Well folks, The Man and I survived a drive of over 2400 km from Ontario to Port Charlotte, Florida.
Wow what a crazy drive that was.
Interstate 75 is just as busy as the 401 in places and it was interesting with the transport trucks on the route too. Not to mention the motor homes and land cruisers towing vehicles and boats and bikes and ...you name it.
The weather was quite snowy through Ohio and then, once we reached Kentucky, it cleared and the drive was nice and sunny. I really applaud the people that tag team drive all the way to Florida for March Break. It is really a long way.
For us it was uneventful. Thankfully.
We spent time looking at the licence plates going by, reading the Route 75 book I had bought for the trip and it was very handy in finding the odd place to stop and for neat restaurants.
I had to get some fresh pecans (said as pee-CAWN, don'tcha know) and we spent a bunch in the store. I love pecans. There was a cotton patch there too and we took some pictures of it. Okay, it was a touristy thing to do.
I'd like to take a little bit of time to explain how lousy the hotels were that we were staying in.
On my other trips I had booked through CAA on line. Located the place I wanted to stop and then picked the place that looked the most appropriate. Having that experience I did the same thing again! I wasn't as fortunate with my picks this time.
I did pick "known places" that weren't in the back of beyond.
But they certainly didn't add up to what we'd expect.
Let's see, the last place we stayed, in Gainesville Florida, a Days Inn actually, had the vanities nearly completely detached from the wall. The rust at the bottom of the bathtub where it meets the floor was quite interesting and the old metal doors needed some serious attention. The linens were clean though and that's all that mattered.
The first place we stayed on the trip, in Florence Kentucky was equally as "tired" and in need of some real TLC. The lobby area and the breakfast area was lovely but the rooms and hallways needed some help.
I was dismayed at the state they were in. I will follow up with CAA and find out how they do their ratings and let them know what we found. They always want to know because if it is really bad then they won't rate them.
Regardless we did arrive in one piece and the beloved Equinox was stellar in it's work for us. It is in need of bath right now but we'll get to that another day.
The home I have rented for our Florida adventure will have me a "temporary resident" of Port Charlotte for 3 months; The Man, 2.
Port Charlotte has so much to offer and today we only scratched the surface finding the grocery story and the ABC liquor store (right ON!) We stocked up on just about everything we need for the next few days at least as we don't want to go anywhere! It's new years! Yippee!
So, arriving with 77 F temperature and the pool at 86 F we knew we had found the best spot. The Hibiscus plants are in bloom and the palm trees really make the whole place. I post pictures on my next post once I figure out how this computer works (the home owner left his for us to use!) at taking my memory card from my camera.
I am officially a snowbird! Okay, a very tired one at the moment but I am escaping the snow and cold for the first time in my life. Wow! Now there's a concept.
I'll fill you all in on more tidbits as I think of them. I'm a little brain drained at the moment.
Cheers all!
The following will be an account of the travels and travails of one discovering her roots, history and some adventure thrown in.
The travels and travails of one finding her history, roots and some adventure!
Beginning in 2010 a whole lot of planning, thinking, worring and dreaming will start.
A Pilgrimage to where her father was born, lived and worked will be investigated.
Some items from a personal "bucket list" will be crossed off.
A journey of some thousands of kilometers will begin.
It will truly be an epic journey of a lifetime.
It is through family that I am blessed to have this opportunity.
It is through family that I will discover many new things.
And so it begins.....
A Pilgrimage to where her father was born, lived and worked will be investigated.
Some items from a personal "bucket list" will be crossed off.
A journey of some thousands of kilometers will begin.
It will truly be an epic journey of a lifetime.
It is through family that I am blessed to have this opportunity.
It is through family that I will discover many new things.
And so it begins.....
Friday, December 30, 2011
Monday, December 26, 2011
I think I have everything I need...
12 hours from now I will be heading west from TO to begin my southern odyssey.
I've been east, west and south west but now it's just plain south.
I begin my research on snowbirds and what is entailed to be one of those "retired but not ready to sit and do nothing" people that I've heard about.
So far I'm wondering if the folks pulling a trailer have the right idea. Now, I know that if I had my own place in the south I wouldn't bring as much as I have,but I just don't know what I might need. Much of it is books and "amusement" things like that. Some of it is clothes, yes, and I know I've probably over packed with that type of thing. I just don't know what I'll need.
Ho hum.
Christmas is done for 2011 and for me that means seeing some cousins I don't see except at this time of year and we spend some time catching up and figuring out what each other has been doing. There aren't any "little ones" in our group and the teens come and go and hang with their friends as well as us. It's an open, swinging door where ever we all are and it's neat to see everyone having fun. Next year there will be a baby as my cousin A is very pregnant right now and is looking forward to losing the basketball she has infront of her. I give her credit, since the age of 12 she has wanted to get married, have a nice home and children. She's stuck to her dream and a couple of years married her love J, after many years of dating, has a little home and now they are having their first child. I have another cousin, T, who is a miget race car driver and I love hearing how animated he gets when he explains how his car works and what could make it better.
All these things make the Christmas get together a lot of fun. It's a time for family and that's exactly what it is.
So after checking all my "to do" lists I think I'm just about ready to head out.
I can't believe that this time has finally come, the planning, thinking, organizing is down to this.
Wheeee!
Gee, I hope the border folks are nice and we can really get on the road!
2,400 km from here to there.
Piece of cake really.
The Equinox is ready to go.
The pilgrimage continues.
Cheers all!
I've been east, west and south west but now it's just plain south.
I begin my research on snowbirds and what is entailed to be one of those "retired but not ready to sit and do nothing" people that I've heard about.
So far I'm wondering if the folks pulling a trailer have the right idea. Now, I know that if I had my own place in the south I wouldn't bring as much as I have,but I just don't know what I might need. Much of it is books and "amusement" things like that. Some of it is clothes, yes, and I know I've probably over packed with that type of thing. I just don't know what I'll need.
Ho hum.
Christmas is done for 2011 and for me that means seeing some cousins I don't see except at this time of year and we spend some time catching up and figuring out what each other has been doing. There aren't any "little ones" in our group and the teens come and go and hang with their friends as well as us. It's an open, swinging door where ever we all are and it's neat to see everyone having fun. Next year there will be a baby as my cousin A is very pregnant right now and is looking forward to losing the basketball she has infront of her. I give her credit, since the age of 12 she has wanted to get married, have a nice home and children. She's stuck to her dream and a couple of years married her love J, after many years of dating, has a little home and now they are having their first child. I have another cousin, T, who is a miget race car driver and I love hearing how animated he gets when he explains how his car works and what could make it better.
All these things make the Christmas get together a lot of fun. It's a time for family and that's exactly what it is.
So after checking all my "to do" lists I think I'm just about ready to head out.
I can't believe that this time has finally come, the planning, thinking, organizing is down to this.
Wheeee!
Gee, I hope the border folks are nice and we can really get on the road!
2,400 km from here to there.
Piece of cake really.
The Equinox is ready to go.
The pilgrimage continues.
Cheers all!
Wednesday, December 21, 2011
Back on the Blogging Trail
Greetings all
First of all Merry Christmas and Happy New Year to everyone and I hope everyone has a safe and fun holiday time.
This year, for the first time in many, I've been able to get hand written Christmas cards out to just about everyone I can think of. I've had TIME to do this! Okay, I've had time in the past by my brain didn't have time. There was always something driving me away from that little task that is really quite fun to do. I've found myself taking time to do just about everything. There is no rush for anything. It's really a novel concept and I am so enjoying this new philosphy in my life.
Since arriving home from my Western Tour I've enjoyed the quiet and unrushed life of Southampton Ontario. There has been some snow but today it is green as it would be in April and just a slight drizzle falling. It's 2 degrees Celcius out. Not really Christmas weather but I'm not complaining. With the amount of driving to come in the next week and a half I'm fine with it!
I have been back and forth to Toronto a few times as The Mother required her cataracts to be removed and that required The Kid to be present for the shuttling back and forth to appointments. The Mother is recovering as expected and is finding things brighter and bluer than before though disappointed that reading glasses are still required. She has also decided that with "new eyes" high definition satellite TV is in order. She thinks she'll see the puck better when her beloved Leafs score. I told her not to hold her breath.
Packing is nearly complete for the next phase of my travels. To think I've been away from work for 6 months and I've accomplished so much! Now it's off to Florida. I'm going to do intensive research on what it's like to be a snowbird. What do folks do, that are retired, in a warm, sunny clime, for months on end?
Do they get bored?
Do they have fun?
I know they get great tans, I know they golf and watch grapefruit league baseball but what else do they do?
I will endeavour to report what it is exactly that a snowbird does. So, watch this space for more updates on the research as it becomes available.
Christmas is a time for travel and for family. The Mother announced that she has spent all but 2 Christmases with her beloved cousin AW. Whether in Guelph or the London area they have been together. This is a feat in itself when you think of how long The Mother has been on the planet. It is "old home week" when we all get together in the little hamlets of Lambeth and Shedden, Ontario. There is the requisite shrimp ring, beverages, goofy noisey toys my cousin likes to bring out at Christmas eve and the catching up of cousins (1st, 2nd and 3rd) comings and goings since the last time we all met. Then it's turkey and all the trimmings on Christmas day. It's fun, intense but reflective to see how the families have changed and grown over the years.
Once the craziness of that event is over it's "on the road again" time. It'll be a drive through 5 States to get to the 6th that will be my home for 3 months. In speaking to my "landlord" just recently he will leave the pool at 86 Farenheit for us along with instructions for the home theatre system and the power jets in the pool. New lights have been installed in the outdoor Tiki bar and all the flowers are in bloom. Wow! When he called it "Paradise" he wasn't kidding! I am grateful for T to let me lease his home for this time and for my friend B for linking us up so this could happen. This is an opportunity that I can't wait for. The Man has half a dozen books packed and is looking forward to just doing nothing. I will, of course, do my diligent research on what a snowbird does, or doesn't do while away from the fun of a Canadian winter.
So, the blogs will begin again and I hope everyone will enjoy the next set of reports.
I hope to have some pictures from Christmas on here too. I know pictures are a hit.
Finally, to my friend M's mom, Mrs. W. I know you have been missing my blogs and now I hope you'll have some fun as you hear of them. Your daughter told me of your specific request that I start blogging again. This one's for you! :-)
Merry Christmas! (and Happy Hanukah!)
First of all Merry Christmas and Happy New Year to everyone and I hope everyone has a safe and fun holiday time.
This year, for the first time in many, I've been able to get hand written Christmas cards out to just about everyone I can think of. I've had TIME to do this! Okay, I've had time in the past by my brain didn't have time. There was always something driving me away from that little task that is really quite fun to do. I've found myself taking time to do just about everything. There is no rush for anything. It's really a novel concept and I am so enjoying this new philosphy in my life.
Since arriving home from my Western Tour I've enjoyed the quiet and unrushed life of Southampton Ontario. There has been some snow but today it is green as it would be in April and just a slight drizzle falling. It's 2 degrees Celcius out. Not really Christmas weather but I'm not complaining. With the amount of driving to come in the next week and a half I'm fine with it!
I have been back and forth to Toronto a few times as The Mother required her cataracts to be removed and that required The Kid to be present for the shuttling back and forth to appointments. The Mother is recovering as expected and is finding things brighter and bluer than before though disappointed that reading glasses are still required. She has also decided that with "new eyes" high definition satellite TV is in order. She thinks she'll see the puck better when her beloved Leafs score. I told her not to hold her breath.
