Showing posts with label Travel. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Travel. Show all posts

Sunday, February 26, 2012

Kansas! We're not in it anymore!

Oh lookie, I'm a week behind in my blog!

You see, last Sunday was not really a Sunday, because it was a three-day weekend, but even more importantly, because I was on the far away island of "Kansas" where time is slowed down.

It started in the wee wee hours of Friday morning, February 17. We woke up at 3:30. Which was made even more sad by the fact that Molly thought it would be a good idea to wake up screaming at 2:30 and 12:30 before that. Fine. Up at 3:30. Flight was off the ground around 6:35. Stopped in Phoenix before going to the bustle and hubbub of Kansas City. Molly flew like a champ. People actually stopped to tell us how impressed they were with her behavior on the flights. Hooray.

We picked up an awesome little shitbox from the airport, Paul wrestled the carseat into it, and we were off to Overland Park to visit Paul's dad and stepmom. Molly was pretty fed up with being strapped into a chair by the time we got there, and refused to nap for a while before spending the next several days being absolutely spoiled and exhausted by nonstop play with Linda.

Sunday morning we went to the park! In Overland Park! Which apparently is a bizarre thing to do. All the houses, even those that were within 30 yards of the playground, have their own playground in their backyards. So I guess there's no need to go to the public park. So we had it to ourselves. Molly saw ducks and geese! Later on at her grandparents' house, she got to play with bubbles for the first time.

Meanwhile, the rest of us just worked on keeping all the breweries and wineries in business. And kept the television company. I've watched enough TeeVee to keep me sated for the next 6 months at least. More on that later. (can't get clean!)

The flights back were not nearly as nice. Molly was fussy and tired but barely slept, and woke up halfway through the second flight in a very very angry mood. BABY VERY ANGRY. We tried everything to keep her shut up to get off the flight. It was not fun but we all lived. As bad as it seemed, I know a lot of toddlers are way way worse on flights.

Thursday, January 20, 2011

Mendocino

We did it!
We managed to get back to our old adventurous drinking-in-public ways!

Yes, having a baby is stressful. Yes, the things going on at work are stressful. So? We took off. North. I have to say, of all the directions available I like North the very best.

I had booked a cottage in Little River, about two miles south of the town of Mendocino. It had a kitchen and a gas fireplace and a little view of the ocean. It was small and cozy without being too rustic for our first baby travel.

Besides the long drive, it was perfect. Saturday, we spent in Mendocino, puttering a little, and then dinner at the cottage, followed by watching mindless movies on cable with the sound turned off.

Sunday, we had lunch in the pub next door, then took the short hike to Van Damme State Beach. Molly traveled pretty well in the sling (thanks Gregg!) and we resumed our irresponsible ways.
Molly apparently is not an oatmeal stout drinker. Snob.

And then, Monday we took a long time getting out, then took the long way home. Which, really was probably not all that pleasant for Molly. But! We did get to stop in Berkeley for my very favorite Indian food. OMG


In short, travelling with baby was not all that bad. We didn't do as much as we would have on our own, but it was a nice slow pace.

Tuesday, June 01, 2010

Pavement Ends - Part 1

Paul and I needed a vacation. An adventure. A place to get lost and find neat stuff.
Work has been high stress and low joy. Weekends, full of errands and obligations. So we decided to go. North.

Ever since my ex-boyfriend took my ex-dirtbike to Glass Mountain a few years ago, I have wanted to go see it. (the mountain-- I had seen enough of the boyfriend, and waaaay too much of that dirtbike) Paul also wanted to see it, and there are lots of other nice things in the area we wanted to see. We had a "plan" that was something like:
  1. Drive North
  2. Stay somewhere North
  3. See Glass Mountain one day
  4. Maybe see Lassen the other day
  5. Come home.

Easy enough!

I found a very cute looking hotel in McCloud... and then decided to book a cheaper one a block away. We learned from our Lost Coast experience, and packed up tools, sleeping bags, snacks, and water (I carry water with me everywhere now anyway) We researched where the local medical centers were (using the word medical loosely, but that's another post)

And we bought a car. Right. We were set.

Day 1: Friday, May 28
Friday morning we bounced out of bed and hit the road around 10ish. We stopped briefly in Vacaville to get a car charger for my phone in case we needed the GPS, and then at Bill & Kathie's for lunch (because I'm a creature of habit), where we also found a stand selling almonds. Locally grown! Covered in butter toffee! Nom nom nom.

We expected holiday weekend traffic, but didn't find it. We got to McCloud by 5-something and checked in to our hotel. It was awful. The room they gave us wasn't the room I had booked, and I was a little peeved by that but I have a feeling that it's because the room I booked must have been in even worse shape.


From 2010.05.28 to 31 McCloud Trip

Century House Inn
The reviews on that site aren't so bad, but they are probably out of date. Bottom line: you don't want to stay there.
The roof of what must have been once a very charming little building is basically falling apart. The interior walls are all bubbled or peeling from moisture damage. Our bathroom was flooded. It was a soggy place. I thought of going to complain, but it was obvious that the innkeepers knew about the damage because it had clearly been going on for a long time. The upside was that we had a kitchen?

