About us
Welcome to the Seattle Millennials and Gen Z Meetup group! We’re an active, inclusive community :)
If you’re on Meetup, you’re probably hoping to make friends. That’s great! You should fit right in! We’d love to meet you. Our main activity is our weekly happy hour where we grab drinks at a bar and chat. This can sometimes involve karaoke, boardgames, or minigolf. Currently, our weekly happy hour alternates between being on Tuesday, Wednesday, and Thursday every week. We often have meetups on weekends as well. Our weekend activities have included hikes, kayaking, beach bonfires, festivals, wine tasting, and fruit picking. In addition to our official weekend meetups, many members will get together without an official meetup. For best results, show up to our weekly happy hour meetup and ask people about their plans for the weekend!
If you read our meetup’s name carefully, you’ll notice that our community is NOT strictly reserved for SINGLES!
That being said, if you ARE single, we ask that your primary motive at activities is to build new, lasting friendships. Members who are pushy or clingy or don’t give other members space will be asked to stop, then asked to leave. And it should go without saying that harassment (of any form) will not be tolerated.
We hope to see you soon!
Upcoming events
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Fort Columbia with coastal strawberry and oyster and cranberry weekend trip
Location not specified yetDescription
Picture it: you sweep across the emerald span of the Astoria–Megler Bridge, the river flashing like hammered steel below. On the Washington side, Fort Columbia Historic State Park rises out of cedar and spruce—moss‑soft bunkers, parade lawns, and cliff‑edge lookouts where the Pacific breathes in and out like a living thing. The air tastes faintly of salt and fir. Gulls stitch white threads across the sky. You’ve reached the place where the river meets the ocean—and where the weekend slows into something timeless.No cancellations for oyster closure
There is a chance of oyster closure. There is NO REFUND for that. Instead we will find alternative things to do near Fort ColumbiaGas and Food Costs and Sharing
Gas costs is negotiated within each car group ahead of the drive. Everyone should bring food and split costs for additional food bought. I encourage people to share part of each of our shellfish harvest as part of our communal experience.Equipment to bring
- License
- Gloves for warmth before and after harvesting
- Water
- Change of Clothes
- Cooking ingredients
- ziploc bags for oysters
- Food to share
- Oyster shucking knife
- Things you want to bring to lighthouse quarters
License
You will need to buy an annual shellfish license or a temporary combination license.Regulations
Coastal Strawberry Forage
We will forage for beach strawberries.Vacation House Cost
The house costs $150 per person and there are 6 total spots. 5/19 is last day for a full refund and past that only $100 refund is available if someone can be found to take your spot.Payment methods:
Make sure payment is for friends/familyVacation House Info
Sleeping accommodations include one room with two queen-size beds, one room with one queen bed, one room with two twin beds, and one room with one twin bed. The spacious living room has three full-size futons, plush couches, Smart Roku TV and WiFi, and opens onto a large porch that faces an old-growth forest. The dining room is stately, and a modern, tiled kitchen offers a comfortable place to prepare culinary delights. No pets or smoking allowed. Cable is not provided.Itinerary
- Friday evening: Drive to Fort Columbia and get dinner on way
- Saturday 6am(optional): Oyster Harvest
- Saturday morning: Get brunch and look for wild coastal strawberry
- Saturday 11am: Cranberry Museum Workshop
- Saturday afternoon: Columbia Pacific Heritage Museum
- Saturday evening: Visit Historic Fort Columbia Buildings and Museum
- Sunday Morning: Illwaco Boardwalk
- Sunday Afternoon: Go Home
Optional if they open: Waikiki Beach and North Jetty at Cape Disapointment and North Head Lighthouse at sunset
Carpool
Arrange Carpool on whatsapp.Liability:
Filling this will be required9 attendees![Alaska Labor Day Week Trip[Full]](https://secure.meetupstatic.com/photos/event/d/1/9/6/highres_533393654.jpeg)
Alaska Labor Day Week Trip[Full]
Location not specified yetDescription
Alaska doesn't ease you in. It arrives all at once — the scale of it, the cold salt air off the water, the way the mountains simply refuse to end. On the drive south from Anchorage, the Turnagain Arm corridor unfolds like a nature documentary you can't pause: Dall sheep balanced impossibly on cliff faces, beluga whales ghosting through the shallows at high tide, a 1910 gold mine where the owners still know every visitor's name.
The centerpiece of the trip is a full day on Kenai Fjords aboard a Major Marine catamaran — seven and a half hours out into a wilderness of calving ice and wild Alaska. Aialik Glacier is a mile wide and audibly alive; Holgate Glacier stands 500 feet tall and is still advancing. Humpback whales breach at a 90% sighting rate. Puffins, murres, and kittiwakes crowd the Chiswell Islands in numbers that defy expectation. Lunch is included. All you need to bring is your willingness to stand at the bow in the cold and stare.