Packing is nearly complete for the next phase of my travels. To think I've been away from work for 6 months and I've accomplished so much! Now it's off to Florida. I'm going to do intensive research on what it's like to be a snowbird. What do folks do, that are retired, in a warm, sunny clime, for months on end?
Do they get bored?
Do they have fun?
I know they get great tans, I know they golf and watch grapefruit league baseball but what else do they do?
I will endeavour to report what it is exactly that a snowbird does. So, watch this space for more updates on the research as it becomes available.
Christmas is a time for travel and for family. The Mother announced that she has spent all but 2 Christmases with her beloved cousin AW. Whether in Guelph or the London area they have been together. This is a feat in itself when you think of how long The Mother has been on the planet. It is "old home week" when we all get together in the little hamlets of Lambeth and Shedden, Ontario. There is the requisite shrimp ring, beverages, goofy noisey toys my cousin likes to bring out at Christmas eve and the catching up of cousins (1st, 2nd and 3rd) comings and goings since the last time we all met. Then it's turkey and all the trimmings on Christmas day. It's fun, intense but reflective to see how the families have changed and grown over the years.
Once the craziness of that event is over it's "on the road again" time. It'll be a drive through 5 States to get to the 6th that will be my home for 3 months. In speaking to my "landlord" just recently he will leave the pool at 86 Farenheit for us along with instructions for the home theatre system and the power jets in the pool. New lights have been installed in the outdoor Tiki bar and all the flowers are in bloom. Wow! When he called it "Paradise" he wasn't kidding! I am grateful for T to let me lease his home for this time and for my friend B for linking us up so this could happen. This is an opportunity that I can't wait for. The Man has half a dozen books packed and is looking forward to just doing nothing. I will, of course, do my diligent research on what a snowbird does, or doesn't do while away from the fun of a Canadian winter.
So, the blogs will begin again and I hope everyone will enjoy the next set of reports.
I hope to have some pictures from Christmas on here too. I know pictures are a hit.
Finally, to my friend M's mom, Mrs. W. I know you have been missing my blogs and now I hope you'll have some fun as you hear of them. Your daughter told me of your specific request that I start blogging again. This one's for you! :-)
Merry Christmas! (and Happy Hanukah!)
Monday, November 7, 2011
Home Sweet Home (for a while)
Okay, okay, I know it's been a few days now but it's taken me that long to get all straightened away!
I think I still have things in the Equinox that I haven't found yet.
Sheeesh!
I got back to Southampton on Thursday November 3rd after 8,901 km of touring west, then south then east, then north east.
I've seen snow, desert, hail, thunderstorms, rain and dust storms. Sometimes all in the same day (New Mexico was weird that way.)
I've been warned of: moose, elk, deer, rattlesnakes, big horned sheep, rocks, slides, avalanches, tsunamis, turtles, bears, flooding, high tides, rip tides, sneaker waves, drifting sand, flash floods, road dips, smoke on the road and that dust may obscure the road.
I've spent nearly $1300 in fuel.
The accommodations ranged from the spectacular to the "never again".
I've met people from every state in the union and every province.
I've travelled over mountains, through mountains, over bridges, under bridges, through forests, over deserts, down canyons, up switchbacks, over 14 statelines and through 3 time zones and back again.
I've been in some of the busiest places (think Vancouver after a BC Lions game) and some of the most desolate (the desert around Andrews Airforce Base in Nevada).
It's been something of an amazing tour I think.
So my "best and worst" list goes like this....
I was so glad to come home to a nice big hug and comfy home of The Man and I haven't even driven the Equinox since I drove it in the driveway a few days back. It's been awesome to be home and I find myself remembering quite clearly where I was 2 weeks ago or even a few days ago on my travels.
It's been an amazing experience and so inspiring too. I have truly enjoyed my time away and have so many memories of it all. I will never forget this opportunity to travel and grow.
So as I weed through my masses of pictures I hope to add another post here and there as I find ones folks might like to see.
After some down time I'm sure the planning will start for the next phase! For now, it's just taking some quality time out for friends and family.
Cheers all!
I think I still have things in the Equinox that I haven't found yet.
Sheeesh!
I got back to Southampton on Thursday November 3rd after 8,901 km of touring west, then south then east, then north east.
I've seen snow, desert, hail, thunderstorms, rain and dust storms. Sometimes all in the same day (New Mexico was weird that way.)
I've been warned of: moose, elk, deer, rattlesnakes, big horned sheep, rocks, slides, avalanches, tsunamis, turtles, bears, flooding, high tides, rip tides, sneaker waves, drifting sand, flash floods, road dips, smoke on the road and that dust may obscure the road.
I've spent nearly $1300 in fuel.
The accommodations ranged from the spectacular to the "never again".
I've met people from every state in the union and every province.
I've travelled over mountains, through mountains, over bridges, under bridges, through forests, over deserts, down canyons, up switchbacks, over 14 statelines and through 3 time zones and back again.
I've been in some of the busiest places (think Vancouver after a BC Lions game) and some of the most desolate (the desert around Andrews Airforce Base in Nevada).
It's been something of an amazing tour I think.
So my "best and worst" list goes like this....
- Best accommodation: Adobe Village Graham Inn, Sedona Arizona
- Worst accommodation: Days Inn, Gallup New Mexico
- Most beautiful place: Lake Louise, Alberta and the Chateau Lake Louise
- Most desolate: Williams, Nevada
- Most fun: 3 Bars Guest Ranch Cranbrook, British Columbia
- Most fun and relaxing: Surrey, British Columbia staying with my cousins
- Most lonely: Crescent City, California
- Place where I said,"I can't believe I'm here": Whistler, BC; Las Vegas, NV; Chateau Lake Louise, AB; Alcatraz Island, San Francisco, California; Pebble Beach Golf Course, California
- Best meal: the Thai place in Pacific Grove, California that my friend J-A and her friend took me to.
- Worst meal:the complimentary continental breakfast at the Super 8 in Greenfield, Illinois (blech! Stale everything...)
- Craziest place: Las Vegas, Nevada (need I say more???)
- Nicest people: 3 Bars Guest Ranch in Cranbrooke British Columbia and the Adobe Village Graham Inn, Sedona Arizona
- Best experience: oh dear....3 Bars Guest Ranch (the whole thing), canoeing on Lake Louise, walking the trails near Sedona, Arizona, watching the surfers in Santa Cruz, driving through the Big Red Forest.....I could go on....
- Longest drive (it seemed): Auburn, Indiana to Southampton, Ontario
- Places I'm glad I didn't miss: Lake Louise, Grand Canyon and all of Arizona
- Best museum experience: The Charles M. Shultz (think Charlie Brown) in Santa Rosa, California
- Craziest midway/boardwalk: Santa Cruz, California (a truly Americana thing)
- Most tedious drive: Branson Missouri to Port Huron, Michigan
- Wildest drives: Sea to Sky highway, Vancouver to Whistler and Oak Creek Canyon road, Sedona, Arizona
I was so glad to come home to a nice big hug and comfy home of The Man and I haven't even driven the Equinox since I drove it in the driveway a few days back. It's been awesome to be home and I find myself remembering quite clearly where I was 2 weeks ago or even a few days ago on my travels.
It's been an amazing experience and so inspiring too. I have truly enjoyed my time away and have so many memories of it all. I will never forget this opportunity to travel and grow.
So as I weed through my masses of pictures I hope to add another post here and there as I find ones folks might like to see.
After some down time I'm sure the planning will start for the next phase! For now, it's just taking some quality time out for friends and family.
Cheers all!
Monday, October 31, 2011
Hallowe'en in Branson, MO
Well, my travels have brought me to another "attraction" place in the USA.
Branson, Missouri
Mid west USA to be exact and the people here are just as entertaining as the place.
I love accents so when locals speak it's quite a hoot.
Missouri is just above Arkansas and I think one of the best southern accents is from that area.
I'm in the Ozark mountains. Not peaked mountains like the rockies but equally as tall and let me tell you the roads departments didn't make any concessions for the fact that you have to drive up and down these suckers! Wheee!
The good old Equinox has only struggled once, and that's getting out of the hotel parking lot up a 25% grade when she wasn't warmed up. It's no wonder you don't see many transport trucks around here. They'd never be able to make it!
Branson is known for it's live shows. Of all kinds.
Music, circus, comedy, anything. There are over 100 possible shows that you could see. Of course being me I have picked a weekend that things don't run quite as often because many of the shows are switching over to their Christmas programs. Never fear there is still tons to choose from.
I have gone to The Acrobats of China with the New Circus of Shanghai which was a typical Chinese circus show, a real difference from Cirque du Soleil but really cool because it was typical of another country. Being front row centre didn't hurt either, it was fun to make eye contact with the performers.
I have gone to Presley's Country Jubilee. This has nothing to do with Elvis and everything to do with a country variety show that is a throw back to the "old days". The Presley Family Show started Branson. It was the first one out on this little dirt road called 176. This is now the "strip" of Branson. It was a fun show with singing, comedy and some awesome guitar work and a guy that played the banjo like there was no tomorrow. It was GREAT! This is one show that everyone should see. The home made cinnamon pecans they sell in a little paper cone were fantastic too. Yee haw!
This afternoon (yeah, there are shows at 2 pm, 5 pm or 8 pm) I plan to go to the Rat Pack which is a bunch of guys who sing music of Sammy, Dean, Frank etc and that era. Or I might find something else to do. I have gone to the Wax museum and had a hoot there but there is a Veteran's museum that I might check out and then there is the lake and dam area that is pretty.
Later this week the Veterans start to arrive for nearly a month of celebration and honour. This town is VERY military friendly, as it should, and the whole place goes nuts for the armed forces. The hotel I'm staying in practically empty but in a few days the 400 rooms may all be full with military personelle. Good on them. The economy is hitting this area just as much as the others.
So Branson has been fun, if not quiet which is OK by me. This is the last part of the journey, the next nights will be "sleep stops" as I head back through a few more states. I have seen the colours change (yay!) in Branson, saw some of the devastation in Joplin Missouri that got wiped out by a tornado in May, seen snow on cactus' and driven through hail in Arizona! (Yikes)
And that's all in the last few days.
What I won't miss (the list is quite short actually):
What a pilgrimage.
Wow!
Branson, Missouri
Mid west USA to be exact and the people here are just as entertaining as the place.
I love accents so when locals speak it's quite a hoot.
Missouri is just above Arkansas and I think one of the best southern accents is from that area.
I'm in the Ozark mountains. Not peaked mountains like the rockies but equally as tall and let me tell you the roads departments didn't make any concessions for the fact that you have to drive up and down these suckers! Wheee!
The good old Equinox has only struggled once, and that's getting out of the hotel parking lot up a 25% grade when she wasn't warmed up. It's no wonder you don't see many transport trucks around here. They'd never be able to make it!
Branson is known for it's live shows. Of all kinds.
Music, circus, comedy, anything. There are over 100 possible shows that you could see. Of course being me I have picked a weekend that things don't run quite as often because many of the shows are switching over to their Christmas programs. Never fear there is still tons to choose from.