We went to see the town, and sadly, there doesn't seem to be much left of it. The restaurant, cafe, candy store, etc. that make up most of the historic district were either officially closed, or had signs up that they were open, but the lights were off and the doors closed up. Huh. Sadly, the Shasta Dinner Train that everyone raved about seems to have ceased operations, and I have a feeling the town's tourism will dry up pretty quickly.

We went to Dunsmuir to look for dinner since McCloud seemed to be sleeping. After a quick traipse up and down the main drag, we had tasty dinner at the Dunsmuir Brewery Works before heading to our hotel for the night.


Day 2: Saturday, May 29

We had a map. We had my GPS. We had a plan. We would take Forest Road 49 up to... something or other, where we'd cut over to Glass Mountain. We had gas, we had provisions, flashlights for the lava caves, snacks, water, ETC! and we were very excited.
From 2010.05.28 to 31 McCloud Trip


The weather was perfect-- the views of Mt. Shasta were stunning.

Forest Road 49 was beautiful. Paved nicely, and led through gorgeous scenery. As we got up a little higher, we started to see old lava flow remnants like collapsed bubbles/tubes and rocks. One had a sign, so we pulled over to check it out:
From 2010.05.28 to 31 McCloud Trip


Ooh! mysterious! We climbed down past the snow into a little cave and took some pictures. Paul got in far enough to see that the cave basically had a dropoff at the end that went to... China? Middle Earth? A pile of bones and flashlights? It was pretty slippery because of all the ice, so I stayed near the top.

From 2010.05.28 to 31 McCloud Trip


A sense of adventure and excitement reigned. "We're just getting started... we'll see so much more at Glass Mountain and Lava Beds National Park! Let's GO!"

About two turns farther up on the road, we were stopped by this:
From 2010.05.28 to 31 McCloud Trip


BASTARDS!
We may be stupid, but that was way too much snow for our little car. We didn't even argue about it-- our trip to Glass Mountain was over for the day, and we turned tail to go find something else to climb on and poke at.

Along the way, we started turning down any old road with a semi-interesting sign, just to see what was there. "Deep Crater" thata-way? Why, yes. Except that the road got really small. It was a fine dirt road, the brush just got more and more aggressive the farther we got, so we were basically scraping through on both sides, and finally decided to see if it was passable. It really wasn't-- even our little shitbox car was too wide. Dang!

We backed out of there-- literally, down this little dirt road in reverse, and decided to head down to more traveled areas. I had been to Burney Falls once as a kid and thought it was incredibly beautiful. So we went there, and spent a few hours hiking.

The falls were just as beautiful as I remembered them:
From 2010.05.28 to 31 McCloud Trip



We hiked on the Pacific Crest Trail! Now I can say I hiked the Pacific Crest Trail!
From 2010.05.28 to 31 McCloud Trip


It was all very beautiful and we saw snakes and lizards and lots of nice wildflowers and birdies.

For dinner, we headed to Mt. Shasta (town) and then realized we were not hungry yet, so we decided to try a road to Mt. Shasta (mountain) to see how far we could get. We got as far as Bunny Flats, where we climbed up onto the snow to see this bunny:
From 2010.05.28 to 31 McCloud Trip


And Paul ate some snow (white, not yellow)
From 2010.05.28 to 31 McCloud Trip


The road was closed:
From 2010.05.28 to 31 McCloud Trip


so we headed back down to Mt. Shasta (town) for dinner at a vegetarian restaurant, which turned out to be Mexican food, which turned out to have videos of the Supreme Master playing on a teevee.. very weird. But the food was good and the people nice, so who cares about their particular religious bent. It's no weirder than believing in flesh wafers and holy underwears and such.


Day 3: Sunday, May 30
Our spirits had been dampened, but we convinced ourselves that we should try the other Forest Road, which had a red line on the map, and was marked "scenic byway," and went to other destinations that made us think maybe, just maybe, it would have been well-traveled enough to have been plowed. We would get up north, and then magically find a cutover to Glass Mountain. It was going to be great.

To Forest Road 15!

Along the way, we decided to follow a sign that said "Harris Springs" that-a-way. Down a dirt road. Which started criss-crossing other unmarked dirt roads. Finally, we decided that if we kept following these roads, we would be in the next Blair Witch movie, so we parked the car on the road we came in on, and started to walk around in the Middle of Nowhere. It was so out there that the roads had trees down and snow coverage showing no use for months, and the only sound was literally the creaking of the trees in the breeze. Paul found bear poop. It was beautiful:
From 2010.05.28 to 31 McCloud Trip


But! We were getting distracted from our great voyage to Glass Mountain! Back on the road we went, and just as we slammed the brakes to avoid hitting an errant chipmunk, we looked up and saw this:


From 2010.05.28 to 31 McCloud Trip


BASTARDS!

