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Strange Planet: The Northwest's Geoduck

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Friend of IT Marissa Bea writes to us about a strange aquatic animal found along the Pacific Northwest coast. While it looks more like something straight out of The Empire Strikes Back, the funny-looking geoduck (pronounced "gooey duck") is a sought-after treat and even gains media attention (Dirty Jobs's Mike Rowe worked on a geoduck farm in 2006, and Top Chef cheftestants cooked up geoduck in Season 3). Here's what Marissa has to say about this Northwest clam.

geoduck.jpgBeing from the Pacific Northwest, I have a strange love affair with the species of clam known as a geoduck.

The quick and dirty: the geoduck is an oversize clam, with shell sizes ranging from 7 to 9 inches in diameter. But the amazing feature of this bivalve is not the shell size but the length of the odd siphon (or nose, or tongue, or what have you) that protrudes from it. There have been specimens found that are up to 6 feet in length, however most are not nearly that long.

Geoducks have one of the longest life spans in the animal world, coming in close to tortoises with an average life expectancy of 146 years. They have few natural predators and can reproduce like rabbits. The female geoduck can produce 5 billion eggs in her lifetime (that's almost an entire new planet of people).

This creature is native to the northwest coast of the U.S. and Canada and gets its name from the Nisqually word for "dig deep." It is still possible to go hunting for them along the beaches. You know you have happened upon a geoduck when you step in the sand and water squirts out at you. Dig a few inches and they are easy to spot. This unique animal looks like a freak of nature, but really it's nature at its best, with an almost infallible design that has been working for millions of years.

But if you pick one up, please put it back. They enjoy the beach more than your kitchen.

Smithsonian Magazine caught up with Top Chef Season 3 winner Hung Huynh, who showed them how to prepare geoduck. Click here for the video.

What strange species live in your neck of the woods? Tell us about it!

Photo: Jordan Husney via Flickr

I Heart My City: Susan's Portland

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Portland.png Thumbnail image for MyCityBug2.gifTo mark the release of our March issue (now on newsstands), we're celebrating cities over the next few weeks, and we've asked our readers to share what they love most about their towns. We've been overwhelmed by your responses, and don't worry, we're going to try to get to them all!

Still haven't submitted? Here's your chance. We've put together a list of fill-in-the-blank questions that should help get you started and we'd love it if you would copy and paste the list into an email, fill in your answers (as many as you like) and send your responses to IntelligentTravel@ngs.org. Declare your love for that special city in your heart!

Today's featured city-lover is photographer Susan Seubert, who has most recently captured New York, San Francisco, and Sydney for Traveler. Here's what she has to say about her favorite Northwest city.

I Heart My City: Pam's Seattle

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MyCityBug2.gifTo mark the release of our March issue (now on newsstands), we're celebrating cities over the next few weeks, and we've asked our readers to share what they love most about their towns. We've been overwhelmed by your responses, and don't worry, we're going to try to get to them all!

Still haven't submitted? Here's your chance. We've put together a list of fill-in-the-blank questions that should help get you started and we'd love it if you would copy and paste the list into an email, fill in your answers (as many as you like) and send your responses to IntelligentTravel@ngs.org. Declare your love for that special city in your heart!

Today's featured city-lover is Pam Mandel, of Seattle, Washington. Pam is the author of the witty Nerd's Eye View blog, and when she's not riffing on the Seattle weather, she's dreaming of Hawaii over at WorldHum.
 
Seattle is My City
 
Pike Place MarketThe first place I take a visitor from out of town is Alki Beach to see the view of the skyline from the waterfront.
 
When I crave milkshakes I always go to Luna Park in West Seattle.  
 
To escape the midwinter blues, I head to Pike Place Market. The buzz of activity, the bright colors, and the chatter of the market reminds me why I fell for Seattle in the first place.
 
If I want to see the salmon run I go to the Ballard Fish Ladder.
 
For complete quiet, I can hide away at the Arboretum. Bonus: In fall, the trees are spectacular!
 
If you come to my city, get your picture taken with Noguchi's Black Hole Sun in Volunteer Park.  
 
If you have to order one thing off the menu from Bakery Nouveau it has to be the almond croissant.

