Showing posts with label Traveling. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Traveling. Show all posts

Friday, February 24, 2023

Las Vegas February 2023

Five wonderful days!
2/17/23 - 2/22/23
Drove down Thursday after school and spent the night at Fairfield Inn and Suites by Marriott at Dulles Airport (23000 Indian Creek Dr., Sterling, VA 703-435-5300)  They actually answer the phone themselves!  Parked my car there and took the shuttle, which leaves every 30 minutes beginning at 4:30 am until midnight.  Breakfast begins at 5 am and is everything anyone might want!  Note: Pickup was quick and easy.  I ended up spending the night here upon my return, leaving at 5 am and heading righ 

Flight out of Dulles (lots of walking, but a great place to fly to and from) on United, nonstop, leaving around 8 am, arriving in Vegas about 10:30 their time. Picked up by Fran and Terry and we had the whole rest of the day to have fun!
Did so many things this week!  
Two quilt shops:  Christmas Goose and Sew Yeah.
Two shoe shops:  DSW and Desert Birkenstock. Purchased a new pair of shoes at each!
Three movies:  Missing, Marlowe, and A Man Called Otto, all at South Point.
One show:  Van Gogh Immersion Exhibit at Aria - WOW!!
Chinese New Year exhibit at the Conservatory at Bellagio - Year of the Rabbit!
Casino fun:  Four times at South Point (love those free margaritas and the Roulette "slot" machine!)
Meals out and meals in.  So much fun sitting around the kitchen island eating salad, warm bread, fruit, decadent deserts from bakeries and Whole Foods and chatting...
Enjoying the outdoors:  Tule Springs Fossil Beds National Monument AND Desert National Wildlife Refuge
Loved this "slot" machine - spent many hours here (with my free margaritas)
 
On our way to the movies at SouthPoint
 
A teeny, tiny part of the South Point Casino floor

Fran & Terry's rental

We timed it perfectly whilst driving down the strip to see the Bellagio fountains!

Van Gogh Immersion exhibit



Year of the Rabbit at Bellagio Conservatory.  We are able to hit this every year we've been to Vegas in February together - quite a few years' worth now!

Love the Conservatory flowers!

You don't see this signage every day...

Desert Wildlife Reserve.  AMAZING!  1.5 million acres.  2nd largest in the world.  35 natural springs.
Las Vegas mountains.  Everywhere.  Gorgeous.  These are ones that are nearest to the Ranger Station at the Wildlife Preserve.

Time to go home.  At the airport.  I never take selfies, but this was too tempting.

Bye-bye Vegas.  One last look at the strip out the plane window.


Wednesday, November 11, 2020

A Short Stay in Williamsburg, Virginia


November 8 - 11, 2020
Photos below

Laura and I decided to take the kids down to Williamsburg back in August, but decided against it because of the pandemic.  We thought it would be less busy in November (it was) but still pleasant weather.  Were we ever right!  We had perfect weather, great accommodations at a Hampton Inn/Hilton (really clean) quite close to Colonial Williamsburg, and the opportunity to visit, if even for  short time, with one of my former fifth graders, Emily Doherty, who now has the dream job of being a docent/writer/presenter at Colonial Williamsburg.

We drove down on Sunday, arriving before dark to check in and find an outdoor venue to eat dinner.  We found the perfect place, a wonderful pizza place at the end of the mile-long central strip of Colonial Williamsburg, Mellow Marshmallow.  We enjoyed it so much that we decided to eat there again on Tuesday night.  Great food, wonderful wait staff, we loved it.

First thing Monday morning, we met up with Emily outside the Governor's Palace.  She hasn't changed one iota, what a sweetheart.  She even gifted us with free tickets for our two-day stay.  She says it's one of the perks of employment, and she hasn't had the opportunity to give many away this year!  

Our first "tour" was of the governor's palace, which was super enjoyable.  I spent a week here on a Teacher Education Opportunity back in 2001, and remembered some of the places here so fondly.  During that week we saw so much behind-the-scenes and gleaned a huge knowledge of how to share this incredible place with kids.  I remembered the entrance to the palace, full of swords, knives, and firearms.  Tristan sure enjoyed it!  

