Our eastward journey continues, from Boise to Provo and then a week and a half in beautiful Denver, Colorado. We had a fine time catching up with friends, enjoying the wonderful scenery, and oh yeah, stopping at a few breweries along the way. Then, it was time to head home!
Our stay in Seattle was wonderful, although entirely too short. Still, it was time to move on and so Charlie and I hit the road for Portland by way of Astoria and Seaside, Oregon, and spent a fantastic long weekend exploring that city.
Having explored around the suburbs of Seattle, it was time for our heroes to venture into the city! Our destination was the neighborhood of Ballard. Ballard is on the north side of Seattle and is full of interesting hipster restaurants and bars and interesting shops. It’s a very walkable area, which is a big reason I chose it. It was to be my home for the next five days.
Did you ever start a blog project, promising to post every day, and then you…didn’t? No? Just me? Ah well.
One reason I wasn’t too worried about it is that over the past couple of months I have taken the time to go back to the 2017 Great Western Road Trip, the Maritimes Trip in 2022, and the road trip to the Southwest in 2023 and collapsed the daily blog entries into more-digestible chunks, so you’re only reading 4-5 entries and not 20+ entries. (Also, going back and fixing the photos that were posted to social media sites so they were locally-hosted was kind of a pain!)
So anyway, let’s see about getting back on track! I’ve tried to break the trip into logical parts from here:
This Part: Seattle Suburbs
Part 3: Ballard, Seattle
Part 4: Portland and the trip to Denver
Part 5: A week and a half in Denver, then home
I know these get kind of long, though I love having them to return to in the future. If you prefer to skim through just for the photos, that’s OK too!
Sometimes you have great plans and everything comes together, and sometimes those plans fall through. We’ll put these blog entries in the latter category 🙂 It’s been a long couple of days of longer-than-usual driving legs and that has left me pretty tired by the end of the day and not up for blog entries. Anyway! Enough excuses.
It’s time for the 2024 Summer Road Trip: Charlie Goes to the Pacific Northwest! These trips have been wonderful, and I’m very excited for this year’s edition. To recap past trips:
A three-week solo trip in 2017 which took me to Canada’s Prairie Provinces, and California. (the red-orange line on the map above)
A four-week trip to the American Southwest in 2023 with Charlie, with stops in the High Plains, California, Arizona, and New Mexico 9 (the yellow line), which gave me the wonderful photo collages below
This year, shown in the blue line on the map, Charlie and I will be on the road for four weeks to the Pacific Northwest and to Denver! I had so much fun last year, and traveling with Charlie is always very enjoyable. Solo road trips can be an incredibly isolating experience, and I find having a cute and friendly dog along helps to break the ice. I’ve gotten into so many great random conversations with people that were started from people wanting to say hello to Charlie.
As I was planning this year’s route, I thought about where I’ve been, and where I want to return to. I grew up in the American Southeast, spending the first 30 years of my life in South Carolina, North Carolina, and Virginia. I’ve had quite enough of those and am looking forward to seeing new places! And while I have friends there and know many wonderful people live there, I have zero desire to visit Texas or Florida in the current political climate. This extends to much of the Southwest, to be honest.
I haven’t been in the Pacific Northwest since 2020, when I spent Christmas there in a lovely AirBnB in Capital Hill, so Seattle seems like a great destination. I haven’t been to Portland since 2017, so an extended stop there would be nice. And I always want to visit Denver – I love the heck out of that city. So with my anchor points set, it was time to lay out my itinerary.
I don’t want to dawdle along the way between Chicago and Seattle, so I’ll be driving like hell across North Dakota, Montana, and Washington to get there as quickly as possible. At the same time, I try to keep each day’s driving to around six hours to leave time to relax and maybe explore our stop for the night a bit. Likewise the sprint between Portland and Denver will be as short as possible, but hopefully I’ll get to see some nice things along the way.
As always, I will be posting near-daily updates here on my blog, as well as lots of posts to social media (Mastodon and BlueSky). As with last year, if you want easy notifications of blog entries, you can either subscribe to my Telegram channel (now with a feedback chat!) or RSS.
I hit the road on Saturday, and I just can’t wait!