Help Pick the Best from the Northwest

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The Central Cascades.pngSome good news from our colleagues at the Center for Sustainable Destinations came out this week - they've announced a partnership with organizations in Oregon and Washington to create a geotourism project for the Central Cascades region in the Northwest. If you're not familiar with our geotourism projects, here's a quick recap: The CSD works with local partners and the public to identify authentic, sustainable aspects of a region - be it culture, food, shopping, activities, events, or landmarks. Right now, you can log onto the project's website www.thecentralcascades.com, and nominate places that you think best represent the region's character. CSD will then put them all together to create a geotourism mapguide, which are amazingly accurate and helpful maps. (I've used them before and found that I hardly need a guidebook.)

The "Central Cascades" area designated for the map stretches from Mount Rainier National Park to Crater Lake National Park, including communities plus private and public lands in both states. The printed Central Cascades MapGuide will be available in September 2009. A parallel interactive Web site is also being developed, so check out the site now and help others find the best places to visit.

And if you're interested in contributing to other mapguides, Montreal is still taking suggestions through today. CSD also has a complete list of available maps for Guatemala, Rhode Island, Arizona, Vermont, Romania, Norway, Yellowstone, Montana, Appalachia, Peru, Honduras, and Baja, Mexico, many of which are free and available as PDFs online.

Photo: via the Central Cascades site 

Global Eye: Seattle Airport

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Surprise Transparent Landing

Photographer: Linda Lane, Seattle, Washington.

Getting the Shot: I was waiting for a plane to depart from Seattle International Airport after meeting with my independent study professor at the University of Washington. I remembered that I had wanted to photograph the transparent panels installed at the airport under the 1% for Public Art ordinance.

The Details: I shot several photos with an automatic night setting on my trusty Nikon (love Canons too!) while hauling my carry on-bag and gear. Shooting photos in airports is more difficult since the security lockdown. The security officers who watched me realized pretty quickly that I was shooting "art shots" but they did stand and watch me just to make sure. Not wishing to cause any problems, I finished up pretty quickly.

This particular shot I loved because of the person reading - from his side he probably could barely make out the iconic image flying over his shoulder but from my perspective it was quite beautiful and relevant to the airport situation. This is from the same series taken throughout the hour I was in the airport.

We Love: The way you can find beauty even in the otherwise harried airport experience. And we dig Seattle's 1% for Art ordinance!

Want your own photo to be featured on the blog? Add it to our Flickr pool.

Happy Winter Trails Day!

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pinecone.jpgHaving just spent a week in snow-covered Seattle, the thought of spending even more time in a winter wonderland is the furthest thing from my mind. But on January 10, 100 ski resorts are lifting their fees in celebration of Winter Trails Day. Twenty-two states from Washington to Maine are giving snow-goers the chance to try cross-country skiiing or snowshoeing for free, meaning that those who claim the only winter sport they enjoy is making snow angels have no excuse not to frolic in the white stuff. January is also "Learn a Winter Snow Sport Month" (betcha didn't know that), and other resorts across the country are hosting plenty of events straight on 'til Groundhog's Day.

Thanks to Gadling for the tip!

Photo: Vahid Jahed via the Intelligent Travel Flickr pool


Rainer Jenss and his family are in the midst of a yearlong around-the-world trip, and they're blogging about their travels here at IT. Keep up with the Jensses by bookmarking their posts here.

Photo: Orcas Island lavender field

I am a big fan of Michael Palin for two reasons. First and foremost, I love Monty Python. But perhaps my favorite work of Palin's comes not by way of his comedy, but for the series of travel documentaries he produced for the BBC over the past 20 years that feature him traveling Pole-to-Pole, Around the World in 80 Days, and Full Circle. What I'm particularly intrigued by is that he makes it a priority to travel over as much physical landmass as possible during each of his journeys and whenever possible, does so without the use of aircraft. His objective is to capture the true essence of what lies between different geographical locations, gaining the perspective that distance, space, and time provide.

In retrospect, watching these programs probably helped influence our decision to travel around the world for a full year, without stopping or coming back home for the duration, as much as anything else. As a frequent business traveler, I have taken my fair share of cross-country flights from New York to the West Coast, and noticed that rarely do passengers look out the window or know where they are during the roughly six hours on board the plane. Instead, we get in our seats, sleep, eat, read a book, work on our laptop, or watch a movie and then BAM - we step out into a different city thousands of miles away that still speaks English, and has plenty of Starbucks and copies of USA Today. Frequent flier is really a more accurate term for who we are and what we do. After all, a true travel experience provides you with a sense of place, something a cross-country flight just can't capture. Never before had I had the time or opportunity to do it the Michael Palin way, until now.

