Birch Bay RV Park in Blaine in Washington, is an RV park, not a campground, meaning there is no shade, no trees at your site. UGH. Two wonderful hikes in the area helped provide needed relief from the heat. Terrell Marsh Trail in Birch Bay State Park, and Point Whitehorn were perfect walks in the woods for the elderly. On the Point Whitehorn trail we met a man who is in his 90s. Inspiration for us to keep on trucking.
Cedar TreesOur fourth stop was to be Leavenworth, Washington. Monitoring the weather mostly to know which foods to purchase, I noticed that the day we were to arrive the prediction was 102 degrees. Oh dear. Not such a big issue except the air conditioning in the truck went out. Okay. Decision time. Go forward or not.
We feel blessed in that we were able to extend our stay in Blaine, forgo the Eastern Washington and Eastern Oregon section of our trip, head back to Paradise for seventeen days and then continue on with the planned trip to Ainsworth State Park in Oregon and then on to Seaside, Oregon.
So far we have learned a couple things about vacation traveling. Since we are now in ours 70's, hiking and kayaking in the same day taxes our physical resources. Seven days in one location is too short. Three of the days are dedicated to travel prep and rest. One day for grocery shopping and laundry; one day for kayaking; one for hiking. We began to feel that we were running from activity to activity. Not the peaceful, relaxing time we had envisioned. Lastly, your kayak trip may be cancelled due to wind. :( Sigh. No kayaking in the Puget Sound in Blaine this year.
September is a much better month to travel in Eastern Washington and Eastern Oregon. Hopefully, we can complete that leg of the travel adventure in the next few years.
Interesting Tree
Surrounded by sun dappled maples and sword fern on the Terrel Marsh Trail |