Lake Washington for reunion pictures.
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Joe, Elaine & Ken
Joe, Greg & Ken
Under the Interstate
UWA Stadium – Go Huskies
A Boat Passes By
Police Boat on the Lake
By now it was lunchtime, so Ken and Greg treated us to lunch at a Seattle institution, Ray’s Boathouse. Seafood salad for me; a bowl of cl;am chowder for Elaine. I got to have a glass of Manny’s Pale Ale – I’m not driving today. We sat outside on the deck in the beautiful weather and ate watching the boats go by.
Waitress Picture
Ray’s Boathouse
Sailboats
Working Baots
UWA Research Boats
Next it was on the Hiram M. Chittenden Locks on the Lake Washington Ship Canal. It is run by the U. S. Army Corps of Engineers. It was an interesting sight that we never would have seen without our superb local tour guides.
Arriving
Ships in the Lock – Going Up
Ship in the Other Lock – Going Down
Deadliest Catch?
Petersburg, not Dutch Harbor
Final stop was at the Museum of History and Innovation (MOHAI) which houses the Bezos Center of Innovation. Fabulous museum! We had time to cover only one floor. It was fascinating.
MOHAI
Seaplanes Outside MOHAI
Welcome
Logging History
Transportation History
Aviation History
Disgraceful History
War History
Funny History
A Last Look
We drove around a lot of other places in Seattle including the complex of Amazon Buildings that house my favorite retailer’s headquarters, downtown Seattle, and Alki Beach, a delightful stretch of beach that faces Seattle’s skyline.
Finally we went back to Greg’s for a delicious home cooked meal featuring barbecued salmon and steak. Yum. Then goodbyes and home to bed.