Saturday, September 18, 2010

It's official - Cruise West Ceases Operations


I am sorry to report that Cruise West has now officially gone out of business. I am happy to report that we did not succumb to the high pressure sales pitch onboard to pay in full for an Intracoastal Waterways Cruise of the southeast USA in May. I am also very happy to report, that there were no indications of Cruise West's financial problems in our onboard experience. If we had not known about it before boarding nothing in our onboard or shore tours experience would have given it anyway. Based on our conversations with the many Quyana members (Cruise West past passengers) onboard, it was clear that the majority of them had no clue that Cruise West was in difficulty. It is always sad to see a cruise line go out of business, especially when you just finished cruising with them. This just reinforces that Clay and I are the vacation kiss of death! Next up Universal Studios Orlando, I hope they can weather us!

Just joking, I hope. I am sure we can't single-handly bring down Universal Orlando, but not so sure about the next cruise we were contemplating... so I won't mention it here, or aloud, lest it destroys them. On another note, I apologize that it is taking me so long to get photos up. Rest assured that I am going to work at it slowly until it is done eventually though. I won't quit until every post has photos!


Saturday, September 11, 2010

Final trip report post!

9/10/2010




Clay's salad
Just when you thought I was done! Here I am sitting at PDX, back again. I had to come back to report that last night we randomly selected our 2nd most expensive and best meal of the trip. We went to Salty’s on the Columbia on NE Marine Drive behind the airport’s runway and right on the Columbia River. Wonderful food and great views and it was packed with locals. It was so busy that there was NO parking available. I had to just hand the keys to a valet and hope that I was not in serious violation of my Avis rental car agreement! Clay finally had cedar-planked salmon and decided that he really doesn’t like it cooked that way.




Clay's Salmon
Debbie's dinner - half eaten!
I had a petite filet mignon with a loaded baked potato cake and bacon jam. It sounds weird, but it was all delicious. Clay had a 3 glass 5-oz. beer tasting flight and got one loser, Klickitat. I had a Yakima Valley, WA Riesling that was very nice. For dessert, Clay had the Udderly Chocolate ice cream from Tillamook that I had at the factory, yum! I had a white chocolate mousse crème cake that was delicious too.






Debbie's dessert

Clay's Tillamook Udderly Chocolate Ice Cream
We had our least expensive meal of the trip this morning at Pig N Pancake and it was good too. We had no line whatsoever at Voodoo doughnuts this morning and turned in the rental car without incident and checked in our bags with Southwest without incident. We were through security after about 30 minutes. It seemed like a busy morning at PDX. So, I think that is the end of this trip journal. All that is left is flying home all day. We change planes in Phoenix and expect to be landing at home near midnight. We should be tired tonight after a long day of travel. This is probably the last entry then!

I went to the Starbucks in the PDX terminal to look for a Portland mug. I had been looking for an Oregon (or Washington, really wanted Walla Walla!) city specific mug at every Starbucks I walked past since we got here almost 2 weeks ago. This is the first place that I found them! Thank you to Stuart Jones for his $10 Starbucks gift card! I used it to buy my souvenir Portland mug!

Coveted empty center seat for Voodoo Doughnuts!
Our flight from Portland to Phoenix was full. We only had an hour layover and then on to Raleigh. The flight from Phoenix to Raleigh was about twice as long and fortunately was not full, so we had a row of 3 seats to ourselves. Clay let me use his lap for my feet or my head at various times and I was able to sleep for a good portion of the flight. Happily, we had no turbulence and quite smooth flights on both segments. We arrived home on time and without incident. My checked bag was opened by TSA and a dirty shirt of Clay’s got damaged. The front pocket zipper was not closed all the way and when I tried to open it I found it was zipped over the sleeve of Clay’s shirt. I finally got it uncaught, but it took a little bite out of it. The bag was packed differently than I had done it, but I could not find anything else wrong. Not sure what they were looking for. I hate flying and don’t do it often, and when I do, I try really hard to only fly with carry on luggage, so this is the first time I have found a TSA card in my bag. Anyway, I was just happy the bags arrived with us and intact.