This snow was much shorter in length. On dirtbikes, or in a more adventurous spirit, we might have discussed the possibility of trying to get across... a gamble, for sure. You can see where previous drivers had tried and gotten stuck. We did not do that. We took the responsible path and turned back. Boo. (who ARE these people???)

At that point, we decided to head vaguely toward Lassen, and pick up any other sights along the way.
Lava Springs State Park sounded interesting (just from the name on the map, anyway), and the map showed a single access point from the South. Which? Maybe that was true, but you actually needed to drive up that dirt road with a boat in tow, to then cross "Big Lake" to then reach the park. Sigh. Walking along the shore of the lake was lovely at least, and a nice view of the valley and Shasta in the background:
From 2010.05.28 to 31 McCloud Trip


We stopped along Pit River at a nice BLM camping/picnic area with a beautiful spot by the Pit River:
From 2010.05.28 to 31 McCloud Trip


And then pulled over to see what "Subway Caves" was. There were quite a few people here, including screaming children, and worse, a smug, flute-playing hippie. Ugh, infernal noise! Subway Cave was created by lava flow, and it is completely dark inside-- bring a flashlight!
From 2010.05.28 to 31 McCloud Trip


neato, and then we headed down to Lassen, which would surely be open because it's a huge attraction and it's Memorial Day Weekend, and and and! It was closed, just past Manzanita Lake. That meant it was not worth paying the fee to get in (Manzanita Lake is just inside the entrance) so we again found ourselves turned back due to SNOW. Gah!

This is the closest we got to either of the mountains we set out on this trip to see:
From 2010.05.28 to 31 McCloud Trip


stupid dumb mountains and their stupid dumb snow.

So, you know, FINE. We'll turn around and go back to McCloud. But I hate backtracking. "Want to take the scenic route?" "Sure." Famous last words. The map showed a few roads that we could connect together to get back to McCloud by a different route that we hadn't already traveled.

These roads were beautiful through to Big Bend-- green hills, bucolic meadows of waving grass and wild lavender, beekeping and some very placid cows. After Big Bend, the road we were taking through to McCloud was the only way through-- if it didn't go through, we'd have to go all the way back out through Big Bend to Burney. Did I mention that I hate backtracking?

Forest Road 11 started out as a nice paved road. We saw signs of recent use-- paper plates pointing to a campground, etc. I was thinking that since it went through to McCloud Lake, popular boating area, it was probably well-traveled and suitable for truck and boat types. Then it went from nicely paved to nicely groomed dirt road. Then, we saw our arch-nemesis of the weekend on the side of the road-- SNOW. Shit. Then? It went from dirt road to rocky, shale-y road and we started to wonder if we were going to make it through. It got bumpier and rockier, rutted even. We saw where the paper plate signs had led to a couple of small RV things camping in a spot by the river. "Well, at least we can hike back to there if we get stuck"

We did not get very many pictures of this road because we were very focused on the stress of "can we get through?" These pictures don't do justice to just how small and hairy the road got:
From 2010.05.28 to 31 McCloud Trip


in fact, there were parts just after this where the road had started to fall away at the sides-- a wider car or truck could not have made the trip. Bigger isn't always better folks! That said, we could have used bigger clearance and suspenion, and were constantly worried about scraping important mechanical bits off of our undercarriage. But what can I say? My baby loves offroading, and what baby wants...

Eventually, we made it through to the lake, and all was right in the world. We were elated, to say the least, because had we gotten stuck, we would have had to turn all the way back. But again, we had sleeping bags, water, and food-- not the end of the world, and we did know roughly where we were and where the nearest people could be found.

Besides, sleeping out there might have been nicer than the hotel we stayed in. In the morning, I had a cough, probably from all the moisture trapped in the hotel room. It went away after we got out of Shasta...

Day 4: Monday, May 31
We honored our war dead in the following way: Pecan French Toast at Cornerstone Bakery in Dunsmuir, which? Was awesome! I'm getting hungry thinking about it now. We left early, thinking we'd surely hit holiday traffic, but it never materialized. I think we were home by like 4:30

The road home was paved and clear of snow, I'm happy to report.

Thursday, April 15, 2010

Italy recommendations...

I had been asked for recommendations for a trip to Italy, and it was only then that I realized I never finished publishing my journals from my second trip to Italy. Lame! For now, I will do a little brain dump, and if you click the "Italy" label below or on the right, you can see the stuff from my previous trips (that I actually got around to publishing). If you want to read it in order, you have to start with the bottom post and work your way up. (it spans two pages, so hit "Older Posts")

Be warned, I have a heavy bend toward visiting churches and staring at art and architecture. I am too old or too boring to care about the nightlife, and too poor to give recommendations for "fabulous" places to stay or eat. I did drink an $8 coke while in Siena, and I guess it was sort of worth it, but I wouldn't do it again. I also like walking. A lot. And I think getting lost is a sport (incidentally, if you are driving in Italy, you *will* get lost, or at least, off of your planned route)

General note about accommodations: If you want a private bathroom, make sure it is specifically noted in the reservation/listing. Many, if not most, places have shared bath setups.

