As soon as the work was done (great conference by the way, learned a *ton*) we were off to downtown Seattle to hit up the major attractions. We hit up Seattle Center and, though we didn’t actually go up in the Space Needle, we got a good look at it. We did check out the Experience Music Project and Science Fiction Museum.

The museums were okay, but nothing special. Granted we couldn’t spend as much time there as I would have liked, since Evie was getting restless, but after we left, Evie managed to get us to buy some tickets to the carnival rides outside. It quickly became apparent that all of us would have enjoyed the day more if we had taken the money for the museum and just let Evie blow it on the rides. Add in a trip to the children’s museum and I have to say that Seattle Center has Navy Pier beat for fun by at least a factor of 10.
We ate possibly the best meal of the trip at a creperie of all places, 611 Supreme. My crepe was better than I imagined a crepe could be, they let us just get a side of shrimp for Evie at the “extra topping” price, and the toasted almond bread with goat cheese and olives was awesome. Don’t even get me started on “Le Chocolat”, our desert crepe.
The next day we hit up the aquarium and Pike Place Market before eventually relaxing with some friends at the corner of Love & Loss in the Olympic Sculpture Park. The aquarium was kind of small, but we still had fun. I liked the giant octopus (you can just see the evil in his eye) and Evie liked sitting in the jellyfish ring: “There’s jellyfish under my bottom!” Pike Place was pretty much exactly as I expected, but still well worth the trip. We saw the requisite people throwing (and catching) fish and the original Starbucks (can you imagine, at one point it was the only Starbucks in the world?) as well as some unexpected things like cheese making, lots of weddings, and a cat wearing a sweater. I also saw an unrelated dog riding in a bike basket, wearing a hat. The sculpture park was actually pretty cool and even if you’re not into modern sculpture, the view was breathtaking.
Finally we were off for home, with a short layover in “Kansas Silly” (Evie’s words, not mine) we made it all the way back to Chicago in time for bed.
Overall, my impression of Seattle was very favorable. It is pretty small for a big city. I am used to looking at a Chicago map and the scale of the Seattle map kept throwing me off. Despite that, there is so much to do there, and the city is so hip, that it feels much bigger. The views of the ocean and mountains were spectacular, although, growing up in the Midwest, it doesn’t take much landscape-wise to impress me. In Indiana we were impressed with just a hill. The people of Seattle have a very distinct sense of style, unlike anything I’ve seen anywhere else. I got the impression that a lot of people were trying a little too hard…there were no half measures. If you were punk, you were punk. At home I’ll see maybe one person a week that I think, “whoa, did you see that guy?” or “what the heck was she wearing?” and in Seattle I would think that easily once per block. One major downside is the city is just crawling with homeless people. On the other hand, though there were a lot more there then in Chicago, they didn’t harass me for money the way the ones here do.
One last tale to report, our downtown hotel had a sign stating that the pool was closed due to “unfortunate circumstances”. That means dead body, right? Can that mean anything else?
