Next month I will be in Portland, Oregon area for a week, and then I will be heading north to Seattle, and then Vancouver Canada.
I am looking for quick 2 hour hiking spots, camp sites, good national forest to visits around those areas, twisty roads, offroading, quite places to relax and be away from everything. I dont know how or where I'll end up, so I would like some suggestions in or around those cities.
I have a plan to visit Bagby Hot Springs outside Portland. Anything else in that area?
Never been to Seattle, I will only be passing through the city, any 1 thing worth visiting? Must have food in Seattle?
hows the weather there in March? any snow in the mountains? are some roads still closed?
buahahahahahhaaha
homosexual
imagine going to these homosexual butt sex places
what did u do, watch some docu on netflix? what do ur parents do for a living? i hope theyre rich and not actual people that work, to send u to some hick white trash dumpster like this for some gay adventure
why are you such a fricking unwelcoming gayget? if you must know I am flying into Portland on company money for a conference, I am then taking a week vacation. Im going to rent a truck, and live out of it for a week as I drive around and explore the north west. Ive already explored most of Oregon before, and north Cali. I avoid highways, stick only to back roads, I dont stay in hotel rooms, I sleep in the truck on the side of the road. never been bothered. and shower at truck stops. been taking trips like this for a decade. Explored most of the US this way. I have not been to Washington yet, so im taking the advantage of a free flight to do so. I also have friends in Canada so i wanna drop by for a day.
now if you wanna talk about gaygityy places go to Vermont. its like a mini Colorado and everyone looks like a liberal economics professor.
you triggered a number of underage election tourists who don't go PrepHole. how else were they supposed to respond?
also go to dino's or baked in bosnia
moron holy shit
>any snow in the mountains?
lol snow doesn't leave the mountains until late june
Definitely drive up the Columbia River Gorge and check out the waterfalls. If the weather's nice you could spend full day hiking the trails. It's always worth the drive to head for the coast and just pick a trail or section of coast to explore. You can't go wrong.
Ya pussy gon stink hella raw from your time in Portland. Talmbout musty. Crab. Shrimp. Pier water.
Yup.
I hate to disappoint you but the PrepHole situation in Vancouver is not really good in general, especially at this time of year, unless you can afford to throw money at it. Some of the trails on the north shore might be OK if you don't mind the cold rain and mud. If your leaf friends have kayaks or a canoe then you could do some paddlin'
I won't be doing any PrepHoleing in Vancouver, just gonna hang with my friends, do the things they do. After that I'm driving straight down to Portland to fly back on Monday.
I essentially have Sunday to Thursday for travels and exploring on my way up to Vancouver.
Forgot to add. I've been to Portland plenty, so I won't be staying there long. I wanted to go to Bagby hot springs but they are closed as of right now.
Are there any other hot springs going north? I don't want touristy hotel springs.
go see mt st helens in the winter, pretty breathtaking
>coming into WA
Frick off, we're full.
Kek no you arent. How many boat people arrive daily in WA?
I can and do call immigration on those. So fick off, we're full.
So stay in your state and stop driving down to mine to buy groceries, you love your state so much pay your states sales tax
do people not know how to research and read maps any more? all of these forest service units have maps detailing recreation opportunities