i just found out that i’m spending my spring break (march 21-26) in seattle and vancouver, as my sports team has a couple of games up there. i was wondering if any of you locals could tell me about interesting stuff to do.
any worthwhile tourist stuff (museums, etc), good bars or clubs, special festivals going on during those dates. any and all tips will be appreciated.
Seattle. Pretty much nothing to do except Pioneer Square, Space Needle, and Pike Place Market. Whoop-de-doo, the whole town pretty much shuts down around 9pm. Spend a lot of time getting drunk, or wired out of your mind on quad mochas–that’s what we do, anyway. If you are interested in science or technology, the Pacific Science Center (by the Space Needle) or the Boeing Aviation Museum are kind of neat.
Vancouver, BC is a lot more fun. Great nightlife, take advantage of the killer exchange rate, maybe catch a hockey game. Go to the Granville area–good shopping, a few quality restaurants, good clubs, readily available late-night pizza.
That’s my 2 cents. Oh yeah, make sure to go to Dick’s Burgers while in Seattle. It’s an institution, and helps line the stomach after too many bad microbrews.
-sb
They say the Lord loves drunks, fools and little children.
Two out of three ain’t bad.
I don’t know much about Seattle, but I live in Vancouver so I can help there. If you want museums, I strongly recommend the Museum of Anthropology at the University of BC. Lots of cool stuff there. For touristy shopping as well as nightclubs, go to Gastown. It’s a little too touristy for my taste, though, so I recommend Granville Island (it’s similar to Seattle’s Pike Place market). If you want more alternative (and cheaper) shopping, try Commercial Drive. “The Drive” is the place where you’ll find lots of vegetarian restaurants and hippie shops. 4th Ave is similar.
For live music, the best place is the Commodore Ballroom on Granville St. Remember, though, if you’re a smoker, you can’t smoke in any pub or restaurant in BC. If you want nature, try Stanley Park. If you ski, Whistler/Blackcomb is one of the nicest mountains anywhere. Lots of good restaurants in Vancouver, as well.
In Seattle, you have got to take the Underground Tour of the town! It was awesome and if you get the same guide we had, it is a laugh-riot!! If you have time, can get out of town and you are into nature, head over to the Hoh Rain Forest in Olympic National Park. ~200" of rain a year - AMAZING!
out of curiousity, for those Vancouverites out there - was your airport initially intended to handle a much larger flight load? i was flying through on my way back from christmas break, and the place was huge and empty. i had a 3+ hour layover, and spent the entire time in a giant lounge that never held more than three other people. very strange.
Maybe it was slow due to weather that day? When I’ve been there it was packed. People everywhere, lots of tourists, planes coming and going.
When we there on a field trip for Aviation class, we went to the end of the runway to watch the heavies (jumbo jets) land and take off. We were there for about an hour, and saw dozens of planes. There was a plane landing or taking off every few minutes, and it wasn’t even during peak travel time.
I don’t know Vancouver well, but if you’re ever in Victoria, you should go to the Royal British Columbia Museum. Amazing place. We spent 6 hours in there and didn’t get bored. They also have a great wax museum.
When I was last in Seattle, we took the ferry from Seattle to Victoria, BC. The San Juan Islands are quite picturesque, as are the volcanic peaks to the east.
When danger reared its ugly head,
He bravely turned his tail and fled
AWB is right. Do yourself aa favor and take a ferry over to Victoria (Vancouver Island). The scenic ride alone is worth the trip, plus Victoria is a nice, tourist-friendly town. (And the favorable exchange rate saves many bucks.)
“Every time you think, you weaken the nation!” --M. Howard (addressing his brother, C. Howard).
While you’re there, make sure to have High Tea at the Empress. This is a must. Also, they have a pretty cool Chinatown and a limited, but killer night life, if you decide to stay the night.
"Every one is bound to bear patiently the results of his own example. "
-Phædrus
i was there on dec. 29th of this past year. mebbe people weren’t flying because of y2k fears, but i would have thought it would have been a fairly peak travel time - and i was there for pretty much the entire afternoon.
also, what’s the Royal British Columbian Museum?
for the rest of you -
what are the best streets for bars in either town? i’m going to be there with my lacrosse team, so we’re obviously not going to be hitting museums the entire time.
I know Pike is in Seattle, and Red Hook, too, if my memory is not wrong. In Vancouver, there’s the Yaletown brewpub, which has some nice hand-pulled beers as well as good food, and Spinnakers is either there or in Victoria (my wife and I disgree which town it’s in), and also has nice hand-pulled beers.
Damn it, now I have to go back. Shucks.
A committee is a lifeform with six or more legs and no brain.
OK, Seattle is a fine town and contrary to popular belief it doesn’t shut down at 7 pm. First if you want the true Seatown coffee experience try The Green Cat on Olive in the Capital Hill neigbourhood. I would also say to get on a number 44/45 bus that will take you from Pioneer Square to Ballard. Ballard is the old scandinavian part of town but is now the up and coming young hip area.
Places to visit in specific would be SAM (Seattle Art Museum), Archie Mcphee’s (good toys and stuff), Mae’s on Phinney Ridge, someone else said Underground Tour and I second that, and The Ave in the U-district. Touristy things are nice too, Pike Street Market is actually quite nice.
It’s a nice town to jump a bus to a neigbourhood and walk around in because of the plethera of bars and cafes.
Well then, why didn’t you say so? In Vancouver, you’ll want to hit the clubs in Gastown or Granville St. There are also some good clubs on 4th or Broadway (10th), but the highest concentration of clubs is in Gastown which makes a crawl easier. If you want skin, the best nudie bars are the No. 5 Orange or the Drake. The Cecil is way too expensive. Trivia: The Bon Jovi album, Slippery When Wet was named in honour of the shower at one of the local strip clubs. Can’t remember which one, though. The best thing you can do is pick up a copy of The Georgia Straight. It’s a local free paper that has a listing of what’s happening at the local clubs and restaurants.
Sorry for taking so long to reply, I was offline for four days.
It’s a huge history museum, there’s little or no artwork. It also has an IMAX theatre inside. http://rbcm1.rbcm.gov.bc.ca/
Several years ago, Prince Phillip visited the museum and was so impressed with it that he said they could use the title of “Royal.” It was also one of the two or three stops in North America for the Leonardo DaVinci exibit, but I missed it by a week, dammit. http://www.waxworld.com/ is the Royal London Wax Museum’s website. Very fun place.
They also have a great horse-drawn carriage tour of downtown and Beacon Hill Park.
Seattle haas clubs of every type so if you are looking for a specific type email me and I will let you know. Also, you might want to check with BurnMeUp, I think he is a bit more nightlife centered than I am.
-Frankie
“Mother Mercy, can your loins bear fruit forever?/Is your fecundity a trammel or a treasure?”
-Bad Religion