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Washington
Tour
After
months of planning a summer vacation to Glacier National Park in
Montana, we found ourselves just a couple of days away
needing to change plans. With all of the lightning-induced fires
that have plagued Idaho and Montana this summer, we took one last look
at the webcams
in the park, and decided that it just wasn't going to be an enjoyable
trip with all of the smoke up there.
We weren't too terribly disappointed, however. Now that we
live in the Northwest, there are oodles of places we want to go
explore. On a whim, we chose Washington state.
Suzanne and the kids had never been to Washington before, and
since it is the Evergreen State, it wasn't suffering from the smoke as
bad.
In ten days, we explored Mount
St. Helens National Volcanic Monument, Mount Rainier National Park,
Olympic National
Park, and Seattle.
We put 2020 miles on the car, and 39.7 miles on our feet.
At that, there was still more that we could've explored had
there been more time to do so. Below is a route of our trip.
Google Map Courtesy of GPS
Visualizer
Highlights
Whew... we sure packed in a lot of stuff into our
Washington
tour. Not bad for planning this trip just a couple of days
before
leaving. It's a good thing we had ten days to do all of it:
- Mount
Saint Helens National Volcanic Monument:
- Ape Cave Hike (Longest Lava Tube in the United
States)
- Trail of Two Forests Hike
- Miner's Car Exhibit
- Meta Lake Hike
- Windy Ridge Hike
- Mount Rainier National Park
- Twin Firs Loop Hike
- Nisqually Glacier Vista Hike
- Box Canyon Hike
- Trail of the Shadows Hike
- Carter/Madcap Falls Hike
- Myrtle Falls Hike
- Christine Falls
- Narada Falls
- 2006 Flood Damage Presentation (18 inches / 24
hours = Millions of dollars of damage!)
- Olympic National Park
- Second Beach Hike
- Rialto Beach Hike
- Perseids Meteor Shower
- Hoh Rain Forest Hike
- Sol Duc Falls Hike
- Hurricane Ridge Hike
- Lewis River Waterfalls
- Lower Falls
- Middle Falls
- Upper Falls
- Taitpatum Falls
- Copper Creek Falls
- Big Creek Falls
- Seattle, WA
- Space Needle
- Woodland Park Zoo
- Seattle Acquarium
- Children's Museum
- Pioneer Square
- Seattle Center
- Puget Sound Ferries
Lowlights
We were actually favored with excellent weather
conditions for
the most part. While the Olympic Peninsula is the wettest
place
in the contiguous 48 states, there was just a little bit of rain while
we were driving to our campground, but by the time we arrived, the
skies were opening up. We spent almost three days there, and
never got a drop of rain on us! In fact, we spent almost all
of
our time west of the Cascades, and we only got a little drizzle of
moisture on our first day. Also, there were very few bugs and
mosquitos to deal with. Otherwise, we were favored with sunny
skies and idyllic temperatures. Even so, there were a few
things
that could've gone better. Here is a small list of complaints:
- Not enough time to see everything!
- Mount Saint Helens gave us just a peek of a view
through the clouds
- Mount Rainier spent most of the time in the clouds
Favorites
Here's what each family member said was their absolute
favorite activity of the trip:
Raymond: |
Space Needle (Seattle) |
Amelia: |
Rialto Beach (Olympic NP) |
Suzanne: |
Waterfalls (All over the place!) |
Mike: |
Nisqually Glacier (Mt. Rainier NP) |
Takeaways
Here are a few final thoughts from our vacation:
- Washington truly is the Evergreen
state. We drove for days and days and
days, and it seemed like we were in one giant forest the whole time.
Even the Seattle area is loaded with trees on every square
inch of land that hasn't already been developed.
- Washington has a lot of water.
We lost count of the number of waterfalls that we saw, but
I'm sure it was probably somewhere around twenty! Of course,
this shouldn't have surprised us... to be the Evergreen State, you need
lots of water. We found it very difficult to pick a favorite waterfall... each one has its own special charm.
- There is a lot of fun stuff to do
in Seattle. We only gave ourselves one
day in our itenerary, ended up spending two days, and then
wished we would've had three! Our city-boy, Raymond, was
really disappointed to leave!
- The beach is a great place for a
meteor shower... especially if it's at the peak of
the best meteor shower of the year, which this year happened to
coincide with a new moon! We could see gobs of stars, and a
great assortment of meteors.
- Olympic National Park is huge! It is
very difficult to access this park, but it is well worth the effort.
95% is designated as wilderness area, so we just got to see the
highlights from the road, and that took us nearly three days.
Olympic protects 75 miles of pristine Washington coastline, and
only a few small points are accessible by car... And the rest? By
backpack and foot only! The range is simply spectacular, and both
Mike and Suzanne agreed that we felt like breaking out in singing "The
Sound of Music" for their majestic Alps-like appearance.
Photos
As you've come to expect from the Lewis Family, there are
loads of pictures to wade through from our vacation. We've
uploaded the following five albums
consisting of over 300 pictures!
Last
Updated
-- 10 November 2012
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