I have gone to The Acrobats of China with the New Circus of Shanghai which was a typical Chinese circus show, a real difference from Cirque du Soleil but really cool because it was typical of another country. Being front row centre didn't hurt either, it was fun to make eye contact with the performers.
I have gone to Presley's Country Jubilee. This has nothing to do with Elvis and everything to do with a country variety show that is a throw back to the "old days". The Presley Family Show started Branson. It was the first one out on this little dirt road called 176. This is now the "strip" of Branson. It was a fun show with singing, comedy and some awesome guitar work and a guy that played the banjo like there was no tomorrow. It was GREAT! This is one show that everyone should see. The home made cinnamon pecans they sell in a little paper cone were fantastic too. Yee haw!
This afternoon (yeah, there are shows at 2 pm, 5 pm or 8 pm) I plan to go to the Rat Pack which is a bunch of guys who sing music of Sammy, Dean, Frank etc and that era. Or I might find something else to do. I have gone to the Wax museum and had a hoot there but there is a Veteran's museum that I might check out and then there is the lake and dam area that is pretty.
Later this week the Veterans start to arrive for nearly a month of celebration and honour. This town is VERY military friendly, as it should, and the whole place goes nuts for the armed forces. The hotel I'm staying in practically empty but in a few days the 400 rooms may all be full with military personelle. Good on them. The economy is hitting this area just as much as the others.
So Branson has been fun, if not quiet which is OK by me. This is the last part of the journey, the next nights will be "sleep stops" as I head back through a few more states. I have seen the colours change (yay!) in Branson, saw some of the devastation in Joplin Missouri that got wiped out by a tornado in May, seen snow on cactus' and driven through hail in Arizona! (Yikes)
And that's all in the last few days.
What I won't miss (the list is quite short actually):
- styrofoam plates and bowls for breakfast
- weak coffee in styrofoam cups
- really bad soap in a some hotel rooms
- trying to remember what hotel room I'm in as the numbers are all running into one
- the feeling of being a nomad and living out of the beloved Equinox
- getting dressed for breakfast
- trying to find a place for dinner or late lunch
- worrying if the internet connection will work so I can skype or blog
What a pilgrimage.
Wow!
Friday, October 28, 2011
The Red Earth of Oklahoma?
Short post tonight as I've spent most of it behind the wheel of the beloved Equinox.
From the snowy landscape of upper New Mexico I traversed over the panhandle of Texas.
Scrub brush turned to flat, very flat, hugely flat land with little black mounds that were Angus cattle.
That's all you saw, nothing else.
Kind of like the Canadian prairies.
Then Oklahoma.
Red dust.
Red mud.
Red ground under the green grass.
Oh yeah, the best, nicest and fanciest Tourist Information stop. (Granite counters in the bathrooms!)
No big hoopla that I had arrived in Oklahoma (ie no big sign telling me so) just the sign for the information stop and a sign that I was now in Central Time.
Oh yeah, and the sign telling me the information stop also had a tornado bunker. Huh??
Thankfully I will not be in need of one of those on this tour. But, with this really flat land I can see how the storms could really pick up speed and become as dangerous as they are. I haven't seen any damage from any storms other than a silo that was crushed by the side of the road. Eerie though.
I40 drives right into Oklahoma City and I decided to stop before that to avoid the chaos of trying to find the right road to get up to Tulsa. Weatherford is a former cattle and truck stop on Route 66. There are cattle everything around here.
Yup, even saw a guy with horns on the front grill of his truck while I was driving along. Right ON!
So the lovely Comfort Inn that I have found myself for the night has a nice pool and is very spacious. Again, I guess it's what you pay for. This place is a little more expensive than the others (by 25 bucks) but it's great. After nearly 6 hours of driving it's nice to stop for a few hours. Booking on line is a real handy thing let me tell you. I know where I'm staying. I don't have to worry about figuring out what room I'm in. It's all done. I just arrive, sign a form and I'm in. Checking out is just as easy. Drop off the key and I'm done. Love it.
I'm on the road again tomorrow. This country is huge! Then I'll stop for a couple of days and give the Equinox rest.
Ah, the pool calls me!
Cheers!
From the snowy landscape of upper New Mexico I traversed over the panhandle of Texas.
Scrub brush turned to flat, very flat, hugely flat land with little black mounds that were Angus cattle.
That's all you saw, nothing else.
Kind of like the Canadian prairies.
Then Oklahoma.
Red dust.
Red mud.
Red ground under the green grass.
Oh yeah, the best, nicest and fanciest Tourist Information stop. (Granite counters in the bathrooms!)
No big hoopla that I had arrived in Oklahoma (ie no big sign telling me so) just the sign for the information stop and a sign that I was now in Central Time.
Oh yeah, and the sign telling me the information stop also had a tornado bunker. Huh??
Thankfully I will not be in need of one of those on this tour. But, with this really flat land I can see how the storms could really pick up speed and become as dangerous as they are. I haven't seen any damage from any storms other than a silo that was crushed by the side of the road. Eerie though.
I40 drives right into Oklahoma City and I decided to stop before that to avoid the chaos of trying to find the right road to get up to Tulsa. Weatherford is a former cattle and truck stop on Route 66. There are cattle everything around here.
Yup, even saw a guy with horns on the front grill of his truck while I was driving along. Right ON!
So the lovely Comfort Inn that I have found myself for the night has a nice pool and is very spacious. Again, I guess it's what you pay for. This place is a little more expensive than the others (by 25 bucks) but it's great. After nearly 6 hours of driving it's nice to stop for a few hours. Booking on line is a real handy thing let me tell you. I know where I'm staying. I don't have to worry about figuring out what room I'm in. It's all done. I just arrive, sign a form and I'm in. Checking out is just as easy. Drop off the key and I'm done. Love it.
I'm on the road again tomorrow. This country is huge! Then I'll stop for a couple of days and give the Equinox rest.
Ah, the pool calls me!
Cheers!
Thursday, October 27, 2011
From the Red Rocks to a red nose
The tour has continued.
On the road again, heading pretty much due east.
First of all I had to go through a hail storm at the top of the canyon above Sedona.
Uh Oh.
They were forecasting a cold front but I didn't think it would be like this!
Slow and steady makes it safely.
A few hours down the road is Gallup, New Mexico.
Through some prairie type landscape with some read cliffs in the back ground and a pretty straight road.
The clouds were gathering though.
Gallup is a railway town and really that's about it. Again, it's really noticable that the economy has made a large dent in the overall activity in this town. There is very little going on. I stayed in a Days Inn that has been around for quite a while. The sign said that the rooms had been newly renovated but I have a feeling that that was in the last century. Well, I wasn't going to be going to be staying there for long. I was safe enough and everything worked. That's all I can ask. But it certainly was VERY different from my beloved Inn near Sedona. Oh well.
I had to wait to leave Gallup this morning as the I40 that I was travelling on was snow covered around Albuquerque! Yikes!
I know we had a good rain storm last night and the temperature was just above freezing when I turned off my light but I didn't think that we'd get that much snow in New Mexico.
If it wasn't for the mountains coming down from Colorado there wouldn't be this issue but the Rockies do make a difference in the climate around here.
The news folks said that later in the day the higher elevations should be clear of the snow but in Santa Fe they had received nearly 18 inches of snow and the roads were rather challenging at 9 am. So, I made the decision not to go that route. I was going to take I25 north to see the Santa Fe area, which I was told was quite pretty.
Safety first and play the game I figured so I just stayed on I40 into Santa Rosa.
Santa Rosa is small and really, I think, a shadow of it's former self as there are many places closed up on Route 66. The days are gone of the romance of travelling on Route 66 as I40 is faster and parallels it. There used to be so many motels, bars and diners along this strip of 66. Many of them are closed, and have been closed for several years or even decades. Sort of sad really.
I did find a laundromat to do my clothes as it was time for that and the people I met were all really nice. You get a real feel for a town hanging out at the local (only?) laundromat!
I was the only one in the Sante Fe diner (one of the originals still on this part of Route 66) and had a great BLT with a side of quacamole! I'm in the south after all. I chatted with the owner for a while and expressed that it's hard to keep things going when the weather switches so drastically but he said he had a good spring and summer.
The motel is very nice and clean and a sight better than last night's I must say. There is a little park across the road and if the sun comes out I will go and take pictures. There's not much to take pictures of when I'm driving so much but it's still nice to add a memory or two to the data banks.
I'm glad I broke the trip through New Mexico up into two parts as with the weather I don't know that I would have been able to do it all in one day. Sometimes things just work out for a reason.
The compass is stuck on East as I continue to witness and enjoy new places and scenes.
I could do without the snow though...
On the road again, heading pretty much due east.
First of all I had to go through a hail storm at the top of the canyon above Sedona.
Uh Oh.
They were forecasting a cold front but I didn't think it would be like this!
Slow and steady makes it safely.
A few hours down the road is Gallup, New Mexico.
Through some prairie type landscape with some read cliffs in the back ground and a pretty straight road.
The clouds were gathering though.
Gallup is a railway town and really that's about it. Again, it's really noticable that the economy has made a large dent in the overall activity in this town. There is very little going on. I stayed in a Days Inn that has been around for quite a while. The sign said that the rooms had been newly renovated but I have a feeling that that was in the last century. Well, I wasn't going to be going to be staying there for long. I was safe enough and everything worked. That's all I can ask. But it certainly was VERY different from my beloved Inn near Sedona. Oh well.
I had to wait to leave Gallup this morning as the I40 that I was travelling on was snow covered around Albuquerque! Yikes!
I know we had a good rain storm last night and the temperature was just above freezing when I turned off my light but I didn't think that we'd get that much snow in New Mexico.
If it wasn't for the mountains coming down from Colorado there wouldn't be this issue but the Rockies do make a difference in the climate around here.
The news folks said that later in the day the higher elevations should be clear of the snow but in Santa Fe they had received nearly 18 inches of snow and the roads were rather challenging at 9 am. So, I made the decision not to go that route. I was going to take I25 north to see the Santa Fe area, which I was told was quite pretty.
Safety first and play the game I figured so I just stayed on I40 into Santa Rosa.
Santa Rosa is small and really, I think, a shadow of it's former self as there are many places closed up on Route 66. The days are gone of the romance of travelling on Route 66 as I40 is faster and parallels it. There used to be so many motels, bars and diners along this strip of 66. Many of them are closed, and have been closed for several years or even decades. Sort of sad really.
I did find a laundromat to do my clothes as it was time for that and the people I met were all really nice. You get a real feel for a town hanging out at the local (only?) laundromat!
I was the only one in the Sante Fe diner (one of the originals still on this part of Route 66) and had a great BLT with a side of quacamole! I'm in the south after all. I chatted with the owner for a while and expressed that it's hard to keep things going when the weather switches so drastically but he said he had a good spring and summer.
The motel is very nice and clean and a sight better than last night's I must say. There is a little park across the road and if the sun comes out I will go and take pictures. There's not much to take pictures of when I'm driving so much but it's still nice to add a memory or two to the data banks.
I'm glad I broke the trip through New Mexico up into two parts as with the weather I don't know that I would have been able to do it all in one day. Sometimes things just work out for a reason.
The compass is stuck on East as I continue to witness and enjoy new places and scenes.
I could do without the snow though...
Tuesday, October 25, 2011
It DOES rain in Arizona!
Who would have thunk it.
It does rain in the desert.
When it rains, boy does it rain.
