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Old Aug 8th, 2017, 10:20 AM
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San Fran to Seattle

Hello friends,
I am flying in to San Francisco on June 30, 2018 (looks like PM), renting a car, and driving to Seattle where we will drop the car. I have to be in Seattle by the evening of July 6th for a cruise that departs on the 7th. I've never been to this part of the country before. I know this timeline isn't ideal for seeing everything, but I will be taking grad school classes and coaching right up until the time we leave. I am unable to extend the trip on the back end. I wanted to get some input on maximizing our efficiency and seeing the highlights.

I plan to spend July 1st in SF, so basically I have July 2nd, 3rd, 4th, 5th, and 6th (as long as I get to Seattle at some point during the day) to plan. I want to drive up HWY 1 and then 101 for most of it.

As currently constructed, I have looked at Ft Bragg/Crescent City/Portland (2 nights) as the three primary stops along the way. I wouldn't mind spending most of July 6th in Seattle, especially in the event that the Mariners are at home. I am open to suggestions to change my itinerary, which is why I'm asking for your expertise!

Cost is a factor to consider. I'm not super cheap, but would generally rely on hotels between $50-$150 per night when possible. I have Hyatt/IHG points I can use along the way as well.

Thanks in advance for any help you can provide!
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Old Aug 8th, 2017, 10:54 AM
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I am also open to dropping the car in Portland and taking the Amtrak to Seattle
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Old Aug 8th, 2017, 12:02 PM
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You will be driving most of the time, but you can see the Redwood forest in Northern California, Crater Lake, the Oregon coast,
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Old Aug 8th, 2017, 12:21 PM
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>> I know this timeline isn't ideal for seeing everything,
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Old Aug 8th, 2017, 12:41 PM
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Somehow I missed this entire paragraph >>As currently constructed, I have looked at Ft Bragg/Crescent City/Portland (2 nights) as the three primary stops along the way. I wouldn't mind spending most of July 6th in Seattle, especially in the event that the Mariners are at home. . . .
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Old Aug 8th, 2017, 12:45 PM
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Thanks for the feedback. I know I haven't left myself a lot of time but driving doesn't bother me. I wont get as much time to explore but driving through is appealing to me.

It looks like a one way rental is going to be around $650 for the week which is steep but I can swing it. You're right on the cost of hotels--I found a few places listed on the low end but I can make it work. Any specific recommendations for night of the 2nd or 4th as far as specific places to try and get to? Cities that would be possible targets to stay the night?
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Old Aug 8th, 2017, 12:50 PM
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Is there an alternative worthwhile trip if I fly into Seattle, rent a car, and work my way back to Seattle? Some sort of a loop?
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Old Aug 8th, 2017, 12:53 PM
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I don't see why you'd turn in the car and take the train. That will just take even MORE time out of your already crammed schedule.


To your new question, sure there are a few different loops from Seattle... north, east, or west!
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Old Aug 8th, 2017, 01:30 PM
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>>Is there an alternative worthwhile trip if I fly into Seattle, rent a car, and work my way back to Seattle? Some sort of a loop?
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Old Aug 8th, 2017, 01:56 PM
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Yes, I was going to suggest seeing SF, then flying up to Seattle to explore that area before your cruise.
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Old Aug 8th, 2017, 02:02 PM
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Loving this site already! Y'all are awesome.

Ok Seattle folks: say a July 1-6 loop starting and ending in SEA. Got some ideas on best use of time to see some of the Pacific NW? Cover some ground and see new places but at a less breakneck pace.
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Old Aug 8th, 2017, 02:47 PM
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Having done the Seattle - SF drive in both directions literally more times than I can remember, I'll throw in my few cents.

First, six days is ample time to drive via the coast. Using US 101 to the central Oregon coast requires roughly 12 hours wheels turning; call it 16 if you go via CA 1. From the central coast to Portland is roughly three hours, and from Portland to Seattle call it four counting some traffic slowdowns. So altogether you're looking at something in the neighborhood of 22-24 hours wheels turning.

Here's the route I'd recommend - https://goo.gl/maps/uNVgXRfj9VD2

You start with a drive through the redwoods, particularly the Avenue of the Giants, with an overnight somewhere in the Eureka area. You can stay in Victorian Ferndale, in Eureka itself, in Arcata, a college town just north of Eureka, or in the tiny waterfront village of Trinidad.

Continue the next day through more redwoods followed by the stunning southern Oregon coast. The first 60 or 70 miles after the state line is the most scenic part of the whole coast. Stay in Bandon, the nicest town on the south coast.

The next day, drive along OR 38 through a beautiful little canyon along the lower Umpqua River (look for elk just east of Reedsport at the reserve) and join I-5 near Cottage Grove. Rocket through the Willamette Valley and spend the night at McMenamins Edgefield, a remarkable hotel complex built from the remains of the Multnomah County Poor Farm. The complex has numerous bars, onsite brewery, distillery and winery, gardens, movie theater, spa... great fun. https://www.mcmenamins.com/edgefield

The next day (this is now day 4) head south and up to Timberline Lodge on the side of Mount Hood, then drive down through vineyards and orchards in the Hood River Valley to Hood River. Finish the day by driving along the Historic Columbia Gorge Highway back to Portland. You can stay at the Edgefield again, or at one of the hotels near the airport, or downtown.

