MOHAI – Museum of History and Industry is a museum about the history of Seattle
Many, many exhibits such as this
Behind the museum
MOPOP the Museum of Pop Culture was founded by Microsoft’s Paul Allen. It contains an eclectic assortment of displays, Science Fiction movies, Horror movies, and Seattle Music.
Jimi Hendrix
Science Fiction and Horror
Mork’s Outfit
The Terminator
Alien/s
Instead of watching television at night, I went to a musical at a theater built in 1925. It’s a beautiful old theater which was only 2 blocks from my hotel. It was a famous old musical “Holiday Inn”. Not my thing but why not?
Today I saw many interesting and beautiful things, so there are many photos. As you will see, when I reduce the size of a photo, it’s quality is diminished, so I left almost all of them large.
The Space Needle
CHUHULY Garden and Glass
The two sculptures below are huge
The following Sealife sculptures are a good three feet tall
The glass sculptures below fill a room
These boats are at least 15 feet long
I think I might have this one printed and framed
Seattle Art Museum
There must have been well over 100 Wyeth paintings.
The Aquarium
These two videos are worth watching but take a little time to load
Woke up about 4 am in North Dakota freezing. Went back to sleep and woke again at 6:30 still freezing. I checked and it was -16 degrees outside. Turns out, during the night, there was an electrical problem and there wasn’t any heat in my train car. They stopped between 4 am and 5 am and switched out a car. It warmed up around noon.
North Dakota east of Minot. You see this everywhere in western North Dakota, an oil pump and storage tanks.
You also see a lot of this, new housing that is empty from the oil boom/bust.
It was 5:30 am when I woke up On Saturday, the day after I played in the Senior’s Event. There wasn’t any reason to hang around, so I headed northeast from Vegas on Interstate 15 towards Utah and Zion and Bryce National Parks. I had a campsite reserved at Panguitch Lake campground in Dixie National Forest for tonight (Saturday) and Sunday. Panguitch Lake campground is a little north and between Zion and Bryce. Panguitch Lake is at a higher elevation than Zion and Bryce, so would be cooler and more comfortable. My plan was to get to Panguitch Lake later in the afternoon, set up camp, relax, explore Zion on Sunday, and Bryce on Monday. Because I left Vegas so early, I got to Zion pretty early in the day. The road leading into Zion was just packed. I was a little concerned that I might not get into the park. After a while, I did get in it, and Zion is just beautiful, but I decided not to fight the crowd. I will visit Zion in the future in the off-season.
I drove east through Zion, exited the park, and drove a few miles on highway 9 to Mount Carmel Junction, Utah, where I headed north on highway 89. About an hour north is Panguitch. A few miles before Panguitch is highway 12 east, which takes you into Bryce National Park. On this drive, I could see smoke coming from the hills west of Panguitch Lake. This turned out to be the beginning of the “Brian Head” fire which became pretty big, moved east, and one week later, burned the Panguitch Lake area. Brian Head is a ski area popular with skiers who live in Vegas. Anyway, I took highway 12 east through Bryce. Bryce is another beautiful National Park. I stopped at three scenic overlooks, walked to the edge and snapped photos.
It was 3:30 pm. Although I saw just a fraction of Zion and Bryce, it was in the mid-90s, the parks were crowded, and I plan to return to these parks, so decided to forget about camping at Panguitch Lake. I headed towards home. Highway 12 heads east out of Bryce, to the town of Tropic, then the town of Escalante, then north to the town of Torrey. This drive is incredibly beautiful. Months later, when looking at one of those internet, Best Drive in Every State lists, I saw that it is someones opinion that this drive is the most beautiful drive in Utah. In Torrey, I turned due east on highway 24 which cuts straight across Capital Reef National Park, another gorgeous drive. About halfway through the park is Fruita which is like an oasis. There is a little campground there that I will visit with a small trailer someday in the future.
At this point, the only plan I had was to head towards Milwaukee, and get a motel when I got too tired to drive. I continued on 24 north towards Interstate 70 which would take me east across Utah and Colorado, and back to Sterling, Colorado. After driving east on 70 into Colorado, it had been a long day, so I started looking for a place to sleep. It was midnight when I exited 70 at the Glenwood Springs rest area. This is a large, popular, very nice rest area. It felt safe, so I shut my eyes. When I opened my eyes again, it was 5 am, so I started driving east and didn’t stop except for gas, coffee, and snacks until I was back home in Glendale, Wisconsin, a suburb north of Milwaukee. I just checked on Google maps, and Glenwood Springs to Glendale is supposed to be 17 and a half hours. I don’t remember what time I got home. My trip odometer showed that from Las Vegas to Glendale, WI was 1880 miles. Google confirms this. Driving 1880 miles with 5 hours of sleep wasn’t a smart thing to do, but I just didn’t want to stop, get a motel, and get up to face another day of driving.
An amazing thing about this trip is that it covered 9 days, 4500 miles, I think 8 national parks, and I never saw one drop of rain, not even on my windshield.
The Senior’s Event is a 3-day poker tournament. The entry fee is $1000. I think the minimum age is 50. Two years ago, I played in the event and lasted the entire first day, which I think was about 13 hours. This year, not so much. After 5 hours of the first day, I was eliminated. Oh well, so I just took it easy and went to bed early.
It’s Thursday, and I’ve spent two great days camped at the South Rim of The Grand Canyon. The drive to Las Vegas was through desert, and it was hot. By the time I reached Vegas, it was around 105. I headed south from Grand Canyon Village on highway 64. At the town of Williams, Arizona, I got on Interstate 40, drove west until I reached Kingman, got on highway 93, and went northwest until I reached Hoover Dam. It’s been 30 years since I’ve seen Hoover Dam, so I stopped and walked onto the “new” bridge, which is below the dam, and took a few pictures.
I had time to spare, so I took a look at Boulder City, the town that was created to house the workers who built the dam. There is a big, old, white hotel in the middle of town which has a small museum on the second floor. The museum is about the town and the construction of the dam. It costs $2 to go through the museum. It was late afternoon when I got to the Rio in Vegas, where I stayed for the next two nights. The Senior’s Event would start the next morning (Friday), so I had dinner, had a couple glasses of wine at a bar while playing video poker, and went to bed early.
Tonight and tomorrow nights, I will be camping at the South Rim of the Grand Canyon. It’s roughly a six-hour drive from Moab to the South Rim. Headed south on highway 191 until I reached Bluff, Utah where I picked up highway 163 which goes southwest towards Arizona. Just before reaching Arizona is Monument Pass.
Highway 163 continues southeast into Arizona until you get to the town of Kayenta where you continue southeast on highway 160. I followed 160 until just past Tuba City and turned south on 89. After a short distance, highway 64 west took me to the southeast entrance of Grand Canyon National Park. My first stop was Desert View Watchtower.
It’s not possible to overstate how spectacular the Grand Canyon is, so I won’t try. I had a site at Mather Campground reserved for the next two nights.
The South Rim is at an elevation of 7000 feet. It was around 85 both days I was there but one night, it dipped below 30 degrees. I could post hundreds of photos of the Grand Canyon but will only post two, one from mid-day and one from sunset.