We  were  gone eight days.
We were  aloft and flew a good part of the way around the globe.
We  used the sky train in Vancouver. Public transit buses. Tour buses. We went up Grouse Mountain on  a bus. Walked  across the rope bridge at Capilano Canyon. Travelled further up  to the cable  car  that takes people almost to the top.
Theresa and Heather went  on up to the top in a chair lift. Didn't enjoy that. Came back down to the cable car on foot.... more or less. One wore heels, the other birkenstocks.
A ferry carried  us to Victoria on Vancouver Island. We trekked around  town on foot and scooter.  The Seattle Clipper fast-tracked  us down  Puget Sound to Seattle.
If I had known  Seattle, like San Francisco clings to  the side of mountains. I may not have gone.  But  it is.  I did.  I am  here to tell the tale.
In Seattle, I zig-zagged  through the downtown , up, up, way up, from Harbor to  Hilton Hotel. I remembered from  bicycling days, it's  easier to zig-zag on an incline than to take it head on. It works the same  on a scooter. It increases distance but reduces  incline.
At the Hilton Hotel, only half way  to the top, but a long way from the bottom, we collected   the  vehicle we  used in the rest of our travels.
It had Hawaiian license plates. We added the Island of Paradise to our itinerary.
We drove to Tacoma,where resides grand-daughter Vanessa, husband James and   twins Clair and  Reid in a house  that also clings of the side of a  mountain along  with most of the rest of the town.
Their house is on the same street where the first house in the town was built in 1869. Tacoma is a town of 250,000 people,  mostly  clinging to the side of a mountain.
On Saturday,  we went to Pikes Market at the waterfront  in Seattle.
Well!! Bless our Hearts!!! If that's a market, we  have no such thing  in Aurora.
On Sunday, we went to a several day event  called Tastes of Tacoma. Held  annually in a State Park. It resembles our one day Street Sale in Aurora except it was many times larger with many more vendors and much more variety.  We got there early. When we left , crowds were beginning to swell.
Portable toilets  in rows of twenty were handily placed  in various locations.
We spent the next two and a half hours climbing Mount Rainier where snow was sufficient for  people to snow board down the slope.
We drove back down faster, by a smidgen.
Apparently, the snow  never completely melts that high up the mountain. Snow boarding is  summer recreation in the Green  State of Washington. To be sure, snow melt gushes  from the rocks and disappears  under the road we were driving,  to spill out in waterfalls and form white water rivers at the bottom of steep ravines, the edges of which were uncomfortably close to the paved section of the two lane road.
Signs requested visitors to  refrain from the temptation to feed the wild life; creatures like bears and deer and foxes. We saw a black and silver fox with a smaller creature held securely  between his jaws. Didn't look like he needed much help from  humans around.
I personally experienced no temptation whatsoever to feed the wild-life.
On Tuesday and Wednesday, we visited  three malls. The first  was spectacular. There were turrets in the roof with sunshine and fresh air streaming through. The food court had an outside patio where people were enjoying lunch.
The stores were beautiful and sales were galore.
We shopped.
On Wednesday we returned. our numbers doubled.  There were two more suitcases, two strollers, two car seats, Vanessa and two  tiny toddlers to spend a month with their Canadian grandparents, my son Stephen and  Mary.
We delivered a gift in Tacoma for Mary. Folded between a dress  for Vanessa and a T-shirt for James was a full size picture of herself , plasticised, to attach to the frig at  baby height,  so no time would be wasted getting  to know Grannie again.
We delivered  them  safely at Toronto Airport. They would spend the night  in Kitchener.  Everything was packed for  a six o'clock start in the morning for the continuation of their journey to the cottage on Georgian Bay.
The whole family will gather there on July 10th.
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1 comment:
We lived on the west coast in North Vancouver for 5 years when the boys were little. Your account of your vacation makes me nostaligic and homesick - yes, homesick because it was not my choice to come back east again. We spent a lot of time in Seattle usually because the boys were involved in soccer or baseball tournaments and we always stayed longer. We lived across Capilano Road from the suspension bridge in Edgemont village and were five minutes from the nearest beach and two minutes from Grouse mountain to ski. Occasionally there was enough snow at the top to do both in the same day. The boys learned to ski on Grouse mountain, Cypress Bowl and Blackcombe mountain. They lost all interest in the sport after we returned to Ontario because samll hills were not mountains and skiing in Ontario was boring.
The account of your wonderful trip makes me smile and long for a different time and place.
Thank you.
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