Monday, November 29, 2010
Snowed In!!
Determined to get to Pagosa Hot Springs we soldiered on knowing there would be a little snow. So here we are - waiting for the sun to shine - hoping to be home Dec !. For those of you that don't know Pagosa is in South Central Colorado - the best hot springs in the country we think. We expect snow much of the way home so pray us on in!!
Friday, November 26, 2010
Lots of Fun but no Turkey!
With the first picture can you guess where we ended up on Thanksgiving Day? You guessed it - Branson,MO. We were pretty determined to head West - with no stops - when we realized that we might like to be somewhere special on Thanksgiving. (So we wouldn't be too lonely!) We turned North 170 miles from Little Rock, AK and found ourselves listening to Andy Williams on TG Eve. It was great fun. We almost skipped it - but we have heard about Branson for so long that we felt we might regret it. As it turned out we had two days - four shows - and plenty of time to explore Branson. The weather the first day was 70degrees and the second day 30degrees and sleeting! When we got back to our home we learned that tornadoes had been dancing all around us.
Do you remember me telling you about Pigeon Forge - extreme carnavalism? Well, for our tastes Branson is only a little bit better. The locals tell us that 20 years ago it was small and quaint - easy to get around - a little homey. Not any more. Traffic - and
more commercial endeavors than imaginable! Still we loved the shows - most all of them are very good - not as many big names. They all got too old!!
The lights you see make up my pictures. Branson has a beautiful outdoor shopping mall on the river - the town spent 7,5 million dollars on a computorized fountain that performs to music. The bright lights are huge natural gas flames (I mean huge - 7 pipes as big as a ships smoke stack). We enjoyed it!
Our hosts at the RV park were from Twinfalls, ID and on their way retirement. They could not talk up enough the region of the Ozarks, the Lakes, Hiking, canoeing, fishing, shopping and much more! They said many people come to stay 3 or 4 days and stay three weeks! Now we can say we have been to Arkansas, Missouri, and the Ozarks and Branson. Not bad in two days!
Today, November 26 we drove just past Oklahoma City. We really can see the end of our trips. Barring the unforseen - like blizzards - we should be able to make Boise in five days. Count it - five days! We can barely believe it - we have always felt so far away from home. But now we have it in our sights. Yeahhhhh!
Do you remember me telling you about Pigeon Forge - extreme carnavalism? Well, for our tastes Branson is only a little bit better. The locals tell us that 20 years ago it was small and quaint - easy to get around - a little homey. Not any more. Traffic - and
more commercial endeavors than imaginable! Still we loved the shows - most all of them are very good - not as many big names. They all got too old!!
The lights you see make up my pictures. Branson has a beautiful outdoor shopping mall on the river - the town spent 7,5 million dollars on a computorized fountain that performs to music. The bright lights are huge natural gas flames (I mean huge - 7 pipes as big as a ships smoke stack). We enjoyed it!
Our hosts at the RV park were from Twinfalls, ID and on their way retirement. They could not talk up enough the region of the Ozarks, the Lakes, Hiking, canoeing, fishing, shopping and much more! They said many people come to stay 3 or 4 days and stay three weeks! Now we can say we have been to Arkansas, Missouri, and the Ozarks and Branson. Not bad in two days!
Today, November 26 we drove just past Oklahoma City. We really can see the end of our trips. Barring the unforseen - like blizzards - we should be able to make Boise in five days. Count it - five days! We can barely believe it - we have always felt so far away from home. But now we have it in our sights. Yeahhhhh!
Monday, November 22, 2010
Exploring the Smokies
We drove into Pigeon Forge and Gatlinburg and could not have been more surprised. It was everything we never wanted to see! (Vegas, Fairs, Carnivals all wrapped into one. Huge crowds and traffic jams.) So we avoided the throngs and drove into the Smokey Mountains to view some early mountain settlements. The story that comes out is close families who yearned to be self sufficient, they were Christian folk, lived with very little (we call it poor today - they didn't think of themselves as poor). The stories are much like Dolly Parton's - one of twelve children - roaming the hills, singing together, going to church and often made fun of by the kids at school. Dolly talks about going to school with holes in both shoes, her stockings and having the kids laugh at her. IT made for a tough breed of folks. By the way the graveyard was one of the first where we stopped and read the markers. There were basically about three family names on the markers - still being buried there to this day. The one Jon wanted a picture of is " Here lies Samuel Oliver - Murdered by North Carolina Rebels."
Church built by hand - hardwood of course |
Learned Something Amazing Today
Always a Smokey Haze |
Parkway - destination Great Smokey Mountain National Park and Pigeon Forge,Tenn.
(home of Dollywood!)
