spike
New Member
Long beautiful drive up to Eureka then to Portland then down to Mt Shasta and on home.
I really liked Portland and Oregon in general. The city is beautiful, the people are super friendly, public transportation was convenient as hell, good food, found some fun pubs. Mt Hood is only an hour away and has year-round snowboarding. I could definitely live there. I'd have to see what the whether is like other times of year. It was 80's-90's while we were there.
I got a sweet Shilo hotel room with a bedroom, living room, mini-kitchen, 3 TVs (one in the bathroom!), 24 hour pool/hot tub/sauna/steam room, and free hot breakfast in the restaurant for $65/night through Hotwire. (Hotwire hasn't let me down once yet).
A couple things I found interesting...
You're not allowed to pump your own gas in Oregon. First time I stopped to fill up I got out and walked up to the pump and some guy runs out asking if he can help me. I say "no, I was just going to get some gas" and he tells me that he has to do it for me. While I'm checking to see if I pulled up at Full Serve or something he looks at my license plate and says "It's all Full Serve in Oregon".
He's real nice and we chat while the gas pumps and he cleans my windshield. So I'm not sure if I'm supposed to tip so i give him a couple bucks and he accepts it awkwardly. I don't think I like this law.
Another thing is no sales tax. It didn't even look like I paid tax on beer from my receipt but it may be part of the price. Very nice for visitors.
They are also one of the states with the 5 cent deposit on cans and bottles as a method to encourage recycling. I like this. Throwing a can or bottle in the trash is like throwing away a nickel. Reminds me of how they used to have carts in the grocery stores to return those 16oz soda bottles.
I really liked Portland and Oregon in general. The city is beautiful, the people are super friendly, public transportation was convenient as hell, good food, found some fun pubs. Mt Hood is only an hour away and has year-round snowboarding. I could definitely live there. I'd have to see what the whether is like other times of year. It was 80's-90's while we were there.
I got a sweet Shilo hotel room with a bedroom, living room, mini-kitchen, 3 TVs (one in the bathroom!), 24 hour pool/hot tub/sauna/steam room, and free hot breakfast in the restaurant for $65/night through Hotwire. (Hotwire hasn't let me down once yet).
A couple things I found interesting...
You're not allowed to pump your own gas in Oregon. First time I stopped to fill up I got out and walked up to the pump and some guy runs out asking if he can help me. I say "no, I was just going to get some gas" and he tells me that he has to do it for me. While I'm checking to see if I pulled up at Full Serve or something he looks at my license plate and says "It's all Full Serve in Oregon".
He's real nice and we chat while the gas pumps and he cleans my windshield. So I'm not sure if I'm supposed to tip so i give him a couple bucks and he accepts it awkwardly. I don't think I like this law.
Another thing is no sales tax. It didn't even look like I paid tax on beer from my receipt but it may be part of the price. Very nice for visitors.
They are also one of the states with the 5 cent deposit on cans and bottles as a method to encourage recycling. I like this. Throwing a can or bottle in the trash is like throwing away a nickel. Reminds me of how they used to have carts in the grocery stores to return those 16oz soda bottles.