
Wendy had never been to Seattle before, while this was my fourth visit. The rented condo in Belltown allowed us to walk a half-mile southeast to Pike Place Market one day, and on the next stroll a half-mile north to Seattle Center with the Space Needle and the Museum of Pop Culture. We would do plenty of walking on this vacation, averaging over 9,000 steps per day.
Waterfront & Pike Place Market

On Day 3, we walked downslope from the condominium to the waterfront, passing the Norwegian Encore cruise ship, one of the massive modern mega-ships. It is nearly four times heavier and significantly longer than the famed RMS Titanic, and its 20 decks make it about twice as tall.
As we passed the mega-ship, the Bay Lady, a 19th-century-style gaff-rigged schooner launched in 1989 was coming in to dock.
We reached Waterfront Park, made possible by the removal of the 1950s double-decker Alaskan Way Viaduct that marred the waterfront on my earlier trips to The Emerald City.

Our rental car passed along the tunnel that replaced it multiple times during our stay, and I suppose I’ll eventually get a bill for those tolls through Enterprise Rent-A-Car. I tried creating an account with the toll authority to handle them myself and avoid service fees, but that was a fiasco. Lousy online services are not limited to governments in “red states” like Joklahoma; Washington state also has its struggles.
We climbed the Salish Steps to Pike Place Market. I’d done some homework to help Wendy avoid the fish throwing and the gum wall. At a fruit stand she bought some delicious white nectarines, cherries, and an apple, and I guided us through the maze to Lamplight Books.
I’d finished my last Carlton Keith paperback on the plane flights, and I thought it would be nice to have some short stories I could read on the way back or on future trips. I snagged a 1958 fifth printing of The Portable Chekhov, which had previously been in the library of retired Seattle lawyer Darrell L. Syferd. A little online sleuthing showed that he bought it when he was earning his Bachelor of Divinity at the Princeton Theological Seminary.
The paperback was still in great shape, and I enjoyed reading The Lady with the Pet Dog, one of Chekhov’s most famous works, and then started reading from the start of its chronological selections with Vanka, The Privy Councilor, and A Calamity before heading home. I’ve linked to the translations of those stories by Constance Garrett, which are available for free on Project Gutenberg, while what I read in The Portable Chekhov were translations by Avrahim Yarmolinsky.
On the flights home, I stuck with a Kindle novel by John Cheever, as I like more plot in a story than what Chekhov offers. I find I am more attracted to my physical books of short stories by John Cheever and Roald Dahl and my Kindle books of short stories by Eudora Welty and Flannery O’Connor. However, I might well read more from the Chekhov collection in the years to come.
On our walk along First Avenue back to the condo, we passed the Careless Whisper mural, which is in the pop art style of Roy Lichtenstein. A woman embraces a skeleton, saying, “I don’t care what they say — I KNOW we belong together!!” The London-based artist D*face created the mural in 2018.
Farther along another mural was being created. It showed old-time Seattle, back before downtown was regraded, along with imagery of the Trianon ballroom building and the Century 21 Exposition of 1962, which included the city’s emblematic Space Needle.
Seattle Center
The next morning we headed toward the Needle, passing a Bambino’s that I had to get a quick shot of given that Brian Black’s Bambino’s Downtown Bistro in Bartlesville is a favorite for Wendy and me.
Soon we were stepping up to the Space Needle, which rises 605 feet, with an observation deck at 520 feet. It was once the tallest building west of the Mississippi River, but over 60 years later there are eight skyscrapers in Seattle alone which are taller. Seattle has view corridors, zoning caps, and other restrictions to preserve public vistas such as views of Elliott Bay and the Space Needle.

We rode up the double-decker elevator to the upper viewing platform, where Wendy stayed within the building while I roamed the deck.
I’d been up there a couple times already, but it is always fun to get a panorama of downtown, and I realized that this was likely the last time I’d enjoy the view.
I located our condo from on high, tucked behind one of the taller buildings in Belltown.
I could look down through the slats at the Museum of Pop Culture, with its wild design by architect Frank Gehry, fashioned when it was called the Experience Music Project.
Down in the gift shop was one of maybe 120 surviving Mold-A-Matic or Mold-A-Rama machines, modernized so that I could scan my credit card to get an injection molded plastic Space Needle. The machines debuted at the 1962 Century 21 Exposition in Seattle, churning out Space Needles, monorails, and other designs. I first encountered them at the Lincoln Park Zoo in Oklahoma City when I was a kid.
The piece of plastic was molded for me for $5. They originally sold for 50 cents in 1962, and the inflation calculator says that would be $5.53 in 2026 dollars, so they’ve always been pricey. I propped my little Space Needle up on the condo balcony later, giving it a thumbs up for scale.
I then packed it into a spare shoe in my suitcase for the rest of the vacation, and my Leaning Tower of Seattle now adorns one of the bookshelves at Meador Manor, guarded by Buck Atom and Mark from G Force or, for purists, Ken the Eagle from Science Ninja Team Gatchaman.
Our next stop was the Museum of Pop Culture, which was the Experience Music Project on my previous visits to Seattle. Microsoft co-founder Paul Allen founded it in 2000 as a tribute to Jimi Hendrix, with the Science Fiction Museum and Hall of Fame opening in it in 2004.
Sadly, the Science Fiction Museum was de-installed as a permanent collection in 2011, and after Allen’s death in 2018 several of its major items have been quietly auctioned off. I was curious to see what remained, and I was happy to see Captain Kirk’s original chair from Star Trek was still on display, although the original helm console I had viewed previously has been sold. To tell the truth, both look shabby in real life and are better appreciated on the small screen.
We saw a T-X Terminator endoskeleton from one of the Terminator sequels, but I’ve only watched the original 1984 film and Terminator 2: Judgment Day from 1991. I laughed to see they had one of the infamous Batman costumes from the George Clooney outing, complete with bat-nipples. I smiled at the tiny jacket for Michael Banks in Mary Poppins, and we also saw one of the Winkie costumes from The Wizard of Oz and the oh-so-hot outfit that Bert Lahr endured as The Cowardly Lion.
Wendy was most intrigued by the Harry Potter artifacts at the museum, including a hat worn by Dame Maggie Smith playing Professor McGonagall. By the time we exited, we were hungry, so I steered us over to the Armory, which has a food court. One of the World Cup matches was displayed on a huge screen, and fans were seated at most of the tables. Wendy enjoyed her hamburger at Skillet Counter, while I had macaroni and cheese.
On our walk back to the condo, we passed the International Fountain from the 1962 Seattle World’s Fair, which was renovated in July 2021 and has 274 water jets that continue to delight children as they shift and surge.
We passed a Monkey Puzzle Tree, Araucaria araucana. The evergreen is native to Chile and Argentina. Wendy had never seen one before.
We enjoyed our meals in Seattle, including slices of pizza at Rocco’s, save for the Japanese chicken at Karaage Setsuna in our building, which we found repulsive. The weather was consistently cool, with us in long sleeve shirts and light jackets, while back home Bartlesville was broiling at over 90 degrees Fahrenheit with lows never making it below 72. I love summer in the Pacific Northwest.
The next day we would board a fast clipper passenger ferry for Victoria, British Columbia, Canada, but we would be back in the Emerald City on Day 9 for our nation’s 250th birthday, or semiquincentennial.
























































