The drive was spectacular of course - we had no idea that the mountains were so
tall and rugged in this part of the world. The forest is so thick with hardwood trees
that one would have a hard time walking through it at all. (There are evergreen trees
on the ridge lines.) I had a guy from the South tell me that he loved the West but what he didn't like is that our mountains don't have any trees. To these folks forests mean disiduous. Hmmm
Since we first drove in the Blueridge Mountian Range we have wondered why the
Smokey Mountains are called the Smokey Mountains. Sure, we noticed that the air always seemed smokey - but we assumed that was poor air quality, fog, mist or wood smoke. Today we learned that the constant smokey haze is from the hardwood forests as they breathe and exhale. It has a blue cast and of course makes for the most spectacular sunsets.
We had two hikes today both short and very steep. The three pictues on the right
are the hike to the Devil's Courthouse - a massive black outcropping with a cavern.
The Cherokee Indians lived in this area and they had many superstitions about it- mainly that the devil
held court in the cavern. Those superstitions were carried on by the pioneers
who settled here and became the "mountain folk".
Devil's Courthouse behind Mimi |
Saturday, November 20, 2010
Surprises Still Await Us!
OK - it is time for me to admit that half the time we have no idea where we are going each day - or why. We pray and head in the general direction and sometimes because of lack of daylight or because we need a grocery stop we find ourselves in the sweetest places!
Chapel at The Cove |
Of course another favorite was seeing the North Carolina that Billy often referred to. Montreat - the Cove. Mountains, trees, beauty everywhere. Ruth talk often about it and afterall it is the place she chose to raise the kids pretty much by herself. What a woman.
We debated quite awhile about whether to spend the 69.00/ ticket to tour the Biltmore mansion. We got mixed reviews from everyone we asked. My opinion - if you are there you must go see it. We didn't know that the industry barons could live like that (before income tax). The nice thing is that you are on your own, you can stay as long as you like in each room, you are free to roam the grounds and stay awhile. There are all kinds of hospitality venues and it is very relaxed. As for the mansion - there are no words. No - maybe the word is Royalty.
We loved this part of North Carolina. We were surprised that a little town could hold so many surprises ! Still Crazy and Still Havin Fun! Weather is still glorious! Blessings to you all.
The Lodge at the Billy Graham Training Center |
Biltmore Home (hah) |
Thursday, November 18, 2010
Almost Heaven - Virginia
Hi friends and anyone who has joined us! I now know what John Denver was singing about - I have been singing his song "Country Roads" all week. Almost heaven, West Virginia, Blue Ridge Mountains - Shenandoah River. Life is old there, older than the hills younger than the mountains. blowing on the breeze. Take me home country roads. to the land that I was born - West Virginia - Mountain Mama Country Roads.
Well, I guess you can see that we have been caught up in the Shenandoah Valley and everything that surrounds it. It is impossible (I think) to come to Virginia and not get caught up in the history of the Civil War, the Revolutionary War, the great generals and Presidents who came from this state and the beauty of the rolling green hills.
For the last week we visited Mount Vernon, Monticello, General Robert E. Lees birthplace and burial, Stonewall Jackson, many battlefields, and the beautiful Shenandoah Valley, Appalachian trail . . . it starts the mind a spinning. Washington, Jefferson, Madison, Monroe and on and on. It seems the great minds and great leaders loved Virginia. Both Washington and Jefferson said that there was no place on earth that they would rather be.
So needless to say we ate it up. I apologize - the pictures are few and far between. The picture of Jon is on the Skyway National Park Hwy above the Shenandoah Valley. So is the bear - the largest and prettiest Jon says he has ever seen.
We started at the North end of the Shenandoah at Winchester. A fascinating history. A town that saw so much Civil war action (changed hands 70 times)! We ended up at Lexington, VA - the home of the Virginia Military Institute and the Washington-Lee University. Also the home of Lee and Jackson. Wow. We loved it and the two pictures that I enclose mean nothing to you - but to say how impressed we are with this little
town.
Of all the places we have seen and enjoyed - this is the area that we would choose to live. The Western part of Virginia. Within reach of the Shenandoah, the Blue Ridge Mountains, the Appalachian Trail and the rolling green hills.
Today we say goodbye to Virginia and head for The Great Smokey Mountain National Park and Tennessee. Thanks for checking in and indulging my love for Virginia!
Monday, November 15, 2010
Up Close and Personal
Here we are standing under Miss Liberty. Once again we had the most gorgeous day ever. We found her inspiring, beautiful, and quite large! The pedistal is as tall as she is. The story of building the pedastal just to hold her (after France sent her over) is pretty cool. We went in her inards and the amount of steel securing her would support any large bridge or skyscraper. I would recomend everyone get up close and personal with her. I am finding that on this trip I am spending a lot of time thinking about the word liberty. A blessing that I definitely take for granted.