On a final note, Clay and I are still feeling like the kiss of death to cruise lines. Beware to any company that books us on a cruise! I will say that we were getting our Quyana pitch onboard just as if Cruise West was going strong and there was no hint onboard from Quyana alumni (of which there was such a high percentage because our particular sailing was additionally discounted for them) or from any Cruise West employees onboard. No one that I asked said they had heard about Cruise West being in any financial difficulty and most of the other passengers onboard were enthusiastic about booking onboard deposits for future cruises before disembarkation. When we expressed interest, we got a strong sales pitch to put our money down immediately and work out the details later. So, it is not clear whether the employees onboard were really in the dark, or if they were well trained to keep company business private. Anyway based on the news available to us at the time and now, we actually feel quite relieved that we decided not to do another Cruise West trip.

http://www.cruisewest.com/

The Cruise West website seems to have been taken down. I am pasting the only page up on 9/11/2010 in case the link above changes again. It was definitely still up while we were onboard because Alison used it at one point as a sales tool.

http://travel.usatoday.com/cruises/post/2010/09/cruise-west-spirit-of-oceanus-world-cruise/111611/1

http://travel.usatoday.com/cruises/post/2010/09/cruise-west-suspends-bookings-temporarily-/111461/1

http://travel.usatoday.com/cruises/post/2010/09/cruise-west-restructuring-leaves-passengers-in-limbo/111800/1

http://seattletimes.nwsource.com/html/travel/2012851277_cruisewest09.html

http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=129800170


Stay tuned for photos. I will work on adding them to posts in chronological order next week and keep at until finished for as long as it takes!

Thursday, September 9, 2010

Crater Lake in snow

9/9/2010 

Crater Lake Lodge after dinner


Sunrise over Crater Lake, OR
Big disappointment. I was up several times in the night looking out my pricey deluxe lake view room window to see stars, or even better stars and moon reflected on the lake. No such luck. At about 5am, it seemed a little clear sky window opened up directly above the Lodge and I could see some bright stars but no lake. We showered and hurried downstairs and outside into freezing rain and visibility of about 15 feet.



We went back inside the Great Hall and had some complimentary coffee and hot tea and watched the lake view out the windows near the big fireplace. There were 2 very brief periods when the clouds blew out from over the lake and then it would cloud back over. Somewhere the sun was rising because it became daylight within our clouds but we did not see a sunrise! By 6:45am the lobby and hall area were getting pretty busy. I don’t know if I mentioned it last night, but we were the 3rd reservation to check in at the dining room. We were called 3rd after 5pm and opening arrived. This meant that we did not get a table by a window because there are only 2 two-tops by the windows and they will not seat 2 at a four-top.

I was determined to get a 2-top by the window this morning so I went and stood by the podium at a few minutes to 7am. The girl there turned out to be the coffee/tea girl and we had already visited. She checked the time when I walked up and told me it would be a few minutes, I told her I knew and I would wait. I think she knew I wanted to be sure to sit by a window, since that was what I was doing from 5:30am to 7am! At 7:01am she walked us to the best window table for 2. Mission accomplished! We watched for 30 minutes as rain turned into what we in Raleigh would call a blizzard. It just kept coming down, we could see snow accumulating outside and decided like many others we overheard to just hustle on down the mountain and out of the snow.
time to go...

I had the Crater Lake Eggs Benedict which was not too good, the Hollandaise was transparent and watery, they put a slice of tomato on them and the English Muffins were sourdough, which I don’t like. Clay had 2 eggs fried with toast, Marionberry jam and he paid $2 extra to have Bison hash, since the waitress last night convinced him to have lamb chops over Bison Prime Rib. He thought the Bison Hash tasted funny. It looked the same as my hash browns, or fried potatoes, and I thought mine tasted normal. Since he had paid the extra $2 for Bison in his hash browns, he picked out every bite of the meat and left a big pile of taters! Anyway, he spent the rest of the day in gastric distress and looking for restrooms everywhere we stopped.

West Rim Drive
We checked out an hour early and rather than try any further sightseeing, we drove the West Rim drive out of the park in very low visibility. We were hoping that we might find some pockets of clearing like we did yesterday afternoon, but no such luck! We never got a peak at anything other than road and snow! After going down a couple thousand feet in elevation we left snow, and sleet and visibility improved and it rained on and off pretty much all the way to Salem.





