My New Place

In April I bought a condominium in Northeast Portland.

Why? Two main reasons. The first was to help achieve a sense of stability. There’s a lot in that last sentence, possibly the topic for future posts, and possibly only a topic addressed with beers in hand. The second was economics. Rents are rising in Portland. To me, it makes sense to buy.

Why a condo, not a small house? I want to have the freedom to be gone for longish periods. An apartment seems an easier method than a house for accomplishing that. There are pros and cons of course.

I just finished doing enough with the apartment to call it “done enough”. Furniture, rugs, decorations, some greenery, etc. I have notions for improvements, but the place is now able to accept visitors with a usable second bedroom, and I don’t feel like I have anything urgent to get done. The only major upcoming project is the bathroom, a remnant of 60’s decor that will undergo surgery sometime this winter.

I took some photos, added captions, and printed them for my non-online-savvy mom and dad. They are unlikely to ever visit me here.

Anyway, with those pics hot on my computer, I thought that this was a good opportunity to give others a glimpse of my place on this website.

For those who want to see my place in situ in Portland, use the mapping software of your choice on: 1220 NE 17th Ave. Apt. 12B. It is in Northeast Portland, just east of Lloyd Center Mall, and in the Sullivan’s Gulch mini-neighborhood. It has absolutely fantastic public transport and bicycling available.

I hope that the captions are enough – I decided to just post the pics in the order that I hope my folks look at them. Enjoy!

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Achieving Totality in Salem

I just love that word “totality”. And the phrase “achieving totality”. It sounds like the completion of some ultimate spiritual quest, when really it is just the moon getting fully in the way.

There’s a word for when this alignment occurs: “syzygy” – the straight-line configuration of three celestial bodies in a gravitational system. Astronomers make up the best words. You want to scream out “buy a vowel!” but there are already as many vowels as consonants in the word. Ha. I bet the Scrabble players among us already knew that word.

So, totality comes from syzygy.

Anyway – I have seen a few partial eclipses over the years, but seeing the total eclipse was significantly different. I can understand the importance that ancients placed upon total eclipses. Even though I know about how it happens, removing the mystery, it is still awesome, and it helps me to think of myself as a speck in the universe. That’s a good thing, to think that.

I had the luxury of living nearby for this one. Listening to predictions about overcrowded highways, I woke up very early and left my place in Portland for Salem at 3:30 am. No problems at all getting down there, only 50 miles or so, maybe an hour. I could have slept in a bit, but you never know about these things. I went first to a 24-hour McDonald’s, then to a nice riverfront park and sports venue in West Salem.

There were tents on the edges of all the sports fields, and in all the non-field open spaces. The park management had put out the nicest signs, basically saying “feel free to tent here, we’ve put up extra toilets, but please stay away from the grass in the middle of the sports fields which we try hard to keep in shape for the athletes”. And, people obeyed – it was nice to see.

This part of Salem has a riverfront park that is on both sides of the river, connected to one another by a pedestrian bridge converted from an old railroad bridge. I had a lot of time, so I hiked around before settling on a beach to await totality.

Here are a few pics of the park and of people getting ready.

What’s the adage about sleeping dogs? Oh yeah, I remember…

Here’s the old railroad bridge over the Willamette River, now a pedestrian bridge.

A  view of the early morning quiet Willamette, looking north from the bridge.

We waited and waited and then finally we saw the first edges of the moon getting in the way. So people started clicking away and changing filters on their cameras, fishing out their special sunglasses, and basically becoming more quiet as our attention was now focused.

I tried a few things. The first was the old pinhole projection technique, and it worked pretty well. Here’s a snapshot of the image part way through the partial part of the eclipse.

I also tried taking pictures with my phone camera directly at the partial eclipse as it was happening. I tried many settings. This one is with the HDR (high dynamic range) turned on. Usually the HDR takes a few images and merges them into one – each image being an adjustment in gain, and the merge being the best possible. Obviously that’s a simplification. Looking right at the eclipse with the camera, the HDR got a touch confused, and just overlayed images. At least that’s what I think happened. So you can see the big bright sun, the halo, but also if you look closely you’ll see another image, that being similar to the pinhole projection. That other image mapped its percentage coverage to the pinhole projections as we made progress, which made me reasonably sure it wasn’t a revealed planet or something else.

Finally totality arrived. There were whoops and hollers all about, quite fun. It got dark very quickly. It also got chilly very quickly. This next pic is boring, and isn’t what we were seeing. We were seeing a dark center, and a ring of light around that center, and a halo further out from that bright ring. Then, when totality ended, a bright shot of light came from one edge of what we were looking at, as if a piece of the sun had exploded away from the center. After that, it was a reverse process to the lead-up to totality.