For the last six weeks, I've blogged about our family's cross-country trek that took us through 18 states (and two provinces in Canada), covered 7,600 miles, and didn't find us in a single airport. We witnessed incredible scenery, met warm and friendly people, and experienced the country in a way too few people get a chance to do, along one continuous trail from one coast to the other. As a result, I don't think any one of us will quite look at a map of the U.S. the same way again, or board a plane without appreciating the distances they cover and landscapes they fly over. So as we drove into Seattle six weeks after we left home, we celebrated the fact that we had now officially driven across the country, and there was still so much more to see and do.

IT Editor Janelle Nanos is on the West Coast this week, blogging about her trip and taking advice from readers on where to head next. After gathering some suggestions, she met up with one IT reader for a tour of her favorite neighborhood. She'll be heading to San Francisco next and is still looking for suggestions, so please feel free to leave them in the comments below...

Photo: Seattle skyline After a few stops in Tacoma, Washington, I arrived safely in Seattle this past weekend and was very lucky to meet up with Nerd's Eye View blogger and friend of IT Pam Mandel, who took some time out of her busy afternoon to show me the old amusement park grounds at Alki Point, which was once known as the Coney Island of the West.

I'd never heard of (or honestly, even conceived of) Seattle's little beach town, but with its amazing view of downtPhoto: Pam Mandelown and a hefty heaping of kitsch, I was instantly smitten. The Point was the place where first settlers arrived in Seattle, and its current iteration, Alki, is a mix of old and new: Stacks of old-brick condos mingle with newer glass developments along the waterfront, and old fishfry shacks cozy up to coffee shops with Wi-Fi. There's a long, winding bike path that snakes along the Sound, and volleyball players—and yes, even a few swimmers—were taking advantage of the beach (the great old photographs in Spud Fish and Chips show hundreds of swimmers in their full-piece bathing suits playing in the waves—causing us to wonder whether the enthusiasm waned or whether our tolerance for cold has slackened over time).

IT Editor Janelle Nanos is traveling from Seattle to San Francisco this week, and she's sending her dispatches from the road. Help her plan her trip by leaving comments below...

Photo: Green River soda On my way out of Tacoma, my friends and I were hankering for ice cream when we stumbled upon the fabulous establishment that is Don's Ruston Market and Deli (5102 North Winnifred St., tel. +1 253 759 8151). Tucked in the tiny town of Ruston, which is completely surrounded by Tacoma (and the only such town to be so surrounded in the country, claims Don) the soda and sandwich shop is right above Commencement Bay, a harbor that eventually stretches out to the Puget Sound.

Don Torbet and his wife Beth have been in the soda-shop business for 25 years next month, and he says he took over the store, which was originally built in 1917, thanks in part to his love for the Green River ice cream soda. The lime green beverage was once among the most popular sodas in the country but fell out of favor, and eventually was only produced in Seattle. Don keeps a few bottles on ice for diehard fans, but has to drive up to the factory for the syrup to make ice cream sodas. Let me tell you, it's worth the gas money—the bright green, lime flavor mixed with vanilla ice cream was fantastic. As was Don, who is more than happy to regale you with local stories and discuss the idiosyncratic history of regional fountain drinks (he claims to have been introduced to the egg cream only when some East Coast visitors stumbled through). His menu features a wide variety of shakes, ice cream sodas, burgers and sandwiches, and continues to serve as the local grocery in the community, just as it had for the three generations of owners who ran the shop before Don.

After grabbing a Green River, head down to Point Defiance Park to get a great view  of the Puget Sound and the Tacoma Narrows Bridge. The city park has a spectacular rose garden and living history museum at its fort, and Don and Beth operate a kayak rental shop out of Owen Beach. It's a lovely way to spend an afternoon, and the perfect way to work off your ice cream soda.

Photo: Don Torbet and his Green River soda, by Janelle Nanos

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Photo: Museum of GlassHello from the West Coast! I've arrived safe and sound in Seattle and have been eager to take advantage of your suggestions. I'll be sending dispatches from my trip over the next few days—and please feel free to continue to help me plan my trip!

Within minutes from arriving in Sea-Tac airport, I worked my way to downtown Tacoma, a smaller city a bit south of Seattle where Dale Chihuly, the glass sculptor whose blown-glass flowers grace the ceiling of the Bellagio hotel in Las Vegas, is originally from. The Museum of Glass (pictured, left) was completed in 2002 in part to celebrate Chihuly's role in the studio glass movement, and it helped to revitalize the city and redevelop the waterway downtown. Today, the gleaming silver building sits on the edge of the harbor, looking a bit like a blimp set down sideways in the center of the city.


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