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Always Packed for Adventure!

It's the destination and the journey.

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Goodbye Portland

Life is always busy, but the last few weeks have been overwhelming.

Starting in June, we had over two months of house guests: my step-kids visited from Sweden for six weeks, and on the morning that they left, my mother-in-law arrived from England. She stayed for three weeks and a few days after she left, we had friends visit from California with their adorable pug, Jewels. All of this was happening and we had to pack up our apartment for our move back to California, which happened just a few days after our friends left.

The summer was fun, exciting, but also mega-stressful, which is why I had to take a break from blogging. Not only have I not been writing, but I've also not been reading very much either. I'm back with both and feeling like life is finally returning to its normal state of affairs.

Our year of living in Portland was a wild ride. When we moved to Portland, it wasn't a temporary situation. We didn't know that we would have the opportunity to return to California, although we kept our home in Big Bear Lake. Our move to Portland was somewhat sudden and we had to pick an apartment sight-unseen. After reading tons of Yelp reviews, we went with a modern apartment tower in the Cultural District. Our apartment was located right across the street from the Portland Art Museum and the Oregon Historical Society. The apartment entrance was right on the South Park Blocks and we were a block away from the Arlene Schnitzer Concert Hall. Quickly, we found our local bar to be Higgins, which makes the best Irish Coffees.

Portland living was a difficult transition. Within a week of moving in, ground broke on a major hotel project right across the street. Our view became a construction pit and a large crane. The noise was a nuisance at first; I even called the police department twice, but soon it just became part of the ambiance. Portland is undergoing many changes right now and a major housing crisis is fueling construction projects all over the city. If you don't have a crane near you, you don't live in Portland!

Speaking of noise and the housing crisis, the park near our apartment is where many homeless people camped. Even though we lived on the eighteenth floor, we could often hear yelling and fights. Many of the people openly used drugs and left needles in the park, which was also near a day care center. It was eye-opening and frightening. Even though we lived in a fabulous, over-priced apartment, our direct neighborhood was quite dangerous. I felt sad and depressed every time I walked out of our apartment. It was a mix of feeling grateful for all that I have and feeling helpless towards all of the misfortune around me. It was overwhelming. I felt both scared and uncertain towards many of the people camping in our neighborhood, which in turn made me feel guilty for those feelings. I think the rampant drug problem was at the heart of my nervousness. More than once, I saw people injecting and twice I saw toddlers being removed by the police from parents who had passed out. I was also chased down our block by a woman babbling nonsense in a threatening manner. 

Our neighborhood was the directly affected by the Portland protests. The police with their riot gear used our street as a staging area. All of the vandalism and fires were in our area. Our building even went on lock down more than once. I firmly support the right to protest and express your opinion, but I also support the police in keeping our community safe. It was scary to be living in the middle of all of this. 

I thought living in the cultural district would be an amazing opportunity to see live events, perhaps even get a season theater subscription. I was shocked to discover how expensive it is to go to live events in Portland. It was easily double the price of similar events in Los Angeles. Even though we lived in such close proximity to the theaters, we didn't see much. We did join the Oregon Zoo and The Portland Art Museum. I also loved the local Regal movie theater, which was just a few blocks from our apartment and ran mostly artsy/foreign films. Of course, I can't discount Powell's Books, where I went to a few signings to meet some of my favorite authors. We also had the Wordstock Literary Festival take place in the blocks around our apartment. This was an amazing literary festival and tickets were dirt cheap. If you're a book lover, it's worth the trip to Portland. 

Fall/Winter/Early Spring were rainy and bleak, but summer was indeed, as promised, glorious. I will miss summer in Portland and going to places like The Oaks Park, a smallish family run theme park with an awesome roller rink. I will miss my movie theater and I will miss grocery shopping at Fred Meyer. There are a few restaurants that I will miss, including the best six- dollar burrito cart and Ruby Jewel ice cream. I will miss our city views and our crane. Mostly though, I'll miss the friends that we made. Anywhere you live or visit, it's always about the people you meet. Always.