Here’s a pic of our little beach during totality. The camera did its best to make light of a nighttime shot, but you can see street lights on the bridge that came on automatically, and the waterway channel and bridge warning lights looking very bright. It really was dark for a couple of minutes.

Well, that’s it! We all got in our vehicles and headed home. As it turns out, I would have been better off bicycling. The 50 mile return trip from Salem to Portland took more than 4 hours. I learned later from several friends who had made the same trip, that no routes were good. Even the old-timers who knew all the back roads were stymied. Oh well. I would do it again.

Would I travel a long way to see another? Maybe, especially if the destination had some other redeeming virtue. There’s going to be another in the U.S. in about 7 years I think, and this next one is on a north-south line rather than the approximate east-west line of the one we just had. I might go for it.

Portland to Chicago by Train

… and back!

I decided last minute to take a train to Chicago, walk around for a bit, watch a Cubs game, and then come back the same way.

Why?

Well, I had never been on a long train ride, overnight and scenic, especially in the U.S. I had been on trains in New Zealand and Australia, in Europe, along the U.S. Eastern Seaboard, and in China. Some of them were scenic, some were very fast, one went under the English Channel, but mostly they were purpose-built trains, the purpose being commuting.

Also, I had never been to a baseball game at Wrigley Park in Chicago. For those of you who don’t follow baseball, Wrigley Park is one of few old ballparks remaining. Like Fenway in Boston, Wrigley has gone through renovations, but the layout of the surrounding neighborhood prevents too much change. Also, again for those who need help with baseball lore, Wrigley has a special outfield. Instead of cushy matting for outfielders smacking into the wall, at Wrigley the outfield wall is brick covered in ivy. Smacking into the wall at Wrigley is, well, unique. Also, balls get lost in the ivy. They have a set of rules for that.

And I wanted to get a feel for Amtrak. I have more time nowadays, so some trips that I think of as airplane trips might lend themselves to a train trip, if the trip by train is fun. Another factor: Trains pollute less than airplanes.

Lastly, I simply wanted to get away from the apartment for a little while, and for me it is too hot around here for backpacking right now.

So I found myself at Union Station in Portland with tickets to Union Station in Chicago. My data-set of exactly two examples leads me to conclude that if you want to create a railroad station in the Amtrak system, the correct name for your station is “Union Station”. I said this to someone on board, and they asked the legitimate question, “Even in the South?” I am too lazy to look it up.

Union Station in Portland is downtown. Usually the main train station is downtown. This is significantly different from airports, for obvious reasons. But I like it that I started my trip from downtown Portland. Union Station in Portland is an older place, wooden benches like church pews, ornate tall ceilings, a great feel.

For those of us used to air travel, there’s a noticeable lack of security. There is also a noticeable lack of guidance. The security part was refreshing. We just walked up and got on board. The guidance was less refreshing, especially since I was a first-timer. Thinking about it a little while later, at an airport there’s not as much guidance as we might think. We are just more familiar with airports, at least I am, so I know to check in, go through TSA, find the gate, etc. etc. At Portland’s Union Station you really just hang out within hearing distance of a guy who comes to the center of the station and, without electronic assistance, speaks loudly, announcing the next train, reminding passengers to check with the conductors who are now situated in front of the gates for that train. Those of you who regularly go through Penn Station in New York City are probably chuckling at this, rightly so. It is a touch more complex there.

Our train was late. I have no experience to suggest that this was usual or unusual, but I did learn during the extra waiting time that a truck jolted in front of the train while it was coming to a crossing near Portland. This created a space-time challenge (same space, same time, more than one piece of matter) the resolution of which caused a delay of a couple of hours and a release of heat. Nobody was seriously hurt except the truck which was sent to truck heaven with a story for its peers about how dumb some humans can be. The train had a scratch. When I saw the front of the train while walking to get on board, I could see that this train was no stranger to scratches.

On board, we settled in to our seats and we rolled away smoothly from Portland, across the Willamette, then the Columbia, and onward. This next picture is from the return trip but I thought I would show it now, to set the stage. Our seats were wide, with plenty of legroom, and with a couple of different footrests and lounging positions.

The train felt old, with lots of wear here and there, but not in a way that felt shabby. Just old. Everything worked, everything was plenty clean enough, and the seats were comfortable. Sleeping in them was not at all like sleeping in a bed, but was much easier than sleeping on a red-eye airplane coach flight.

