Where can we get to from Seattle (6-7 days)--help!
I've been too busy at work to properly plan our upcoming spring/Easter break trip. Traveling: me, the husband, the 5 year old boy and the 14 year old girl. I was originally considering Eastern WA with the Stone Rose fossil dig as the highlight. Found out today that they don't open for digging until May!
So....any thoughts on where we could get with 6-7 days total trip time? We've done California Gold Country, the Redwoods, the Bay Area, Oregon Coast, Oregon Journey Through Time, and Richmond BC before. Not averse to seeing one of those again, but hoping for something new.
We'd be able to set out by 10am on Easter Sunday, April 1st, and in the past, we've gotten as far as Northern CA in one day's driving, with stops for picnic lunch and restaurant dinner. The kids are seasoned travelers.
I really need a trip out of town, and am just feeling unimaginative about this one. Any help appreciated!!
Two Possibilities to Start
Since you're just looking for ideas at this point I won't go into a lot of detail, but rather just throw out a few ideas. I've also had a look at some of your previous trip planning to get an idea of what might appeal to you and yours this time.
My first suggestion would be if you have your passports in order to head northeast into the Canadian Rockies. There'd be lots of great scenery, hiking, and national parks; the odd movie location or two (Roxanne with Steve Martin and Daryl Hannah was filmed in Nelson BC, and Vancouver is used for location shots in any number of TV shows and movies, Steveston BC is Storybrooke in Once Upon a Time, etc.); and even significant fossil sites (Jericho Beach in Vancouver and Muir Creek Beach in Sooke for starters). You could even take a couple of ferries with Vancouver Island in the middle to make a very nice loop back to the Seattle area.
But if you don't have your passports already, you'll have to stick to the states in which case I think your best bet is to aim for northern Idaho and western Montana with the beautiful city of Coeur d'Alene and then Glacier National Park as your bases. Again this would give you great outdoors, scenery, more than a few cowboy and high plains movie locations, and you could loop back through southern Idaho, the Snake River Valley and the Hagerman Fossil Beds.
Anyway, those are the first two 'destinations' that leapt to my mind. I hope they spark something in you or if not let us know why not and we'll see what we can do to improve upon them.
AZBuck