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Waking up to a very damp morning with pockets of fog drifting about the San Juans, but the airport itself was clear for departure. Wheels off about 0600am to climb above a solid layer of low foggy cloud deck all the way east to the Cacades. We opened our flight plan and started climbing to clear the jagged North Cascades. As we passed over Concrete we could see that the airport was socked in good. The North Cascades were stunning. From the air I will put them up against any range in the world for their awesome beauty. We press on right into the teeth of the rising sun
After doing all the tourist junk up at the Park (getting in a line of cars to drive the "Road to the Sun") etc., we took off early the following morning to go back to Cavanaugh Bay (why not?) After another day and a night of stress therapy we planned our flight to the Oregon coast for a change of scenery. A gas stop in Deer Park (man they have one big airplane junk yard there! I didn't like looking at all those trashed planes as I made my down wind leg) and we were off for Hood River OR to assess things and unstick out butts from the seats.
Hood River. Man, its getting hot! (The Portland and Seattle area were in the middle if a record breaking heat wave and I wanted no part of it.) We wanted the ocean where we knew things would be cooler. A call to flight service confirmed that the entire coast of Oregon and WA were socked in with a marine layer. Ceilings were 7 to 900 underneath. Darn... Hey, wait a minute. I'm IFR rated. Very recent, but I am IFR rated. Yea, but I've never really used it. Been practicing under the hood with my buddy, but that was just practice. Hmmmm......lets seeee. Wife: "So, whats the deal. Did you call weather and find out?" "Uh, yea I did. They said the whole coast is socked in. VFR not recommended. We may have to do something different.
6500 feet near Portland. "Portland app. This is Cessna ......849er, yada yada,...I'de like to get my clearance into Astoria." "Radar contact, climb to 8,000 and turn to 280". After getting squared away with ATC I felt like I was back in my element and realized that I knew how to do this, the training kicked in, and I felt actually quite at ease. The approach into Astoria ILS went like clockwork. We were only in the soup for a couple a minutes. It felt good to perform my first IFR approach in IMC without an instructor or safety pilot keeping watch, even though it was only IMC a short part of the way. We broke out about 900 feet and just made a low pass on the airport after cancelling and flew the short distance to the coastline before turning south to fly the 20-30 miles to get to Manzanita to see if it was in the clear. It was, we landed and set up our camp in one of the designated fly-in camp sites. What a nice place, except for the rather long walk into town. (Bring your bikes if you can). We strolled the beach on the bay right next to the airport, and then hiked the short hike to the main coast beach.
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The next morning we were able to get out and on top while maintaining VFR (barely) and flew VFR on top into Scapoose for some cheap gas. ($3.71). Leaving Scapoose we headed north for Orcas Island to be there for the Fly-In beginning that afternoon. VFR at Orcas and we landed and got another great tiedown spot to take in all the festivities. A great airport B-B-Q, some good brewskies and a bunch of BS later I nodded off to sleep in my tent thinking "somebody's got to do this, it may as well be me"
