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OMSI

by Rob Levy, Prudential Northwest Properties

The Oregon Museum of Science and Industry, or OMSI, is a 219,000 square-foot state-of-the-art science center. Originally, conceived more than 100 years ago by naturalist John Cyprian Stevens, the museum itself began to take shape after World War II. Today OMSI boasts a 300-seat dome-screen OMNIMAX Dome Theater (the first in the Northwest), a 200-seat Kendall Planetarium, and the USS Blueback, the last non-nuclear powered submarine built by the Navy. With five exhibit halls, OMSI offers hundreds of interactive displays and exhibits, and is ranked as one of the top science centers in the country.

 

Turbine Hall provides a window into how technology and the physical sciences are changing the world. Visitors can build an aqueduct, program a robot, and even feel an earthquake.

The Science Playground offers children ages 6 and younger a place to play with sand and water, puppets and books, and more in this fun and funky exploration area.

Life Science Hall explores the mystery of life, including growth, development, and aging, and how technology shapes health care.

Earth Science Hall focuses on the science of our planet, and includes exhibits on environmental hazards and global climate. 

Kendall Planetarium “blends art, science, fantasy, and fun.” It is the largest and most technologically advanced planetarium in the Pacific Northwest, offering multimedia presentations on astronomy and space science.

The OMNIMAX Dome Theater features a five-story domed screen covering more than 6,000 square feet of projection surface. It also has a 2D IMAX projection system with the largest frame in the motion picture industry.

 

USS Blueback

The USS Blueback was the first battle-ready class of submarines to use the teardrop hull and was in official operation in the Pacific Ocean for more than 30 years. It has appeared in a variety of films and television programs. Visitors can peer through a periscope, touch a torpedo, and climb the crew’s quarters, while learning how a submarine works.

OMSI offers a world of new experiences for the young and old alike. Rotating exhibits document the science and wonder of the world around us, and have included such diverse presentations as those celebrating Leonardo da Vinci, the human body, sharks, dinosaurs, and even the literary works of C.S. Lewis.

Entrance into OMSI requires an admission ticket or a museum membership.   Members are allowed unlimited access to the museum itself, and receive special discounts and guest tickets.  And through OMSI’s participation in the Association of Science and Technology Centers, members can also gain access to over 200 additional science centers and museums throughout the country.  An OMSI membership provides incredible learning and recreational opportunities for those who like to explore, dream, and grow!

Portland Walking Tours

by Rob Levy, Prudential Northwest Properties

Portland Walking Tours

As one of USA Today’s Top Five Walking Tours in the country, Portland Walking Tours offers 5 tours (Cultural, Sub-Culture, Supernatural, Indulgent, and Culinary) every Friday, Saturday, and Sunday, and have just added one more tour to celebrate our “City of Roses.”

 

Best of Portland Tour

This cultural tour highlights the city’s artwork, parks, fountains, bridges, trains, streetcars, and more. Best of Portland was named “Best Way to Fake Being a Native” by Willamette Week. The tour begins outside the Broadway entrance of the Hilton Hotel at SW Broadway and Salmon and leads to the waterfront.

The tour offers a history of Portland, including the inside story of the city’s eleven bridges. Tour participants will get the inside story on “The City that Works,” the bronze drinking fountains, and over 30 pieces of public art.

 

Underground Portland

This tour focuses on the corrupt and shady history of the city, winding through Old Town and Chinatown to the legendary ‘Portland Shanghai Tunnels’ beneath the city. The tour begins outside of Old Town Pizza on Davis. In addition to the history behind the city’s Shanghai tunnels, other highlights include the varied locations that The Simpsons television show is based on. You will also visit the site of “the most arrested man in the Northwest,” and the storied locations and buildings that once hosted notorious criminal activity.

 

Beyond Bizarre

Showcasing just why “Keep Portland Weird” is Portland’s unofficial slogan, this tour offers the wacky, the paranormal, and yes, the weird, using real ghost hunting equipment to visit famous haunts and hauntings. Portland Walking Tours is an official member of the International Ghost Hunters Society, and have a paranormal expert and a clairvoyant available for the tour itself. Highlights include glimpses into the profession of documenting, identifying, and understanding paranormal activity, as well as tales of dark secrets and strange rituals. The tour begins outside of Old Town Pizza on Davis.

 

Chocolate Decadence

This tour showcases local chocolate vendors and chocolatiers. You will learn about chocolate’s lineage from bean to confection. Participants will indulge in truffles and caramels, gelato and sorbet, cookies and croissants, and while also tasting Pinot Noir and Pinot Gris from the Willamette Valley. The tour begins inside and upstairs in the mezzanine library of the Heathman Hotel.

 

Epicurean Excursion

Portland has become of the country’s premier destinations for great cuisine. This tour is for foodies who want to build on their culinary knowledge and skills, learning what it means to be a locovore, the philosophy of F.L.O.S.S. (Fresh, Local, Organic, Seasonable, and Sustainable), and the history of the Slow Food Movement. The tour also includes “Portland’s Liquid Assets”: the microbrews, wines, spirits, coffees, sodas, and teas that make the city proud. The epicurean delights will be diverse and plentiful, and include artisan doughnuts, pizzas, chocolates, pastries, sandwiches and much, much more. The tour begins inside and upstairs in the mezzanine library of the Heathman Hotel.

 

Roses Gone Wild

This tour reveals the facts, secrets, mysteries, and stories behind the world-famous International Rose Test Garden. Learn the truth behind a successful rose, why the legendary blue rose is excluded from the garden, who the “Rose Bro’s” are, with the stunning views of the city as a backdrop. This tour begins across from the Rose Garden store at the International Rose Test Garden.

Guided walking tours provide a great way to experience the city up-close and personal, while learning the fascinating history of what makes Portland so unique. So, put on those comfortable shoes and explore!

Mt. Angel Oktoberfest

by Rob Levy, Prudential Northwest Properties

Each September Mt. Angel celebrates Oktoberfest, which be held this September 15-18. Located 18 miles northeast of Salem on Highway 214, Mt Angel boasts Bavarian style storefronts and Benedictine Abbey built in 1883, and sits high on a bluff with views of Mt. St. Helens, Mt. Hood, Mt. Adams, and Willamette Valley. Oktoberfest actually means Harvest Celebration, and in Germany, fall festivals occur at the end of the harvest season. In Mt. Angel, Oktoberfest always begins the second Thursday after Labor Day, when the hop harvest is usually in. It is Oregon’s largest folk festival.

There will be live music, free kindergarten with rides and shows, Alpine food chalets, arts and craft show, traditional Biergarten, Weingarten, Prostgarten, and Alpinegarten, community Glockenspiel, Bavarian folk dances, and more. Ladies dirndls and lederhosen are also available for purchase.

Most events at Oktoberfest are free, with a nominal cover charge for entry into the Biergarten, Weingarten, Prostgarten, and Alpinegarten. An All Festival Pass is $25.00, and includes unlimited entry. A Day Pass is available for unlimited entry to entertainment venues, and is $4.00 until 5 pm, and $5.00 after 5 pm. Leashed pets are welcomed and seeing dogs are allowed within the venues. Oktoberfest is also handicap friendly.

 

Directions

From the north on I-5, take the Woodburn exit #271 and follow State Highway #214 to Mt. Angel (approximately ten miles).

From the south on I-5, take the Keizer-Chemawa exit #260B at Salem. Turn right (east) through the Hwy. 99 intersection. Continue east and follow signs to Mt. Angel (approximately 17 miles).

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