Seattle-ing in to the west coast

After our (thankfully cougar-free) hike up Mount Walker, we headed to Seattle via the Kingston-Edmonds ferry, which took us across the Puget Sound and into the city.

It was a gorgeous evening, so having been fantasising about burgers and cold beer all the way down the mountain (honestly, you’d think we’d been lost and starving for months), we stopped for a pub dinner on a sunny terrace as soon as we disembarked the car ferry.

The next morning, we headed to Pike Place market, probably Seattle’s most famous attraction. Given that we’d all been to Seattle previously and we all knew just how touristy the market was, I’m not quite sure why we felt the need to go again, but there we are! It did mean we could revisit Lowells, a local institution that’s famous for its seafood. Even on a grey day we were very pleased to nab a window seat for a view over the ferries and seaplanes crossing the harbour.

My clam chowder was delicious, but our next stop was much less palatable… Seattle’s famous gum wall, which has been gradually building up since the 1990s. Well actually, the alley walls have been cleared at least once in that time (because the bricks were starting to degrade from all the sugar!) but the gum is now back with a vengeance. It even came second on a TripAdvisor list of the world’s germiest attractions (after the Blarney Stone near Cork, in case you were wondering). It was totally disgusting, of course, but also strangely pretty.

In the afternoon, we headed to the Museum of Flight, where we introduced Mum and Dad to our signature move of arriving at the rear entrance. You could tell the staff were very confused about how we’d ended up there, but we couldn’t explain because we didn’t know! Anyway, we went inside a BA-liveried Concorde with its interior intact, so Mum gave us a guided tour of where she used to work. It never fails to astound me just how tiny the Concorde is inside.

We also saw an exhibit on the development of the Boeing 747, where we had our own personal tour guide in Dad. In fact, he was so knowledgeable that I accused him of skipping ahead to read the information panels!

Dad was most indignant because the museum claimed to be exhibiting the only Blackbird M-21 in existence and he knew for a fact that there was another at the Imperial War Museum in Duxford, but then he realised that OF COURSE the one at Duxford was the SR-71. Silly him! We all nodded along, obviously already aware of the big differences between the M-21 and the SR-71 (as I’m sure you are too). Actually it was quite cool – the Blackbird already holds the record for being the fastest and highest flying jet in history, and this version had an added drone sat on top that launched from the ‘mother ship’ to collect intelligence from enemy territory during the Cold War. Apparently it never quite worked as it was intended, but we did enjoy the relatively low-tech way it delivered surveillance data, by dropping a canister over friendly territory (rather than transmitting any data electronically).

The following day, we had breakfast at Toulouse Petit, a Louisiana-style Creole restaurant that Mum and Dad had visited before (and Oli, it turned out, on Dad’s recommendation). Dad had mentioned it just the once or twice, so we knew he was keen to return! And it was delicious. Oli and I hedged our bets and shared some tangy, spicy shrimp served with creamy grits (left) and then went full Americana for our remaining choice, with chicken fried chicken, which came with eggs, breakfast potatoes and (my favourite) a biscuit.

To work off our breakfast (which, slightly worryingly, we all polished off), we took a wander around the Capitol Hill neighbourhood. This was described by the Lonely Planet as “Seattle’s most unashamedly hip neighbourhood, where the exceptionally rich mix with the exceptionally eccentric”. Indeed, it was an interesting walk, but to be honest it was mostly notable for Dad’s antics at the gas station just before we parked, when he attempted to pay by posting his credit card into the receipt dispenser of the self-service pump 🤦🏼‍♀️. Thankfully he managed to retrieve it before I reached the front of the queue in the gas station to ask for help, because I still hadn’t worked out how to explain why he’d done it!

After this mishap, it was time to drop off our hire car (probably for the best, really) and head to King Street Station to begin our much-anticipated Amtrak adventure across the continent.

Keeping Portland weird

Hawaii had felt like a bit of a cultural slap in the face after relaxed NZ, but we felt much more at home as soon as we arrived in Portland, a city known for being independent, progressive and quirky. Portlanders may have borrowed their unofficial city slogan (Keep Portland weird) from Austin, TX, but it certainly does seem to fit here.