a viewpoint on West Rim Drive
leaving viewpoint on West Rim Drive
We wound up making very few stops driving to Portland today. It is sad but it is the weather and you take what you get. We did stop at one or two places on the Rogue-Umpqua National Scenic Byway (the other, curvy end of Hwy. 138) to I-5 when there was a break in the rain and I will post photos when we get home. Immediately after we merged into I-5 traffic and settled into the flow, we ran into a couple of long and extra-long tractor-trailers. I don't think trucks are allowed to pull 3 trailers at once in NC! Anyway, just as I finished pulling past the 3-trailered truck and was about to pull back to the right, we entered a bridge with very narrow shoulders and concrete walls on either side. There was a MAN staggering down the road in the right lane! I watched the rear view mirror in horror as the extra-long truck swerved to try to avoid hitting the man as well as not knock the rest of the passing traffic off the bridge. I did not see any accidents, but what a nightmare! Who needs coffee with excitement like this in the morning to get your heart pumping? When we came around the front of the truck, I said, MAN! Clay sat up and grabbed his camera thinking I thought there was a good view atop the bridge. He was looking out the side windows and said where... I nearly screamed MAN in the road! I don't know how those trucks missed hitting him or another car to get around him. I can't imagine what was wrong with that guy to be walking in traffic on an Interstate Highway!

Umpqua River


Another Umpqua River view


Colliding Rivers Visitors Center

We had another little panic as we tried to find a place by the Interstate to get Internet access around 12:30pm and the 24-hour mark for online check-in for our Southwest flights tomorrow. We finally got logged on near Albany, I think, through a Super 8 Motel’s wi-fi while parked in a McDonald’s parking lot.

We drove on to Salem and had lunch at a Shari’s Restaurant. We had been seeing signs for these places but had not seen one or stopped at one. We both thought of Perkin’s when we walked in to face a pie case and saw the sign for free pie on Weds. 4-10pm with dinner. But, Shari’s serves beer and wine and we’ve never seen that at Perkin’s. We both had the lunch trio. It was either $7.99 or $8.99, we each had a different price in our menus. I had soup, turkey sandwich and chocolate pie. Clay had salad, chicken salad sandwich and peach cobbler, with NO ice cream!

We drove about another hour to get to our destination the Red Lion Inn at the airport. Traffic was horrific for the last 30 minutes of that going 20mph in a 55mph zone in 3-4 lanes bumper to bumper. It was like rush hour! It was only around 3pm though. We decided that we would not attempt any more tourism in Portland. (As we were driving under a hanging cable car somewhere over Portland that we had no idea existed and by a black submarine docked in the Willamette River!) Anyway, the plan now was that we would get repacked for flying! Clay would get his treadmill workout at the Red Lion Inn. We would go out to dinner and try to get a good night’s sleep. In the morning we would get up at a reasonable hour and go to breakfast. Clay has been dying to eat a chain called Pig n Pancake and there is one here in Portland. I want to go back to Voodoo Doughnuts and get a dozen to carry home, though they may all get eaten tomorrow on the planes since we will on board for both lunch and dinner. We will get back to Raleigh near midnight tomorrow. Frankly, it will be good to be home. While we have been very impressed with everything Oregon, this has been a hard vacation. Since we have been without Internet for more than half of this trip, I will have to come back into this blog and edit to add photos after we get home and that will probably be the last work I do on this blog. This is probably the last entry then.

Crater Lake, Oregon

9/8/2010

Red Lion Inn's Hot Pancake Dispenser!
Clay was up first this morning and told me to get up at 6am. I showered and we packed up and loaded the car… in the rain! We drove around to the Red Lion Inn lobby building to check out and have the $4.99pp Get Roarin’ Breakfast. This was worth it because of the pancake vending machine! Did you ever even imagine such a thing? You put your plate under a roller on one end and push a button to order 2 pancakes. (You really can’t have just one! One is not an option.) In about 1.5 minutes the first edge of pancake appears and slowly rolls out and flops onto your plate, quickly followed by the second pancake. I had pancakes! I also had a sausage patty, a bacon slice, water and a coffee with cocoa mix. Clay had orange juice, scrambled eggs, potatoes, bacon, sausage, toast, a Danish and a cinnamon roll; no pancakes.
Covered Bridge Museum near Dexter/Lowell, OR

Then we got an early start on our 2.5 hour drive to Crater Lake, Oregon. We started out southbound on I5 to Hwy. 58 to to Hwy. 97 to Hwy. 138. It sounds complicated, but it wasn't because there aren't that many roads to Crater Lake.
Tunnel! Look at that guardrail!

The drive was very scenic. It rained off and on the whole way, at the highest elevation we could see snowflakes on the windshield. We climbed to over 5000 feet and saw rivers, lakes, a rainbow, water falls, a covered bridge, a dam, a deer with fuzzy antlers and miles of wildly curving roads and thousands of evergreen trees. Needless to say I drove again today.