The final day, either drop the car in Portland and take the train to Seattle, or else drive (around 3 1/2 hours) and drop the car at the Seattle airport or in downtown Seattle. The train ride is inexpensive and quite pleasant, even scenic in bits, and you'd probably save money on the car rental. On the other hand, taking the train to Seattle pretty much condemns you to staying in a hotel downtown, and in cruise season Seattle hotel prices will make your eyes water - London or New York prices. If you kept the car you could stay someplace out of the downtown area and save a lot of money. I'd just do the numbers before deciding.

I'm showing skipping the CA 1 coast, mainly out of the interests of time, but also because between the Oregon coast and the scenery you'll experience in SE Alaska on your cruise, you'll have LOTS of beautiful coastal scenery; the loop through the Mt. Hood/Hood River/Gorge area is going to offer a lot more variety in this trip.

Now if you choose to go with the loop idea, then you'd have to sacrifice the redwoods (which I think would be a shame) however you could substitute a loop around the Olympic Peninsula which is also worth its weight in gold, followed by a visit to Mt. Rainier (which will still have snow on the ground at elevation) something like this: https://goo.gl/maps/LJQs9HMNba32 . You'd see alpine scenery at Hurricane Ridge, maybe the lavender fields in bloom around Sequim ("skwim") and the incredible Hoh Valley rain forest. Visit one or more of the amazing beaches along the Olympic National Park coastal strip, then head south and east across to Mt. Rainier. See the mountain from Paradise, drive the incomparable Stevens Canyon Road to the Grove of the Patriarchs (giant trees) then back to town.

This is also a terrific trip. The car rental will cost less as it's a round-trip itinerary (no massive one-way surcharges) and there's less driving.

Whatever route you choose, booking accommodation early is essential as it's quite limited around the national parks and fills up early. This goes for both itineraries, especially along the Oregon coast.
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Old Aug 8th, 2017, 04:17 PM
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Gardyloo: >>First, six days is ample time to drive via the coast.have 6 days. They want to spend the 30th and 1st in SF and hopefully see a Mariners game. Even without the game they have just 4.5 days.
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Old Aug 9th, 2017, 04:27 AM
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BUT they don't have 6 days. They want to spend the 30th and 1st in SF and hopefully see a Mariners game. Even without the game they have just 4.5 days.

Right. Here are the overnight locations per my plan -

30-Jun SF
1-Jul SF
2-Jul Eureka area
3-Jul Bandon
4-Jul Troutdale
5-Jul Portland
6-Jul Seattle
7-Jul Cruise

I was also going to mention that $50 - $150 per night is low for the cities, and also want to mention that the baseball schedule for 2018 won't be released for some time. The OP might have a better shot of seeing baseball in the SF Bay Area, as the SF Giants and the Oakland As tend to coordinate their schedules so that one team is at home while the other's on the road.
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Old Aug 9th, 2017, 04:59 AM
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I think that lodging budget is way low unless they can camp out, rent a yurt, perhaps somewhere along the line? Even $150 is going to be near impossible in the cities like SF, Portland, or Seattle.
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Old Aug 11th, 2017, 05:30 AM
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So I have the itinerary almost complete! Would love some help planning some necessary stops along the way

June 30: fly from Greensboro to Seattle; arrive 2:45 PM; drive to Corvallis and stay along the river (used IHG points)

July 1: drive to Crater Lake for the day; we are staying in Klamath that night in a cheap place 35 min out

July 2: drive down through and explore Avenue of the Giants; stay in Humboldt County

July 3: early morning departure for Bandon where we have a hotel booked on the coast at the Windermere

July 4: depart for Troutdale and spend the night at the Edgefield Hotel

July 5: depart for Portland and stay in the Hyatt House downtown (used Hyatt points)

July 6: stay in Portland most of the day and spend the night in Seattle

July 7: depart for cruise

July 14: AM arrival back to Seattle, stay the night there

July 15: back to NC
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Old Aug 11th, 2017, 07:02 AM
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Seatac to Corvallis after flying across the country? Man, that's one really long day, and a dead boring one at that.

Can you clarify where you're staying after Crater Lake? Fort Klamath, Klamath Agency or Klamath Falls OR, or (I certainly hope not) Klamath CA?

Have you looked into flying into Portland and out of Seattle, renting the car in Portland and taking the train to Seattle? This would save a lot of (boring) road miles and maybe even some money.

I'm not in love with this itinerary but it's your trip.
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Old Aug 11th, 2017, 08:42 AM
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>>July 1: drive to Crater Lake for the day; we are staying in Klamath that night in a cheap place 35 min out>I'm not in love with this itinerary . . .
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Old Aug 11th, 2017, 08:48 AM
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My family lives in Corvallis, I live in Seattle. We drive it often.

Lately it's a 7 hour drive at best. We used to be able to make it in 5-6 hours typically, but more recently there's always been something that slowed down the drive.

Doing that after a cross-country flights makes zero sense to me!!

The to Crater Lake - another 3+ hour drive. And Crater Lake to Klamath is 4+ hours more.

So basically you plan to drive at least 14 hours in the first 2 days of your itinerary?
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Old Aug 11th, 2017, 09:30 AM
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This is why I booked everything as pay later. Easily cancelled as needed. As quickly as things were filling up I wanted to at least get some reservations taken care of.

Klamath Falls, OR is the July 1st spot. Help me understand the rim drive part and get a better option if needed.

When I looked earlier at a map to Corvallis from Seattle it did not give it that long of a drive time, but now that I'm looking at it traffic adjusted having gotten your feedback that isn't a great choice.

Obviously I need to tweak the front part of the trip. I did front load the driving part of the trip to the front in order to take our time a little more in Bandon and Troutdale. I'm going to check on the flight out of Portland and will report back.
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