Oregon had shamefully good weather the entire time we were there. I think I saw one cloud.
One.
I packed for cold, grey and rainy, and instead got warm and sunny. You might say "Lucky, you should pack better," but I say Oregon's weather should conform to my expectations.
After my last trip I proclaimed Oregon the best state in the nation. I haven't changed my mind. This time around, we took our time and thoroughly explored the places we've been considering moving to.
We arrived Friday night, and stayed with friends in Portland for the evening. We rented a car through Alamo, which wound up being a huge mistake and pain in the ass which will never be repeated. The car was filthy when we picked it up, and it got worse from there. Details later...
On the way to the coast, we cruised through Salem (woo! Capitol building!), stopped in Albany for coffee and missed Irondad by minutes. I blame poor cell phone reception and inattention on my part. From there, we went to Corvallis and met Stacy, along with her partner in crime (who had purchased a new Street Triple that very day!). Good folks! We had dinner at American Dream Pizza. It was pretty darn good. We stopped in Eugene to sleep.
From there it was straight on to the coast. We planned to rent quads and fool around on the dunes for a while, but the high winds convinced us that perhaps playing in the sand wouldn't be much fun that day. Instead we had lunch at the drive-in A&W in Florence.
Full of cheese and root beer, we rolled on up to Yachats. Along the way, we stopped and I claimed a chunk of the coast as my own:
Apparently, no one thought I was funny:
But, I managed to get out of that mess and landed back in Yachats in time to enjoy a cold one and a sunset:
The next day we checked out Devil's Churn, which was awesome and you should go:
On Tuesday we left Yachats and headed north to get cheese in Tillamook on our way to Astoria. The low tire pressure light came on while we were in the middle of nowhere between Newport and Tillamook, and then we heard the THUMPITA-THUMPITA of a flat.
Awesome.
I started to change the tire while Lady Luck called Alamo's roadside assistance. The customer service person informed her that we would probably have to buy them a new tire. While she was dealing with that fun, I was trying to pull a bald tire which had the cords exposed and little pokey wires cutting up my hands. I managed to finally break the wheel free from the hub, and putting the spare on was relatively painless. The customer service person told Lady Luck we could bring the car back to Portland to get a different car. Nice.
Of course, I didn't trust the spare, (especially when the low pressure light came on again) so we stopped at a gas station to check the air in the tires. The spare was 20 pounds low, and I noticed the other rear tire was dangerously bald. Nice.
I filled up the spare, and we continued on. We reached Tillamook, and the low air light came on AGAIN, this time with a "DING DING DING." We got to the cheese factory, and I checked the tire pressure again. The spare was leaking. Nice.
This time I called the roadside assistance number, politely explained the situation, and asked when we could expect our new car. Three hours or so.
The Tillamook factory does not provide three hours worth of entertainment. We did buy a bunch of cheese, and lunch, and ice cream, and stuff to amuse ourselves from the gift shop. I got a "Sailor's Knots" deck of cards which came with a length of rope. I sat down to tie the first knot and discovered, upon completion, that it was a noose. Yeah.
Anyway, three hours or so later, the tow truck showed up with the supposedly shiny new car for us. It had decent tires, but that was the best I could say for it. The interior reeked of HORSE, there were wax pencil marks all over the exterior marking damaged spots, and it was, of course, filthy.
Nice. Seriously, fuck Alamo.
Anyway, with that fun behind us, we cruised on up to Astoria. Astoria rocks. We walked the docks in the marina, ate fish and chips from a dry docked boat, saw the Flavel mansion, had coffee from the best coffee shop on Earth (we order their beans here in Phoenix) and generally had a great time.
People in Astoria are friendly. Like, really friendly. Folks said "hi" to us on the street. The folks at the coffee shop can't wait until we move there. And they seemed genuine about it.
After two short days in Astoria, we went on to Portland. Portland is groovy. We got donuts from Voodoo Doughnut. We saw the pirate supply store. We went to Powell's. We hung around with our friends. It was good.
And Lady Luck and I decided we're moving to Astoria. Now we've just got to figure out how we're going to make a living there...
8 comments:
:( fuck alamo...
so glad that your trip ROCKED besides the car shit. sounds as though you have found home :) great post and pics. cant wait to hear how the mission and job search unfold. bravo and enjoy!!!
It sounds like you had a great trip. The Oregon Coast is an awesome place. As is most of the NW. Never been up to Astoria though. My only suggestion would have been to rent a Harley for a day or two. Of course then you would have been spoiled :o)
Wow, Alamo customer service rocks. I am thoroughly impressed. Making a note to place them on the same list with UHaul (that's not a nice list).
-Peace
I used to really like going to Astoria on business. There is a public bath and steam room on 101 across from the Red Lion. In the Fall I would go to the big public sauna and swap tales with the commercial fishermen. There's a Scandavavian atmosphere to the town.
Then an adult shop appeared in the upstairs part of the building. Things got a little, shall we say, uncomfortable, in the steam room. So I quit stopping by. I noticed the adult shop is gone, now, so maybe it's back to normal.
Anyway, I'm glad to know to avoid Alamo. Have pretty good luck with Enterprise once I actually get a car. Often I would be promised one but it wouldn't appear. Once I have my hands around a throat, I usually get a free upgrade.
Next time we'll plan ahead and I'll meet you in Portland with one of my rigs. They don't get used much.
We literally did miss each other by minutes. I got to Rythmn and Brews about 30 minutes after you left.
P.S. When you move to Oregon, you have to stop drinking PBR. You know we have some really good breweries of our own out here!
Devil's Churn is my very favorite place in the whole world.
It was a pleasure meeting you and Lady Luck! We'll definitely have to go riding once you make your way up here. Hurry! ;)
mq01 - Yeah, Oregon seems to be where all the other people just like me live.
gael_cee - It would have been great to have a couple of bikes. Next time we will.
Allen - They are on my very special list. Uhaul are terrible, but they've saved my butt before. They seem geared towards "need a truck, need it NOW and don't need it for very long."
In that situation, they're great.
Irondad - Hopefully the next time around, I'll have my own rig with me. As for the beer, I drank plenty of quality Oregon brews while I was there, but the PBR came in 6 packs of tallboy cans. How could I resist?
I almost got Hamm's for another manly beer review, but gave in to the PBR temptation.
Stacy - I can see why. It'd be easy to just set up a chair and watch the water all day.
Lucky:
Everytime we pass through Astoria because I didn't think there was anything to stop for. Now we have a reason to stop for a Pizza break, even if we are not hungry.
bob
bobskoot: wet coast scootin
Oregon and its people are just awesome...always enjoy it there...the wife had a similar experience with Alamo in Hawaii...so never again.
This post rocks...thanks for sharing....BTW, Great pics too...!
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