Homer is its own kind of Alaska — a small art town at the end of a long road, where eagles crowd the fish-cleaning stations at the harbor and sea otters sleep on their backs in the kelp. The Spit glows gold in the evening light. Across Kachemak Bay, the mountains rise straight out of the water. On the drive back north, the Skilak Lake Road is 18 miles of gravel driven at 10 mph through the premier wildlife corridor on the peninsula — the kind of road where you stop often and stay quiet.
By the time you fly home, you'll have watched brown bears fish for coho salmon at dawn, panned for real gold in a creek that's been running since the 1890s, floated the upper Kenai River on a scenic drift, and eaten dinner in five different Alaskan towns. Nine days is almost enough.
Itinerary
Sept 4 — Fly SEA → ANC- Evening arrival, car pickup, groceries
Sept 5 — Anchorage → Seward via Turnagain Arm
- Potter Marsh, Beluga Point, Windy Corner Dall sheep, Indian Valley Mine gold panning, Begich Boggs Visitor Center
Sept 6 — Seward Free Day
- Option A (strenuous): Harding Icefield Trail — 8.2 mi RT, 3,500 ft gain, one of the best hikes in Alaska
- Option B (easy): Exit Glacier trails, Alaska SeaLife Center, Seward waterfront
Sept 7 — Kenai Fjords Glacier Cruise ⭐ Centerpiece of the trip
- Major Marine Tours full day — 9:30 AM departure, returns 5:00 PM. Aialik Glacier, Holgate Glacier, Chiswell Islands, humpback and orca whales
Sept 8 — Seward → Homer
- Russian River Falls bear viewing at dawn, Prospector John gem sluice, Iditarod dog sled kennel, Cook Inlet volcano viewpoint, Old Ninilchik Village, arrive Homer evening
Sept 9 — Homer Full Day
- Morning: Grewingk Glacier Hike via water taxi (included in trip cost)
- Afternoon: Islands & Oceans Visitor Center, Pratt Museum, Farmers Market
- Evening: Homer Spit golden hour — eagles, sea otters, Salty Dawg Saloon
Sept 10 — Homer → Moose Pass
- Skilak Lake Road wildlife drive (bears, moose, wolves, eagles)
- Alaska River Adventures Upper Kenai Scenic Float — 2:00 PM, 2–3 hrs
- Tern Lake bird viewing
Sept 11 — Moose Pass → Anchorage
- Alaska Wildlife Conservation Center (grizzlies, moose, musk ox, caribou, wolves)
- Girdwood detour: Crow Creek Mine gold panning, Alyeska Tram
- Old Portage Townsite earthquake ghost town
Sept 12 — Departure
- Optional: Snow City Cafe breakfast, Tony Knowles Coastal Trail, Anchorage Museum
- Return rental car, fly ANC → SEA
Getting There
Fly into Ted Stevens Anchorage International Airport (ANC) on September 4 and depart September 12. Book your own flights — coordinate timing in the WhatsApp group so we can arrange shared rental cars from the airport.
We will have rental cars for the duration of the trip. Coordinate with your car group on gas cost sharing.
Equipment- Hiking: Hiking boots, trekking poles (strongly recommended for Harding Icefield), water, layers, rain jacket, sunscreen, headlamp, hiking socks
- General: Warm mid-layers (Alaska in September is cold, especially on the water), waterproof outer shell, gloves, hat, binoculars, portable charger, camera
- Sea Sickness: Scopolamine patch or Dramamine for the glacier cruise (Scopolamine requires a prescription — arrange before the trip). If using Scopolamine, apply the night before and do not combine with meclizine. Bring ginger chews as backup.
Cost
The total cost is $1,350 per person for 6 spots total. This covers all lodging and the following included activities:- Major Marine Kenai Fjords 7.5-hour glacier cruise
- Alaska River Adventures Upper Kenai Scenic Float
- Grewingk Glacier Hike via 49 North Alaska Adventures (includes Kachemak Bay water taxi)
Not included: flights, food, gas, and optional add-ons (sea kayaking, Alyeska Tram).
A deposit of $500 secures your spot. The remaining $850 is due by July 1, 2026.
Accommodation
All lodging is in private Airbnb/VRBO rentals — no hotels. We have rentals in Anchorage (arrival night), Seward (2 nights), Homer (2 nights), Moose Pass (1 night), and Anchorage (final night). 6 total spots.
Refund Policy- Full refund available until July 1, 2026
- $500 penalty for cancellations between July 1 and August 1
- No refund after August 1, 2026 unless a replacement is found from the waitlist
Waitlist
Spots fill in order of payment. If the trip is full, your $500 deposit secures your place on the waitlist. If a spot opens, I'll reach out — if you're still in, great; if not, I'll refund you in full. Anyone not off the waitlist by the departure date will be refunded.
Payment methods: Make sure payment is for friends/familySignup Form — required for all participants
https://forms.gle/YxeuARTnEcQLEN41ACommunication We will communicate through WhatsApp. I will only provide the link to people who have paid to confirm a spot.
3 attendees
Past events
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