Wanderlust Travel Magazine (UK)

FLOWER POWER

Why spring makes for the perfect time to travel to Portland, Oregon

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STOP & SMELL THE ROSES

As winter makes way for the invigorati­ng showers and sunnier spells of spring, the Portland Region celebrates with food, fiestas and flowers.

Thanks to the region’s temperate climate, many flowers begin to bud from early March and bloom through to June. Visitors who plan their trip for this time of year will be rewarded with vistas of blossoming cherry trees, botanical adventures in the great outdoors and the city’s signature event, the Portland Rose Festival, which runs from late May through to early June.

Speaking of roses, the Internatio­nal Rose Test Garden is home to more than 10,000 bushes for you to sniff and admire at Washington Park, which also houses the tranquil Portland Japanese Garden. In the city’s south east, the Crystal Springs Rhododendr­on Garden makes for a lush stopping point. Further south, Tryon Creek State park and the native trillium flower can be found in such abundance that an annual festival is held every April.

The new season brings with it a wealth of spring produce too and so Portland’s dining scene celebrates in fine style. Farmers markets can be found whipping up local eats to tuck into and if you’re visiting in March be sure to make the most of Portland Dining Month, which sees many of the city’s top restaurant­s offering threecours­e meals for just $33 (around £26).

THE ROAD LESS TRAVELLED

Ready to work off all that delicious food? A short 45-minute train ride can help you trade downtown Portland for some down time in the countrysid­e of Tualatin Valley.

As one of the most bikefriend­ly states in the USA, Oregon offers many bike paths to pedal. The Tualatin Valley Scenic Bikeway, for example, is an 80km route on the outskirts of Portland, combining 48km of country roads, fields and farms and 32km on the car free Banks-vernonia State Trail.

If leisurely visits to vineyards prove a better pace of travel, then Tualatin Valley is situated in the northern tip of the famed Willamette Valley wine region, and so offers more than 35 estate wineries and tasting rooms along with several tempting wine loops to try.

JUST ADD WATER

As the sun begins to make a more frequent appearance, so too do water sports enthusiast­s at Mt. Hood Territory’s seven rivers and 40 lakes. You can try stand-up paddle boarding or go by kayak from Oregon City to the thundering Willamette Falls with ENRG Kayaking.

For something a little more adrenaline inducing, the wild Clackamas River is renowned for its white-water rafting with the chance to ride Class 3 and 4 rapids. Time your visit in May and you can join hundreds of people for the annual Upper Clackamas Whitewater Festival.

With so much to see and do, if you put the Portland Region into your travel plans for early 2020 then you’re guaranteed to have a ‘spring’ in your step.

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 ??  ?? Experience nature (clockwise from right) Biking near Camp Wilkerson & Vernonia; horse riders in the Portland Rose Festival; Crystal Springs Rhododendr­on Garden
Experience nature (clockwise from right) Biking near Camp Wilkerson & Vernonia; horse riders in the Portland Rose Festival; Crystal Springs Rhododendr­on Garden

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