Thursday, April 26, 2012

I'm bored, let's go driving.


For various reasons we found ourselves unexpectedly living in Seattle over the winter of 2012. I have never been much of a city dweller, despite having grown up in downtown Los Angeles, but I am adaptable. If this phase of my life includes living in a tiny one bedroom apartment on the third floor with no elevators, well then let's embrace the experience and be Seattle-ites!

Seattle as seen from Alki Beach
The area has much to offer, and in previous trips I was usually on a mission of one sort or another and really did not take the time to immerse myself in the Seattleness and explore much at all. Now I had six whole months to figure out Seattle. I bought sweaters, a raincoat and umbrella and set out to see what I could see.

First thing I see is traffic. Lots and lots of traffic.
The Seattle area is actually pretty diverse and we took our explorations in bites. It usually would go like this: "What are we doing today?" was met with "I dunno, what do you want to do?" inevitably leading to "I'm bored, let's go drive around." Driving around in our big old Ford F250 is our favorite way of killing time and no $4.20 a gallon gas or dirty looks from Prius owners is going to stop us.

See those curvy buildings? That is where the Mariners and the Seahawks play.

Canada Geese enjoying the view
A cool boat thing at some random park


Rhodies in the rain

The exploration trips were somewhat haphazard and not without mishap. There was the memorable day we drove south out of Seattle along old U.S. 99, decided to follow the coast down to Des Moines and cut across to Auburn. A quick glance at the old map says this is possible. So we drive and keep the water to our right the whole time. Stopping to check out little beaches, marvel at the million dollar homes smaller than our apartment along Alki Point and listening to harbor seals barking out on the buoys.

The Argosy plying the waters around Seattle


After driving for 3 hours we hit a point where we must turn inland. No problem, if we just follow this road up over this hill we should come out in Des Moines, right? Right. Up the hill, crest the top and there it is. The Space Needle.

The Space Needle. Again. It should not be there.

"What the %$#@& is THAT doing over there?!" Sure enough. It's the Space Needle, off to our right in the distance. Amazing view of it, really. It should be sort of off to the left and about 30 miles behind us, totally un-see-able from where we thought we were. What we had done was drive all the way down Alki Beach, to the Vashon Ferry, then turned and instead of going south we went straight back north up the ridge and came out almost where we started. We really need to get a GPS, apparently. Oh well, it was a cool drive and we really had nowhere else to be today.

Port of Seattle
The Alki Point Light
Mt. Rainier, the volcano in our backyard

Wednesday, April 25, 2012

Highway 99 - The Pacific Highway

The old U.S. Highway Shield insignia before it became a State Route.


I decided to begin with Hwy 99 for a couple of reasons. First because she starts, much like I do in California, where one of her many names - The Golden State Highway - comes from. Historic Route 99 is an old north-south United States highway system line that ran from Mexico to Canada and as such she has much to offer those who take the time to enjoy her history. She was decommissioned as a U.S. Highway in the early 70's and now the bits that remain are all designated as State Routes. Like too many of her sister routes she fell victim to the Interstate system - in this case Interstate 5. Which is not really a "road" at all. It is an Interstate that will get you there as fast as possible (except through Seattle. Bring a lunch and a book). The Interstate is the antithesis of an old road. But I digress. 

Down Marginal Way with the newer State Highway Head logo


In Washington she runs from Fife north to Everett as SR 99 or the Pacific Highway, and also as Aurora Avenue. These pictures were taken over the course of several trips up and down this grand old road during the six months we lived in Seattle. I figured I may as well document the road in our back yard while prepping for our next round of great highway adventures.

The approach from downtown Seattle. Note the old U.S. shield shape sign.
Wouldn't be a trip down 99 without a glimpse of the Space Needle.

 I remember bits and pieces of roads from my childhood, and one that stands out vividly is the Pink Elephant. My parents made several trips to and from Alaska over the years and my earliest memory of this is probably in 1970 on our way south. This view is headed north, but the Pink Elephant is an icon of U.S. 99 in downtown Seattle to this day.

The iconic Pink Elephant Car Wash in downtown Seattle
A bit further along in Lynnwood you will find the old Mobil Gas station, Keelers Korner built in 1927. After miles of strip mall hell it is like sorting through a pile of trash and suddenly coming across a family heirloom. You know at once this is not junk. This has a history, a story. It once had a vibrant life. This is the only truly real thing here.

Mobil Oil Station on SR 99
Much of Hwy 99 runs through the typical urban blight of strip malls, fast food joints clustered in eternal competition and vast big box home improvement stores and grocery chains. But every now and then you catch a glimpse of what was there before. You see what the family in the '58 Buick saw on their way to the beach or heading home from the drive-in. There it is; a neon encrusted drive-in burger joint.

"Pick-Quick Burgers Drive In - Since 1949"

Another piece of real treasure nearly hidden amongst all the junk. Seeing these gaudy remnants of times gone by is always bittersweet - you know it has been there for ages while at the same moment knowing that it's days are numbered. While the building gets inexorably older the real estate it sits on gets ever more valuable. Whenever I see one of these along a route I know we frequented when I was a kid I cannot help but wonder: Did we stop here? Did Mom tell Dad "Pull in there, the kids are hungry and I could do with a bite myself." I can hear her saying exactly that a thousand times over. Is this neon jewel a part of my own past? I hope it is.

The Poodle Dog in Fife, at the southern start of what's left of old Hwy 99 in WA.
Fields of Daffodils at the northerly end of old 99


Perhaps this is my fascination with these old highways. Not having a hometown to go back to, never having had a specific house I could say I grew up in, I can catch glimpses of my childhood here, along the highways we traveled and the sights we saw. It is as good a hometown as any, and in so many ways better than most. I wouldn't trade it for anything.

An old 60's era motel in Milton, WA seen as it should be - through a dark, rainy windshield