This afternoon we had a couple of great storms. The kind that you pull up a chair for.
SoI did!
The dark cloud comes along then POW! Rain. Big, huge, ploppy drops.
Then it stops.
Then another cloud comes along and the same thing happens.
The rain comes in pockets of clouds then stops. No long drawn out showers.
Just RAIN.
Then nothing and the sun comes out.
We actually had a thunderstorm too! Two of them.
People celebrate.
So do the plants and trees.
Golfers do not.
Sirens going off in two different directions from the Village.
Yikes!
Ah, yes, golfer warnings so they don't get zapped.
Should have had the siren BEFORE the lightening was seen. Storms kind of sneak up on you around here. Guess you take your chances out there.
It's dark out.
All is quiet.
This is a very quiet part of the desert. Except when the coyotes are howling, that'll be later.
No lights.
No lights on the streets, no lights on the intersections (they have roundabouts here so there aren't any stop lights), even gas stations have "dimmable" lights. Everyone wants it this way.
Big protest over local town council trying to put street lights in West Sedona (business area). People freaking out over it. They want their dark.
Many stars to see. So cool.
Lightening to the south, no thunder.
Very, very quiet.
And it's only 7:45 pm!!!
Tonight is my last night in the lovely place I've called home in Oak Creek, Arizona. I highly recommend coming here. Adobe Village Graham Inn is simply the most comfortable, homey amazing place to stay. As I wandered around today I kind of had the place to my self and it was awesome. What a perfect way to wrap up my visit to Arizona. (No, I didn't get a discount for saying the above, I just really, really like it!)
So the beloved Equinox will be packed up again for the journey to the east.
Then to the north east.
I'll cross the Mississippi.
Neat.
I've seen mountains, and prairies and lakes and rivers and oceans and rocks and dust and sand.
I'm glad I took pictures! Phew. They'll help me remember!
But how can I forget!
It's been fantastic.
What a pilgrimage!
Deer print in the red dust.
Abandoned miner's store in Jerome, Arizona. One of the leading Copper mines in the US until 1971.
The hot tub and view at Adobe Village Graham Inn, Oak Creek, Arizona
Bell Rock, a Vortex; a place of balance and harmony on earth. Mysticism is big here and this huge rock formation is like a Mecca for many. I just think it's pretty.
Cactus (a prickly pear cactus) grow pretty much anywhere they can get a hold. This one is below the Church of the Holy Cross. Guess it's blessed....
Towering Ponderosa pines on top of the Oak Creek Canyon. Notice no green underbrush that you would normally see. It's too dry for anything to grow.
Driving in Arizona is fun! I'm driving up a 5% grade into West Sedona (I know, I know, I'm not supposed to do this but hey, I was in the slow traffic lane...:-)
Just one of the many beautiful rose bushes at the Inn. I had to take a picture, remember this is OCTOBER! Oh yeah, they smelled amazing too.
This is how I'll remember Arizona.
Awesome, simply awesome.
It does rain in the desert.
When it rains, boy does it rain.
This afternoon we had a couple of great storms. The kind that you pull up a chair for.
SoI did!
The dark cloud comes along then POW! Rain. Big, huge, ploppy drops.
Then it stops.
Then another cloud comes along and the same thing happens.
The rain comes in pockets of clouds then stops. No long drawn out showers.
Just RAIN.
Then nothing and the sun comes out.
We actually had a thunderstorm too! Two of them.
People celebrate.
So do the plants and trees.
Golfers do not.
Sirens going off in two different directions from the Village.
Yikes!
Ah, yes, golfer warnings so they don't get zapped.
Should have had the siren BEFORE the lightening was seen. Storms kind of sneak up on you around here. Guess you take your chances out there.
It's dark out.
All is quiet.
This is a very quiet part of the desert. Except when the coyotes are howling, that'll be later.
No lights.
No lights on the streets, no lights on the intersections (they have roundabouts here so there aren't any stop lights), even gas stations have "dimmable" lights. Everyone wants it this way.
Big protest over local town council trying to put street lights in West Sedona (business area). People freaking out over it. They want their dark.
Many stars to see. So cool.
Lightening to the south, no thunder.
Very, very quiet.
And it's only 7:45 pm!!!
Tonight is my last night in the lovely place I've called home in Oak Creek, Arizona. I highly recommend coming here. Adobe Village Graham Inn is simply the most comfortable, homey amazing place to stay. As I wandered around today I kind of had the place to my self and it was awesome. What a perfect way to wrap up my visit to Arizona. (No, I didn't get a discount for saying the above, I just really, really like it!)
So the beloved Equinox will be packed up again for the journey to the east.
Then to the north east.
I'll cross the Mississippi.
Neat.
I've seen mountains, and prairies and lakes and rivers and oceans and rocks and dust and sand.
I'm glad I took pictures! Phew. They'll help me remember!
But how can I forget!
It's been fantastic.
What a pilgrimage!
Deer print in the red dust.
Abandoned miner's store in Jerome, Arizona. One of the leading Copper mines in the US until 1971.
The hot tub and view at Adobe Village Graham Inn, Oak Creek, Arizona
Bell Rock, a Vortex; a place of balance and harmony on earth. Mysticism is big here and this huge rock formation is like a Mecca for many. I just think it's pretty.
Cactus (a prickly pear cactus) grow pretty much anywhere they can get a hold. This one is below the Church of the Holy Cross. Guess it's blessed....
Towering Ponderosa pines on top of the Oak Creek Canyon. Notice no green underbrush that you would normally see. It's too dry for anything to grow.
Driving in Arizona is fun! I'm driving up a 5% grade into West Sedona (I know, I know, I'm not supposed to do this but hey, I was in the slow traffic lane...:-)
Just one of the many beautiful rose bushes at the Inn. I had to take a picture, remember this is OCTOBER! Oh yeah, they smelled amazing too.
This is how I'll remember Arizona.
Awesome, simply awesome.
Monday, October 24, 2011
Hey! There's a cloud! Wow! Cool!
I post this sitting in the back yard of the wonderful Adobe Village Graham Inn in Oak Creek Arizona. I'm listening to the birds as they flit between the feeders and the fountains on the terrace around the side. It's a balmy 80 F. I'm in my bathing suit.
Horrors!!! There's a cloud! What you say? A cloud?
Yes, after 2 weeks of not seeing a cloud in the sky, one has come along, or should I say several.
The red rocks are now orange in colour and there's actually a breeze!
Could it be that the state that gets only 1.6 inches of rain in October might get some today?
Weird.
This area is so parched that drying anything takes only a matter of minutes.
Mould doesn't grow.
It can't.
Any moisture is sucked right out of what ever it's in.
Your drinks don't even leave a ring on the table.
Can't.
Too dry.
Right on!
Being asthmatic this climate is lovely! Even today when I was up at about 8000 ft on top of a canyon I was doing okay. Not great but okay.
This place rocks.
Horrors!!! There's a cloud! What you say? A cloud?
Yes, after 2 weeks of not seeing a cloud in the sky, one has come along, or should I say several.
The red rocks are now orange in colour and there's actually a breeze!
Could it be that the state that gets only 1.6 inches of rain in October might get some today?
Weird.
This area is so parched that drying anything takes only a matter of minutes.
Mould doesn't grow.
It can't.
Any moisture is sucked right out of what ever it's in.
Your drinks don't even leave a ring on the table.
Can't.
Too dry.
Right on!
Being asthmatic this climate is lovely! Even today when I was up at about 8000 ft on top of a canyon I was doing okay. Not great but okay.
This place rocks.
- I have not felt any pull to the vortecies that are supposed to put one in "balance" with the earth and self. I think they're just big red rocks. The mysticism of the Vortex's is huge here. Maybe my mind isn't ready for that balancing stuff yet. I just take pictures of the vortex and move on.
- I have seen the change from desert (no living thing above 3 feet tall) to the Ponderosa Pines of the Upper Oak Creek Canyon (now there's a fun drive for you folks-narrow switch backs up 2000 feet of rock cliff!).
- I can tell the difference between a hedgehog cactus and a sprawling prickly pear cactus.
- I have had the best prickly pear lemonade (oh yum!)
- I've eaten more types of salsa than I can remember.
- I have yet to eat rattlesnake but it's on the list for tomorrow or today, who knows.
- I found the most incredible restaurant in the middle of nowhere (literally) run by a chef that needs to have his name submitted to the Food Network. Hmmm I think that's a plan.
- I am finding everyone here is so friendly and seems to know that I'm from Canada. I don't get that....Anyway...eh?
Can you see the road in the above picture? Yup, me and the Equinox drove up that sucker!
I have a feeling after I leave here the roads won't be as hilly and I'll miss the challenge of the switchbacks.
Oh, have to go now. The hot tub is at the perfect temperature to enjoy!
Friday, October 21, 2011
Beautiful, awesome Sedona Arizona
This is more like it!
After a challenging day driving from Las Vegas to Sedona I have found what I think is probably the neatest place on earth for many reasons.
Maybe it was arriving in the dark last night and waking up to the amazing sight of the sun rising on Castle Rock outside my window (nothing beats getting up early to see stuff). Or maybe it's the really friendly people at the place I'm staying, or maybe it's the birds that are congregating in the back yard around the pool in the feeders.
This place is awesome.
The red rock is really something to see.
Okay, the Grand Canyon and Hoover dam yesterday were really, really cool too but there's a real peacefulness about this place. Oh yeah and it's still 85 F too. That helps. I think.
I'm excited to be here. There's so much to do in Sedona and the area. Hiking around the fantastic rock formations, watching the stars come out over the rocks to give me sights that I've only seen on The Mother's jigsaw puzzles. But I'm seeing it for real. In real life. In person.
How cool is that.
The rock and the "vortex's" that are believed to bring positive energy and are sacred to all faiths bring people to sit and contemplate, perhaps meditate around them. For me, sure, they have that kind of pull but they are also incredibly beautiful in any light. The picture above was taken at 10 am.
This one taken at 6:15 am from the balcony of my room (which is awesome too I might add)
This, I think, is better than the Grand Canyon in some ways. There's a quietness about the whole scene.
Yesterday I was at Grand Canyon West and the Skywalk. The drive also included a 12 mile stretch of washboard gravel (not warned about this little tidbit) but once I arrived and sorted out what is expected (there is a bus that takes you to the sights) and then the same drive back out to the highway.
Really though, it is a once of a lifetime thing to see. I think everyone needs to see it at least once.
It is so majestic. So huge. So unbelievable. The colours, that you hear about are there in the layers of the rock but being there at 1 pm in the after noon on a 90 F day means that things get a little muted in the picture but you get the idea I think.
One thing I've noticed in the south west is the dryness. It's so dry, really dry. In October the average rain fall is 1.6 inches. Everything here is parched. Where there is any moisture around it disappers really fast. When I was washing the windows in the car I had to re wash them before I could sqeegee them clean! Yikes!
The plants, of course, have adapted but I still haven't seen my big huge cactus yet (the one that looks like a person standing with there arms up) but I know I will!