Ellis Island on a beautiful day. You are looking at the processing building where they weighed, measured, tested IQ of 12 million immigrants. They pulled up their eyelids with a button hook to look for disease, - The tests and measurements were elementary but they made the immigrants so nervous and a few were sent back! It is hard to imagine the fear and trepidation they felt.
Sorry that you cannot see this but you are looking at Jon's back as he looks at ground zero. Today they are building a new building on the sight - Trade Center One - next year will be 10 years and they will dedicate a park at the sight as well. There really is very little information around the area but the tourists keep flooding in to see it. In some ways it felt like New Yorkers had moved on - but if you dig there is plenty of personal accounts. My favorite is the church that withstood the explosions when the buildings around it suffered. That church became a respite and place of peace and provision for the firemen and volunteers over the next many months. I don't think we ever thought we would be here - but we are glad we did. What happened here changed the world as we know it - right along with Pearl Harbor , the Atomic Bomb, the assasination of JFK. Every generation has an event that cannot be forgotten - it reminds us how vulnerable we are. Something to think about. TTFN
Ellis Island on a beautiful day. You are looking at the processing building where they weighed, measured, tested IQ of 12 million immigrants. They pulled up their eyelids with a button hook to look for disease, - The tests and measurements were elementary but they made the immigrants so nervous and a few were sent back! It is hard to imagine the fear and trepidation they felt.
Sorry that you cannot see this but you are looking at Jon's back as he looks at ground zero. Today they are building a new building on the sight - Trade Center One - next year will be 10 years and they will dedicate a park at the sight as well. There really is very little information around the area but the tourists keep flooding in to see it. In some ways it felt like New Yorkers had moved on - but if you dig there is plenty of personal accounts. My favorite is the church that withstood the explosions when the buildings around it suffered. That church became a respite and place of peace and provision for the firemen and volunteers over the next many months. I don't think we ever thought we would be here - but we are glad we did. What happened here changed the world as we know it - right along with Pearl Harbor , the Atomic Bomb, the assasination of JFK. Every generation has an event that cannot be forgotten - it reminds us how vulnerable we are. Something to think about. TTFN
Are We Having Fun Yet?
I know we look like the proverbial tourists but we are having so much fun! Our driver took this picture just as our horse took off - but not to worry we would have followed that horse everywhere! Of course we rode through Central park at dusk. Oh my gosh - so much to see - but the biggest tourist attraction is the spot where John Lennon was killed. It looked so peaceful - like how could someone kill a person on this spot? Hmmm.
We spent the next day walking around Greenwich village. It is a really nice place after the high skyscrapers of NYC, This was my favorite spot - the window with the lights on is called Milk and Cookies. Turns out it is quite famous. I would choose to live next door. This was my favorite door and I love interesting doors. New York University is here and the place is filled with college students. But Jon and I noticed that you can see any genre of person in any neighborhood. We also saw grey hairs driving Rolls Royces. Great - you never feel out of place in NYC!
More cool Greenwich Village.
We spent the next day walking around Greenwich village. It is a really nice place after the high skyscrapers of NYC, This was my favorite spot - the window with the lights on is called Milk and Cookies. Turns out it is quite famous. I would choose to live next door. This was my favorite door and I love interesting doors. New York University is here and the place is filled with college students. But Jon and I noticed that you can see any genre of person in any neighborhood. We also saw grey hairs driving Rolls Royces. Great - you never feel out of place in NYC!
More cool Greenwich Village.
Day Two - NYC
We were totally facinated by Times Square at night! There are no words.
The Romance of it all! The Empire State Building totally captivated us. The history, the architecture and of course the ROMANCE ! We had a gorgeous day - a chamber of commerce day. It was hard to leave it and come back down! Love it.
Just how high up are we? It makes all the other buildings look small. Final days tomorrow. TTFN
The Romance of it all! The Empire State Building totally captivated us. The history, the architecture and of course the ROMANCE ! We had a gorgeous day - a chamber of commerce day. It was hard to leave it and come back down! Love it.
Just how high up are we? It makes all the other buildings look small. Final days tomorrow. TTFN
Saturday, November 13, 2010
Day One -NYC
Everything about our time in New Your City amazed us. Though we have wanted to come for a long time we never expected to have as much fun as we did!! We loved our time in the city and hope to come back. Though we had planned to stay at a hotel we had selected - through recommendations we stayed at a place called Liberty Harbor (a RV and Yacht park) - a fifteen minute train ride dumped us off right in the heart of the city. We started walking and kept stumbling onto every place we dreamed of seeing. This pic is in Times Square. There are simply no words to describe it - one must see it!
