Are you considering a move to the Pacific Northwest? Does Portland, Oregon look appealing to you with its tender embrace of all things vintage and its quirky but lovable city motto of 'Keep Portland Weird'? Have you watched every episode of Portlandia and envisioned yourself as an extra (and liked it)?
Well if so, get ready to have your bubble burst! There are too many people here. Sorry. We locals have decided that fewer people would be beneficial. We are having difficulty marketing this concept, so I have decided to cut to the chase and provide 5 cold hard facts one must consider before purchasing a Subaru and setting out on the Oregon Trail.
1) There are
no plastic bags here. Portland was one of the
first cities to jump on the plastic bag ban.
Many cities have followed suit and/or implemented a bag fee as a
plastic bag deterrent. I just want you
to know that you will be carrying brown paper bags in the rain, with no
umbrella, because you can’t carry two paper bags AND an umbrella. Furthermore, people in Portland don’t use
umbrellas. I'll save that tidbit for
another list on another day.
2) You cannot ‘go to the beach’. Let me clarify. Yes, there are beaches and they are named as
such but you will not go to them. In
Oregon you go to the coast. The difference is that beaches are warm,
sandy, sunny places where you'll likely sunbathe and go swimming and perhaps suffer a sunburn. The coast is more
often than not a cold, windy, rocky place where you may do beach-like things
but you'll be wearing pants and a hoody. You
won’t go for a swim because hypothermia is no substitute for a sunburn. We
have sneaker waves too. Google that if
you forevermore want to view the ocean as your own personal death trap…
3) Portland is surrounded by volcanoes! While Mt. Tabor (within the city limits) is
classified as dormant, Mt. Hood dominates the skyline and is technically
active. I know, I know, it’s been almost
200 years since its last activity, but that’s all the more cause for
alarm. An eruption may not be the
Michael Bay pyrotechnics we expect from an active volcano, but Portland could
be covered in dust and ash. Yikes! and Yuck. Additionally, Mount St. Helens is a mere 65 miles away.
4) Casual Friday is every day. All seven. It’s casual at dinner. It’s casual at the doctor’s office. It’s casual in court. It’s so casual here we wear jeans to the opera. Seriously. Blue ones. If you like your lunch server or dentist to be well-kempt then you may want to reconsider your options. Also, dreadlocks abound. Just sayin’.
5) Portland has more parades than any city I
know. I would be curious to research how
many parades the average city has in a year. Whatever that average is, I’m sure it’s pretty
close to the square root of the number that Portland has. The Portland Rose Festival itself has three
parades of its own in one week! Those do
not include the Macy’s Holiday Parade, Pride NW Parade, Christmas Ship Parade,
Independence Day Parade, Division/Clinton Street Fair Parade, St. Patrick’s Day
Parade, Mardi Gras Parade, and the Brewers Brunch & Parade. The fact that there has been more than one
parade sketch on Portlandia should
tell you something. Hint: it’s not
something good. I’m sure there are more
parades, bike rides, runs, and marathons going on than you’ll ever know until the day you find yourself on a standing room only MAX train with a walking sample of PDX carpet. Is this the kind of typical day you want in your life? I'm asking...
I own no rights to Portland or the Oregon Trail, the city or the game, the franchise, it's merchandise, or anyone or thing that has to do with it. The text written here is my own original thought, work, and opinion, shared with love. Photos in this post belong to their original owners (not me). No copyright infringement intended. I only offer my humble rambling opinion. Thank you.
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