I visited Portland, Oregon recently for pleasure and for practical purposes. I had a great time.
Airbnb
I stayed in an airbnb within walking distance of downtown. Since it is the slow season, the rate was very reasonable.
Weather
The weather was mild to me: highs in the 40s and 50s F with light showers once or twice a day. I felt very comfortable in a thermal baselayer, jeans, a tee shirt, sweater and light jacket.
I appreciated the fall foliage and the abundant flora. Trees, shrubs and gardens grow in profusion and do not die off by this time of year like they do in Minneapolis.
Transit
Transit from the airport and around downtown was similar to Minneapolis, but streetcars and light rail are easier to use and comprise a network instead of a crumpled V shape.
Homeless people, tweakers and criddlers
The homeless population is very visible in Portland but not in your face. I saw a lot of people sleeping in business entryways and camping in marginal public areas such as the lawns next to thoroughfares. I was never harassed, although two people did start long conversations with me under a pretext only to ask for money at the end. This is probably because I walked so many miles.
The homeless people are not just mentally ill older men, but also a younger group pejoratively called tweakers and criddlers. These are drug users who residents complain will steal bikes and yard implements and shout and follow you and behave unpredictably.
Walkability and beerability
I walked many miles in downtown, Pearl District, Lloyd District, Kern and Sullivan’s Gulch neighborhoods. I visited several brewpubs and took note of features of the parks system. When it comes to open green areas, Minneapolis may be a close tie. But since all that green dies off in the winter in Minneapolis and is mostly abandoned and devoid of people for much of the year, the comparison may be invalid.
Hillsboro
I visited Hillsboro, a suburb, because of a reason I had. It turned out to be much more remote than expected. Much like Minneapolis suburbs, there is little or no transit on the weekends. The private company Uber stepped in to fill this gap.
Weed gummies
I got some weed gummies from a dispensary downtown. As expected, a legal recreational cannabis system is safe, hassle-free and controlled. It’s funny to compare the moral hand-wringing that accompanies cannabis legalization debates with the laissez-faire attitude toward deadly and addictive opioid prescribing.
Book festival
A highlight of my trip was the 2017 Wordstock book festival. The event took over several city blocks, including the Portland Art Museum and the Oregon Historical Society. I attended a couple of readings and panels by authors I was totally ignorant of. Nonetheless I enjoyed it. Partly because of those potent gummies, no doubt.
I enjoyed my trip and I am looking forward to a more nature-oriented visit in the future. Mount Hood is less than an hour away. So is the Oregon coast. This is in stark contrast to Minneapolis where an hour’s drive in any direction presents you one thing: corn fields!