Rome:
Overall: I went to Rome on my first trip to Italy. We made the mistake of making Rome our last stop after several beautiful places in the country, and returning to Rome felt dirty, noisy, and just a little too much big ugly city. If we'd started in Rome, it would have seemed beautiful, but after two weeks in bucolic country, it just felt like a slap in the face. My fault, totally. I know a lot of people love Rome, but it wasn't my favorite. Here were some highlights:
  • Where to stay: Don't stay near the train station. Every town has the crappiest and most overpriced accommodations near the train station, and depending which side you're on, it can be kind of a shady neighborhood. We chose to stay in Trastevere, (beyond the Tiber river) and I thought it was a great neighborhood. An older part of Rome, it has narrow streets and old shops, a little quieter, and the kids playing in the piazzas are from Roman families more than tourists. Specifically, we booked an apartment through http://www.rome-accom.com, and it was great.
  • Interesting old church: San Clemente is a church built on top of a church built on top of a Mythraic temple. I jumped at the chance to walk back in time to see the history of one place, and in my mind, the story of the city and its people, develop in one spot. Your mileage may vary. It's a relatively quick tour.
  • Catacombs: We definitely wanted to visit some, being history nerds (and papists, in my mom's case-- just kidding Mom!) and we chose St Calixxtus Catacombs. I enjoyed the tour. You need to take a bus out of the city center to see the catacombs.
  • The Vatican: We had a pretty miserable time at the Vatican. St. Peter's Basilica is indeed big, and beautiful and, kind of overdone. I did really love Pope Alexander VII's tomb by Bernini. It was fun seeing preserved popes on display. We even saw the then new pope giving mass while we wandered through. But going to the Vatican museum, arguably one of the most important collections in the world should have been a high point of my trip and instead it just made me very angry. It was crowded. Not a little, but to the point where you were elbow to elbow getting moved through rooms by the force of the crowd. Asshats everywhere were taking flash photography, especially of the Sistine Chapel, while bored security guards droned on "no flaaash" like bleating sheep. I would love this museum if it were managed properly-- no cameras allowed at all, and only half the number of people allowed in at one time (other museums control how many people are inside at any time)
  • Art & Architecture I wouldn't miss: Bernini's Ecstasy of St. Theresa was magnificent in person. The Pantheon, if you're in the neighborhood, you really should stop to see this unique and beautiful building.
  • Stuff I might skip: The Capuchin Crypts were a bit silly. Trevi fountain is nice and all but crowded and I wouldn't go out of my way to see it again. National Etruscan Museum at the Villa Giulia is a great Etruscan museum if you are into that kind of thing, including famous works that even I was familiar with, and then way way too many more pieces for my taste-- if you are into Etruscan art, it is a must. Otherwise, skip it.