To complete the picture of how I spent most of my time, next is a view of the observation car. It wasn’t a dome – it wasn’t higher than any other car – but it did have much bigger windows, and comfortable chairs looking outward. It also had a section with tables, where many groups played cards and some worked on their laptops. I spent perhaps a third of my daylight time in the observation car. I had some good conversations with people there.

While we were in the vicinity of Glacier Park, some rangers were aboard, in the observation car, with microphones and speakers, giving running commentary and engaging the people in the car. Stuff like “Does anybody know the story behind that mountain, how it came to have its name? Anybody? Well, let me tell you…”, and “Show of hands, how many of you have…”  well … That’s not my cup of tea. I appreciate that they gave some good information, and that many people like that sort of thing. Anyway, I saw much of Glacier Park from the comfort of my seat. I did not consider that to be suffering.

The observation car had a downstairs cafe. That’s an interesting word for a place that served microwaved-in-the-plastic-wrapper fare along with coffee and expensive beer, wine, and alcohol. It was okay.

I didn’t take a picture, but the dining car was a regular-window car with, you guessed it, tables and chairs instead of seats. The food in the dining car was very good. It was crowded and busy most times.

Here’s the observation car.

We were a couple hours late, maybe two and a half, getting away from Portland. Amtrak does a good job of scheduling their long routes so that the most scenic parts are traversed in daytime. I felt a little sorry for the non-Oregonians on the train. Since we left late, we lost some of the Columbia River Gorge views to darkness. Here’s a snap from the observation car. There’s more glare than in some other photos because it is getting dark outside, and my camera is trying to capture the scene, but is allowing reflections from the inside lighting. Often the train tracks are right next to the water, north side of the river.

So that was the start, a short time in daylight, then on through eastern Washington and a bit of Idaho in the dark.

On the way out, I had two seats to myself for sleeping. Like a recliner sofa, there is a rest that comes out from the front of the seat, and it can help make the two seats into a small platform. I curled up on that and it was okay, but I didn’t get much sleep either night, to be honest.

On the way home, I had a partner in the seat next to me. I enjoyed our conversations much much more than I missed the extra seat. We covered so many topics and had a few good laughs. I had a delightful time. We ate meals together. But neither of us got what we would call a night’s sleep, either night.

Sleepers are available, but the price due to my late booking, and that it was prime season, was prohibitive. Summer is filled with families. Sleeper prices vary significantly, especially if one plans ahead. It would have been a $2000 addition to my $550 round-trip ticket for a sleeper on this particular trip. I can go a few nights with little sleep for that much money. In other seasons it is possible to get a sleeper for $400 additional, which might be worth considering. Buying a sleeper also gets you some perks, like a “free” breakfast, etc., which helps rationalize the cost.

Anyway, on the way out, we “woke up” in Idaho. “Waking up” implies sleeping, hence the quotes. This photo is just east of our stop at Sandpoint, Idaho.

All across Idaho and into Montana, the scenery was like this. This next photo is just east of our stop in Libby, Montana. Montana is a bit like Texas. It takes a whole day to cross Montana, more than 600 miles.

Population-wise, no contest. Crossing Texas you see a lot more people, more traffic, even though there are vast empty places. Scenery-wise, also no contest – in the other direction. Crossing Montana is a day full of awesome. I had brought all sorts of diversions, books to read, computer (no Wi-Fi on board) to write with, phone to use up mobile data on. For this day it was mostly me glued to the window.

The next photo is the stop in Whitefish, Montana. This was one of the larger stops in Montana, along with the stop at Glacier Park.

Many of the stations were extremely small, with just a “porch” for the station platform, really. Often, we had to make two stops at these places: One stop to transfer people from the front of the train, then we’d pull forward a bit, stop again, and deal with people in the back of the train. Our shortest stop was to pick up an Amtrak employee, and to let off nobody. It was a 15 second stop!

Only a third or less of the stops were of a length and in a place that allowed us to exit the train for a few minutes, take a tiny walk, stretch, have a smoke, etc. The conductors would give us advance warning for those stops. I’m not sure that this cross-country train ride is fun for smokers. There were a few who really used these stops to load up. And, on the way back from Chicago, we had a “smoking in the bathroom” incident in our car. We got a lecture from the conductor and a warning that this was a felony. That was a little hard to believe.

Like I already wrote, the scenery was amazing. Here are a few photos from the several hundred I took along the way. These are while going through Glacier Park, and then in eastern Montana as the mountains gave way to high prairie.

See the kayakers?

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Somewhere along the way here we crossed the Continental Divide at a mile high, give or take a yard.

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We spent the night finishing up eastern Montana, and crossing North Dakota. I got to see some of North Dakota in daylight on the return trip, and took some photos of the vast plains. I’m only going to write and show the outbound trip in this post – that’s enough to get a gist.