Even though inside touring was limited, small groups got to see a dozen or so of the authentic settings.  Docents were more than happy to answer questions, including those relating to working there.  We learned about blacksmithing, silversmithing, brickmaking, millinery, and the two different courts of law available to the residents of Williamsburg back in "the day."  It was laid-back, engrossing, and so much fun.  Both kids enjoyed it greatly.

We spent Monday morning and Tuesday morning at Williamsburg.

On Monday afternoon we went to Jamestown, one part of the Colonial National Historic Park "triangle."  Unfortunately, the movie and museum were (of course) closed, which lessened the information for the kids greatly.  Next time...

On Tuesday afternoon we headed to Yorktown.  Again, no museum or movie, but interesting.  Kids got to hike around both places, but Williamsburg was the super hit of this trip.

Mellow Mushroom
Just Arrived
We felt like we had the entire place to ourselves!

Fall in Colonial Williamsburg

Inside the courthouse

Masks the whole time, of course


Walkway bridge with benches at Jamestown.


Monday, May 30, 2016

Cross Country Trip WEST to EAST - May, 2016

Thursday 5/27 Tucson to Van Horn, TX
     425 miles, through two time zones
     Motel 6, Van Horn $50.84
Scott Joplin mural in Texarcana, TX (I stayed across the road - literally - in Arkansas)

Friday 5/28 Van Horn, TX to Texarcana, AR
     684,3 miles
     Motel 6, Texarcana $

The Mighty Mississippi in Memphis

Saturday 5/2 9Texarcana, AR to Cookeville, TN
     563.9 miles
     Motel 6, Cookeville $
A little letterboxing - and a few detours.....

Sunday, 5/30 Cookeville, TN to Mt. Holly Springs, PA
     613.8 miles
THIS is what was awaiting me at my destination!

Total 2287  miles

Sunday, June 21, 2015

Summer of 2015 - A Week in New York


Day 1 - Monday, June 15, 2015
Train from Harrisburg to Penn Station
Check in at Holiday in, 57th between 9th and 10th, near Columbus Circle
Lunch at Lunch Box on 9th - delicious spinach & potato soup
Laura off to her conference at Fordham Law, Ella and I hit the sidewalk
Walked north along Broadway to about 72nd Street, stopping at shops
Began to POUR,  We got very, very wet.....
Dinner at Stardust Cafe (Beau was our singing waiter)
Times Square, M & M Store, Toys R Us, souvenir store
Cab back to hotel

Day 2 - Tuesday, June 16,  2015 
Cab to St. Patrick's Cathedral, lit a candle for Grampie
NBC store and LEGO store at Rockefeller Center
Grayline Bus tour, got off at Union Square
Lasagna pizza and mozzarella sticks at Rosa's Pizza on 14th St.
Letterbox outside Lion Brand Yarn shop
Looked for letterbox at Strand Bookstore - not there, but the bookstore was AWESOME!
Croissants
Started to pour again - took quite awhile to get a cab, but we did, back to the hotel



Day 3 - Wednesday, June 17, 2015
Walked to the MOMA
Mostly checked out the fifth floor - Picasso, Van Gogh, Klee, Mondrian....
American Girl Store
Art Cart outside the New York Public Library
Found a letterbox inside the library!
Met Laura - did the Grayline DOWNTOWN loop, got dropped off near the hotel
Dinner near the hotel, pasta
Chocolate mousse cake at a deli before hitting the hay



Day 4 - Thursday, June 18, 2015
Swimming in the roof pool
Subway (big deal for E - no longer nervous!) to Battery Park/ South Ferry
Ferry  to Statue of Liberty
Ellis Island
Dinner at P. J. Clarke's (44 West 63rd St.)  - downstairs; cool decor, very overpriced



Day 5 - Friday, June 19, 2015
Train to Harrisburg
Picked up party stuff for Tristan's birthday party tomorrow
Mother-daughter pedicures!