Florence:
Overall: A beautiful city that balances big city with beauty and history. I've been here twice. Florence was the heart of the Renaissance and is exploding with important and beautiful works. Spending less than a few days is a mistake, but if you did, I'd say: Art lovers MUST do the Uffizi, wanderers should take the hike up to San Miniato, and everyone should have some chocolate at Hemingways. I did love Florence, so it's probably more detailed in my previous blogs, but here are my very select highlights
  • Where to stay: The first time I stayed in the Oltrarno area (across the Arno river), specifically San Frediano neighborhood. It's a quieter area with families and students living there I guess. One or two nights we stayed at this place, and it was nice enough that I'd stay there again. We actually booked a B&B through this site, but after the first night or two, the owner moved us to the other place due to construction in her home. It sounds weirder than it was. I liked the neighborhood too, quiet, not touristy, but a five-ten minute walk to the Uffizi across one of the most famous bridges in the world. This does not suck. The second time I was in Florence, we rented an apartment that was across an alley from, and looking into the windows of the Bargello. It was fantastic, but it was up like four million stairs (old building) If you're staying in Florence or any town in Italy for more than a few days, it is WAY better to get an apartment.
  • The most beautiful church in all of Italy?: San Miniato al Monte! The hike from Florence to this place is uphill, with beautiful gardens and views of the old city walls, on the way to a piazza overlooking the city, and then up more to this wonderful old church on the hill. From the outside, you see the same style facade, but when you get inside, it's so totally different from the rest. A dark, brooding place full of intricate marble patterns, carved gargoyles, and a mash of spaces and levels. Down in the crypt, the light from upstairs breaks through the gloom just a little. The second time I came here, a monk was practicing his organ playing, filling the gloom with grandeur. I wanted to stay forever. (note: there's another church on the hill there very nearby-- don't bother, I think it is italy's answer to the big-box church)
  • Hemingway chocolate: this is about the only restaurant review I have: this place is awesome! And, if you go late, it is jam packed with students and locals. So go as soon as they open maybe. Nom, Nom, Nom.
  • Oh! But gelato: Vivoli. Yes.
  • Il Duomo: I mean, duh, of course. But actually prettier on the outside. The second time I was in Florence, I climbed the dome (accidentally got in the wrong line) and the view was fantastic. Across the street, there's a nice museum to visit to see architectural bits and history up close, with my favorite highlight being Michelangelo's heartbreaking Pieta, which it is said he intended for his own tomb. The baptistry next to the duomo is pretty interesting on the inside. (sparkle power!)
  • Santa Croce is the place where all the important people wen to be buried, and is stuffed with cool monuments. I have been twice, and really like this place. My favorites here: Michelangelo's tomb and some memorial next to the exit.
  • Uffizi: I missed it the first time and was heartbroken, but spent most of a day there the second time I visited Florence. Get advanced tickets, or get there early and wait in line. A fantastic collection of course, not to be missed.
Venice:
Overall: I LOVE Venice. A lot of people say to skip it, that it is just a tourist trap. Those people are soooo wrong, and I'm assuming they either: stayed near St. Mark's, stayed like one day, or just are terribly uninterested people. Getting lost in Venice is like wandering around the inside of a beautiful painting. And you WILL get lost, immediately. It's ok, you're getting closer to where you meant to be, and you're seeing something beautiful. Venice is a wonderful historic art project that you wander, and that people still live in. There is a university here, and once I was here at graduation time and witnessed a Venetian graduation hazing tradition of sorts all over Dorsoduro. There are locals, contrary to to what many tourists may think. You are doing yourself a great disservice if you plan to "see Venice" in a day. If that is your plan, skip it entirely.
  • Where to stay: Do not stay near the train station or anywhere near St Mark's. It is miserable and expensive, and you will feel like you are living in a tourist trap. Both times, I stayed (again! across the river! OK, canal in this case) in or near Dorsoduro, a neighborhood known more for housing university students. The first time I stayed at Antico Capon, which had a hotel right on Campo Santa Margherita, which made it very noisy, and the rooms were a bit tiny and hostel-y, until they realized we were staying for four nights and were supposed to be in the apartment, which was a few blocks away and very nice and quiet. The second time I stayed here, which was nice enough and quiet. Venice is not a cheap place to stay, and I thought these were a good deal. Don't expect much service, just a nice clean place to stay.
  • The FIRST thing to do when you get to Venice is to get a detailed map. You need it to get anywhere. I have a really good sense of direction, but I needed it immediately. Getting lost in Venice is really fun, but being able to pull out the map and recover is necessary. Everything is about a ten minute walk away, but you need the map.
  • Venice is fun to walk around in, but many of the best mansions were designed to be viewed from the water. Take a vaporetto (water bus) around the Grand Canal loop to see these. It's way cheaper than a gondola or water taxi, and if you do the loop you will see parts of Venice not really touristed, to remind you that people really do live here.
  • To Do: Just wander! Everywhere you look there is something interesting. Notice the sinking city, the towers leaning every which way as they settle back into the swamp. The canals and bridges, the beautiful entrances to homes on the water, the gondola workshops in Dorsoduro, and the low-slung tenements in the Ghetto. Some of the best sights in Venice are just things you stumble upon. Including, if you can, the sunset from the edge of Dorsoduro looking over Giudecca.
  • Il Palazzo Ducale: The seat of power for a very powerful empire, the Doge's Palace is a fantastic museum to get you the rundown on Venice's history and arts, housed in a beautiful building, where you can also explore the bridge of Sighs and the prisons (including old prisoner graffiti!)
  • St. Mark's Basilica: You've been to Disneyland, what's up with It's a Small World? Here it is! During high tide, you'll notice you walk over planks in the front due to flooding. There may be a line to get in, but it's worth seeing, including paying the Euro or two to get upstairs. This area and this church in particular, are notable also for being a sort of trophy room of cool junk and plunder from other civilizations, including the Tetrarchs, and the Greek Horses, which you'll want to see if you are an art history buff.
  • Il Ghetto and Museo Ebraico: I strongly recommend taking the tour at this museum if you can. They will show you two of the synagogues in this place and talk about the history. I think this is one of the jewels of Venice that often goes overlooked. If you miss the tour hours, at least take in the history of the Ghetto, and visit the relief in the piazza commemorating the Jews who were finally taken from Venice by the Nazis.
  • Want more art? Gallerie dell'Accademia is here for you.

Tuscany:
Overall: OMG, yes, it's cliche! Touristy! Well, yes, kindof, but there is a good reason-- it's beautiful and chock full of neat history.
You can theoretically see this by bus, if you maybe just want to see one town or something, but it's nice to rent a car and drive around getting lost and seeing some of the less touristed spots.

