Travel

Seattle’s Call to Protect the Endangered Species Act

Seattle’s Call to Protect the Endangered Species Act

A key wildlife law faces major rollbacks as the public comment period ticks down.

There’s plenty to do this season—lights, shows, markets, food—but here’s one more important thing worth putting on your list. The Endangered Species Act (ESA), the federal law that helped bring back the bald eagle and gray wolf, is now facing changes that could weaken its protections. The Trump administration has proposed updates to four ESA…

A New Place to Ice Skate by the Water

A New Place to Ice Skate by the Water

Hyatt Regency Lake Washington’s dockside rink offers lake views and eco-friendly synthetic ice.

Skating season has officially arrived. There’s a particular joy in gliding—or trying to—on cold days. I always go for the outdoor rinks, especially the ones strung with twinkling lights. It can be so romantic. And this year, there’s a new place to lace up. A 71-foot by 38-foot covered Glice rink is up and running…

Bergen: Finding a Home, Abroad

Bergen: Finding a Home, Abroad

A trip across western Norway reveals strikingly Northwest sensibilities.

A few months ago, we randomly walked into Wallingford’s Fat Cat Records. Greeting us, face-out by the cash register, was not Nirvana, not Soundgarden, but Peer Gynt Suite, by the Norwegian composer Edvard Grieg. Was this a Norse omen, a mischievous prank from Loki? For us, two Seattleites with a trip to Norway on the…

Best Road Trip: Chuckanut Drive

Best Road Trip: Chuckanut Drive

A little less than two hours north of Seattle, depending on traffic, Chuckanut Drive (also known as WA State Highway 11) is 20 miles of postcard-worthy scenery with plenty of places to stop and things to do along the way. It’s a pretty straight shot heading along I-5 North; just take Exit 231 in Burlington…

Yes, It's OK to Travel to LA

Yes, It’s OK to Travel to LA

Why a trip to the City of Angels matters now more than ever.

“In Los Angeles, it’s hard to tell if you’re dealing with the real true illusion or the false one.”—Eve Babitz Babitz was one of LA’s great muses, and her line rings especially true in the wake of the wildfires that swept through parts of the region last winter. Los Angeles has always been a city…

Bernardus Lodge & Spa is a Relaxing Base for Exploring the California Coast

Bernardus Lodge & Spa is a Relaxing Base for Exploring the California Coast

Whether you’re ready for adventure, or looking for hours of sun-soaked repose, this picturesque resort has the best of both worlds.

Less than four hours after signing off on Seattle magazine’s November/December issue, I was soaking in a large copper bathtub at the Bernardus Lodge & Spa, a lemongrass-scented bath bomb fizzing away the stress of press week. In a poetic wrapping-up of the issue, I’d sent the email approval of the final page proofs just as the light…

In the Mood for Missoula

In the Mood for Missoula

An insider’s guide on how to spend the weekend in one of Montana’s most popular destinations.

Missoula is that rare mountain town where river surfers, indie filmmakers, ranch kids, and chefs all pack into the same bar—and somehow, it works. It’s wild, weird, and wonderful in equal measure, with enough soul and scenery to make you question why anyone would ever leave. As with most small towns, the best way to…

Desert Daydreams in Santa Fe

Desert Daydreams in Santa Fe

Take a trip across the creative canvas of Santa Fe, a southwestern city steeped in history, culture, and art.

Time doesn’t move in a straight line in Santa Fe. It’s more of a palette—one that the city draws from boldly. New Mexico’s quirky capital, nicknamed the City Different, offers visitors an experience that draws from multiple eras. Centuries pile on top of each other, enhancing, rarely erasing. The ancient Pueblo tribes and the frontier…

Hives Among the Headstones

Hives Among the Headstones

Inside a north Seattle project reimagining cemeteries as sanctuaries for pollinators.

In many old stories, bees are more than just insects. They’re messengers—tiny intermediaries between the living and the dead. There was once even a custom in Europe and America known as “telling the bees:” When a family member died, or another significant life event occurred, someone would go to the hive to share the news….

Dispatches from Greenland, Part Two: Nuuk

Dispatches from Greenland, Part Two: Nuuk

An insider’s guide to Greenland’s mysterious, overlooked, and charming capital.

Greenland is too vast to take in all at once. Yet a few days in Nuuk—the island’s compact, curious capital, just a four-hour flight from Newark—offer a surprisingly complete portrait. Nuuk changes like the weather that shapes it: by turns wild and polished; intimate and bold. To Northerners, it feels as hectic as Manhattan; to…

Lessons from the Land

Lessons from the Land

At the Organic Farm School on Whidbey Island, the ground-to-table mindset is rooted in good intentions.

For some, it’s tough to choose between a perfectly sun-ripened summer tomato and a juicy strawberry—but not for my three-year-old. Tomatoes, always tomatoes. Especially one that he has picked directly off the vine, on a working farm filled with fresh produce, chickens, and pigs. As the juice dribbles down his chin, and the sound of…

1 Hotel is a Hidden Gem in South Lake Union 

1 Hotel is a Hidden Gem in South Lake Union 

Tucked into a strip of businesses above Whole Foods, the new lodging offers contemporary, Scandinavian-inspired rooms, a unique wellness program, and one of the city’s best new restaurants. 

A little over a decade ago, I was in a wedding at the Pan Pacific Hotel. I don’t remember much about it (the hotel, that is), except that it felt very formal, if not a touch dated, with that general “upscale hotel in any city” kind of vibe. The wedding was fun, but I didn’t…

Paddle Camping on a One-Acre Island

Paddle Camping on a One-Acre Island

Posey Island in the San Juans is Washington State Parks’ smallest marine park, where seals, tide pools, and even orcas make appearances.

Stroke after stroke, we paddled further and further away from safety. Should we be here with our two precious kids, I thought as we headed out toward open water. As we rounded the corner it became clear and I let out a sigh of relief—yes, we can do this.  Over Labor Day weekend, my wife…

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