Day 1 – Tampa to San Francisco 5/7/21

Covid-wise, things went well with only two hiccups. First, the lady sitting next to me on the Atlanta flight was quite sternly reprimanded by a schoolmarmish flight attendant for failing to restore her mask after she took a bite of her breakfast muffin. Fortunately, I’m podded with the lady in question so I’m not at any great risk.

The bigger Covid impact was at the Thrifty Rent-a-Car desk. Because they had only three car-prep people who were vaccinated for Covid, we were facing a two-hour wait for our car. The nice Thrifty lady suggested we check out the competition. Sure enough, National had an SUV for about the same money. Problem solved.

But not really. Instead of cruising California in a Mustang convertible with a cute girl at my side with her hair blowing in the wind it’ll be a soulless truck I’ll be driving. Sigh.

OK, she’s silver-haired now but back in the day she was blond, before she dyed it red. Still kinda cute, though.

Other than that, the trip has been an experience that would warm the heart of Dr. Faucci. I don’t think we’ve seen a person without a mask all day, not in any of the three airports, not in the airplanes, not on the streets of San Francisco, not in the R&G Lounge in Chinatown.

We’re booked at the Westin St. Francis hotel on Union Square, a fashionable district with lots of big-name shopping stores. We picked the St Francis because this is the hotel my mom, Professor Lilian Libby Rick, stayed while giving a learned presentation at the Modern Language Association back in 1978. Judy and I, purely by chance, stayed in the same hotel for a convention at exactly the same time so we got to sightsee with her between our various professional duties.

We checked in around 3 PM and by 4 PM were ready to hit the pavement. Chinatown is about a mile’s walk, a little more than half-way to the Coit Tower towards Fisherman’s Warf.

The front desk guy (no concierge at the St. Francis these days) recommended the restaurant, his favorite, and especially the salted fried crab dish. The crab was going for $60 and so we settled for a beef and turnip clay pot dish and one that featured steam clams in a scrambled egg like concoction. We’re always one to try something new and the clay pot proved the virtue of being gastronomically adventuresome. The clams? Not so much. A great thought but the two flavors don’t mix well, we thought. We should have sold another share of Tesla and gone for the crabs I guess.

So now we’re fading (it’s 7 PM here, 10 PM God’s time in Tampa) and we were up at 5. We’ll get to bed as soon as the sun sets. Unless the city lights keep us up. We’ll see.

Today’s pictures include some Judy took from the airplane window as we flew between the Rockies and Sierra Nevada mountain ranges. There’s some I snapped from out hotel room and as we walked to Chinatown.

I, Judy, had never flown over the southern part of Colorado.  It was amazing with the colors and the contours. It seemed absolutely desolate. I really could not see any habitation from the plane. We gradually moved into the snow-capped mountains of the Sierra Nevadas.  It really pointed out to me how varied the natural landscape is in this beautiful country.

 

Still Crazy?

Judy and I are fighting two bugs: the Coronavirus and the Travel Bug. Clearly, one is more serious than the other. But the older we get the more we realize that, tick-tock, our traveling days aren’t infinite. So, can we find a way to safely fight both bugs?

Here’s the plan. We’re doing a West Coast trip that involves one day in San Francisco, one day in Napa Valley, a six-day road trip up the Pacific Coast Highway ending in Portland and then a seven-day cruise up the Columbia and Snake rivers.

We are of course fully vaccinated with Pfizer bug juice. We plan to keep pretty much to ourselves and do most of our touring outdoors – no museums, cathedrals and crowded restaurants. When around people, we’ll wear masks. We’ll wash our hands religiously. In other words, we’ll try to behave as if we weren’t vaccinated.

Is this plan risk free? Of course not, but the risks seem small – probably no greater than staying at home – and with the vaccination, they say our risk of serious complications should we catch the virus is reduced.

So off we go, and you’re invited to follow us via daily blog posts at jonandjudy.com if you wish. I won’t be sending out daily email reminders as I’ve done in the past but if you’d like a daily email, let me know and I’ll send you one each time I make post an update. The rest of you can go to jonandjudy.com whenever the spirit moves you.

I’ve taken a solemn vow to keep the word count to a minimum this time: no long drawn out history lessons nor social commentary. I’ll try to let the pictures do the talking. We’ll see how that works out!

Here’s a more detailed itinerary:

   

Miles

Time

       

7-May

Friday

   

TPA – SFO

 

8:00 AM – 12:46 PM  

8-May

Saturday

   

San Francisco

     

9-May

Sunday

48

1:10

SF – Napa

     

10-May

Monday

136

3:55

Napa – Muir Woods – Timber Creek

     

11-May

Tuesday

199

5:23

Timber Creek – Petrolia

     

12-May

Wednesday

264

5:36

Petrolia – Coos Bay

     

13-May

Thursday

272

6:05

Coos Bay – Portland

     

14-May

Friday

   

Portland

     

15-May

Saturday

   

Pre Cruise – Portland

     

16-May

Sunday

   

1 -Hayden Island, OR

     

17-May

Monday

   

2 – Astoria, OR

     

18-May

Tuesday

   

3 – Mount St. Helens, WA

     

19-May

Wednesday

   

4 – Columbia River Gorge/Stevenson, WA

     

20-May

Thursday

   

5 – The Dalles, OR

     

21-May

Friday

   

6 – Pendelton, OR/Richland, WA

     

22-May

Saturday

   

7 – Clarkston, WA

     

23-May

Sunday

   

8 – Clarkston – Salt Lake City – Tampa

 

6:10 AM – 4:37 PM

 

We’ve booked hotels in San Francisco and May 15 in Portland. The road trip is open; we’ll see how far we get each day and hope we can find a Motel 6 somewhere each night.

As always, your comments and questions are welcome. Enjoy!

Jon and Judy