Rainbow over Odell Lake, OR

Hwy. 138 - That is a straight road!
We're here!
We arrived at the North Entrance to Crater Lake National Park at around 10am. Check in time at the Lodge is 4pm, so we took the long drive around the East Rim. The ranger who sold us our pass told us to be careful as visibility was poor today! She said that it was rainy inside the rim. Well, she was right and wrong. The sun came and went. Rain came and went and turned into sleet and into snow and back into rain and then sun again. The high today is about 46 degrees F. It is quite comfortable when the sun comes through and quite miserable when the sleet is blowing sideways, under the shade, or even inside of a cloud. We are satisfied anyway. It would have been nice to be able to use the rocking chairs on the back porch of the lodge, but they are soaked. The NPS forecasters are not predicting that it will clear out tomorrow morning either. Too bad. Still hoping for a good sunset and sunrise.

Pumice desert along Crater Lake North Entry

Our 1st view of Crater Lake with Wizard Island

Beautiful Crater Lake, Oregon
Around 12:30pm to 1pm we ran into sun, so we stopped and sat on the wall overlooking Pumice Castle and Phantom Ship and had a little picnic of cherries, Nabs, almonds, Raisinets and water. As we sat there we watched a cloud come over the high part of the rim on the opposite side. We wondered if it would slip on down or burn off in the sun and dissipate. We sat and watched as it dropped down all the way to the surface of the lake and darkened its way across towards us. Clay kept saying it would burn off, but I guessed as it reached the midpoint that we had about 3-5 minutes to clear out. We abandoned post shortly after a tiny ground squirrel ran under our legs and we started to get wet. It was pretty amazing and spectacular. Crater Lake is 5 miles in diameter. There are no inlets or outlets. It is 1943 feet deep and the 7th deepest lake in the world and the deepest in the USA. Wizard Island on the west side of the lake is a cinder cone that rises 760 feet above the water and at the top is a crater 300 feet across and 90 feet deep. How amazing is that? It’s a small crater at the top of a small extinct volcano inside the crater of a huge extinct volcano.
Here comes the rain!


Uh-oh!

Wildlife!


More wildlife...

Phantom ship rock formation in Crater Lake

Clay and Debbie (and Bob) at Crater Lake, OR

We reached the Rim Village about 2pm and went into the Steel Visitor’s Center and watched the 18 minute film about the creation of the crater and the park. Then we drove on to the Rim Village Gift Shop and Café. We walked around the amazing viewing area there and then drove on to the Lodge.








There it is!
We arrived at about 3pm and we were able to check in so we did. We got room 212, a deluxe lake view room which is what we had reserved and paid for months ago. It’s view is partially blocked by trees, but that may be true of most of the rooms. We brought in our luggage and checked out the room, then went back out because it looked out our windows like the sun was out.






What a view for these little guys!
Just spectacular!
We opened the back door off the Great Hall and got a face full of slushy rain. We zipped up and walked down the little paved and benched lookout area back there anyway and we were rewarded with a rainbow touching down right in the lake. Amazing! It was a snowbow! We did not hurry back in, but once back in we dried out in rocking chairs in front of a huge fireplace with gas logs burning. There were waitstaff wandering offering to serve snacks and hot and alcoholic beverages, but we passed to save our appetites for dinner.


a snowbow!



Wizard Island, Crater Lake Oregon

Drying out and warming up in Crater Lake Lodge Great Hall
We have a 5pm reservation and I have to go now to wake Clay from his nap and get down to the dining room. More later. Oh, there is no Internet here, though oddly enough when we drove through Mazama Camping Village they had wi-fi symbols up along with restrooms, etc. and that hardly seems right given the price premium at the lodge. It isn’t like they don’t have it, there is a wi-fi network up and running in the Lodge, they just aren’t allowing guests access! So we’ll have to post after we get back to Portland tomorrow!

Our Crater Lake sunset 

Back from dinner and it has at last stopped precipitating. But, we are still socked in with low clouds so we just got a few moments of the faintest few splotches of pink on the lake. Bummer! Still have fingers crossed for a brilliant sunrise over the lake. When we went out after dinner the temperature had dropped to 35 degrees F and even though it was no longer blowing or wet, it was cold!

