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Willamette Week | Christina Cooke

If Mike Gutowski had said hello to the cute girl in the peacoat and Converse All-Star sneakers who boarded the No. 6 bus after him on a Friday evening, this would be a different story. He and the girl made eye contact and exchanged smiles as they traveled south along Martin Luther King Jr. Boulevard. […]

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Amid Peru's stunning splendor | Christina Cooke

The empty saddle on the horse following us up the 15,700-foot pass in Peru’s Huayhuash Mountain Range looks awfully enticing. As I plod up the rocky mountainside, one slow step at a time toward the blue sky, my calves are screaming, my thighs are burning and my lungs are begging for a break. Our guide, […]

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Blog | Christina Cooke

The distant peaks of Glacier National Park through the remains of a burn For us, hiking Montana’s Glacier National Park for three days in late November meant a multitude of ill-informed mid-hike discussions about the sleep patterns of bears. We didn’t even think about the fact we might need bear spray or other protection until […]

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Chattanooga | Christina Cooke

After more than two years of writing for the Chattanooga Times Free Press, I quit my job. No longer will I write about what the children of Hamilton County are learning in their classrooms and whether the school board thinks seatbelts on buses improve safety. I am moving to Chile, to the Torres del Paine […]

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Aviary | Christina Cooke

View on Fodor’s site here. Disregarding culinary conventions, this visionary Alberta Street eatery serves up innovative dishes that’ll push your boundaries while also delighting your palate. Its simple menu of small plates (order 2-3 per person) influenced by Asian flavors and using European cooking techniques, combines unusual ingredients into dishes that work not in spite […]

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Blog | Christina Cooke – Part 3

Packing the Crystal Ballroom in Portland on Saturday, whiskery men pitted their facial hair one against another at the 2012 West Coast Beard and Mustache Championships. They competed in categories that included natural mustache, chops-style mustache, freestyle mustache, full natural beard and partial beard. In honor of the competition, which the “Portlandia” blog covered here, […]

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Virginia | Christina Cooke

11 Feb A herd of about 150 ponies lives atop Mount Rogers, the highest peak in Virginia. Though they accept veterinarian check-ups once a year and salt licks on occasion, they’re otherwise wild and don’t care much about humans.  For the record, though, even from a distance – wild horse babies multiply the adorability factor of any […]

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Montana | Christina Cooke

The distant peaks of Glacier National Park through the remains of a burn For us, hiking Montana’s Glacier National Park for three days in late November meant a multitude of ill-informed mid-hike discussions about the sleep patterns of bears. We didn’t even think about the fact we might need bear spray or other protection until […]

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Salt of the Earth: Sand Mountain man's shaker collection tops 5,000 | Christina Cooke

The salt and pepper shakers on James Thornhill’s kitchen table are cheap, plastic and far from remarkable. Looking at them, you might assume that he has no taste in spice dispensers. But you would be wrong. The 72-year-old Sand Mountain, Ala., resident has a collection of shakers that would impress even the most snobby of […]

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Backpacking Mount Mitchell: when you start at the top, there’s nowhere to go but down (and up, and down) | Christina Cooke

My sister Laura and I hoisted on our backpacks atop 6,684-foot Mt. Mitchell — the highest point east of the Mississippi River — and lumbered 4.5 miles north along a ridge to a camping spot at Deep Gap. While the hike along the Black Mountain Crest (aka Deep Gap) trail was not horizontally challenging, we did find ourselves navigating a lot of steep […]

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Backpacking Mount Mitchell: when you start at the top, there’s nowhere to go but down (and up, and down) | Christina Cooke

My sister Laura and I hoisted on our backpacks atop 6,684-foot Mt. Mitchell — the highest point east of the Mississippi River — and lumbered 4.5 miles north along a ridge to a camping spot at Deep Gap. While the hike along the Black Mountain Crest (aka Deep Gap) trail was not horizontally challenging, we did find ourselves navigating a lot of steep […]

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Sour Season: Cascade Brewing Barrel House | Christina Cooke

View on the Willamette Week page here. When it comes to hops, Northwest brewers are all about one-upping each other. The guys atCascade Brewing Barrel House (939 SE Belmont St., cascadebrewingbarrelhouse.com) didn’t care to join that game—so they went sour. The tasting room serves over a dozen varieties of sour beer, produced with lactobacillus bacteria and aged for months […]

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JJ Jiang Brings Artistic Vision to Cary | Christina Cooke

Photo by Lisa Gotwals Find the original story here.  “This is my hometown,” says JJ Jiang, indicating a watercolor of a town in southeast China at Cary’s Village Art Circle gallery and studio. In the painting, small wooden boats with blue awnings fill a canal edged by thatched-roof buildings. In the distance, trees peek over […]

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Rafting | Christina Cooke

Q: What do you get when you put three dental equipment salesmen from Kansas City together in a river raft? A: Knock-knock jokes! I’ll spare you the gory details, but suffice it to say, I learned quite a few one-liners during a recent rafting trip in Washington State. My friend Jonathan guides rafting trips on […]

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