In the morning we arrived at St. Paul, Minnesota, had a longish stop, still only a half-hour or so. This was the first “big city” we came to after Portland.

Talking with the conductor, he said that they were trying to make up some lost time, but the attempt was more difficult than one might imagine. There are many freight trains on this route, and we give way to them. Amtrak is part of the government, so we are sort of “non-profit”, and don’t pay for the rail use. (Actually, this route loses money, while Amtrak on the East Coast makes money.) The freight trains pay the government a lot to roll on these rails, so they get preference. Our normal route is synchronized somewhat to avoid freight trains, and since we were late we were also out of sync. So, every so often we sat on the sidelines while a freighter rolled past.

At St. Paul we met the Mississippi River, and rolled along beside it for quite a ways across Minnesota.

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The Mississippi turned south, and there was no way to get to Chicago that way, so we crossed it and continued east.

After a short run down the western side of Lake Michigan, we could see Chicago in the near distance. We never were that near to the lake, though. No good views to be had there.

And then we were done! We came out into Chicago’s Union Station, which was about the same age as Portland’s, but much larger, much more ornate, and seemingly newly refurbished. It looked like new and I know that it isn’t new.

I’ll stop here. I might make a separate post about my short Chicago visit and the Cubs game. In case I don’t, here’s an extreme summary: Chicago downtown is fun. The Art Institute of Chicago is one of the best art museums I have visited. The Cubs beat the Reds 15-5, but the game wasn’t as close as the score might imply, ha, and I was happy to be wearing a Cubs hat.

The trip from Portland was all new to me. I was alone, and spent a lot of time taking photographs and a little time on my computer. The train shakes a bit, so using the computer for reading or watching video is okay, but attempting to type and to use a touch pad wasn’t effective. Others might think it’s fine, but I had difficulty.

The return trip was different. I had a seatmate for much of it, quite nice. The scenery was of course similar, but at different times of day. I took fewer photos.

I was happy to see downtown Portland as we crossed the Willamette, happy to get on MAX right outside of Union Station, and happy for a full night’s sleep in my own bed.

Would I do it again? Certainly. It was quite fun and relaxing and scenic. I now know enough to consider the train to Los Angeles or San Francisco, or even a train across the U.S. at some point. I also know a little bit better about what’s useful and not useful on board.

I’m considering some easy trips on the short Amtrak and Cascades routes up and down the Northwest coast. A couple in my building have taken the train from Portland to Seattle on a Saturday, watched a night Mariners game and a day game with a downtown hotel stay in between, then returned Sunday night. Everything they did was within walking distance of the station. A pretty good weekend if you are a Mariners fan, eh? And no I-5 traffic hassle. Important!

Next trip: Would I only do it again with a sleeper? No, but it depends on what is coming up after the trip. For each leg of this trip I was headed to either a hotel with a nice bed, or home, also with a nice bed, and with no responsibilities other than sightseeing. And, two night’s worth of not great sleep is not disabling for me. I know that it is for some. If I had to immediately do something important on arrival day, a sleeper might be more enticing.

 

 

The Greenland Motel

(Originally published November 29, 2013, but it had been on my computer for years.)

Recently I visited Holly Hill, Florida, on a side trip while seeing my parents and sisters. I drove past old haunts, one of which was the site of the old Greenland Motel. Here’s some snapshots of the now-vacant lot.

A paved driveway to nowhere.

You could develop something here!

The Greenland Motel existed in 1960.  It no longer exists, hasn’t for some time.  It is not historically special, but it is special for me so I thought I’d write about it a bit, as a memory of those times.

I lived there for a very short while during a time of change for our family. These memories are those of an 8 year old. That realization makes me think differently regarding what my son and daughter might remember about their own early lives.

It helps to know a little about our family history in that era. In 1960 my father, a computer operator, seeking better opportunities for himself and stability for his family, moved us from central Pennsylvania to San Francisco.  In a 1952 Pontiac, large by today’s standards, pulling a travel trailer, my dad, mom, and two younger sisters and I took our hopes westward.  I have no clear recollection of what happened in San Francisco – we didn’t stay there long.  We moved to Los Angeles after a short time.  I have vague memories of Los Angeles, really Bellflower.  My main recall involves concrete and chain link fences – that our trailer was in a concrete trailer park and that we walked down sidewalks next to busy streets.