Here are some pictures of our apartment from our final morning.

 

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We sold most of our furniture, but still had enough stuff to completely fill a trailer and the bed of our truck.

The biggest moving stress was the cats. Like many cats, ours do not travel well. Last year, we drove them from Big Bear Lake to Portland without stopping. This time, we had the trailer and we were getting a late start because a moving company was packing our trailer for us. With these slow-downs factored in, we decided it would be prudent to break our trip in half.

Finding a hotel that accepts cats is not easy. I found a few hotels that would allow one cat per room, but since we only needed one room, we kept looking. La Quinta Inn turned out to be a good fit. Cat ladies of the world take note - La Quinta Inn allows cats and doesn't list a limit. I don't think I'd rush to stay at a La Quinta Inn if we didn't have the cats, but for one night, the accommodations perfectly suited our needs. Plus, with the cat restrictions, we couldn't afford to be picky.

We still had these amazing pink pills that a vet in Big Bear had given us the previous year. Just a quarter of a tiny pill and the cats were knocked out for about ten hours. The meowing was minimal and they didn't seem too stressed. Giving them the pills was a battle. They both were very sneaky about acting like they had swallowed the pill and then spitting it out when they didn't think I was looking. However, the telling sign that the drug had hit their system is that their eyes look funny and they wouldn't be able to pass a field sobriety test. 

Here are the cats pre-drugs, grumpy that their furniture has been sold. A comfy couch used to be in this spot.

And here is Slinky, five minutes after being drugged.

The drive was over a thousand miles and took nineteen hours. We saw beautiful countryside, Mount Shasta, the Rogue River, a Swedish town in CA, part of Route 66, Desert...

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And one very disgusting gas station toilet with odd holes in the walls and instructions to step on floor buttons that were nonexistent.

Here's the record of our drive.

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When we arrived home in Big Bear Lake, we were greeted by a surprise left at our door from our friends Valerie and Bryan. It was so unexpected and wonderful. Thank you Val and Bryan for the warm welcome home!

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tags: Living in Portland, Downtown Portland Oregon, Moving with Cats, Traveling with Cats, Tips for Moving with Cats, Staying in a Hotel with Cats, La Quinta Inn for Pets, Best Hotel Chains for Pet La Quinta Inn, Moving to Big Bear Lake, Higgins Restaurant Portland, South Park Blocks Portland, Portland Protests 2016, Portland Protests 2017, The Oaks Park Portland, Fred Meyer Best Grocery Store, Construction in Downtown Portland, Cultural District Downtown Portland, Summer in Portland, Homelessness in Portland, Drug Addiction in Portland, Arlene Schnitzer Concert Hall, Portland Art Museum, Oregon Zoo, Ruby Jewel Ice Cream, Portland Housing Crisis, Route 66, Rouge River, Kingsburg California, Swedish Town in California, Worst Gas Station Bathroom Photo
categories: Visit, Life, Sleep
Monday 09.04.17
Posted by Karen Lea Germain
 

John Cleese at the Arlene Schnitzer Concert Hall

Dan and I live in the cultural district of downtown Portland, which means we are just feet away from museums and theaters. If you had asked me prior to our move, I would have said that this was my dream environment. Now, I'm not so sure, but that's another post!

We are so close to the action, that our apartment building actually rents out parking spots for people coming to shows. 

We've lived here since the end of August 2016, and even though I love attending live theater and did so on a regular basis in Los Angeles, we waited until March to attend our first show in Portland.

Why?

Primarily, it's because the ticket prices are so darn high. But how? Portland has a reputation for being so cheap, especially compared to Los Angeles. This is a myth people! Sure, housing is less expensive in Portland, and there is no sales tax (which rocks), but for live theater, in general, the prices seem to be about double what we would pay for similar seats/show in Los Angeles.

When we moved to Portland, I had big dreams of all of the shows that I would attend living in the cultural district. I've given it a lot of thought and I think it has to do with supply and demand. No big shock, that's a key concept for a lot of things. Portland is not a big city like Los Angeles, although it does gets big name shows and concert tours, the venues are smaller. More people are competing for less seats, which drives up the prices. I think.