The Adobe Village Graham Inn is a small hotel like B and B 5 miles south of Sedona. I found it on line. I am so glad I did. Usually I don't say where I'm staying but this place is so fantastic that I can't help but blow their horn. My room has a gas fireplace which is two sided, one side is on the "living area" side and the other is on the whirlpool tub side. Right on. There is a plate of home made cookies on the bed at "turn down" time and the outdoor hot tub and pool are a fantastic place to unwind. Oh yeah, there's even a really comfy robe in the closet! This place rocks. The breakfast is to die for. Right, so I've never had chilli grits before but along with the breakfast burrito they were a great addition. Anyone needing a place to just chill this is the place. I am soooo glad I picked it.
So I have recovered I think from the insanity of Las Vegas and so enjoying my time in Sedona.
This is a part of the country that is so different. It just is. There are so many reasons why. Tomorrow I'm going to take more pictures of pretty red rock because I don't want to forget this place.
No wonder people find it sacred.
Below is a picture of Holy Cross Church. This spot is awe inspiring too!
These are cactus flowers...weird...
After a challenging day driving from Las Vegas to Sedona I have found what I think is probably the neatest place on earth for many reasons.
Maybe it was arriving in the dark last night and waking up to the amazing sight of the sun rising on Castle Rock outside my window (nothing beats getting up early to see stuff). Or maybe it's the really friendly people at the place I'm staying, or maybe it's the birds that are congregating in the back yard around the pool in the feeders.
This place is awesome.
The red rock is really something to see.
Okay, the Grand Canyon and Hoover dam yesterday were really, really cool too but there's a real peacefulness about this place. Oh yeah and it's still 85 F too. That helps. I think.
I'm excited to be here. There's so much to do in Sedona and the area. Hiking around the fantastic rock formations, watching the stars come out over the rocks to give me sights that I've only seen on The Mother's jigsaw puzzles. But I'm seeing it for real. In real life. In person.
How cool is that.
The rock and the "vortex's" that are believed to bring positive energy and are sacred to all faiths bring people to sit and contemplate, perhaps meditate around them. For me, sure, they have that kind of pull but they are also incredibly beautiful in any light. The picture above was taken at 10 am.
This one taken at 6:15 am from the balcony of my room (which is awesome too I might add)
This, I think, is better than the Grand Canyon in some ways. There's a quietness about the whole scene.
Yesterday I was at Grand Canyon West and the Skywalk. The drive also included a 12 mile stretch of washboard gravel (not warned about this little tidbit) but once I arrived and sorted out what is expected (there is a bus that takes you to the sights) and then the same drive back out to the highway.
Really though, it is a once of a lifetime thing to see. I think everyone needs to see it at least once.
It is so majestic. So huge. So unbelievable. The colours, that you hear about are there in the layers of the rock but being there at 1 pm in the after noon on a 90 F day means that things get a little muted in the picture but you get the idea I think.
One thing I've noticed in the south west is the dryness. It's so dry, really dry. In October the average rain fall is 1.6 inches. Everything here is parched. Where there is any moisture around it disappers really fast. When I was washing the windows in the car I had to re wash them before I could sqeegee them clean! Yikes!
The plants, of course, have adapted but I still haven't seen my big huge cactus yet (the one that looks like a person standing with there arms up) but I know I will!
The Adobe Village Graham Inn is a small hotel like B and B 5 miles south of Sedona. I found it on line. I am so glad I did. Usually I don't say where I'm staying but this place is so fantastic that I can't help but blow their horn. My room has a gas fireplace which is two sided, one side is on the "living area" side and the other is on the whirlpool tub side. Right on. There is a plate of home made cookies on the bed at "turn down" time and the outdoor hot tub and pool are a fantastic place to unwind. Oh yeah, there's even a really comfy robe in the closet! This place rocks. The breakfast is to die for. Right, so I've never had chilli grits before but along with the breakfast burrito they were a great addition. Anyone needing a place to just chill this is the place. I am soooo glad I picked it.
So I have recovered I think from the insanity of Las Vegas and so enjoying my time in Sedona.
This is a part of the country that is so different. It just is. There are so many reasons why. Tomorrow I'm going to take more pictures of pretty red rock because I don't want to forget this place.
No wonder people find it sacred.
Below is a picture of Holy Cross Church. This spot is awe inspiring too!
These are cactus flowers...weird...
Maybe tomorrow I might see a cloud in the sky... I know I'll see some neat, red rocks!
Cheers!
Wednesday, October 19, 2011
The New vs. Old Vegas... a perspective
Like many cities and towns in the US there are challenges financially.
I was surprised to see that Vegas is no different despite the millions of dollars spent by visitors each day (all day I might add).
I walked to the northern part of The Strip. The old part I guess you'd call it. Locals (I found 1!) call it the "other end". I saw why.
There were two resorts in mid construction that had stopped. Some time ago by the look of the rust stains on the concrete. The whole area was boarded up and there was no action or movement.
On the other side of the street the stores needed some refurbishment as there was an old smell coming from them. As if they had never had the rug cleaned in 60 years.
The hotels, Circus Circus, the Riviera, the Stratosphere are now very outdated and in need of something to glam them up a bit. Not saying that the glam stuff doesn't get to you after a while but they are very tired looking and to top it off the people you meet right inside the door aren't the nicest. The 5 uniformed security guards I saw when I walked into Circus Circus did throw me off a bit.
To say the least I didn't linger long in this part of the strip. It certainly wasn't as welcoming as the part I'm in.
The other thing that is curious is there is a Trump tower on the block bechind Treasure Island hotel. I wanted to go to see what's in a Trump tower. You know, just to snoop, see what all the hype's about.
Well, at the corner of Las Vegas Blvd and the street that has Trump on it there was a now abandoned demo/model suite store front and the side walk kind of ended after that building. Hmmm I decided I didn't need to get to the Trump tower that bad.
When I came back to the hotel I looked it up on "accommodations" and it wasn't listed. All I can figure is that it is a "residential" hotel and not for rent. It looks like it's occupied, I think, but it's hard to tell around here as windows don't usually open in hotels around here.
With the temperature climbing I figured a pool time was in order so after purchasing my Cirque du Soleil ticket for the evenings performance I went lounging by the awesome pool here. Now that's the life.....Pina Colada in hand I enjoyed myself for a couple of hours doing nothing!
The evenings around Vegas can be chaotic so I have learned to pick my battles with the mass of people around. The Cirque du Soleil show, Mystere (which was awe inspiring to say the least and tons of fun) got out around 9 pm. There was a convention going on in the hotel and across the road was the West American Presidential Debate going on. Yikes! People everywhere (of course where there's a debate there are protestors!) The throng of people was really something. Oh yeah, to top it off the people waiting for the 9:30 Cirque show were all out in the hall too. Hold on kiddo we're heading for the elevators. The casino was jammed! Holy Cow!
I've never seen so many folks in this place! I'm outta there. Back to the safety of the room.
So today, my last full day in Vegas I plan to check out a couple of things and head to the pool for the afternoon. I think there's another souvenir Pina Colada glass with my name on it!
Cheers all!
I was surprised to see that Vegas is no different despite the millions of dollars spent by visitors each day (all day I might add).
I walked to the northern part of The Strip. The old part I guess you'd call it. Locals (I found 1!) call it the "other end". I saw why.
There were two resorts in mid construction that had stopped. Some time ago by the look of the rust stains on the concrete. The whole area was boarded up and there was no action or movement.
On the other side of the street the stores needed some refurbishment as there was an old smell coming from them. As if they had never had the rug cleaned in 60 years.
The hotels, Circus Circus, the Riviera, the Stratosphere are now very outdated and in need of something to glam them up a bit. Not saying that the glam stuff doesn't get to you after a while but they are very tired looking and to top it off the people you meet right inside the door aren't the nicest. The 5 uniformed security guards I saw when I walked into Circus Circus did throw me off a bit.
To say the least I didn't linger long in this part of the strip. It certainly wasn't as welcoming as the part I'm in.
The other thing that is curious is there is a Trump tower on the block bechind Treasure Island hotel. I wanted to go to see what's in a Trump tower. You know, just to snoop, see what all the hype's about.
Well, at the corner of Las Vegas Blvd and the street that has Trump on it there was a now abandoned demo/model suite store front and the side walk kind of ended after that building. Hmmm I decided I didn't need to get to the Trump tower that bad.
When I came back to the hotel I looked it up on "accommodations" and it wasn't listed. All I can figure is that it is a "residential" hotel and not for rent. It looks like it's occupied, I think, but it's hard to tell around here as windows don't usually open in hotels around here.
With the temperature climbing I figured a pool time was in order so after purchasing my Cirque du Soleil ticket for the evenings performance I went lounging by the awesome pool here. Now that's the life.....Pina Colada in hand I enjoyed myself for a couple of hours doing nothing!
The evenings around Vegas can be chaotic so I have learned to pick my battles with the mass of people around. The Cirque du Soleil show, Mystere (which was awe inspiring to say the least and tons of fun) got out around 9 pm. There was a convention going on in the hotel and across the road was the West American Presidential Debate going on. Yikes! People everywhere (of course where there's a debate there are protestors!) The throng of people was really something. Oh yeah, to top it off the people waiting for the 9:30 Cirque show were all out in the hall too. Hold on kiddo we're heading for the elevators. The casino was jammed! Holy Cow!
I've never seen so many folks in this place! I'm outta there. Back to the safety of the room.
So today, my last full day in Vegas I plan to check out a couple of things and head to the pool for the afternoon. I think there's another souvenir Pina Colada glass with my name on it!
Cheers all!
Tuesday, October 18, 2011
Still a cloudless sky in Vegas
The sun is just rising over the hills to the east and lighting up the mountains to the west. It's pretty!
Las Vegas is in a pretty part of the desert. It's kind of like glitz meets the rugged hills and they fight back and forth.
This is the only place, so far, that I've seen smog in the later afternoon, if there's no breeze. Las Vegas is in a bowl and with little wind the orange haze hangs above it. We had some gusty winds yesterday so the smog got blown away for the most part. It still amazes me that many years ago a bunch of people decided that this little area of Nevada was going to be good for a hotel/casino town. That idea certainly has grown.
As I walked around the strip and in and out of some of the hotels and casinos the opulence of the whole place is over whelming. If there is a fancy schmancy store then it is here. Chanel, Gucci, Hermes, Prada, Jimmy Choo, Coach, Louis Vuitton...you get the idea. All I can even think of doing is taking a picture of the front display.
Somehow I just can't bring myself to spending $1,200.00 on a hand bag (which I don't use anyway). And Gucci shoes? $800? Naw, I'm just not cut from that cloth I guess. I did have fun looking and no, I didn't have the guts to walk in, wearing my San Fran t-shirt, shorts and running shoes to actually check anything out. I know when I'm beat.
Did you notice in the picture above that the hand bags are displayed on little flamingo legs? Right, anything goes in this town. Weird.
Every hotel here has a casino and some of them are really, really old. Like the Flamingo. It's one of the originals. As I wandered down the strip I visited a few of them. Being the big spender that I am, me and my little 5'er sat down at a slot machine to see what would happen. If I lost it all I'm only out 5 bucks, if I won it back great, if I doubled it I'm outta there. (I can hear you all saying, "What? That's it? Go for it!" ) Nope, that's the way I roll.
Some of the casinos really take glitz to a new level, like the Cosmopolitan, which looks like a huge, high ceiling, ball room.
With lots of crystal accents and some natural light it was neat to be there. At 10 am this place was pretty much deserted but it took me nearly an hour to lose my $5!