Wednesday, June 5, 2013

Shopping in Colorado Springs

I found these "notes" I'd written two years ago, in April, 2011, which I want to remember.  So I know this is waaaaaaay out of order, but I want to be able to access it (now that I've reread it I'm ready to head back to Colorado)!  I'll look for photos later.  This is solely for my own memory and no one reads this blog but me, so I guess it doesn't really matter....

Boy, we’ve been to some really cool places in Colorado…both in Pueblo and in Colorado Springs.  I don’t want to forget the people or the places, so I’m going to make a few quick notes.

                Pueblo, CO, first thing Wed. morning (April. 20th) we went to Colorado Fiber Arts.  This was a #5 shop.  The owner was in Mexico, vacationing for the week, but Wynne (Winnie), who works and teaches there, was superb AND superbly helpful.  First she showed me the short, short Addi’s that people who don’t like to knit on four needles are using to knit socks. (People like me).  She has recreated a pattern and gave it to me.  She also gave me a copy of the scarf/shawl pattern that they had a gorgeous grey shawl made as a sample.  Wynne lives in Canon City but stays with her 91-year-old mother three times a week and works at the shop.
                Wynne also told us about a great bakery downtown (I had a yummy “sticky orange roll”), a stamp store in Pueblo that would be fun, and a couple of fiber arts stores in Colorado Springs that were too good to miss.  She was just lovely, and so was the shop.  I could have spent a lot more time looking around, and will hopefully be back another time to do so.
                Next stop was Colorado Stampin’ & Scrappin’ where I was greeted by Margaret, the store’s owner.  She is an incredibly knowledgeable stamper who showed me all sorts of tricks to get me restarted with stamping and embossing.  She was wonderful…and funny.  She had a difficult time walking and used a small shopping cart (which contained her purse and portable store telephone) to aid her.
I purchased a new VersaMark stamp pad, 6 stamping powders (metallic gold, metallic “super russet”; three DUO colors:  blue-green, green-yellow, and red-blue; and one called “interference violet”, which can be used on its own or added atop another to change its tone a bit), Stamp N Bond adhesive powder, a rubber stamp that was a lady’s face, a cylinder of three foils, and a heavy formica table pad on which to stamp.  I came away with some instructions and a lot of ideas.

                We then hit 25N for a quick ride to Colorado Springs.  We went to Van Briggle Pottery, where they have been making fine pottery since the end of the 19th century.  I bought a beautiful vase with a lovely gold-brown glaze that includes a greenish and a mauve hue.  Really lovely.  It’ll look great with my Mata Ortiz, Navajo, and Hawaiin pots on my sideboard. 
                After checking into the LaQuinta, we drove over to a lovely area on Colorado Avenue which was blossoming with all sorts of lovely flowering trees.  Although it was overcast, the sun tried to peep through the clouds throughout the afternoon.  We did finish our time here with sprinkles falling, but it was not a problem at all (except that Fran got cold). 
                Bon Ton Café:  homemade vegetable soup and salad for Fran, hash browns and club sandwich for me.  Quite satisfying.
                The first gallery we went into, right across the street, was very cool, and the gal working there knew her artists quite well.  Funky birdhouses by a Scottsdale artist were there, I’d seen them in Bohemia in Tucson.  There were also gorgeously painted and reasonably priced pine furniture from Texas….I would love a piece for my house.  $300 would purchase a gorgeous end table with door.  All the people that work on each piece sign the back of it.  This collection also included tables and chests.
                Just down the street was Arati Artists Gallery, Inc.  This was a coop of local artists, and the woman “on duty,” was a wire worker and beader.  Darn but we didn’t get her name.  (Arati is east Indian meaning “send a little light (or beauty) into the world.)  Incredibly reasonable prices – I got a horsehair vase by Dan Masimer for $6 and two cool little pots by Darlene Wells for $3 and $4!  What deals…and they’re beautiful.  There were also silk paintings by a woman who has macular degeneration.  She actually forms the pieces of silk into a sculpture like a flower or sunburst, adds dyes, and frames them.  A couple had the leftover piece of silk draped from the corner of the canvas.
                Needleworks by Holly Berry and Holly Berry House Originals was our next stop, at 2409 West Colorado.  OOOOOEEEEEE.  The left half of the store was yarns and patterns and samples and needles….the right half was baby and boutique-y gifts, and out back….well, here were Kathryn Read’s rubber stamp designs. Englas, one of the rubber stamp artists who work here, gave us a demonstration and really got our creative juices going.  I ended up buying two large rubber stamps and some transparent art glitter that can go on any color and keep that color.  She showed us how to emboss with gold, paint inside the lines with Twinkling H2O’s by Luminarte (which they were sold out of!), and create beautiful works of art.  Fran really loved it, and it looks like she might be enticed into trying it out!  So cool! 
                As I was leaving the yarn part of the store, I noticed a big container of Tamari Balls.  There is an instructor that gives classes on the first Friday or Saturday of the month.  I’d love to come on up during the summer for a class, and gave them my email address so I can keep informed about both the stamping and yarn classes.
                Across the street was Kathleen McFadden’s Range Gallery.  What a cool lady!  She’s a photographer (who gives lessons) and her studio shows her wonderful, natural photos….weathered trees, ancient school bus, donkey’s full-face….images from the central coast of California(where she used to live) and in black and white.  She has a series of oak trees mounted on cotton rag paper with UV protection for $325.  They’re long and would look great over my couch – and she can ship anywhere.  She was the one who told us that living in Colorado Springs is great, reasonably priced, and extremely dog-friendly.  There’s even a sticker that businesses put on their doors so that people know they can bring their own dogs in without a problem.
                Fran’s niece, Terri, joined us then, and we continued wandering down Colorado Avenue to Pyramide Boutique.  Batik fashions and jewelry, made by cottage industry companies, were featured.  Fran found a dress for a family wedding this summer.  Terri found a Bright green cotton shirt.  And I found a black scarf with white swirls and a necklace that almost matches my favorite silver bracelet.  We spend about an hour trying on clothes and yakking with the owner.  Such fun!