We saw that John Cleese was coming and decided to make the splurge. John Cleese is a legend and he's getting up there in age, so it seemed like a "now or never" kind of thing. We went with mid-range tickets (the back of mid-orchestra to the side) and they were eighty dollars each. Gulp. Let me repeat, these were not the most expensive tickets. 

Here was our view. Not bad. 

The Arlene Schnitzer Concert Hall was built in the 1920's and the interior is grand, with chandeliers and reliefs. 

Let's back it up for a minute. Prior to entering the Arlene Schnitzer Concert Hall, the tone for the evening was set with a little pre-theater street performance. We found a unicycling knight playing the bagpipes, wheeling around right outside of the theater. Dan took a video. 

Street entertainment as we arrived to see John Cleese at The Arlene Schnitzer Concert Hall in downtown Portland on March 15, 2017 Please visit www.alwayspackedforadventure.com for a full review of John Cleese's show in Portland.

So when you have a unicycling-bagpiping-knight as your opener, the bar has been set high. Your turn Mr. Cleese!

Cleese started off strong, providing many laughs as he did a slide-show about his family and growing up in the seaside tourist town of "Weston Super Mare." Dan and I found this hilarious, because Cleese kept mentioning how Weston Super Mare is completely dead as a tourist town and this was our experience when we took the kids a few summers ago. It was summer and nothing was going on; the fun fair and ice cream shops were shuttered. Supposedly, we arrived a week too early for the summer rush, but it was already mid- July. 

Cleese continued giving us stories about how he got his start in comedy writing and show business. I found this aspect of his life to be inspiring, as he clearly found joy from writing and simply from making his friends laugh, which miraculous translated into a paid job making the public laugh. David Frost played a huge part in giving Cleese his big break. I enjoyed hearing about the unexpected turns that his career headed, and my main take-away is that Cleese was someone who was open to whatever opportunities came his way. He took bold chances and didn't let opportunity pass him by.

Unfortunately, the show took a huge nose-dive in the second half, when Cleese started playing clips. A few short clips would have been fine, but I estimate that about a third of his show was clips and many of them, clips that I'm positive everyone in the audience had already seen. I wish that he had played the clips as the audience was entering the venue, as a way to get everyone pumped up for his stories, rather than using them as filler. He's had a magnificent career, surely there were more stories to share?

The worst part was the question and answer segment. A few days prior to the show, an email went out to ticket holders, saying to arrive early if you had a question for Cleese, questions would be collected by ushers prior to the show. He answered three questions during Q & A, but it was very clear that they had not come from the audience. They were predetermined with canned responses, one even had a clip that he showed. Why the charade? He could have skipped the pretense of an actual Q &A, and just said that these were some of his favorite questions that he has been asked over the years. We were not the only grumpy audience members leaving the theater. 

The show was supposed to run for ninety minutes without an intermission. It started five minutes late and ended ten minutes early =  fifteen minutes shaved off. So approximately seventy-five minutes of show, a third of which were video clips, and fifteen minutes was a pretend Q&A = not worthy the eighty dollar price tag.

So disappointed in John Cleese.

 

 

tags: John Cleese, Portland Cultural District, Arlene Schnitzer Concert Hall, John Cleese at the Arlene Schnitzer Concert Hall, John Cleese 2017, John Cleese Question and Answer at Show, John Cleese Fake Q & A, John Cleese and Cats, Theater Ticket Prices in Oregon, Unicycle Bagpiper Portland, Unicycle Bagpiper Knight John Cleese, John Cleese Preshow Entertainment, Is John Cleese Worth the Ticket Price, John Cleese Live, John Cleese Show Clips, John Cleese Live Show Running Time, Pictures Arlene Schnitzer Concert Hall, John Cleese and David Frost, Weston Super Mare, Weston Super Mare John Cleese
categories: Watch, Visit
Thursday 03.30.17
Posted by Karen Lea Germain
 

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