City

wanderlust Wednesday: still in DC and thankful for...

wanderingDCNovember2013 Things I am thankful for:

my sisters, for being amazing, each in her own weird way my parents, for having worked hard their whole lives so that I could have a great education and live my best life my grandparents, for raising my parents and still answering all my phone calls, for still being alive my friends, for being supportive no matter where I am or what I am working on or how often I answer my phone my city, for being a crazy, beautiful place where magic happens and people learn how to get along all cities, for letting people live in close quarters and learn from our different, yet similar realities leaves, for reminding us that things change the people I have met, for taking time to share their story with me skilled workers, for doing the things that allow people to live and wear clothes and turn on light bulbs writers, for still doing it even though it is hard and doesn't really pay bloggers, for being so disciplined artists, for doing it when everyone else is too scared, busy, or lazy musicians, for being artists designers, for being a little bit of everything entrepreneurs, for trying even though it is painful computer engineers, for creating things out of 0s and 1s and spending all day and night on computers activists, for making things happen even when everyone tells them to go away and be quiet

Seattle: Part 2 --In the City

The Seattle Eye If you've ever been to Seattle in October, you know how easy it is to fall in love. When the sky is clear and the leaves are fifteen different colors and you are biking through the endless parks in awe with a new friend, a coffee waiting at every turn and enough restaurants, shops and attractions to keep you busy for days.

StephanieatPublicMarketYou shop at Public Market, walk through the urban forests, grab a drink in Ballard with strangers, take the ferry across the Puget Sound, eat fresh oysters off the beach...you wonder why you don't already live in this super livable land.

Trees in Capitol Hill

And the then the fog rolls in and you hear the sun won't come back until March. The affair ends quickly and you pack your bags, going back to wherever you came from, with a light heart and a warmed soul.

On the Puget Sound

After a year in Bilbao, Spain, I know how slight rain for long periods of time affects me, and I'm not quite ready to sign up for long periods sans sunlight. But I'll visit Seattle any day, rain or shine.

Sybil on Ferry across Puget Sound

Take a trip on the water...

Ferry Tripping in Seattle Wool Cap
Ferry Tripping in the Seattle Wool Cap (get your own here)

Mailboxes

Oyster Shells

Inspecting Oysters

Warm up a little at the Volunteer Park Conservatory...

Volunteer Park Conservatory

Bike through the Sculpture Park...

Sculpture Park

Eat... IMG_3170 and enjoy the ride. newFerriswheel

Stay: Ace Hotel 2423 First Avenue Seattle, WA 98121--206.448.4721 Hotel Five 2200 Fifth Avenue Seattle, WA 98121--206.441.9785

Shop: Totokaleo 1523 10th Avenue Seattle, WA 98122--206.623.3582 Mon — Thur 11-6, Fri — Sat 11-7, Sun 11-5 Cairo 507 E Mercer Street Seattle, WA 98102 Mon — Sun 12-7 Ebbets Field Flannels (they handcrafted our Seattle Wool Cap!) 119 South Jackson Street Seattle, WA 98104--Mon — F 9-5, Sat 10-5pm Nube Green 921 E Pine Street Seattle, WA 98122--206.402.4515 Mon — Sat 11-7, Sun 11-5 The Elliott Bay Book Company1521 Tenth Avenue Seattle, WA 98122--206.624.6600 Mon — Thur 10-10, Friday — Sat 10-11, Sun 10-9

See: Frye Art Museum 704 Terry Ave Seattle, WA 98104--206.622.9250 Ballard Locks 3015 NW 54th Street Seattle, WA 98107 Olympic Sculpture Park 2901 Western Avenue Seattle, WA 98121--206.654.3100 Volunteer Park Conservatory 1400 E Galer Street Seattle, WA 98112--206.684.4743

Eat/Drink: Victrola Coffee 310 E. Pike Street Seattle, WA 98122--866.228.0206 The Walrus and The Carpenter 4743 Ballard Ave NW Seattle, WA 98107--206.395.9227 Ocho 2325 NW Market Street Seattle, WA 98107--206.784.0699