Where to stay: I recommend choosing the towns and areas you want to visit, and finding a farmstay or something like that, which is sort of central. If you really like one of the hilltowns, suck it up and pay to stay in one for two nights. They change drastically at night, and it's a totally different experience. If you're in one of these little historic towns, you'll have to leave your car outside, so either make a bus trip from Florence (or whatever town you last took the train to), or leave your car outside for a few nights.

My favorite? Hands down: Volterra. OMG. I hear it is in featured in one of these Twilight movies, so it may be ruined forever. But if not... This is a beautiful, gloomy old town on top of some famous cliffs (that I tried but never got to see, so maybe they aren't real). Volterra is a very old town, first settled by the Etruscans and lived on ever since. So there's beauty steeped in history everywhere. There are active alabaster workshops leaving dust on tiny cobbled streets leading to old Roman and Etruscan walls. We stayed two nights and explored and it was incredible. The tourists leave at the end of the day, and the locals come up to watch sunsets from the bus turnaround. As the sun goes down, the townspeople come out. There are Etruscan and Roman ruins, and a Medici fortress currently in use as a maximum security prison. It's fantastic.

San Gimignano is a well known and loved hilltown, famous for its towers. The best gelato in Italy comes from here. San Gimignano is as cute as everyone thinks it is, and there are the tour buses to vouch for it.

Siena is a big city to San Gimignano's little medieval town. It's a great place but packed to the gills with tourists. The Duomo is really quite beautiful, with incredible marble floors that are only fully exposed once or twice a year (we got lucky on my second trip and happened to be there for it) Otherwise, many of them are covered, but you'll get the idea. If you're into that kind of thing, and I am, you can go see Saint Catherine's head and finger in the Basilica of San Domenico.

Sorano: This is a tiny (really, tiny) crumbing thing of a town which we visited for it's Etruscan history. The town is not much but a crumbling pile of clustered homes and shops, overrun by cats. It wouldn't be worth mentioning, except I'd never seen anything like this, buildings crammed on top of each other on a crag, crumbling into dust in front of my eyes. Across the valley you can see Etruscan tombs where they were cut out of the rock. And if you have a day and need a hike, how's a trip to the underworld sound? The Etruscans had roads cut out of the rock that led to the underworld, and they dug tombs out there. We hiked, then ran, as far as we could. It was beautiful, it was overwhelming to see the axe marks from people who lived 2500 years ago! We finally found some tombs and climbed inside. Then I found some porcupine quills. It was magical. If you're nearby, stop here for an hour or less. If you're interested in a hike through Etruscan history, stop here for a few hours. Otherwise, skip it.

Bagno Vignoni: notable for it's hot springs, this is worth a quick stop if you are in the neighborhood, but don't go out of your way. It's a unique little town in that its piazza is actually a bath. If you get here at the right time of day, you'll catch the water evaporating off of the bath in a beautiful way. A short walk outside talks about the history of the springs, with the option for a longer hike if you wish.



There is so much more, but it's too much. Those are just the highlights.

Saturday, April 11, 2009

Southern Comfort

OMG, did I forget to tell you all about my trip to The South?

When we told people we were going to Savannah and the south for vacation, we got a lot of confused looks from people. "oh... how interesting. ... how did you pick that destination?" as in "uh? why in the heck are you going there, of all god-forsaken places?"

We decide to take advantage of Paul's time off, and we also discussed the great trips we've had when we went to places we would not have necessarily chosen as our first choice vacation. Stuff like a roadside apple orchard in Wisconsin, a beautiful park in the middle of Atlanta, a tiny saloon in a town not really on the map near Cincinnati-- in short, there is a wonderful quiet satisfaction in the things you find when you aren't looking for them. And perhaps it's good to go off of your own beaten track of adventure. If my habit is to prefer big cities, then the only way to see something new is to go somewhere I don't want to go. It's a weird logic. Anyway, we made a list of places we'd like to see, and checked the weather for March, and found ourselves pointed to Savannah!
We booked our flights and were excited to see the old town in all its quiet charm...
And then we quickly discovered that Savannah was going to be hosting the second biggest St. Patrick's Day parade in the country that week. Gulp. well, we thought, how bad can it be, really?

So we went to see!

We flew out Thursday night on a red-eye, swapped planes in Charlotte, and landed in Jacksonville, Florida, where we picked up our sweet ride and headed north!
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(our sweet ride)
Note: if you click any of these photos, it should take you to see the whole set.