We were staying in the artsy Alberta neighbourhood, which we liked immediately. The houses had incredible curb appeal and the residential streets were leafy and quiet, but the main street had a great buzz, with independent grocers, cafes, craft beer bars, and tempting homeware shops. It wasn’t overly gentrified, though, and definitely retained a sense of Portland’s ‘weirdness’, with every available surface plastered in flyers and lots of street art around. It also felt fiercely inclusive, with prominent signs on nearly every business making it very clear that anyone was welcome here.

As soon as Mum and Dad arrived, via a flight to Seattle, a very long-winded airport experience and a slow drive south, we headed straight out to NE Alberta Street to check out some of Portland’s famous food carts. Mum and Dad were planning to stay home, but then we mentioned beer and bluegrass and it didn’t take long for them to change their minds! It felt like a strong start on Portland’s food scene – we found a Senegalese food cart selling some of my favourites, which was a blast from the past (I visited Senegal in 2006, ate amazing food and have been struggling to find anywhere that sells it ever since). I washed my chicken yassa (barbequed chicken with a lemony caramelised onion sauce) down with a beer from Conscious Sedation, and we all settled down to watch the Tuesday night bluegrass jam that was unfolding. Overall, an evening very well spent!

The next morning, we headed to Nob Hill in Northwest Portland to explore further. Just like in Alberta, we found lots of independent businesses, attractive houses and a really cosy neighbourhood feel. This contrasted with the Downtown area and the Pearl District, which still had a lovely mix of architectural styles but felt much rougher around the edges, with some buildings empty and shops boarded up.

It was a pretty warm day and, as usual, we walked much further than planned, so an ice cream pitstop at Portland-legendary Salt and Straw was a must. I asked everyone to rate their orders but I foolishly let them all come up with their own avatars and scoring systems, so make of the below what you will!

👾 Oli: Lemon curd and whey (B+)
🐕 Dad: Double fold vanilla (7.5/10)
🍷 Mum: ½ Lemon curd and whey, ½ Chocolate gooey brownie (5/6)
🐱 Me: Cinnamon snickerdoodle (⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️)

Look at those happy faces! 🍦

Next, we headed down to the river to see whether there was any evidence of the Rose Festival, about which we’d received some baffling recommendations from a pair of Portland locals we’d chatted to in Hawaii. “Oh, it’s the Rose Festival!” they said, “So there will be lots of ships in town.” We tried to clarify what was the link between roses and naval ships, but it was clearly so blindingly obvious to them that they couldn’t even find a way to explain. To be honest, we’re still none the wiser!

Anyway, other than a closed funfair and lots of fencing, we couldn’t see much evidence of festivities (to be fair, it was a Wednesday afternoon), but Oli had found out that a Canadian naval ship was due to arrive in the afternoon. This meant that the Steel Bridge would need to be raised, and we wanted to see this for ourselves as we’d read that the levels telescoped into one another, which sounded unlikely but very cool! Unfortunately, by the time we arrived, the Canadian ship was safely moored on the dock, so we missed any bridge action. I think the ship probably arrived while we were gorging on ice cream, though, so it’s hard to be too regretful…

The Steel Bridge: trams, bicycles, cars and pedestrians travel along the top tier, and trains run along the bottom level. It’s a busy bridge!

All in all, we didn’t have much luck at the Rose Festival, but thankfully the International Rose Test Garden was more of a hit (Portland is famous for its roses, if you’re wondering why all the rose-themed attractions). This garden sits on a hillside in Washington Park and acts as a test bed for new rose varieties, with more than 600 types on display at any time. To be totally honest, I normally think that roses are a bit overrated (I’m a daffs girl! 🌼), but this garden was pretty impressive. I guess we’d caught it right at the peak of the flowering season, and many of the bushes were absolutely laden with blooms. I’m not sure my photos do it justice at all – it was beautiful!