Then there are places like the old Flamingo. The ceilings are only about 12 feet tall. The cigarette smoke lingers in the air (yeah, everyone smokes everywhere pretty much) and there is no natural light. It's dark, noisey and I think what it used to be like in the "old days".
No wonder Vegas had a bad reputation...
Oh yeah, and I lost my 5 bucks in about 20 minutes. Boo Hiss.
I am a people watcher by nature and nothing beats Las Vegas for doing that. There is so much to see and fun things to watch. There are street performers that are great. There was an Edward Scissor hands that scared the crap out of one group of ladies and those of us walking near there all laughed! It was fun. There are lots of other "statue people" that amaze me. They are real! But truly look like marble. Weird.
Las Vegas' strip has been planned to be a pedestrian area along with 8 lanes of traffic. The sidewalks and road crossings are very well organized to keep both people and vehicles moving. Every few blocks you are forced up to an over road walk way then back down either on to the same side of the street or the other, but it's a neat way to keep moving down the street. It's also a good chance for pictures. This is looking north along the Strip.
But there's also all the fountains and statues to take pictures of too. Caesar's Palace is the best for that.
So it was a great day wandering around and looking at the craziness of Las Vegas. Since my hotel is nearly at one end of the strip I only have a little bit to go to see the rest of it. Then I think it's a pool day. Though the high is only supposed to be 88 F I think I can manage.
Life's rough here.
Really, it is....
NOT!!!
Cheers all.
Las Vegas is in a pretty part of the desert. It's kind of like glitz meets the rugged hills and they fight back and forth.
This is the only place, so far, that I've seen smog in the later afternoon, if there's no breeze. Las Vegas is in a bowl and with little wind the orange haze hangs above it. We had some gusty winds yesterday so the smog got blown away for the most part. It still amazes me that many years ago a bunch of people decided that this little area of Nevada was going to be good for a hotel/casino town. That idea certainly has grown.
As I walked around the strip and in and out of some of the hotels and casinos the opulence of the whole place is over whelming. If there is a fancy schmancy store then it is here. Chanel, Gucci, Hermes, Prada, Jimmy Choo, Coach, Louis Vuitton...you get the idea. All I can even think of doing is taking a picture of the front display.
Somehow I just can't bring myself to spending $1,200.00 on a hand bag (which I don't use anyway). And Gucci shoes? $800? Naw, I'm just not cut from that cloth I guess. I did have fun looking and no, I didn't have the guts to walk in, wearing my San Fran t-shirt, shorts and running shoes to actually check anything out. I know when I'm beat.
Did you notice in the picture above that the hand bags are displayed on little flamingo legs? Right, anything goes in this town. Weird.
Every hotel here has a casino and some of them are really, really old. Like the Flamingo. It's one of the originals. As I wandered down the strip I visited a few of them. Being the big spender that I am, me and my little 5'er sat down at a slot machine to see what would happen. If I lost it all I'm only out 5 bucks, if I won it back great, if I doubled it I'm outta there. (I can hear you all saying, "What? That's it? Go for it!" ) Nope, that's the way I roll.
Some of the casinos really take glitz to a new level, like the Cosmopolitan, which looks like a huge, high ceiling, ball room.
With lots of crystal accents and some natural light it was neat to be there. At 10 am this place was pretty much deserted but it took me nearly an hour to lose my $5!
Then there are places like the old Flamingo. The ceilings are only about 12 feet tall. The cigarette smoke lingers in the air (yeah, everyone smokes everywhere pretty much) and there is no natural light. It's dark, noisey and I think what it used to be like in the "old days".
No wonder Vegas had a bad reputation...
Oh yeah, and I lost my 5 bucks in about 20 minutes. Boo Hiss.
I am a people watcher by nature and nothing beats Las Vegas for doing that. There is so much to see and fun things to watch. There are street performers that are great. There was an Edward Scissor hands that scared the crap out of one group of ladies and those of us walking near there all laughed! It was fun. There are lots of other "statue people" that amaze me. They are real! But truly look like marble. Weird.
Las Vegas' strip has been planned to be a pedestrian area along with 8 lanes of traffic. The sidewalks and road crossings are very well organized to keep both people and vehicles moving. Every few blocks you are forced up to an over road walk way then back down either on to the same side of the street or the other, but it's a neat way to keep moving down the street. It's also a good chance for pictures. This is looking north along the Strip.
But there's also all the fountains and statues to take pictures of too. Caesar's Palace is the best for that.
So it was a great day wandering around and looking at the craziness of Las Vegas. Since my hotel is nearly at one end of the strip I only have a little bit to go to see the rest of it. Then I think it's a pool day. Though the high is only supposed to be 88 F I think I can manage.
Life's rough here.
Really, it is....
NOT!!!
Cheers all.
Monday, October 17, 2011
In Vegas! Anything goes here!
I have finally found a place that I think overwhelms me!
Being brought up in one of the largest cities in North America I'm pretty used to the crowds, the noise, the stuff that goes on.
Then I came to Las Vegas, Nevada.
wow.
That's all I can say!
wow.
Everything here is over the top.
WAY over the top.
I am staying at a hotel on The Strip. Again, I chose here because I didn't want to drive anywhere, didn't want to have to take a taxi anywhere and wanted to be central so I didn't have to worry about being out after dark.
Not a problem here. It doesn't get dark.
There is enough neon lighting here to keep any small country out of the dark for years.
This place never, ever stops.
There is music everywhere, slot machines everywhere (I'm up $10 so far!), people everywhere, and stuff to do everywhere.
Everything you've heard about The Strip and it's non-stop action is true.
My hotel has an outdoor pirate vs "siren" show and there are lots of scantily clad ladies on one pirate ship and lovely topless men on another "fighting it out" across the front of the hotel. There are fireworks, great light show and loud fun music. It's awesome! I am glad though that my room doesn't over look that show as the shows run 5 times a night!
The other thing that is really neat about this oasis in the desert is the fountains and water features. They are spectacular. At the Mirage, which I see outside my 19th floor window, has a "volcano" that goes off 3 times a night with great explosions of fire and water. Something else.
Driving here from Bakersfield, California was through some of the most desolate, barren land I have ever seen. The Canadian Prairies had more to look at than his area. The Mojave desert really is dry, really dry and Edwards Air Force base is in a perfect spot because of the flatness of the ground in that area and the remoteness of the whole place. If there's a problem it probably won't bother anyone!
At one point I was driving up to 5000 feet and there were warning signs not to run AC during the climb as it may cause your vehicle to over heat. Yeah, right. It's 90 F out. I'm running AC and taking my chances. No prob but it was quite a drive as it never seemed to stop going up.
Then, of course, we came down and right to some dry lake flats that there was a "driving strip" put on. There were some people out on it and I can only guess that they were testing something fast.
As you reach the Nevada border it's really obvious. The hotels and casinos are right there. Boom! No guessing there. We're in gambling country. There is so much to see. Between the signs luring you into the casino and "join" their club for free points or chips to the attraction and show signs. After the flat, dried out ground of the drive it was really an oasis to see all of this.
Then I arrived in Vegas.
YIKES!
I drove The Strip first and found my hotel and the rest of the attractions and then decided it was time to get out of the vehicle and into the 95 F heat. EEEEkkk.
It took me 2 hours to get everything organized, between the checking in part to getting my things from the car (parking is in a covered building behind the hotel and you have to walk through the casino to get there, natch).
Even the pool has a DJ! This place has music everywhere. There is something going on every second of the day. You don't need to sleep at the normal times. There are black out curtains on the windows of the room and it makes the room REALLY dark!
So, I'm here. I'm really looking forward to checking out The Strip and all the craziness that goes on here.
There is a Cirque du Soleil show right here in the hotel that looks great and I'll see what else is cool (like the whole place). I really think Las Vegas must be visited once in your life. Just to see it, be in it, watch what happens and enjoy the over the topness (new word by me) of this place.
Right, so before it get unbearable out there (supposed to be a high of 90 F today with no clouds of course) and I go live in the pool I'm outta here.
Viva Las Vegas!
Or viva New York, New York! (dontcha just love it???)
Being brought up in one of the largest cities in North America I'm pretty used to the crowds, the noise, the stuff that goes on.
Then I came to Las Vegas, Nevada.
wow.
That's all I can say!
wow.
Everything here is over the top.
WAY over the top.
I am staying at a hotel on The Strip. Again, I chose here because I didn't want to drive anywhere, didn't want to have to take a taxi anywhere and wanted to be central so I didn't have to worry about being out after dark.
Not a problem here. It doesn't get dark.
There is enough neon lighting here to keep any small country out of the dark for years.
This place never, ever stops.
There is music everywhere, slot machines everywhere (I'm up $10 so far!), people everywhere, and stuff to do everywhere.
Everything you've heard about The Strip and it's non-stop action is true.
My hotel has an outdoor pirate vs "siren" show and there are lots of scantily clad ladies on one pirate ship and lovely topless men on another "fighting it out" across the front of the hotel. There are fireworks, great light show and loud fun music. It's awesome! I am glad though that my room doesn't over look that show as the shows run 5 times a night!
The other thing that is really neat about this oasis in the desert is the fountains and water features. They are spectacular. At the Mirage, which I see outside my 19th floor window, has a "volcano" that goes off 3 times a night with great explosions of fire and water. Something else.
Driving here from Bakersfield, California was through some of the most desolate, barren land I have ever seen. The Canadian Prairies had more to look at than his area. The Mojave desert really is dry, really dry and Edwards Air Force base is in a perfect spot because of the flatness of the ground in that area and the remoteness of the whole place. If there's a problem it probably won't bother anyone!
At one point I was driving up to 5000 feet and there were warning signs not to run AC during the climb as it may cause your vehicle to over heat. Yeah, right. It's 90 F out. I'm running AC and taking my chances. No prob but it was quite a drive as it never seemed to stop going up.
Then, of course, we came down and right to some dry lake flats that there was a "driving strip" put on. There were some people out on it and I can only guess that they were testing something fast.
As you reach the Nevada border it's really obvious. The hotels and casinos are right there. Boom! No guessing there. We're in gambling country. There is so much to see. Between the signs luring you into the casino and "join" their club for free points or chips to the attraction and show signs. After the flat, dried out ground of the drive it was really an oasis to see all of this.
Then I arrived in Vegas.
YIKES!
I drove The Strip first and found my hotel and the rest of the attractions and then decided it was time to get out of the vehicle and into the 95 F heat. EEEEkkk.
It took me 2 hours to get everything organized, between the checking in part to getting my things from the car (parking is in a covered building behind the hotel and you have to walk through the casino to get there, natch).
Even the pool has a DJ! This place has music everywhere. There is something going on every second of the day. You don't need to sleep at the normal times. There are black out curtains on the windows of the room and it makes the room REALLY dark!
So, I'm here. I'm really looking forward to checking out The Strip and all the craziness that goes on here.
There is a Cirque du Soleil show right here in the hotel that looks great and I'll see what else is cool (like the whole place). I really think Las Vegas must be visited once in your life. Just to see it, be in it, watch what happens and enjoy the over the topness (new word by me) of this place.
Right, so before it get unbearable out there (supposed to be a high of 90 F today with no clouds of course) and I go live in the pool I'm outta here.
Viva Las Vegas!
Or viva New York, New York! (dontcha just love it???)
Saturday, October 15, 2011
Gee it's hot in California!
It feels like August in Ontario out here right now.
