
Pike Place Market, coffee culture, and Mt Rainier at your window.
カスタムツアーとは — Seattle?
Seattle is best across Pike Place Market (arrive 9 a.m. when vendors open), the Olympic Sculpture Park (free, sunrise Puget Sound views), and a day trip to Mount Rainier (Paradise Visitor Center at 1,646 m, July–September wildflower meadows). Fly into Seattle-Tacoma (SEA). Best season: July–September (sun, 22–25°C, Mount Rainier accessible). Capitol Hill has the best restaurant density; Ballard has the best Saturday farmers market.
Seattle sits between Puget Sound and Lake Washington on a narrow north-south corridor of hills — the city was built on seven hills (Capitol Hill, First Hill, Beacon Hill, Queen Anne, Magnolia, West Seattle, and the original Denny Hill, regraded away between 1898–1930 by hydraulic water cannon in the Denny Regrade project, now the Belltown neighbourhood). The 170-km Olympic Mountain range across the Sound is visible on clear days (November–April has the most frequent cloud cover; July–September are the driest months with an average of 1–2 days of rain per month — a revelation to visitors who've heard only of Seattle's rain). Mount Rainier, the stratovolcano 59 km southeast, rises to 4,392 m and is visible from the city on clear days as a white mass that appears detached from the land — higher than the surrounding foothills by 3,000 m, sitting above the treeline.
Pike Place Market (85 Pike St, opens 9 a.m. daily, closes 6 p.m., free to enter) is the oldest continuously operating farmers market in the United States (1907) and a functioning public market with 200 vendors: the fish-throwing fishmongers at Pike Place Fish (the theatrics have been running since 1986, beginning when Jon Yokoyama adopted the 'World Famous' mindset — the throws are genuine but largely for salmon that have been pre-ordered), the fruit and vegetable stalls with Rainier cherries in July (USD 5–8/lb), the Hmong flower vendors, Rachel the Pig bronze piggy bank (the market mascot, visitors rub her nose for luck), and the original Starbucks (1912 Pike, opens 6 a.m., the store has the original 1970s store design rather than the corporate format — the lines are long, the coffee is the same as every other Starbucks).
The Seattle underground: the Pioneer Square neighbourhood (1st Ave and Yesler Way) is the original 1852 settlement site, rebuilt after the 1889 fire (which destroyed 25 city blocks in 7 hours) on a raised platform 3–9 m above the original street level. The Bill Speidel Underground Tour (608 1st Ave, USD 22, runs daily at 10 a.m. and 11 a.m. hourly through 6 p.m.) walks through the preserved original 1889 street level beneath the modern sidewalks — intact storefronts, boardwalk remnants, and the original utility tunnels — with guides providing the genuinely extraordinary story of the city's literal rebuilding one storey above itself.
おすすめの月は June–September. 月別の計画メモをご覧ください。
地元オペレーターが厳選した体験の数々。すべてのカスタムツアーにこれらの一部、またはさらに良いものが含まれます。






2つの出発点 — 実際の旅程は完全オーダーメイドです。ここから組み立てます。
July, August, and September are Seattle's sunniest and driest months — an average of 1–2 rain days per month, temperatures of 22–26°C, and Mount Rainier visible on most days. This contradicts the reputation: Seattle's annual rainfall (950 mm) is less than New York or Miami, but it falls as persistent drizzle over November–April rather than dramatic storms. The Pacific Northwest overcast (low cloud rather than rain) dominates winter. Spring (May–June) has unpredictable weather but the Skagit Valley tulip fields (45 minutes north, April) are a regional highlight. Mount Rainier's Paradise Visitor Center road is fully open July 1–October 1 and partially open earlier; Rainier is the primary reason to visit July–September. Fall (October–November) has lower prices and good hiking in the Cascades.
The original Starbucks at 1912 Pike Street opened in 1971 and is the first location, though it moved from its 1912 Pike address within the first decade — the current location is technically the second site. The exterior maintains the original 1970s brown bear logo (the siren logo came later). Inside, the menu is identical to every other Starbucks; there is no Pike Place exclusive product. The queue is 30–60 minutes on busy days. The honest assessment: the experience is primarily the photograph with the original sign. If your time in Pike Place is limited, spend it with the produce vendors and fish market rather than queuing. The Seattle coffee culture genuinely worth experiencing is at Victrola Coffee Roasters (Capitol Hill), Lighthouse Coffee (multiple locations), or Caffe Vita — all roasting locally with independent identity.
Mount Rainier National Park is 90 km southeast of Seattle — approximately 2 hours by car via WA-7 South or I-5 South to WA-706 through Ashford to the Nisqually entrance (USD 35 vehicle entry, 7-day pass). From the Nisqually entrance it's 50 km to the Paradise Visitor Center at 1,646 m — the best single point in the park for wildflower meadows (July–August) and glacier views. There is no public transit option that allows a day trip in reasonable time. The Jackson Visitor Center at Paradise has the ranger programme schedule and a viewing platform. The Paradise parking lot fills by 10 a.m. on summer weekends — arrive by 7:30–8 a.m. or after 3 p.m. The Sunrise Visitor Center (northeastern park, elevation 1,951 m, shorter wildflower season but less crowded) is accessible July–September.
Seattle's identity as a coffee city predates Starbucks (founded 1971): the city's proximity to Pacific Rim trade routes made it an early importer of specialty beans, and the independent coffee culture emerged in the 1980s alongside the alternative music scene. Starbucks scaled from Seattle's specialty coffee expectations to a global format. The post-Starbucks independent scene: Victrola Coffee Roasters (Capitol Hill, Fremont, Pike Place — single-origin pour-over specialists), Lighthouse Roasters (Fremont, the oldest specialty roaster in the Pacific Northwest still operating on its original roaster), Caffe Vita (Capitol Hill — the original espresso-culture café, 1995), and Stumptown Coffee (brought from Portland, now national). The correct Seattle café experience is a single-origin pour-over at a neighbourhood shop with a laptop-using local beside you — not the original Starbucks tourist queue.
The Bill Speidel Underground Tour (608 1st Ave, USD 22, hourly departures 10 a.m.–6 p.m., 75 minutes) explores the original 1889 street level of Pioneer Square — the section of the city that was rebuilt one storey above itself after the June 6, 1889 fire that destroyed 25 blocks. Rather than clear the debris, the city raised the street level and built new structures on top, sealing the original ground floor of every building underground. The guide-led tour walks through the preserved Victorian-era storefronts, the original boardwalk, and the utility tunnels beneath the current sidewalk. The guides use the story to explain the city's history — the original city was built on tideflats, sewage flushed backward at high tide, and the fire provided an opportunity to regrade everything. The tour is genuinely entertaining and historically substantive.
AIコンシェルジュとチャット — 夢の旅を伝えるのに2分あれば十分です。