That evening, Mum and Dad were in charge of our dinner plans, having arrived in Portland with a food wish list courtesy of their pre-departure Netflix research of Somebody Feed Phil. We were only too happy to be dragged along on their mission to Prost Marketplace, another pod of street food carts, because it sounded absolutely delicious! Oli and I hedged bets by sharing a Methi Mirchi Shrimp bowl from DesiPDX and chopped brisket with pinto beans from Matt’s BBQ. Both were delicious – the prawns were juicy, smoky and salty, and paired beautifully with the pumpkin seed pilau rice and unexpectedly fiery coriander chutney, and the brisket tasted just as good as it looked. For me, though, the BBQ pinto beans were undoubtedly the star of the show. Meanwhile, Dad went for sliced Texas BBQ brisket, which looked sensational. When I asked Mum what cuisine she was eating (from Native Bowl), all she could tell me was that it was vegan and contained beans! But I am reliably informed that it was great, so happy bellies all round. We rounded off the night with some excellent German beers from Prost.

Portland was right up our street – I’m pretty sure that anywhere that’s famous for street food, craft beer and coffee will always be a hit with us. But we reluctantly tore ourselves away from the food scene and set our sights on the journey to the Olympic Peninsula, in the far northwest of the lower 48 states.

Crossing the International Date Line (the longest day of our lives)

From Auckland, we flew halfway across the Pacific to Honolulu and crossed the International Date Line. We woke up on Tuesday in Auckland, spent our entire day there and boarded a flight at 22.40, had a night on the plane and then woke up as we landed in Honolulu on Tuesday morning (again). This was a first for both of us, and meant that:

  1. We were irrationally excited
  2. Our spending against budget on Tuesday 30th was a bit of a disaster since we lived the day twice over
  3. Despite point 1, we forgot to book accommodation for our second Tuesday. Whoops!
  4. Our photos look like absolute chaos, flipping wildly between being in Auckland at 11am and Honolulu at 11.01am. This gave us the idea that we could do a time-travelling diary of our two Tuesdays…

So, here’s how our two Tuesdays unfolded, arranged by local time in each destination.

10am

🏢 Auckland: We checked out of our hotel and left our big bags with the front desk, before walking through Auckland Domain (via many closed paths and diversions) to the Auckland Museum, which sits right in the middle. We actually came here on our very first day to watch the sunset, so it felt like nice symmetry to revisit on our last day.

🌺 Hawaii: Meanwhile, in Hawaii, our flight landed and we cruised out of the airport at record speed. Who has ever got through US immigration in under five minutes?! There was no queue whatsoever and while the officer initially seemed slightly concerned about our plans to stay in the country for nearly 50 days (well within the permitted 90 days, but admittedly still quite a long time), he soon got distracted by his absolute horror that we might consider crossing the country by train!

10.30am

🏢 Auckland: Inside the museum, we met Peter and Barbara, two rare T-Rex skeletons (not casts!). These were very cool and we were particularly pleased to meet Barbara, as she is one of only three female T-Rex ever discovered. It blew my mind that Palaeontologists could tell she was female not from her size or shape, but through tiny chemical differences in her bones because she was pregnant at the time of her death. Meanwhile, we could see Peter’s injuries that likely resulted in his death.

11.00AM

🏢 Auckland: We began looking at exhibits on Māori and other Polynesian culture, but really spent most of our time dodging huge school groups before we realised just how much museum there was upstairs and so headed up for some peace and quiet. In the Natural World section, we laughed a lot at this quote on an exhibit about Charles Darwin:

His visit to New Zealand was brief, confined to the Bay of Islands, and made little impression on him

Auckland Museum

Poor New Zealand!

🌺 Hawaii: We arrived at our hotel (a last-minute interim when we realised we had nowhere to stay on our extra Tuesday – we’ll move to an apartment tomorrow). Our room wasn’t ready but we commandeered the ground floor bathrooms to change and freshen up, then set off to explore Waikiki.

11.30am

🌺 Hawaii: Within minutes, we came across a very public Hula lesson in the street. We did not join in!

