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Portland, Ore. is rife with free things to do, see and sample. Here are a few suggestions from the Portland Convention and Visitors Bureau:

  1. One of the consummate brew cities in the country, Portland is perfused with breweries and distilleries – many sporting complimentary tours and tastings. Check out BridgePort Brewing Company, Clear Creek Distillery, House Spirits Distillery, Rogue Ales Distillery and Public House and Widmer Brothers Brewing Company.
  2. Portland’s arts scene is edgy and elegant. See it up close the first Thursday of each month during the appropriately-named First Thursday Gallery Walk. The streets come alive with performers and sidewalk artists as strollers search for the next star.
  3. Enjoy the controlled wilds of the nation’s largest urban wilderness, Forest Park. The 5,000-acre enclave is perfect for hiking and biking – and this time of year the park’s largely evergreen forest is sprinkled in shades of autumn color.
  4. See a remarkable marble replica of Michelangelo’s Pietà at The Grotto, a 62-acre Catholic sanctuary. The likeness of the famous sculpture’s signature work is carved into the base of a 110-foot cliff.
  5. Hang a while in Pioneer Courthouse Square and feel Portland’s pulse as nowhere else. Some 9.5 million souls pass through the square each year, making it the city’s most-visited site.
  6. Some venues are gratis on designated days, like the Portland Art Museum every fourth Friday from 5 – 8. This first-rate artistic repository is always free for folks 17 and under.
  7. From the “almost free” category here are a couple of other suggestions.  Visit the Oregon Museum of Science and Industry (known locally as OMSI) the first Sunday of every month for a pittance: $2.
  8. Or head to the acclaimed Oregon Zoo the second Tuesday of any month and pay just $4 for admission.

(Image: robert.hamilton)

About the author

Jerry ChandlerJerry Chandler loves window seats – a perch with a 35,000-foot view of it all. His favorite places: San Francisco and London just about any time of year, autumn in Manhattan and the seaside in winter. An award-winning aviation and travel writer for 30 years, his goal is to introduce each of his grandkids to their first flight.

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