Dinner in the dining room was good, not great and very expensive. Over $120 for the 2 of us with 2 drinks, 3 courses and tip. Clay couldn’t decide and let the waitress lead him astray with the lamb recommendation. He immediately regretted it. But he ate it all and part of my Classic Chicken Dijon with a polenta cake and braised greens. I had French onion soup to start and it was not great, but hot soup on a cold wet day is always good. I had flourless chocolate torte with raspberry sauce for dessert. Clay had a salad with Marionberry vinaigrette and Gorgonzola to start and triple berry crumble with vanilla ice cream for dessert. Clay told me to make sure I came back here and added that he paid $4.95 extra for a scoop of vanilla ice cream on top of the $7.95 cobbler! I had the Crater Lake Lodge Private Reserve Label Pinot Gris to drink and Clay had an IPA draft beer from some microbrewery in Ashland, OR, sorry don’t remember the name.

So, anyway that was our big finale vacation day. Not a total washout, but less than hoped for. Tomorrow we hope for excellent weather here in Crater Lake and then we will drive out on a different route before returning to I-5 for the run back to Portland. We have a room reserved tomorrow night at the Airport Red Lion Inn and we have no plans for anything in Portland. We will have to see how time and weather are if we do anything else here, or there, or between here and there. Good night.

Wednesday, September 8, 2010

Highway 101 South in the rain

9/7/2010

I can’t believe I forgot to comment on the weather yesterday! We finally lost our sunny clear weather and woke up to typical Oregon coast weather. It was low thick clouds and random drizzle most of the day. We had a short period of clear sunshine while we were at Seaside and that was it. Unbelievably I sunburned my face in that time! Today looks to be the same. We went to bed with a view of mountains and woke up to a view of clouds/fog beyond the parking lot. Not too scenic. Hope things improve!

Well, here I am 12 hours later and things did not improve, but worsened dramatically! It was all wet and gray today. The sun never shined at all anywhere that we were. We were really lucky with our beautiful clear weather the first week here in Oregon. So, we are happy. We will be even happier if we wake up to a clear 24 hours tomorrow. It will be very sad if the only 24 hours we have to spend at Crater Lake are spent seeing nothing but the inside of a cloud! So, we set off a little later this morning because Clay slept in. He used the treadmill at the Best Western the night before and it did not reopen until after 8am. Complimentary breakfast was at 7am and it looked nice with eggs, potatoes, sausage, bacon and biscuits and gravy. But, the coffee was so weak I actually first thought it was a bad carafe of tea. But, I tried the pot at the front desk and it was only slightly better. So, I really missed my dose of caffeine. We did not eat the breakfast there, so maybe it was all bad.

Clay had walked to Fred Meyer the evening before with the idea of getting himself a Diet Coke, but he got sidetracked by a Party platter of Marionberry coffee rolls and a tub of Maple French Toast Twists in the bakery section and bought those and forgot his beverages. It was enough food for four and that is what we ate last night and again for breakfast, with the rest of our squeaky cheese and we’re still working on the 2 pounds of cherries! I also think I forgot to say that we bought and ate Sea Foam at Seaside yesterday. It is like a Cadbury Violet Crumble bar, but not as good, too much chocolate. Anyway, we tried some for the first time after lunch. I remembered it when we saw so much real sea foam today!

So, we started out from Tillamook thinking that as the sun warmed things up that it would clear up. But, it didn’t at all. So we started out to head for the Cape Meares area to do the Three Capes Scenic Loop drive along the coast. But since visibility was so low we decided it would be a waste of time and we would just hurry down 101 and go to the aquarium at Newport. We did not realize that the aquarium is mostly outdoors! Oh well.


Clay at Munson Creek Falls
On our way, I spotted a sign for Munson’s Creek Falls and Clay looked it up and it was the highest falls on the Oregon Coast at over 300 feet. It was a good slog through rainy woods, but it was worth it. (That is from memory, the route map is out in the car and I am not going back out in the rain now! If it needs to be corrected, I will do it when I come back and paste in photos. Sorry! Inserting here with photos and that is all correct.)
Another creepy forest trail to falls



Oregon seashore this morning

Siletz Bay
blowhole at Depoe Bay, OR
We stopped to look at a spouting whale statute at Depoe Bay, since you could barely see the surf there for the sea spray and rain and fog that would surely be the only whale we would sight spouting there. I did see one dolphin leap over a wave crest though, amazingly. I was watching waves to try to count off for Clay to photograph a blow hole there and just happened to see one. We stopped at Rocky Creek Scenic area. It was very scenic.





low visibility at Cape Foulweather lookout - go figure!
We stopped at Cape Foulweather and admired the fog as we read the signs telling us to look down for sea lions on the rocks and to the left for Yaquina Head Lighthouse and we saw nothing beyond the fence except fog! It lived up to its name. Another classic on a clear day moment for us!








