We’re back from Portland, so I’ve been dealing with the
demands of my university job, an internet connection that was down most of
yesterday, and the beginnings of panic about not being prepared for the Seattle
Fragrance Salon on May 5.
The good news is that we survived the first orchid show in
which we also displayed perfumes and, most importantly, survived driving in
Portland. As soon as we crossed the bridge into the city, we saw a car with a
bumper sticker that said “Keep Portland Weird”. It’s weird, all right, but
probably not in the fun and funky way the bumper sticker people meant it.
What’s weird is trying to navigate in a city where almost every street is
one-way, the direction is randomly assorted rather than alternating, and there
are very few functional signs indicating that streets are one-way. The standard
“one way/do not enter” signs used at intersections elsewhere seem to be unheard
of in Portland.
Whenever I’d visited Portland before, it was on the train
from Seattle, then on public transportation around town. The times that we
drove, we parked the car as soon as we arrived and took public transportation.
That was simple. You just get on a bus or a tram and it takes you where you
want to go. Easy enough.
Driving around Portland in a car jam-packed full of orchid
plants, looking for an unfamiliar address, was a very different experience. The
worst incident was when we turned onto an unmarked 4-lane street that looked as
if it should be 2-way and found ourselves heading straight for an oncoming
tram. I suppose people do this all the time because the tram driver and other
oncoming cars saw us and slowed down to avoid a head-on collision, allowing us
to not so gracefully find our way off of that street.
The orchid show was at a venue in the Convention Center-Rose
Garden stadium district, a weird combination of hotels, motels, fast-food and
stop-and-rob chains, an inordinate number of Starbucks (standing at one point
we could see three!), and public buildings of all sizes. The good thing was
that our hotel was only two blocks from the show venue. Setting up, we were a
little uneasy about how perfume would be received at what is essentially an
agricultural show. It was reassuring to see that some vendors were also selling
bromeliads, begonias, and other non-orchid plants, and that there were framed
orchid photographs and a few orchid-theme tchotchkes for sale as well.
Before the public even came in we had exhibitors and
organizers coming over to smell the perfumes. In the rush of packing I had
forgotten to bring sniff glasses, so we made do with disposable coffee cups
from the hotel. They actually worked quite well, providing just the right
blue-collar touch to the display. I had
also forgotten to bring the Just Orchids discovery sets that I had set out the
night before, but we did manage to bring a lot of individual small sprays and some
soaps. By the end of the show we had sold out of the orchid-line sprays and had
made a dent in the Devil Scents!
It was a very good show, both in terms of perfumes and in
terms of orchids. From now on, the perfumes are coming to orchid shows. In
Seattle, some orchids will come with me to the fragrance salon, to serve as props and to be given
away at the end. I’m starting to really appreciate the crossover between the
two domains.
[Portland landmark photos from Wikimedia]
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