First stop was Brunswick, GA, which our tour book suggested might be cute-ish. It really wasn't all that cute, but we did circle around some rather run-down neighborhoods with funny signs before getting lunch. Then on to nearby St. Simon's Island for our Very First Sights! we pulled over to see some slave houses
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(in our neighborhood, they would try to sell this as a 3/2 for $850K)
and were attacked by the onslaught of Southern beauty in its purest form: the Spanish Moss covered oak giants.
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Then we moved on to Fort Frederica, to see the remains of the fort founded in 1736. There's not much standing still, but they've excavated a lot and determined who lived and worked in some of the old buildings. There's a nice audio tour, and the grounds are beautiful!
From 200903 Trip to the South

From 200903 Trip to the South


After enjoying the tour and the views, we piled back into the car and headed to Savannah. We arrived in time to head out for dinner (Thai food) and a little walk. I immediately fell in love with the city's thoughtful layout and intimate squares and greenery. What I didn't love? Crowds. Lots of people, and it was only Friday--still days away from the main event. On the waterfront, we found throngs of revelers crowding in long lines to get into pubs and restaurants. Lines of porta-potties were in heavy use (according to the next day's paper, the porta-potties the city planned for the weekend were filled before Saturday noon, and they had to call in for emergency backups) an some smart enterprise had popped up with special fancy porta potties. You paid $5 for the night and had access to these fancy crappers. Genius. We had a nearby hotel, so this didn't impact us, but, from a woman's point of view, totally worth it.
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("A regal portable restroom experience")


Saturday
We took Saturday to explore the city. Which? Is adorable. I would like to put it in my back pocket and take it home. I tried, but it was taken away by the TSA at the airport.
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(the view I awoke to from our hotel room)

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(enchanting public spaces, and again with the beautiful greenery everywhere)

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(we visited the birthplace of Girl Scouts)

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(we visited Colonial Park Cemetery)

In short, we had a grand time. Savannah is a gorgeous, full of beautiful rows of houses pushed up against public squares, all designed around the scale for, um, people! Not cars. It is wonderful.

But, the nicest thing about being in Savannah? You can drink in public! Which is one of my favorite pastimes, and here I did it with impunity! It is so delightful to get a bottle of wine and enjoy sitting in a square watching the world go by.
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Sunday, Sunday, Sunday!
We decided to go to a swamp and then on to Charleston.

So we hopped in our sweet ride and headed north. As soon as you leave Georgia, the sides of the road are littered with billboards for fireworks stores. Fireworks, how novel! But not here, where, when you get off the freeway, you'll find about 4-6 fireworks superstores clustered at each offramp.

From 200903 Trip to the South

From 200903 Trip to the South

(fireworks in South Carolina is like starbucks in California)

We did not stop for fireworks, as we were on a mission! To get to a swamp! Cypress Gardens, to be exact. And, for me, this was one of the highlights of our trip. We got there a little late, sadly, with only an hour and a half or so left before closing. We paid our ten bucks or whatever to get in and were asked if we'd like a boat tour. Well, yes, is there an extra charge? Only if you want a guided tour. Nah, we'll do it ourselves, we said. Now, being from California, I expected a 30 minute training video, fourteen pages of waivers, a life vest, and some stern warnings from uniformed killjoys. But, being South Carolina, what you get is a sort of quizzical look of, "well, the boats are there, obviously. Here's a paddle, now go." The guys at the boat dock also added a helpful "I think there's a female alligator right over there on the other side of this island. Um, really? No instructions? No opinions on how close we should get or what we shouldn't do to an alligator? No! In South Carolina,it's up to you to figure out how many limbs you want bitten off by alligators or blown off by fireworks. OMG, I'm an adult!

Anywho, this place was perfect. Just... and I mean this with no irony, for once: it was magical.
We took a ton of pictures, and if you click a thumbnail, you will be taken to the album to see your fill of them.
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(our first alligator, the one the boat guys pointed us to. Apparently, she had been sitting there all day. Alligators are lazy)

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(we paddled along between the trees)

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(the water is black, and the lighting of the day created perfect mirrors, with the trees growing up to the sky, and their reflections shooting down over the water's surface)

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(there were also lily pads and more gators)

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(paul was there too!)

In all, we saw NINE alligators. One, we didn't even notice until we were looking at photos later and realized that there was a bonus gator hiding in the water in front of one we had been taking pictures of. They are very still critters.

After the boat tour, we took in more of the onsite goodness, first stopping at the alligator pit to see these lazy bastards:
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(These gators were totally going to eat us. One of these days, when they got around to it)

We toured a little reptile/fishie museum, where Paul made friends with a cockatiel, and then we went to see the butterfly house, where we were greeted by this stern admonition:
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Well! We most certainly will not Touch The Duck!
Well, at least we tried not to. But the duck, Cypress, took a liking to Paul, particularly Paul's shoes, and so he climbed out of the little fence area and proceeded to chase Paul. Paul valiantly rebuffed his advances, but Cypress was persistent.

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(video of Cypress accosting Paul)

We had a few more minutes before the park closed (and there was a wedding setting up), so we took a quick hike round one of the nature trails. While we poked around the grounds, it started to drizzle. It was gorgeous. One of those perfect times and places you'll always remember.

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(I love you, swamp day!)

We ran out of time at Cypress Gardens, sadly, we had to go. (knowing what I know now, I would have allowed several hours to do this-- you can actually take off and paddle around the lagoon freely wherever you want, and there are trails we didn't get to see)

We got to Charleston in time for dinner at a brewery and then a walk to Waterfront Park well before sunset. Waterfront Park has a pier with the great swinging benches, so you can sit and watch the water while swinging and listening to bats. At the end, we watched the birds (pelicans, cormorants, gulls, an some mystery birds) and then got very excited to see fins. FINS! OMG! A DOLPHIN!

