Category Archives: Seattle

Top Travel Trends for 2011: The Washington State Version

Happy New Year to you all.

View of Mt. Rainier

Thomas Stanley, COO of Cox & Kings laid out his top predictions for the kinds of travel people want to take in Luxury Travel Magazine recently. Lo and behold, I discovered that every one of his trends can easily be experienced right here in Washington.

Here’s how:

  1. Travelers will be taking Multi-destination Vacations to basically get more bang for their buck or their time off. Since we have almost every kind of terrain from mountains to forests to desserts to the Pacific Ocean and you can easily drive from one to another in less than a day, this is ideal. One way to do this would be to start in Seattle (www.visitseattle.org) for city activities, drive to Mt. Rainier (www.visitrainier.com) and stay overnight and then go to Tri-Cities in eastern Washington (www.visittri-cities.com) to experience wine country.

 

  1. Group Tours will increase in popularity. I can easily recommend the eco-friendly Evergreen Escapes tours (www.evergreenescapes.com). This winter you can choose from the Woodinville Wine Trail, Olympic National Park, Mt. Rainier and more. Or tour Seattle by land and water with Ride the Ducks of Seattle (www.ridetheducksofseattle.com), a laugh-a-minute tour.

 

  1. Then there’s Contemporary Cultural Travel. We’ve got this one more than covered with the Seattle Art Museum (www.seattleartmuseum.org), the free Frye Art Museum (fryemuseum.org) in Seattle, Tacoma’s Art Museum (www.tacomaartmuseum.org) and Museum of Glass (www.museumofglass.org); and if you’re on the far side of the mountains take a gander at the Northwest Museum of Art and Culture (www.northwestmuseum.org) in Spokane.

 

  1. Resurgence of Tour Guides and Travel Agents. I don’t know any tour guides personally, but what about checking out some of the tours offering guidance via a CD at www.washingtonfolkarts.com. There’s Othello to Omak, Leavenworth to Maryhill, the Cascade Loop and several more.

 

  1. Learning Vacations rank high on the charts.  This February you can learn how to make cheese over a three-day period in Lynden (www.wsu.edu/creamery/basicplus.htm). Roadscholar.org (formerly Elderhostel) offers many learning opportunities for seniors including the study of  “Seabirds and Shorebirds of Coastal Washington in Port Townsend. We also have the Stonerose Interpretive Center (www.stonerosefossil.org) in Republic where you can dig your own fossils.

 

More to come on top travel trends for 2011.

Contests and a State Travel Guide

Fall photo by Bob DuBos - looks like a contest winner to me.

Since we’re thinking more about giving to others this time of year and our budgets are stretched in that direction, maybe it’s time to win a contest. It will be like a gift to yourself.

I’ve run into a few that look mighty interesting.

Win Snowshoes

You can enter up to five times in different ways to win a “9 Series Snowshoe Kit” from Atlas Snow-Shoe Company.

  • Ask or answer a question in the Wild Washington blog forum, http://wildwashington.com, which is a really cool blog dedicated to outdoor life and recreation in Washington State.
  • Link to the Wild Washington post about this on your website or blog
  • Tweet about it with the same link in your tweet
  • Link to this post on your FaceBook account
  • Watch for Wild Washington tweets for one additional opportunity

 

Deadline:  December 31, 2010 at noon

Win Cultural Activities

Every week the Seattle Weekly, www.seattleweekly.com, offers tickets to cultural events in their “Gimme Culture” column.

If you hurry, you can win 2 tickets to the Pacific Northwest Ballet’s Nutcracker for 1 p.m. on December 26, 2010 or 2 tickets to Red Ranger Came Calling at the Seattle Children’s Theatre at 7:30 p.m. on December 17, 2010.

Deadline:  December 7, 2010

Follow Clues, Get Deals and Collect Evidence in Scavenger Hunt

Washington State Tourism, Seattle’s Convention and Visitors Bureau, Tacoma Regional Convention + Visitor Bureau and Snohomish County Tourism Bureau all partnered and set up a free, interactive web-based scavenger hunt that offers clues to exclusive travel deals and travel prizes to the winners.

Visit www.TourismRevealed.com for details.

You solve cases and submit evidence which is photos of you with the objects found. Mission No. 1:  Uncloak Your Style’s deadline is January 31, 2011, 11:59 p.m. PST.

I recently received two prizes from a contest similar to this sponsored by Salty’s Restaurant – my own nutcracker ornament and a surprise gift certificate for up to $100 off for dinner at Salty’s. I won’t know what my discount is until I use the certificate because it’s sealed and if you open it prior to dining it’s no good.

Free 2011 Washington State Travel Planner Now Available

If you’d like to plan a trip to Washington or just see what we have to offer, our new travel planner is now available. Log onto www.experiencewa.com and look on the left hand side for “Free Travel Planner.”