About 90 F.
And humid.
Yick!
Glad there is airconditioning in my room. Phew!
The drive today took me away from my beloved ocean and through the mountains which were totally burnt dry and golden. I drove through pistachio, almond, apricot, cotton and walnut farms. It was totally neat to see! The farms go for miles and miles! Now I know where my favourite bags of pistachios come from !
The temperature got warmer and warmer as I decended from the mountains. I actually had to turn on my AC in the truck!
One of the big issues here in California is the use or mis use of water. There are signs all along the interstate stating that without water there are no farms. No farms means no jobs, no jobs means no towns and the rest is easy to figure out. Again the economy is really a challenge here.
The land became really, really flat too. I mean prairie flat! Wow! What a difference! Without a cloud in the sky it made for a very interesting drive. I really enjoyed the difference again.
Arriving fairly early here in Bakersfield I had a chance to review my maps and plan my next part of the journey. I think I have it all figured out. Some days will be long drives but I think I'm going to see what I want to see across the US. There might be a stop in Branson Missouri to check out a few shows and what all the hoopla is about that place.
So, on the road again and heading east now. My time at the Pacific has been great and it's now a new adventure! Oh yeah, I have to have my fill of glitz and glam and all things over the top in Vegas. Bring it on! I'm gonna like it! I just wish it was a little cooler! Oh well. I will remember this heat when I'm back in Ontario and thinking how nice it was to be in shorts in late October!
Cheers all!
Saying goodbye to California tomorrow!
About 90 F.
And humid.
Yick!
Glad there is airconditioning in my room. Phew!
The drive today took me away from my beloved ocean and through the mountains which were totally burnt dry and golden. I drove through pistachio, almond, apricot, cotton and walnut farms. It was totally neat to see! The farms go for miles and miles! Now I know where my favourite bags of pistachios come from !
The temperature got warmer and warmer as I decended from the mountains. I actually had to turn on my AC in the truck!
One of the big issues here in California is the use or mis use of water. There are signs all along the interstate stating that without water there are no farms. No farms means no jobs, no jobs means no towns and the rest is easy to figure out. Again the economy is really a challenge here.
The land became really, really flat too. I mean prairie flat! Wow! What a difference! Without a cloud in the sky it made for a very interesting drive. I really enjoyed the difference again.
Arriving fairly early here in Bakersfield I had a chance to review my maps and plan my next part of the journey. I think I have it all figured out. Some days will be long drives but I think I'm going to see what I want to see across the US. There might be a stop in Branson Missouri to check out a few shows and what all the hoopla is about that place.
So, on the road again and heading east now. My time at the Pacific has been great and it's now a new adventure! Oh yeah, I have to have my fill of glitz and glam and all things over the top in Vegas. Bring it on! I'm gonna like it! I just wish it was a little cooler! Oh well. I will remember this heat when I'm back in Ontario and thinking how nice it was to be in shorts in late October!
Cheers all!
Saying goodbye to California tomorrow!
Friday, October 14, 2011
Thanks San Fran for an awesome visit
Alcatraz...check
Tour on the bay...check
Aquarium...check
Old boat tour...check
Cable Car ride...check
Mexican lunch...check
Best sushi ever...check
Phenominal views...check
Sun tan...check
Laughing at the Sea Lion's antics...check
Crab dinner...check
Having a great hotel room with the views of the lights of Oakland and the northern part of San Francisco Bay ...check
Now it's nearly time to check out of here and on to the next part of the pilgrimage.
I have had such a great time here checking everything out. I even went to the Ripley's Believe it or Not museum! Something a little different.
The weather out right now (it's 4 pm) is about 85 F and the sun fairly melts you. I have been doing my sight seeing early in the morning and back "home" mid afternoon before the worst part of the day hits. With no parks around the shade is very hard to find so I figure the morning is the best time to move around. The weather I guess is a little surprising for the locals too. It's so nice that everyone is out doing things.
San Fran has very little in the way of green space. As it's built on a cliff or series of cliffs the buildings and structures are all shoved together much like Prague! Narrow little streets and some crazy hills and cable cars and trams and everything else thrown in makes it a challenge to move around.
The Cable car was fun but trecerous to ride on if you were just "hanging on"! The ride was not smooth by any means and when the driver decided to go, we went! It was a blast though. I was at the back of the Cable Car for part of the ride on the back "patio" they call it. It was great!
I walked back to the hotel (about a 2 hour walk) from the Cable Car end depot as the line up to go back was way too long to hang around in just for a ride back to the waterfront. The walk took me through the financial district and the fancy schmancy shopping district (think Saks 5th Avenue and the like). What a great walk!
I think I've covered quite a bit of San Francisco and totallly enjoyed everything!
Yesterday I was at the Aquarium of the Bay for 2 hours! It was so AWESOME! It's one of the type of aquariums that you walk through. So, so cool! There were two tunnels to go through, one of smaller fish and one of larger fish. The whole experience was fantastic.
The manta ray touch and play pool was really neat! I've never touched a manta ray before. They are so soft and a little slimy. They were so curious too! They kept coming to the sides to have a look at us. It was kind of eerie!
The most relaxing part was watching the moon jelly fish go up and down like an aquatic lava lamp. There was even relaxing music playing too. They should have this at a spa!
Oh yeah
Alcatraz!
I didn't mention anything about that.
What a great tour! The boat ride across the bay to the island was great. Super views and a super ride.
Once on the island there are many options. A 20 minute movie is shown to illustrate the history of the island, a steep walk up to the cell block where an audio set is picked up to take you on a very effective tour of the cell block and the life there.
It's narrated by a former inmate and there are lots of sound effects through out the tour. Really something.
After you return the headset you are off to explore the island for the most part. The lighthouse pictured below is one of the most photographed in the world. A light has been here for over 200 years. The ruins are of the Warden's home. The staff lived on the island.
The cell block was eerie and neat all at the same time. Al Capone had been here. Movies have been shot here (Escape from Alcatraz etc) and there is lots of history in these cells.
Let me tell you that 6 X 9 is really, really small!
Yikes!
Well, I think every single thing that I had on my "do in San Fran" list is checked off. I've even had original San Francisco Sour Dough bread!
Yum!
Off to the next adventure....
Tour on the bay...check
Aquarium...check
Old boat tour...check
Cable Car ride...check
Mexican lunch...check
Best sushi ever...check
Phenominal views...check
Sun tan...check
Laughing at the Sea Lion's antics...check
Crab dinner...check
Having a great hotel room with the views of the lights of Oakland and the northern part of San Francisco Bay ...check
Now it's nearly time to check out of here and on to the next part of the pilgrimage.
I have had such a great time here checking everything out. I even went to the Ripley's Believe it or Not museum! Something a little different.
The weather out right now (it's 4 pm) is about 85 F and the sun fairly melts you. I have been doing my sight seeing early in the morning and back "home" mid afternoon before the worst part of the day hits. With no parks around the shade is very hard to find so I figure the morning is the best time to move around. The weather I guess is a little surprising for the locals too. It's so nice that everyone is out doing things.
San Fran has very little in the way of green space. As it's built on a cliff or series of cliffs the buildings and structures are all shoved together much like Prague! Narrow little streets and some crazy hills and cable cars and trams and everything else thrown in makes it a challenge to move around.
The Cable car was fun but trecerous to ride on if you were just "hanging on"! The ride was not smooth by any means and when the driver decided to go, we went! It was a blast though. I was at the back of the Cable Car for part of the ride on the back "patio" they call it. It was great!
I walked back to the hotel (about a 2 hour walk) from the Cable Car end depot as the line up to go back was way too long to hang around in just for a ride back to the waterfront. The walk took me through the financial district and the fancy schmancy shopping district (think Saks 5th Avenue and the like). What a great walk!
I think I've covered quite a bit of San Francisco and totallly enjoyed everything!
Yesterday I was at the Aquarium of the Bay for 2 hours! It was so AWESOME! It's one of the type of aquariums that you walk through. So, so cool! There were two tunnels to go through, one of smaller fish and one of larger fish. The whole experience was fantastic.
The manta ray touch and play pool was really neat! I've never touched a manta ray before. They are so soft and a little slimy. They were so curious too! They kept coming to the sides to have a look at us. It was kind of eerie!
The most relaxing part was watching the moon jelly fish go up and down like an aquatic lava lamp. There was even relaxing music playing too. They should have this at a spa!
Oh yeah
Alcatraz!
I didn't mention anything about that.
What a great tour! The boat ride across the bay to the island was great. Super views and a super ride.
Once on the island there are many options. A 20 minute movie is shown to illustrate the history of the island, a steep walk up to the cell block where an audio set is picked up to take you on a very effective tour of the cell block and the life there.
It's narrated by a former inmate and there are lots of sound effects through out the tour. Really something.
After you return the headset you are off to explore the island for the most part. The lighthouse pictured below is one of the most photographed in the world. A light has been here for over 200 years. The ruins are of the Warden's home. The staff lived on the island.
The cell block was eerie and neat all at the same time. Al Capone had been here. Movies have been shot here (Escape from Alcatraz etc) and there is lots of history in these cells.
Let me tell you that 6 X 9 is really, really small!
Yikes!
Well, I think every single thing that I had on my "do in San Fran" list is checked off. I've even had original San Francisco Sour Dough bread!
Yum!
Off to the next adventure....
Wednesday, October 12, 2011
San Francisco California-So much to do!
Hi there
After a short break, due to a very poor internet connection in Santa Cruz I'm blogging again...
First of all Santa Cruz was awesome and fun too! Watching the surfers in the swells of the Pacific off of the shore was great, the views were great. Meeting and acquaintance for lunch in Pacific Grove (she said she'd haunt me if I didn't call her when I was in California!) and drinking in the opulence of Pebble Beach was fantastic too. The fog and drizzle enshrouded the gigantic fields of strawberries, artichokes and brussel sprouts (now I know where they come from when they say "California" on the tag) were neat to see and the century old Boardwalk was so fun to walk on during a holiday weekend.
When planning a trip on the fly like this it's hard sometimes to figure out how long to stay in one place or another. Santa Cruz was a stopping place for other things that were out there to see. The hotel, though nice, was not as comfortable as I've been in other places. (Okay, a car alarm going off at 1:30 am today didn't help the overall experience, and it wasn't mine yay!)
Santa Cruz is not the most wealthy of towns and only a few miles away is one of the wealthiest, Pebble Beach. The difference is so vast, as is the terrain. To drive to the south means driving though fields and fields of crops. Then to huge sand dunes, then to lush treed and gated homes of Pacific Grove, Pebble Beach and the 17 mile drive. So beautiful. So manicured. So fancy.
Yeah, I went to Pebble Beach Golf Course (if you're a fan of golf you'll know that this is like going to a holy site, Mecca is Augusta National in Georgia, this is a close second to that).
A round of golf costs $495 a round and the caddie is expected to receive a significant gratuity and I didn't even ask what the cart would cost. There had been rain so carts weren't allowed when I was visiting. But there was no shortage of players lining up to be sent off.
Really something to see and just be part of. I sat quietly on a bench for a little while and watched a couple of groups tee off. Way out of my league. I took a score card for The Mother, she'll have to compare her distances with the one's at Pebble Beach. Good luck on that!