                By the time we left the boutique it was drizzling and it was also time to eat.  We walked over to Pizzeria Rustica, where we ate Neapolitan pizza with homemade goat cheese, grilled mushrooms, zucchini, and sundried tomatoes.  What an excellent afternoon!

Thursday, August 2, 2012

California Barn Quilt Trail

What fun!

In Lake County, California, 28 buildings have decorated their sides with huge, COLORFUL, quilts.  Apparently this is happening all over the U.S. with about 28 states creating their own Barn Quilt Trail!  We set out early in the morning, traveling from Novato by Sonoma, through Napa and Calistoga and up into Lake County.  What a gorgeous ride, past zillions of vineyards and winding around and through mountain roads.

Our first stop was at a deli on the outskirts of Middletown, where we had a "snack."  Thank goodness for that snack, because we couldn't find anyplace to eat for the next four hours, not even a Subway. We had a map with sketchy addresses that we'd downloaded from the internet, and started our gaping and u-turning adventure in Middletown, where there was one quilt we just had to find.  It wasn't easy., but after traveling down and around a driveway that meandered through grapes and horses and trees (with a sign that said "No Trespassing/Tresspassers will be shot/Survivors will be shot again/We aim to please") , we followed a sign advertising eggs for sale.  And on the egg-lady's own somewhat hidden barn, we found our first quilt.

From there we headed up toward Lower Lake where we found another, then on to Kelseyville,, where there are about 20 clustered around town - but it's a largish area, so many miles were traveled.  Some were easily found from the road.  Some we had to look backwards or drive back and forth.  One was covered with a ladder - it was a ladder store, but it bugged us to cover such cool art. I think I felt they had a responsibility with this art that they'd chosen to share with the world and they'd shunned their duty with it.  However, the colors were spectacular, some of the barns and settings were truly wonderful, and we had a blast.We even found three that weren't yet on the map.

We were famished by the time we finished up in Kelseyville.  Wei headed north to Lakeport, where there were three more quilts and the town looked more populated on the map.  For sure!  A few restaurants, one where we found a super ... huge ... salad complete with beets, chick peas, and bay shrimp.  It was all I could to not to inhale like a vacuum cleaner!