Do you know of any other contests I might have missed? Please let me know, if you do.

Spending Time at the Pacific Science Center, Eating at the Crab Pot

Butterflies indulging at the Tropical Butterfly House in the Pacific Science Center

Dinner at the Crab Pot on Seattle's waterfront

I worked at the 1962 Seattle World’s Fair, the one Elvis Presley visited and President John F. Kennedy opened. If I told you more about how young I was then, those that are good at math might figure out my age. Just know, I was there and that event marked a lot of history for Seattle.

Century 21, as the Fair was called, created several new venues that still stand today. The most iconic is the Space Needle, but what was then called the Science Pavilion also stands and is now the Pacific Science Center. The Bubbleator, a see through elevator, sits in a residential yard in Des Moines, or at least it did a few years ago. We are totally into recycling here.

But this post is about the Science Center http://www.pacsci.org, which until last week-end, I hadn’t visited for several years. In that time it has blossomed into a very hip and cool place for the entire family. Was I impressed? Yes, as were all the other members in our party from my two-year-old granddaughter and 11-year-old grandson to my daughter and husband. Everyone found a particular activity or two or three that he or she just couldn’t get enough of.

For Kita, the two year old, Tot Town held her interest for more than an hour, which is unheard of in her little world of moving from one toy to another to the TV to running around all day. She was mesmerized by the water play opportunities and when we did talk her into moving, she drove a car, tried different sized slides and then wanted to repeat the water play.

One of the first words Kita learned was “butterfly” so our main intention for this trip was to visit the Tropical Butterfly House. This exhibit maintains a temperature in the low 80’s, which feels wonderful on a brisk, fall day. My daughter thought she’d move in with her hammock and a Mai Tai.

 

Butterflies of all sizes and colors fill the room, so much so, that you must be very careful where you step. If you’re one of the chosen ones, a butterfly or two will land on you and you can strut around showing your “adornment” to others. You can view new butterflies emerging in the chrysalis viewing window – these new butterflies are released into the exhibit each morning. What a wonderful hands-on learning opportunity for the entire family.

Also noteworthy, the Mindbender Mansion, a temporary exhibit on site until January 2011, attracts teens and pre-teens, asking them to solve puzzles. Dads might enjoy playing chess with the bigger-than-life-size chess pieces. Then there’s a Harry Potter Exhibit, insects, dinosaurs, sounds and so much more.

A perfect end to a day at the Science Center means a meal on Seattle’s stunning waterfront. At the Crab Pot http://www.thecrabpotseattle.com, your meal is tossed onto white butcher paper and then you select your seafood of choice and attack it with a mallet or gently remove it from the shell. No silverware required. You’re given a bib so as not to tarnish your clothes with fish juice.

Although several Crab Pot restaurants exist, I can’t imagine one with a better view or fresher seafood than the one on Seattle’s Pier 57.

Market’s Grisly Ghost Tour

We met at the Gum Wall. I’d heard about the Gum Wall, seen photos of it and thought it sounded cool – until I saw it. The brick wall filled with chewed gum truly is disgusting and ranks as the second most germy place in the world, topped only by the Blarney Stone. However, the Gum Wall draws a lot of tourists – ones who pose close to the wall with their tongues hanging out. I just hope they have other remembrances of Seattle, too.

Penny, our tour guide, introduced herself to the five of us, and gave us a short history of the Gum Wall.  It began in the early 1990’s when people waiting in line to attend productions at the Market Theatre began placing their gum on the wall. They used it to anchor coins to the wall, but the coins were stolen leaving only the gum. No matter how many times it was power washed, people continued to stick gum there, so now they only power wash in front of it.

The Gum Wall is located below Pike Place Market in Seattle, next to the Market Theatre.

 

Then we were off to hear the details of the hauntings in and around the Pike Place Market which gave me a whole different view of what goes on there. I’m used to buying ultra fresh produce, seafood and other food items, but at night the market gives off other vibes.

In the Market Theatre, they reserve chairs for their ghosts. “Down Under” in the lower level of the Pike Place Market, we were told about the large woman who owned the barber shop there many years ago. She would sing operatic arias to her customers until they fell asleep and then pick their pockets – made a great deal of extra money that way. Then, her health failed, she had a heart attack after closing and the next day, the owner of the store beneath her barber shop found her legs had sticking through his ceiling.

The owner of Grandma’s Attic, a store from the market’s past, used to come to open up in the morning, find the front glass broken and a tea set configured on the floor for a little girl’s tea party.

That’s just a taste of what you can learn on the Market Ghost Tours, which run year round. Voted second best ghost tour in the nation by Trip Advisor, the guided tours are reasonably priced at $15.