My father worked for an airplane manufacturer.  One day my father came home from work and said that he’d been laid off. Soon, we were headed back across the country, in that Pontiac, pulling that trailer.  I remember lying on the shelf below the rear window as we cruised across the country.  I remember the heat of the desert, water bags on the front of the car, and an evaporative cooler attached to the passenger front window.  I remember the hood ornament, an Indian chief, Chief Pontiac no doubt, rendered in chrome and yellowing plastic.

We came to stay with my Aunt Helen and Uncle George, my father’s sister and her husband, and their young family in Holly Hill. It was a place for my father to gather himself and search for work.  We parked our trailer in the back of the Greenland Motel, which my aunt and uncle owned, and lived there until my father found work. We then moved into our house in Holly Hill which was my childhood home, and in which my parents lived for about 50 years.  My father was proud.  He was determined to support his family, and for some time worked at jobs which were beneath his skills.

Those times seem so foreign now. All of us are successful, loving, and intact.  My father and mother are healthy and loving grandparents and great-grandparents.  I wonder if my parents could have known then that it would all turn out as well as it has.  They should be proud. I know they are fortunate.

Holly Hill is north of Daytona Beach on the western banks of the Halifax River. The Greenland Motel was on Ridgewood Avenue, US Route 1, at that time the main coastal road from the top of Maine to Key West.

It was a true motel, a motor hotel.  There were ten or twelve cottages, arranged in an “L”, with a carport between each one.  The cottage closest to the road served as office and home for my aunt, uncle, and cousins.  A small front yard, with some Adirondack chairs, looked out on Route 1.  A green neon sign made humming noises in the hot humid nights.  Although I’m sure I didn’t know the word at the time, to me this was exotic.

This is from the Daytona Beach Morning Journal, from December 27, 1958, in the real estate section:

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On warm summer nights we would play in the big front yard under the neon sign. If you got close to the sign and listened carefully, it would make all sorts of snapping and humming noises and you could see the neon gas flow in the tubes. Cars would be whooshing by on Ridgewood Avenue but we hardly noticed. Many nights we would catch fireflies in glass jars with holes in the lids.

Each large Adirondack chair could hold one kid comfortably, but usually held three. The chairs were often upside-down. They made good forts that way.

In the summer, when we were out in the yard, Uncle George would allow each of us kids one Coke. It would come from a red-painted rounded-corner Coke machine sitting outside the front office. About ten glass bottles were aligned vertically, caps towards you, behind one long thin door that you would open. It was so cold inside the door, dripping with condensing water on the glass front. You would put in your money, and then you would have to pull sharply on the bottle to get it free. Then you would use the bottle opener on the front of the machine to pull off the cap. Uncle George would do something magical to the machine so that we would not have to use money. Then he would set it back for the guests to use.

About two blocks down Ridgewood was a Mr. Peanut shop. I don’t remember ever actually going into the shop, but every so often on summer evenings one of the adults would agree to take us down the sidewalk to see Mr. Peanut. “Wanna go see Mr. Peanut?” and we would all jump and squeal. We would promise to be careful on the sidewalk, with the heavy traffic nearby. Mr. Peanut was a 7-foot-tall peanut dressed in formal wear, sporting a monocle and a top hat, walking with a fancy cane. He walked up and down the sidewalk in front of the shop, waving at traffic. He was a giant.  He never talked to us, not that I can remember, but he addressed us, shook hands, sometimes gave us some warm peanuts in a paper bag, and waved goodbye when we left.

This is a daytime pic. Imagine this dude at night!

When arriving guests pulled up in front of the office we kids understood that for that time the office was off limits for play, and that we were to be a little bit better behaved than usual. Generally, we obeyed, and understood that this was a business as well as a home. But we always snuck a look at the incoming guests, just to see if there was anything interesting or if they had kids our age.

I specifically remember thinking to myself then how much better the Greenland Motel was than Los Angeles had been, and I remember thinking, at 8, that I was thankful to be there.

One of the lasting memories that I have from that time is of my Uncle George. He was different than other adult men I knew at that time. He did not have a 9-to-5 job – he ran the motel. I had no idea whether this was difficult, whether he did a good job, or whether he was successful. None of that mattered to 8-year-old me. What mattered was that he was a kind and funny man, who took time with kids. Most adult men I knew in that era, from a kid’s point of view, appeared to be serious. They worked, they did their duty, and they talked about us kids in the third person even when we were standing next to them. I felt that I was just a part of their duty. Not so Uncle George. He was more like a friend, a co-conspirator against anybody who didn’t get our jokes. He seemed to get his work done without making it serious, and made time for us kids as if it were the natural thing to do. Uncle George died recently. I regret that I did not take the time to thank him for those years, or to let him know the lasting good effect he had on me. Perhaps the real reason for this blog post is to thank him now.