Midday

🏢 Auckland: After exploring a First World War exhibition together (fascinating to see it from New Zealand’s perspective), we parted ways. Oli spent some time in the Second World War exhibition, where his top sight was an anti-aircraft gun that had been bought from the US Navy after the war for two bottles of gin! Meanwhile, I headed to the Robin Morrison Road Trip exhibition, which featured photographs that he had taken on a seven-month trip around the South Island in 1979. I loved this – the use of colour and the composition of his photographs were beautiful and really did serve as a time capsule of the late seventies. It felt wrong to take photographs of his photographs to put on the blog but I do keep thinking about them – I’m going to have to buy the book!

🌺 Hawaii: We took a walk on the beach and the promenade, soaking in the buzz and feeling intense culture shock. We weren’t in sparsely-populated, low-key NZ anymore! We saw surfers catching waves further out to sea, body boarders closer to the beach, people playing in the shallows and even a man using a metal detector in the water – I wonder whether he found any treasure.

1pm

🏢 Auckland: We met up for a (mediocre) lunch in the museum cafe. We arrived and ordered separately and then staff definitely suspected that I was stealing Oli’s lunch when it came out and I claimed it while he was in the loo!

🌺 Hawaii: After a long time in the same country, we were ready to embrace a new cuisine so we headed to Five Star Poke, which served (you guessed it) poke bowls (containing marinated raw fish, rice and sometimes other vegetable goodies, such as seaweed and edamame beans), pretty much the only thing we knew about Hawaiian food.

2pm

🏢 Auckland: We walked across the city in the sunshine to the 328m-high Sky Tower, an iconic part of the city’s skyline and the tallest freestanding structure in the Southern Hemisphere.

3.30pm

🏢 Auckland: From the tower, we had beautiful views of the city, the harbour, multiple volcano cones and the outlying islands. It was only slightly disconcerting having orange-suited people hurtling past the window as they base-jumped from the level above us!

🌺 Hawaii: We checked into our hotel the moment our room was ready and promptly fell asleep.

5pm

🏢 Auckland: We had a very early dinner at Bona’s Thai, served by the loveliest husband and wife team, before heading back to the hotel to pick up our big bags and say farewell to Auckland.

6.30pm

🏢 Auckland: We walked to the central station, where the chap at customer services joined us in our confusion about the best way to pay our fares without buying two transport cards (which seemed a bit ridiculous, as we were on our way out of the country). I’ll just say this: if your ticketing structure is so complicated that even your own employees don’t understand it, then it probably needs a bit of work… Anyway, at length we managed to buy tickets and took the train to Puhinui and a connecting bus to Auckland International Airport.

🌺 Hawaii: We rushed out of our hotel with just minutes to spare and arrived at the beach bang on 6.30pm (having read that people normally set up chairs several hours before!) to watch a Hula performance while the sun set behind us.

7.30pm

🏢 Auckland: Even with our ticketing adventures, we still arrived at the airport SO early that we had time to kill, so we set about trying to palm the transport card we’d just bought onto someone else. This was harder than it seemed! Eventually, we donated it to a newsagent who sold the cards and she promised us that she’d pass it onto the next people who came to buy one. I wonder where it is now!

8pm

🏢 Auckland: Once we’d passed through security, we set about playing a round of one of our favourite games: Leftover Currency Golf. This is where you try to buy as many tasty snack items as possible using any remaining cash, and then count up your change to calculate your score. Lowest score wins!

🌺 Hawaii: We joined a very long queue to try the most famous noodles in town at Marugame Udon. We were surprised to see such strong Japanese cultural influence here, but we read that Japanese people were actually the second largest ethnic group in Hawaii, a result of the long tradition of relations between the two. Anyway, the food was delicious and tasted just like Japan.

10PM

🏢 Auckland: We boarded our flight and Oli took full advantage of the New Zealand wines while I watched Nomadland. Then it was time to try to get some sleep before beginning our Tuesday all over again in the morning…

🌺 Hawaii: We arrived back at our hotel, exhausted from our two Tuesdays.