As we creep closer to January, I’ve been reminiscing about the trip I took to Portland, Oregon, in January 2018. When I was planning this solo trip, I decided to rent a car for a day or two so I could drive to the coast, which is about a 90-minute drive from Portland. I wanted to go to Cannon Beach to see Haystack Rock (of The Goonies fame) and dip my feet in the Pacific Ocean. Then I planned to drive roughly 40 miles down the coastal highway to the Tillamook Creamery. Don’t act like you wouldn’t drive 40 miles for cheese.
It was a cool, clear morning when I ventured out of Portland in my white Kia rental. I made sure to stop at Voodoo Doughnut first for a beach doughnut (translation: a doughnut that I planned to eat while sitting on the beach), and headed west.

Obligatory doughnut shot at Cannon Beach. Yes, those are Cocoa Puffs.
Outside of the city, the landscape went from suburban to flat, wide-open farmland. Around Banks, Oregon, the highway reduced to a two-lane road, and I was soon driving through a thick forest of Douglas firs.
I don’t remember how long I had been driving, but some time after entering the forest, I began ascending a hill. Near the top there was a blue sign that vaguely read “Viewpoint” and an arrow pointing diagonally to the upper right.
Normally I’m one to power through a long drive, only stopping for the essentials: food or a bathroom break. But, I was on vacation, I reasoned. By myself. I had all the time in the world. Haystack Rock would still be there even if I was “late.”
There were 3 or 4 cars already pulled over when I parked. I got out and walked toward a small cluster of people holding up their iPhones and snapping pictures of….the trees? I stopped for this? But then I looked closer toward the direction everyone was facing and gasped:

Two spindly trees perfectly framed the snow-capped mountain, which almost wasn’t visible; it nearly blended in with the sky. I confirmed later that what I was looking at was Mount St. Helens, miles away in Washington. I took in the view, trying to commit it to memory. But I couldn’t leave without taking a few envy-inducing photos:


A non-zoomed in photo of Mount St. Helens. This more accurately shows the view as I saw it with the naked eye.
I don’t know what compelled me to stop at that vaguely labeled viewpoint, but I’ve felt grateful that I did ever since. I now know what I would’ve missed if I had kept going, making good time on my journey to eating a doughnut on Cannon Beach. Sometimes the best and most unexpected things happen when we deviate from our plans. Always stop at the viewpoints.
And I did eventually make it to Haystack Rock.
