Kristen framed by the St John’s bridge in Cathedral Park
Randy standing on a sculpture at the Portland Water Pollution Control Lab
Our Voodoo Doughnuts haul – old fashioned glazed, Mexican hot chocolate, maple bacon, and Portland Cream
After the wedding in Seattle, we planned to begin heading South to Sacramento to take a break from traveling. But on the way, we were excited to make a couple of stops. The first was in Portland to visit Kristen’s cousin Randy, his girlfriend Jessica, and their two parrots, Soda Pop and Pickle.
We didn’t have too much planned for our time in Portland – we mostly wanted to hang out with Randy and Jessica, see a bit of Portland, and maybe go for a bike ride or two. Luckily, we came at the right time – Randy is currently studying for his master’s at Portland State, and school was not yet in full swing for the semester, so we got to spend almost all our time with him. He was a great host – Randy took us to see the PSU campus and showed us some of his work, toured us around the city, and took us to a few hidden gems (most notably Cathedral Park, which is a greenspace framed by the arch-shaped pylons of the St John’s bridge on the North side of town). We also visited a few Portland landmarks: Powell’s books, Voodoo Doughnuts (the originator of the gourmet doughnut trend), a couple square blocks of food carts (home of the $5 delicious lunch), and the fabulous urban wilderness park (designed by Olmsted, but far more raw than Central or Prospect parks).
All in all, Portland was shockingly . . . normal. Not at all like the caricature portrayed in Portlandia. There were fewer and less aggressive fixed-gear bike messengers than in NYC, the food was eclectic and understated, and the hipsters we saw didn’t even look like homeless people (like they do in Seattle). In retrospect I guess I’m not sure what I expected – people living in trees? Hipsters occupying credit unions? Guys with waxed mustaches riding their fixies around with free-range chicken coops strapped to the back? Maybe I didn’t imagine it to that degree, but what we got was quite the opposite – Portland is really, really nice.
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