
MAKING MEMORIES: HIT & MISS IN SEATTLE
Welcome to Seattle! We’re on our first full day in the city, but it was a Sunday. I had a hard time putting together a day of sightseeing for us. I had a full plate on both Monday & Tuesday, but pulling together our Sunday activities without a car took some doing. Come along and see what you think!
Let’s Start at SAM
One thing that was easy to choose was the Seattle Art Museum, but working out of an old tour guide, I thought it was going to be free, which it wasn’t. The things you want to see that are free, get a pass. They only have to be slightly good to justify your presence. If you pay, then your expectations go up. For free, SAM would have been fine. That we had to pay made us love it less.
We had no trouble getting there. We walked across the street to the light rail station, caught the next car going north and hopped off after a couple of stops. Then it was about a block to the museum.
They’ve got something going on logistically. Yes, my guide book was outdated, but the entrance they promised was closed up and it looked empty. Will it stay that way? No one seemed to know. We continued up the block and found the new entrance. That’s when we found out just how outdated my guidebook was. You should have seen the look I got when I mentioned it was going to be free!
The ground floor didn’t seem to have much in the way of exhibits going on, mostly the reception area, restrooms and such. So, we went up to the next floor and started wandering around. Initially, we didn’t connect with what they were showing. We’d stand before a painting or sculpture for a bit, look at each other, shrug our shoulders and then move on to the next thing.

Bill was fascinated enough by the sculpture above that he took the photo and then took one of the tag, but it’s the only item that inspired that reaction out of the whole museum. I’d say that was a fail.
The Peter Principle in the Porcelain Gallery
I was initially wowed when I walked into the porcelain collection. I mean that’s my jam and the pieces were gorgeously displayed, but you were only supposed to want to look at them, I guess, because logistically it was a mess.
I adore all decorative art, but especially porcelain. I can spend hours wandering from case to case, comparing one piece to the next, trying to guess the manufacturers and then recalling what I have seen from that maker before. Someone had the magnificent idea of putting everything in a database and giving the museum goers access to the database from a wall-sized screen. Talk about a fail. Technology proved the Peter Principle!
You’d see something you wanted to know more about. In the good old days, you’d read the tag next to it or in the case with it. At SAM, you’d have to go over to the huge screen, scroll through the database until you got to the case you’d been looking at and then figure out, from across the room, which piece in the case you were trying to research. I found myself walking over to the screen, looking through the database, getting to the case I wanted and then trying to remember exactly why I was over there in the first place.
I’d stroll back to the eyeball everything again. Remind myself of the actual item and go back to the screen, which by then had cleared itself, so I’d have to start again. That was when all I wanted to do was know the manufacturer. If in my perusal I wanted to compare Piece A in Case 3 with Piece H in case 6, well it was just too complicated and took too much time. Within 15 minutes I moved on. Big, big, big disappointment.
On to Seattle Center!
We tried at SAM. We even tried a tour with a curator and visited a Calder exhibit. All too soon for our $27.99 senior price of admission we were back out on the street.
What was more fun was getting on the monorail and heading to Seattle Center. We’d be going back there the next day, but the Pacific Science Center would be closed, and all the guide books said I should want to go there.
Our first stop, once we reached Seattle Center, was The Armory. It’s an events center with a food court. We found a pretty fabulous vendor of Middle Eastern food, which served us what was perhaps our best meal in Seattle!
The Pacific Science Center
It had been damp, dark and dreary all day – very Seattle weather. By the time we headed to the Science Center, we were beginning to feel as if our skin was puckering. Our first conundrum was how to get in. There was a sort of fountain/pool area which the center had been built around, but no obvious place to enter.
The attraction was free and we opted to also get tickets to a show in the planetarium. Good thing, because it was the only thing worth our time. Not the best audio/visual/laserlight show we’d ever seen, but better than everything else in the Center as far as we were concerned.
The description and reviews for the attraction set it up for failure. If they would have said, “This is a children’s science museum,” I would not have bothered to enjoy the free admission. We would have headed to Pioneer Square or Pike Street Market or the Sculpture Garden along the waterfront – something, anything – instead of the sounds and smells of damp children.
We didn’t have anything else scheduled for the day, so we really tried to enjoy it, but we just didn’t. We headed for the hotel and thought we might regroup and head out again, but it didn’t happen. We rifled through the snacks we had on hand and watched TV. Bill wished we’d headed on home when we were at the airport the day before. I assured him that by that time the next day he’d be glad we didn’t.
I count the day as a bust. I wished I’d invested the day in the rainforest, but you can’t know everything until you actually do it. I understood Bill’s frustration. We’d spent a boring day in the car on Saturday and then a boring day in Seattle on Sunday. Who wouldn’t want to go home. Here’s the page I made for my photo albums:

If you’ll come back next week, I promise I’ll show you a better time!