The fog here can be rather a challenge to drive in, or a pain, depending. Highway 1 along the western edge of California was lovely, I'm sure for part of the drive, as I didn't really get to see it I have no real clue. The traffic reports in the morning give a fog density rating for the bridges and highways. It's what can hold things up around here. Today the fog was to clear later in the afternoon on the highway but I didn't want to wait until later in the afternoon so I ventured out and other than a couple of spots of "where'd the road go?" I did just fine.
San Francisco roads reallly are steep. Very steep. Steeper than they should be for any safe driving. But I did it! Okay, I did catch myself saying "Wheeeee!" a couple of times and thanked God again for my nav system which guided me to the Best Western here down town. Driving here makes a roller coaster ride seem like a bunny hill. I can see why they shoot car chases for movies here. You could get airborne very, very easily.
There is so much to do here and I chose a place very close to Fisherman's Wharf and the downtown core. I'm 2 blocks from everything I want to do. I have already booked my ticket (no it's return) to Alcatraz and checked out the Trolley cars, acquarium, Chinatown and the rest of the sights I want to see. I missed the complimentary "Manager's Wine hour" here at the hotel because I was having way to much fun on the Piers having dinner and watching all the boats go back and forth. Maybe tomorrow.
Oh yeah, and the Golden Gate Bridge is RED not gold. Someone lied. Or picked the wrong colour. Maybe when the fog really goes away (right....it's San Francisco) I'll see it in a different light.
Better go charge up the camera!
Some sights for you.
First is a bronze statue at Pebble Beach Golf Club entitled "Just Like Dad".
Next is "lone cypress" from the 17 Mile drive between Monterey and Carmel, California
Then, "Alcatraz emerging" (I like that one).
Then my view from my sushi restaurant overlooking the bay. Alcatraz in the distance and just some of the boats whipping around. Busy place!
Cheers from San Fran
After a short break, due to a very poor internet connection in Santa Cruz I'm blogging again...
First of all Santa Cruz was awesome and fun too! Watching the surfers in the swells of the Pacific off of the shore was great, the views were great. Meeting and acquaintance for lunch in Pacific Grove (she said she'd haunt me if I didn't call her when I was in California!) and drinking in the opulence of Pebble Beach was fantastic too. The fog and drizzle enshrouded the gigantic fields of strawberries, artichokes and brussel sprouts (now I know where they come from when they say "California" on the tag) were neat to see and the century old Boardwalk was so fun to walk on during a holiday weekend.
When planning a trip on the fly like this it's hard sometimes to figure out how long to stay in one place or another. Santa Cruz was a stopping place for other things that were out there to see. The hotel, though nice, was not as comfortable as I've been in other places. (Okay, a car alarm going off at 1:30 am today didn't help the overall experience, and it wasn't mine yay!)
Santa Cruz is not the most wealthy of towns and only a few miles away is one of the wealthiest, Pebble Beach. The difference is so vast, as is the terrain. To drive to the south means driving though fields and fields of crops. Then to huge sand dunes, then to lush treed and gated homes of Pacific Grove, Pebble Beach and the 17 mile drive. So beautiful. So manicured. So fancy.
Yeah, I went to Pebble Beach Golf Course (if you're a fan of golf you'll know that this is like going to a holy site, Mecca is Augusta National in Georgia, this is a close second to that).
A round of golf costs $495 a round and the caddie is expected to receive a significant gratuity and I didn't even ask what the cart would cost. There had been rain so carts weren't allowed when I was visiting. But there was no shortage of players lining up to be sent off.
Really something to see and just be part of. I sat quietly on a bench for a little while and watched a couple of groups tee off. Way out of my league. I took a score card for The Mother, she'll have to compare her distances with the one's at Pebble Beach. Good luck on that!
The fog here can be rather a challenge to drive in, or a pain, depending. Highway 1 along the western edge of California was lovely, I'm sure for part of the drive, as I didn't really get to see it I have no real clue. The traffic reports in the morning give a fog density rating for the bridges and highways. It's what can hold things up around here. Today the fog was to clear later in the afternoon on the highway but I didn't want to wait until later in the afternoon so I ventured out and other than a couple of spots of "where'd the road go?" I did just fine.
San Francisco roads reallly are steep. Very steep. Steeper than they should be for any safe driving. But I did it! Okay, I did catch myself saying "Wheeeee!" a couple of times and thanked God again for my nav system which guided me to the Best Western here down town. Driving here makes a roller coaster ride seem like a bunny hill. I can see why they shoot car chases for movies here. You could get airborne very, very easily.
There is so much to do here and I chose a place very close to Fisherman's Wharf and the downtown core. I'm 2 blocks from everything I want to do. I have already booked my ticket (no it's return) to Alcatraz and checked out the Trolley cars, acquarium, Chinatown and the rest of the sights I want to see. I missed the complimentary "Manager's Wine hour" here at the hotel because I was having way to much fun on the Piers having dinner and watching all the boats go back and forth. Maybe tomorrow.
Oh yeah, and the Golden Gate Bridge is RED not gold. Someone lied. Or picked the wrong colour. Maybe when the fog really goes away (right....it's San Francisco) I'll see it in a different light.
Better go charge up the camera!
Some sights for you.
First is a bronze statue at Pebble Beach Golf Club entitled "Just Like Dad".
Next is "lone cypress" from the 17 Mile drive between Monterey and Carmel, California
Then, "Alcatraz emerging" (I like that one).
Then my view from my sushi restaurant overlooking the bay. Alcatraz in the distance and just some of the boats whipping around. Busy place!
Cheers from San Fran
Saturday, October 8, 2011
Wine country California-A pretty place
Yesterday I had a lovely time going through the Charles M. Schulz (spelled correctly now) museum. It was so much fun to read some of the early comics. See how he put them together and what the process was for some of them and also see what a humble and giving man he was.
Though not political he sometimes had a slant like that in his work or an educator but he also taught so much with his comics. He is also known as a child behaviouralist and observer of the joys of play and development in young people. So fascinating. I would suggest this visit to anyone who visits the Sonoma Valley and the wine country here.
As I'm not a wine person per se I didn't do a "wine tour" but enjoyed learning about the art of wine making in this area in downtown Santa Rosa. Very similar to the Ontario version but the air and mountain sides that the grapes are grown on are supposed to be superior to anything that we have. I guess that's one side's opinion. It's all very pretty to me and seeing the hills covered in vineyards is neat.
Santa Rosa is a divided town. The highway (101) divides it in "old" and "new" but is easily accessed from each side by tunnels. There is a junior college here and their hockey team (yeah! Hockey!) the Polar Bears, plays at the Redwood Empire hockey arena that Charles Schulz had built due to his love of hockey. The little cafe, the Warm Puppy, is right inside the door with lots of good viewing of the rink. The rink itself looks like it should belong in the centre of the Austrian Alps with lots of mock ups of Austrian chalets on the end walls and huge murals of the Alpan countryside. It's really quite fascinating (pictures later friends, I'm on the hotel computer). There was an "old guy" team that was playing when I was there and they were pretty good. Mr. Schulz played with this same team that was playing I later found out. He loved hockey. As did his Peanuts characters.
He spent a lot of time at the rink and at the Warm Puppy Cafe and had his "usual table". That table now has a "reserved" sign on it, as it always did, but now it has no chairs around it and just a vase of flowers on it. Very touching I thought.
Santa Rosa is a railway town as well and I think, like many places out here, that's how it came to be. It's now really supported by the wine industry and the off shoots of that (hotels, restaurants etc) but it's just a little town in the middle of California.
Surprisingly I haven't seen any of my tie dye clad hitch hikers around. I guess they don't do wine country. The hitch hiking in California is next to a sport I think. There are so many of them all over the place. I don't know where they are all heading but most of them have zero money and just moving on. The economy in this town appears to be good, sort of the first place I've noted that, the other's not so much.
Today I am heading to the coast again for a few days. Where I'm going I hear there's a surfer museum, a long board walk and a nice beach. I'm looking forward to that!
Oh yeah, the tree I thought was a lime tree is actually a lemon tree and I found a pretty good fruit to take and try. I'll check it out tonight and see if it's really edible. Okay, okay, I know for a tourist like me I think it's pretty exciting but really... a lemon tree! Right out side my door. Cool.
Yesterday I saw a Kiwi plant in the gardens I was visiting. Very neat too. I like this area. Everything grows here!
Right folks so it's off to stick my tootsies in the surf and see if I can find any sea lions or seals. I haven't seen those yet. I have seen huge herds of elk that are starting to gather for the winter. Quite a sight.
Later dudes!
(Hey, I'm in surfer country, I have to get that in!)
Though not political he sometimes had a slant like that in his work or an educator but he also taught so much with his comics. He is also known as a child behaviouralist and observer of the joys of play and development in young people. So fascinating. I would suggest this visit to anyone who visits the Sonoma Valley and the wine country here.
As I'm not a wine person per se I didn't do a "wine tour" but enjoyed learning about the art of wine making in this area in downtown Santa Rosa. Very similar to the Ontario version but the air and mountain sides that the grapes are grown on are supposed to be superior to anything that we have. I guess that's one side's opinion. It's all very pretty to me and seeing the hills covered in vineyards is neat.
Santa Rosa is a divided town. The highway (101) divides it in "old" and "new" but is easily accessed from each side by tunnels. There is a junior college here and their hockey team (yeah! Hockey!) the Polar Bears, plays at the Redwood Empire hockey arena that Charles Schulz had built due to his love of hockey. The little cafe, the Warm Puppy, is right inside the door with lots of good viewing of the rink. The rink itself looks like it should belong in the centre of the Austrian Alps with lots of mock ups of Austrian chalets on the end walls and huge murals of the Alpan countryside. It's really quite fascinating (pictures later friends, I'm on the hotel computer). There was an "old guy" team that was playing when I was there and they were pretty good. Mr. Schulz played with this same team that was playing I later found out. He loved hockey. As did his Peanuts characters.
He spent a lot of time at the rink and at the Warm Puppy Cafe and had his "usual table". That table now has a "reserved" sign on it, as it always did, but now it has no chairs around it and just a vase of flowers on it. Very touching I thought.
Santa Rosa is a railway town as well and I think, like many places out here, that's how it came to be. It's now really supported by the wine industry and the off shoots of that (hotels, restaurants etc) but it's just a little town in the middle of California.
Surprisingly I haven't seen any of my tie dye clad hitch hikers around. I guess they don't do wine country. The hitch hiking in California is next to a sport I think. There are so many of them all over the place. I don't know where they are all heading but most of them have zero money and just moving on. The economy in this town appears to be good, sort of the first place I've noted that, the other's not so much.
Today I am heading to the coast again for a few days. Where I'm going I hear there's a surfer museum, a long board walk and a nice beach. I'm looking forward to that!
Oh yeah, the tree I thought was a lime tree is actually a lemon tree and I found a pretty good fruit to take and try. I'll check it out tonight and see if it's really edible. Okay, okay, I know for a tourist like me I think it's pretty exciting but really... a lemon tree! Right out side my door. Cool.
Yesterday I saw a Kiwi plant in the gardens I was visiting. Very neat too. I like this area. Everything grows here!
Right folks so it's off to stick my tootsies in the surf and see if I can find any sea lions or seals. I haven't seen those yet. I have seen huge herds of elk that are starting to gather for the winter. Quite a sight.
Later dudes!
(Hey, I'm in surfer country, I have to get that in!)
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