NorCal to Pacific Northwest Questions
This is my first post and I apologize for not having found this information which no doubt exists already on these boards, but I figured I would ask with the hopes of some quick answers.
I have two weeks (Aug15-19) and had originally planned to fly into SFO and out of SEA trying to see as much "nature" as possible (hard to do with that much driving and such little time, I know).
The rough ideas were:
Mendicino (or alternatively Lassen),
the Redwood forest,
Crater Lake,
the columbia River Gorge,
Mt. St. Helens (or Mt. Ranier),
and the Olympic rain forest.
I have several questions based on this rough outline.
1. Have the California wildfires affected this possible route? If they have, is it better to fly into Portland, drive south to the redwoods and loops back up, or perhaps eliminate the redwoods altogether?
2. Considering we would like to do some hiking/tenting, is this at all reasonable to actually SEE anything, or is the itinerary set up such that I will basically be able to drive from place to place and nothing else? If it is too aggressive, what would anyone recommend cutting out?
3. Are there any suggestions for "must see" either within this itinerary, or that might be missing from this itinerary? In other words, can anyone be specific with suggestions on improving my limited time?
Thank you in advance for any assistance you can provide. I truly appreciate it.
~William
Fires could affect you around Crescent City
Here is a very good resource for checking on the location of the major wildfires in the USA. It's also very handy for road trippers seeking boondocking locations because it shows the Federal land areas. (The Red dots are active wildfires).
The Soda Complex is the closest one to your route -- mostly it will be a matter of smoke in your area.
Mark
Cool resource for fire info!
I'll have to bookmark that! Thanks.
Quote:
The rough ideas were:
Mendicino (or alternatively Lassen),
the Redwood forest,
Crater Lake,
the columbia River Gorge,
Mt. St. Helens (or Mt. Ranier),
and the Olympic rain forest.
I see no reason why you can't see all of this, including both Mt. St. Helens and Mt. Rainier, in two weeks. This includes plenty of time for some day-hiking. It would be tight to pull this off if you plan to do overnight hikes though.
Quote:
1. Have the California wildfires affected this possible route? If they have, is it better to fly into Portland, drive south to the redwoods and loops back up, or perhaps eliminate the redwoods altogether?
I think this would make a nice trip even without considering the fires. You could drive down the coast, see the Redwoods, and then go to Lassen, Crater Lake, and other interior places of interest on your way back north. Depending on time, you could either scoot back up I-5 or take a swing through parts of Eastern OR on your way to the Columbia River Gorge area. That's probably what I'd do.
Quote:
3. Are there any suggestions for "must see" either within this itinerary, or that might be missing from this itinerary? In other words, can anyone be specific with suggestions on improving my limited time?
You might consider flying into/out of Portland. This way you can do a nice figure-8 taking in all the places you want to visit. Airfare is often cheaper when you purchase roundtrip airfare instead of individual segments. This would also eliminate the need for you to pay a drop-off fee on the vehicle rental.
From Portland, I'd head out to the Oregon Coast, drive south along the coast to the Redwoods, go east to Lassen, north to Crater Lake, north through E. OR to Columbia River Gorge, then to the Washington coast and the Olympic Peninsula, then Mt. Rainier, Mt. St. Helens, and back to Portland.
If you do this route, just some of the specific places I'd spend time at are might be as follows:
Astoria OR, Fort Clatsop, Depoe Bay OR, Newport OR, Sea Lion Caves, Oregon Dunes NRA, Bandon OR, Gold Beach OR, the various Redwood forests, Eureke CA (because I'm a sucker for the fantastic architecture in that town), Lassen, Lava Beds NM, Crater Lake, the high desert country of Bend/Warm Springs, Mt. Hood, Columbia River Gorge area (including Hood River, Snoqualmie Falls, Beacon Rock, Maryhill, etc.), then up to Mt. St. Helens (visiting the best side at Windy Ridge), Mt. Rainier (visiting both Paradise and Sunrise areas), then across to the Olympic Peninsula, and back down to Portland.
It's about 2000 miles and can easily be done in 2 weeks. And you could cut a few miles if you want. One place you might do that is in The Gorge. You don't need to double-back as far east before crossing over to Washington, for example.