We kept walking . . . the next thing we knew we were looking at something quite familiar. Oh, yes! That is Rockefeller Center and the ice skating rink and NBC today show window. It's odd to see something you have never seen before but you know all about it! We walked on and there was Radio City music hall - and yes we did buy tickets for the Rockettes extravaganza. The Hall is amazing - I tend to like the architecture - the interior - better than anything else.
Next we found ourself staring at Grand Central Station. Never was there a more amazing place. Stunningly beautiful and a labrynth of shops, restaurants and markets that are just as beautiful. We stumbled apon the Oyster Bar (under ground at the Station). This is a picture of the interior - tiled roofs and also beautiful. We sat by a couple from New Zealand who had competed in the NY marathon and were enjoying the NY experience just as we were. It was great. (and Jon loved the raw oysters!)
Most of our pictures would never do justice to any building or place in the city. (They have professionals for that) But we took this picture not realizing that the Empire State Building was the backdrop building! When you are on the street there is no way of knowing what building you are standing in front of unless you read a small plaque or door engraving. It's very easy to walk by a very important sight! We learned that 44 million people visited NYC in 2006 - that was the peak. As a visitor you feel very at ease - over half of the people on the street are tourists - the New Yorkers don't seem to notice and they are very friendly and helpful. The policemen seem to serve more as direction dispensers than law enforcers. NYC was voted the safest city in the US last year.
Next blog - day 2 and 3. TATAForNOW
We kept walking . . . the next thing we knew we were looking at something quite familiar. Oh, yes! That is Rockefeller Center and the ice skating rink and NBC today show window. It's odd to see something you have never seen before but you know all about it! We walked on and there was Radio City music hall - and yes we did buy tickets for the Rockettes extravaganza. The Hall is amazing - I tend to like the architecture - the interior - better than anything else.
Next we found ourself staring at Grand Central Station. Never was there a more amazing place. Stunningly beautiful and a labrynth of shops, restaurants and markets that are just as beautiful. We stumbled apon the Oyster Bar (under ground at the Station). This is a picture of the interior - tiled roofs and also beautiful. We sat by a couple from New Zealand who had competed in the NY marathon and were enjoying the NY experience just as we were. It was great. (and Jon loved the raw oysters!)
Most of our pictures would never do justice to any building or place in the city. (They have professionals for that) But we took this picture not realizing that the Empire State Building was the backdrop building! When you are on the street there is no way of knowing what building you are standing in front of unless you read a small plaque or door engraving. It's very easy to walk by a very important sight! We learned that 44 million people visited NYC in 2006 - that was the peak. As a visitor you feel very at ease - over half of the people on the street are tourists - the New Yorkers don't seem to notice and they are very friendly and helpful. The policemen seem to serve more as direction dispensers than law enforcers. NYC was voted the safest city in the US last year.
Next blog - day 2 and 3. TATAForNOW
Friday, November 12, 2010
INSPIRATION
GETTYSBURG AND PHILADELPHIA
If you are in need of a little inspiration after another political campaign and recent economic forcast I would like to share a little of what we felt and saw during the visit to National Military Park at Gettysburg.
Gettysburg a wonderful town of 2400 people engulfed by 75000 troops for three days. The women folk stayed behind with the children to protect their homes from being ransacked. For the most part they were left alone as they hid out in their homes wondering if the cannon fire would ever cease. The area of the battle around the town is close and small so they were not far away. I'm sure you all know that during July 1, 2, and 3 over 50,000 fell (more than Vietnam). One day alone was the bloodiest day in military history.
Today, the parks department has recreated the battlefields and it is not hard to feel like a first hand witness to the sacrifice and blood shed there. There are 3300 monuments placed by the regiments that fought their. They are placed in the exact spot that each unit fought. Amazing - to think about what they fought and died for.
PHILADELPHIA
We could not find many people who encouraged us to visit Philadelphia. It was on our driving path so we thought - why not? Though we walked and visited many places around the city - we found the experience of standing in the Constitution Hall - where all the important new documents were written and signed was a great experience. Of course it is almost all restored to exact furnishings. The recreations in film and voice of Washington, Jefferson, Hamilton, Payne, Franklin (the senior and oldest) and many others makes you feel like you are sharing the air they breathed. They were not even sure that what they were doing would survive or work. (sometimes the founding of our nation was referred to as the great experment) LaFayette, the French diplomat and general said after the Constitution was signed, "Finally, freedom has a place to reside!
For any of you who grew up in the East - you probably visited most of these places on field trips and weekends with your family. If you grew up out West it is all so far removed that they seem like places just in a book. Every American needs to see first hand the price, the struggle and the inspiration the Founding Fathers, the soldiers and the immigrants shared to build this great country! We wish we had taken our own kids to see first hand. We are so thankful to see it for ourselves and to be inspired!
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