We didn't have time to go all the way around Clear Lake, so we missed two of the quilts on the northeastern shore.  I'll have to satisfy myself with looking at Tulip Time and Grape Basket on their website, but we did find 22 of them!

For them, this was "an agricultural and tourism project designed to promote and celebrate our community pride."  There are lots and lots .... and lots ... of grapes growing in Lake County. Very agrarian.  There was a wonderful shop on Main Street in Kelseyville that delighted us - BirdBrain Designs, where the owners design redwork and felt work patterns and display them with lovely antiques and a wall full of red  and wool fabrics. A Subway franchise in Kelseyville would make a FORTUNE!

The ride across the mountains from Lakeport to Route 101 was absolutely spectacular.  I was glad I wasn't the one behind the wheel, because for once I could gape at the scenery without worrying about dropping thousands of feet to my demise.

Check out the Lake County Quilt Trail website.  It's so interesting, and it was a fabulous day....a great "adventure!"

Sunday, December 19, 2010

Put On Your Travelin' Shoes: SEATTLE

Just two days here to check out as much as I could, and much of one day was reserved for a beautiful wedding. I love this city!

When I left for Seattle, the 10-day forecast was for rain...every single day. But when I looked out my 7th floor window Sunday morning - my first day ever in Seattle, Washington - the sun was shining brightly, people were out and walking about, and I could clearly see Mt. Rainier in the distance. Wow.

Just outside the Marriott Waterfront is an elevator that goes up about seven flights - and lets you out on the edge of Pike's Market, one of the major toruist draws in Seattle. Streets go up and down hills that in many ways remind me of San Francisco!

After roaming through the fish stalls, jewelry makers, flower and vegetable venders, and incredibly diverse stands - hundreds of them - I discovered an information booth. James, its friendly, funny proprietor, directed me to my next few stops and helped me nail down a couple of the important things I wanted to do the next day.

First, after walking through Rocky Mountain Chocolate and out the door on the far end, I found myself in an indoor "mall." Across the hall was UNDERCOVER QUILTS. A wonderful store, small, great fabrics, samples, patterns.

Pike Place Chowder had many choices...too many choices...so I finally chose the 4-cup sampler. My favorite? The clam chowder. A close second was the seared scallop chowder. The smoked salmon was quite tasty (it appeared full of capers, I've always avoided them before, but they worked just fine). The 4th - recommended by the server - was my least favorite, the seafood bisque. I sat in a window facing the alley where an aged, long-haired, gap-toothed singer-guitarist entertained. I couldn't hear him, but he was fun to watch.

Then on through Cost Plus to a hidden elevator in the very rear corner. Funky. Up to the second floor, down a deserted outside corridor to discover a very cool shop, So Much Yarn. Small, first class yarns. Added a couple of reds to my collection, since I'm into making Christmas stockings right now.

Back to the hotel for the wedding. Lovely. Fun. Happy. Mazel Tov Alyssa and Dan! I'm so glad I could be here for this!

Monday morning walked up the hill....up....up....and up more, 'til I hit Westlake Center, a three-story complex of retail shops with the Seattle monorail and a large multicultural food court as the uppermost destination. Spaghetti and meatballs for breakfast, now that's my idea of perfection!

The monorail, originally built for the 1962 World's Fair, delivered me nonstop to th Seattle Center, which houses museums, gardens, a merry-go-round, and the Space Needle. I spent a couple of hours checking out the exhibits at the EMP (Experience Music Project), spending lots of time on the history and music of Jimi Hendrix. Wow. I didn't make it to Renton, where he's buried, but sure got a great taste of him at this classy museum. It also houses the Science Fiction Museum, but I'll save that for another visit. Because there WILL be another visit. The building itself is something to see...like nothing you've ever seen before.

By the return trip on the monorail it was drizzling pretty steadily, and I walked east for a few blocks, ending up at Pacific Place, Barnes & Noble, and the movie theater, where I took in a screening of Black Swan. After a fantastic dinner at Bell Street Diner, seated in a poinsettia and candlelit booth right on the edge of the waterfront, I headed back to the Marriott and the packing that awaited me.

I loved Seattle. I must come back.