By the way, while we were on Post Alley hearing tales of drunken soldiers, my grandson told me he felt heat, a sure sign spirits were present – or is that cold? He also said to call him right away if my photos revealed any orbs. They did not. Maybe I’m too much of a skeptic, but I loved the rich history divulged during the tour – whether the ghosts revealed their presence to me or not.

For more information, visit www.seattleghost.com.

Seattle Light Rail’s Art

An art installation at the Tukwila Station, where there's a lot of free parking

A newcomer to the light rail world, Seattle’s version opened for business in the summer of 2009. It’s a great way to get from SeaTac Airport to downtown or any of the stops in between. You avoid the parking hassles and traffic jams.

Along the track, from the airport to Westlake in downtown, public art was installed at almost every station giving riders a glimpse of the surrounding neighborhoods’ character.

With 40 artists each contributing their interpretation of “cultural conversations,” you’ll see evidence of manufacturing, fruit orchards, ethnic diversity and more. Just for fun, while you’re gliding through the tunnel, see if you can make a full house with the playing cards flashing across the wall just before the Beacon Avenue Station.

Traveling north from SeaTac, watch for these sculptural renditions of each ‘hood and see what else you can find:

  1. Tukwila International Boulevard Station, “A Drop of Sustenance” by Tad Savinar

The gigantic drop of water and the resulting “splash” depicted above the escalators on the southbound platform show the dramatic role water plays in the city of Tukwila – water from excessive rainfall and the water in the Duwamish River.

Granite pavers throughout the Tukwila Station illustrate residents’ insights and memories of the past.

  1. Rainier Beach Station, “Parable” by Buster Simpson

The pears in “Parable” refer to the thriving orchards that filled this area in years past.

  1. Othello Station, “Come Dance With Me” by the late Augusta Asberry

Vivid colors combined with lithe African-American dancing figures speak to the rich cultural heritage of this established multi-ethnic community.

  1. Columbia City Station, “Global Garden Shovel” by Victoria Fuller

Made with castings and replications of a variety of plants and trees to replicate the diverse ethnic makeup of the neighborhood and the shovel represents the fertile nature of Rainier Valley soil.

“In exploring the neighborhood I noticed that people took pride in their gardens, no matter what the size or style of their home,” said Fuller. “I wanted to capture that feeling.”

  1. SODO Station, “Made in USA” by Michael Davis

An oversized level, carpenter’s pencil and square towering over some actual-sized tools attached to benches below honor the industrial nature of the SODO district. The tools appear to have been left by a worker on a break.

To get the details about riding the light rail, visit www.soundtransit.org and click on “Central Link Light Rail.”

A newcomer to the light rail world, Seattle’s version opened for business in the summer of 2009. It’s a great way to get from SeaTac Airport to downtown or any of the stops in between. You avoid the parking hassles and traffic jams.

Along the track, from the airport to Westlake in downtown, public art was installed at almost every station giving riders a glimpse of the surrounding neighborhoods’ character.

With 40 artists each contributing their interpretation of “cultural conversations,” you’ll see evidence of manufacturing, fruit orchards, ethnic diversity and more. Just for fun, while you’re gliding through the tunnel, see if you can make a full house with the playing cards flashing across the wall just before the Beacon Avenue Station.

Traveling north from SeaTac, watch for these sculptural renditions of each ‘hood and see what else you can find:

  1. Tukwila International Boulevard Station, “A Drop of Sustenance” by Tad Savinar

The gigantic drop of water and the resulting “splash” depicted above the escalators on the southbound platform show the dramatic role water plays in the city of Tukwila – water from excessive rainfall and the water in the Duwamish River.

Granite pavers throughout the Tukwila Station illustrate residents’ insights and memories of the past.

  1. Rainier Beach Station, “Parable” by Buster Simpson

The pears in “Parable” refer to the thriving orchards that filled this area in years past.

  1. Othello Station, “Come Dance With Me” by the late Augusta Asberry

Vivid colors combined with lithe African-American dancing figures speak to the rich cultural heritage of this established multi-ethnic community.

  1. Columbia City Station, “Global Garden Shovel” by Victoria Fuller

Made with castings and replications of a variety of plants and trees to replicate the diverse ethnic makeup of the neighborhood and the shovel represents the fertile nature of Rainier Valley soil.

“In exploring the neighborhood I noticed that people took pride in their gardens, no matter what the size or style of their home,” said Fuller. “I wanted to capture that feeling.”

  1. SODO Station, “Made in USA” by Michael Davis

An oversized level, carpenter’s pencil and square towering over some actual-sized tools attached to benches below honor the industrial nature of the SODO district. The tools appear to have been left by a worker on a break.

To get the details about riding the light rail, visit www.soundtransit.org and click on “Central Link Light Rail.”

One of Seattle's light rail stations close to the center of town