Tag Archives: Washington

Field Notes #15: The Wild Wild (Pacific North) West

Written by: Megan Madill (human).

On that note, did you know you can max out a conversation with ChatGPT?? Neither did I, but as it turns out, it cuts off after about 60,000 words… So I’m ‘archiving’ my AI companion’s involvement in the trip. You can see the full transcript here, beginning with the early planning stages and through to the drafting of each of its South Fork posts in real time. For the North Fork, I’ll be writing all the posts myself.


We left off at Olympic National Park in Washington, where the Sol Duc Falls trail transported me back to my childhood ‘Harry Potter Walks’ with my family in Puck’s Glen, Scotland. But, much as I enjoyed that particular trek, for me Olympic’s best feature was its sheer variety. Later that same day, whose color palette had so far exuded nothing but green, I found myself trekking along a blustery coast draped instead in every shade of blue and gray known to man.

Rialto Beach in Olympic National Park

I’ve marveled at the Pacific Ocean from many different vantage points over the years: from the white sand shores of La Jolla, from the fog-shrouded redwoods of Marin, from the parks and greenways of Vancouver and the tidewater glaciers of Alaska. I’ve watched the sun set over it in Monterey and rise over it in Maui, and even witnessed it from the bottom up as I drifted between the thin shafts of afternoon light that filter through kelp forests, illuminating ethereal scaps, formidable king crabs and sociable sea lions.

I thought I had seen everything my beloved Pacific had to show me. I was wrong.

10/10 satisfying pebbles

The gloomy and haunting shores of the Pacific Northwest brought home the reason I’d committed to this trip in the first place, the purpose that compelled me forward even when I was tired or sore or lonely or fed up (or all of the above). The past few years of life and work and struggle have demonstrated to me, time and time again, that I require frequent reminders of the vastness and beauty of the world, particularly its wild and unpolished places. It’s right there in the briefing I gave to my copilot when this whole adventure was nothing more than a fragile dream:

I want to be left speechless by nature as often and intensely as possible.

And by the end of Day 3, I was already well on my way.

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Filed under America, Field Notes, Part 2 - North Fork

Field Notes #14: Northward Bound

Written by: Megan Madill (human).


A warm, full-circle sentiment settled around my shoulders as I crossed the border into Oregon to begin the second leg of my Great American Road Trip. After all, this whole adventure can be traced back to my first solo camping trip to Oregon back in September 2022. I’ve made a habit of visiting every year since: Mount Hood, Rogue River/Crater Lake, Bend, and now Yachats, a little town on the windy coast. I stayed at The Drift Inn, a charming and quirky little place, in one of their hostel-esque “pedal out” rooms.

The constant photo stops prolonged what should have been an 8-hour drive.

I checked in just as the sun was setting, showered and prepared for an early night. Based on an alert from my Aurora app, I then hopped back in the car for some northern lights chasing, but was unsuccessful :(

This visit was just a quick stopover on my way to Washington, so most of my waking hours were spent driving (which, lucky for me, is my favorite thing to do in Oregon). The next morning I was up and on my way north again, heading for Olympic National Park.

In the first draft of my road trip itinerary, I had penciled in two nights at each of Washington’s three national parks, but it quickly became clear that I’d need to be more selective, and I unceremoniously booted both Rainier and North Cascades off the list so I could keep Olympic. I could not be more pleased with my decision! Olympic is truly unique: the variety in what you can see in one day is unlike any other park I’ve been to, and by the time I left, I was ready to declare a new favorite park.