Yaquina Bay Bridge
Devil's Churn
We stopped at Devil’s Churn, which was a cleft in the cliff where the surf would wash up a tunnel it is carving and get all foamy. It was near Otter Rock. This is a noted area for storm watching. I guess we were getting a classic view of loud surf sounds and mostly the inside of a cloud!









Otter feeding
Tufted Puffins
As mentioned earlier we went to the Oregon Coast Aquarium at Newport where the famous octopus was apparently off exhibit, but we did see tufted puffins (now tied for my new favorite animal with sea otters). We were there right on time to stand in the rain and watch the sea otters get fed.









Oregon seashore this afternoon
Cape Perpetua Scenic Area
We stopped at Cape Perpetua. We did get to see Heceta Head Lighthouse. So, of all the 9 Oregon coast lighthouses, we were only able to see 2, the rest were lost to the mists and the fact that we cut off the coast at Florence.










Cape Creek Bridge
Heceta Head Lighthouse Scenic Viewpoint

Top side of Cape Creek Bridge - right into tunnel!

Heceta Head Lighthouse
So, we decided to end our time on 101 at Florence and go to the Sea Lion Cave; the World's largest sea cave or something like that. We parked, walked across 101 and went to pay and they informed us that 3 weeks ago all the sea lions had left and there was only 1 in there now after none for weeks! We were offered a $3 discount if we would go down to view the empty cave. We decided not to go down. She had a live webcam showing the one lonely sea lion down there in the cave and we did not think live would be an improvement on the view.  http://sealioncaves.com/home/


So, while it sounds like a washout of a day, it really wasn’t. The drive is dramatic; think Amalfi Coast, then take away the Italians and the stone retaining wall along the edge, then add a lot of bicycles. It was really very scenic. The fog and mist and sea spray just made it all the more dramatic, though probably not any more beautiful since a great deal was completely hidden from us. 

We ate lunch in Newport. We saw a place called Pizza Cucina as we entered town and Clay was hungry for a pizza. We ordered a 10 inch to share. It was a thick crust, which we don’t like, and it was slathered in garlic butter. You could smell it on approach from the kitchen! Not a happy choice for a couple spending a day in a car! So after we needed a palate cleanse, and we did not drive far before spotting an ice cream parlor. I was happy to have a strong peppermint, which did the trick for me. Clay selected a chocolate peanut butter and it only made things worse for him! Anyway, in the car driving inland on 126 to Eugene to spend the night, Clay found a Red Lion Inn in the directory he picked up in Portland and called ahead to book a room. We hope to only be about 2.5 hours from Crater Lake in the morning. We are crossing our fingers that this rain moves out before our time is up in Crater Lake!

dinnertime in Eugene, OR
The hotel desk clerk recommended McMenamins North Bank in Eugene as a good local place to eat dinner and it was. Clay had a tasting tray of 6 beers and I had a Pinot Noir Blanc that was from their own winery and it was good. The food was good. Clay had ribs and I had a southwestern chicken sandwich. Clay had a brownie with ice cream and caram-ale sauce and I had a horrible mocha milkshake. During dinner Clay was yawning and I asked him if he was ready to go home. With huge eyes, he said "I AM ready to go home!" I laughed out loud at him, and he started back tracking about only not wanting to go back to work, just this entire vacation has felt too much like work and he just wants to go home but not to work. Um-hum.

Well, that is it for tonight. Clay just came back soaked from working out on the treadmill and getting ice. This Red Lion Inn has all outdoor entry guest rooms in a bunch of separate buildings and we are far from the ice machine and fitness room. This Red Lion Inn is nowhere near as nice as the one at Portland Convention Center, but it is still so much better than the closet we inhabited on Spirit of ’98; we need to keep that in mind!

I need to put in an endorsement here for http://www.visittheoregoncoast.com/. You can find loads of information there, but even better for road trip purposes you can order a free Official Mile-By-Mile Guide to Hwy. 101. We found it invaluable with its milepost information and the ads and the photos. If you are going to do any part of this drive, go online and order the Guide! You won't be sorry. So, anyway, this is the soggy end of our coast drive!