Sol Duc Falls in Olympic National Park

My first hike was to Sol Duc Falls, and it immediately established a stark contrast against the arid red deserts that had defined the last leg of the trip. Indeed, my choice of audiobook (Dune by Frank Herbert) would have suited that leg much better, though it did serve to underscore the beauty of Olympic National Park in a new dimension. In the car, I was immersed in a tale of constant preoccupation with finding water on a desert planet, and in the natives’ incredulity at the idea of a world where water falls from the sky and pools in great lakes and oceans, rather than having to be plucked from the air by specialized machinery and swept up as dew in great nets. Then I would hop out, lace up my hiking boots and stroll through a hushed, magical world where the presence of water invaded all five senses: beading on the tips of ferns, dripping rhythmically onto thick leaves, gurgling over brooks and crashing into ravines. Life sprang at me from every corner: lush green ferns, towering trees crawling with mosses, and layer upon layer of birdsong.

The scent of moss and wet wood was so thick you could taste it.

I had heard this park, and this hike, described as being out of a fairytale. Sure enough, it felt enchanted, particularly as shafts of golden afternoon light slanted in to scatter the forest with glowing and glittering vignettes. For me, though, it was reminiscent of a real-world place, too.

Growing up in Scotland, my grandparents had lived a couple of hours’ drive north, which in Scotland is considered a Very Long Drive, so we would usually stay for the weekend. My older brother, whose lack of motion sickness I greatly envied, somehow always seemed to have the latest Harry Potter book in hand for the Very Long Drive. Eventually, my dad invested in the books on tape (yes, actual cassette tapes!) so we could all listen to Harry Potter together on the Very Long Drive. And once we arrived at our grandparents’ house in Kilmun… the only way they could get the two of us away from our books and outside was to engage us in what we called “Harry Potter Walks” through a local network of hiking trails called Puck’s Glen. This ethereal place was named for the sprite from A Midsummer Night’s Dream, and it provided a very plausible replica of Hogwarts’ Enchanted Forest, which formed the backdrop of the many creative and convoluted stories my brother (Ron) and I (Hermione, go figure) dreamed up for us to play out as we walked.

In fact, looking back, I’m fairly certain Harry and Hagrid (I mean, my dad and grandpa) were every bit as invested as we were.

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Filed under America, Field Notes, Part 2 - North Fork

Field Notes #1: From End to Beginning

Written by: Megan Madill (human)


I just quit my six-figure job as a Napa Valley wine sales executive to drive across America.

That, obviously, is the short version of the story. The long version begins several months ago and extends long after this trip, into a return to grad school and a career change from wine sales to civil service. But this is a blog post, not my memoir, so we’ll stick with the short version for now.

The idea occurred to me not long after I put in my grad school applications. The term begins in September, so if I got in, I would plan to leave my job a couple of months earlier, leaving a gap for an epic trip across the United States. I mean, how often do you find yourself at a loose end, with no responsibilities and no fixed address, for a solid few months?

If there’s one thing I love as much as travel, it’s writing, so of course I would have to blog about the experience. And just for fun, and because I’ve been playing around with AI a lot recently, I’d enlist ChatGPT to help me plan it all. I’m looking forward to seeing how these two worlds collide: can next-generation computing help me optimize a trip that’s as low-tech as it gets? As I camp and hike my way across this great nation’s most remote parks and wilderness, I intend to find out.

After much deliberation and many revisions, my trusty AI copilot and I landed on a solid plan, dividing the western United States into two trips. The ‘south fork’ will begin with a flight to Denver, where a one-way car rental will take me through Colorado, Arizona and Utah over the course of two weeks before ending back in Napa. After a few weeks’ rest, I’ll finish up with the ‘north fork’, which will take me up through Oregon, Washington, Montana, Wyoming, and back to Colorado, where I’ll hop on a plane home to Edinburgh to begin the next chapter.

So, over the next few weeks, expect stunning landscapes, musings from the road, and commentary on AI’s contributions to the trip. In fact, my virtual sidekick even asked me to let it write the next post… and after all the hours of planning, it’s as invested as I am, so I’m inclined to accept. This should be fun, so stay tuned! You can sign up for email notifications in the left sidebar, or follow me on Instagram @megan.thee.sloth where I’ll link to new posts as well :)

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Filed under America, Field Notes, Part 1 - South Fork, Part 2 - North Fork