This was terrifically exciting. Then we saw another. And... another. And then we realized the harbor was lousy with dolphins, and yelling every time you saw one was a little ridiculous. Total newbie move.

We walked down the waterfront and around to the Battery Charleston, at least this area of it, is full of grand old mansions. It sort of reminds me of the Nob Hill/Pacific Heights areas, but the mansions are more densely packed in. Each of the houses had at least one giant covered porch, and it was easy to imagine wonderful parties on these piazzas (as they are apparently known there). We hiked through these neighborhoods and noticed a lot of For Sale signs. In fact, Charleston's historic districts were full of For Sale signs, on historic mansions and iconic commercial buildings alike. We stopped in at a pub where we conversed a bit with the bartender (I was able to help him remember a motorcycle part he wanted) and his friend who laughed and told us that Savannah's St. Patrick's Day was "the biggest party on the East Coast." Oh, boy. We were in for it.

Monday
We had seen enough of Charleston to be intrigued, so we decided to head north again the next day. This time we stopped to experience a fireworks store. These places are all branded with themes and some of them decorated quite kitschy and fun. Each one had hand painted signs of the fireworks brand logos, each one made different by its owners hand. The best we saw was actually the one closest to the Georgia border:
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(Joes seemed to be a common theme: Papa Joe's, Hobo Joes, etc.)
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(well, you can't very well have fireworks without.. fruitcake?)
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(and, you know, elephants. of course.)
Inside the store, the cashier was exactly the guy you imagine was working there. Ponytail, a couple of teeth, flannel shirt, watching daytime TeeVee.
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(the array of fireworks was dizzying. This is only one end of the store, probably about a quarter of the whole thing)

And, onward!
Our plan was to see a plantation and then go back to Charleston. We knew we couldn't see everything, so we went looking for old decrepit plantation, rather than fancy maintained plantation. Drayton Hall fit the bill pretty well. (though we both had expressed an interest in something totally overgrown and ruined, but we'll look again next time we're in the South)
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(Drayton Hall has not destroyed during the war because it was used s a hospital. Now it stands in wonderful condition, but without being filled with restored furniture. Here you can see that if you stand on one sie, you can see right through. Just the house, nothing else. This comforted us)
We skipped the formal house tour, due to time constraints, but took the two walking tours of the grounds. This was a really neat tour because the little hike straddled about three different types of ecosystems.
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From 200903 Trip to the South

From 200903 Trip to the South

And finally, we got back to Charleston We could not resist the dolphins in the harbor again:
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(this is video of two of the many dolphins, showing off just a few feet from us)

Our second afternoon in Charleston, we again walked around, traipsed through graveyards and peeked in the windows of mansions wherever we could, getting soaked in a rainstorm, and had dinner in a church-turned sports bar. Charleston is a big old town, full of grand buildings, but not a lot for us to do there on such a short visit.


Tuesday! The Big Day!
We'd toyed with the idea of spending Monday in Savannah so we could avoid the whole St. Patrick's Day thing by fleeing to Charleston Tuesday, but then decided that since we were there, and suffering through the weekend crowds, we might as well just see the thick of it. Each night we'd been in Savannah, we'd seen more people than I've ever seen before. Worse than Burning Man, worse than Gay Pride in San Francisco. More like Halloween in Castro, but the whole city was covered. Lines a block or more long, to get into pubs (not even dance clubs--pubs!) Every restaurant full to the gills, and crowds wandering around every street. We'd come to call them the green zombies. We saw them from our hotel every morning (yes, morning), clusters of people wandering mindlessly in the streets, clutching plastic cups of beer, covered in head-to-toe St. Patrick's day junk-- green mardi-gras beads, blinking green LED hats, and requisite green shirts and flip-flops.

So there we were, in the thick of the biggest party on the East Coast, per our barmate in Charleston. And off to the parade!

We took quite a few pictures of the parade, but rather than go through it all, here are some higlights:
  • Apparently, it is tradition for the ladies to run out and kiss the troops as they parade through. I imagine this started innocently enough, but has evolved to this: young women piling on the thickest layer of the reddest lipstick they can find, and then planting lipstick all over the guys as they walk through (they have to stop every so often due to parade traffic, and then they re left quite vulnerable) Every unit that came through was covered in lipstick. But even funnier was that the tradition seemed to be leaking into new territory, such as: a father carrying his small daughter (maybe 4y/o? wearing lipstick) who lost her courage at the last minute and refused to kiss the soldier; the female soldiers also covered in lipstick, other random paraders also getting lipsticked, and finally, a float that had a dancing bunny mascot? Also covered in lipstick. Why not.
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  • Shriners. A lot of Shriners. But they don't have the little cars! instead they had a bunch of other weird vehicles and vaguely un-PC things (an "oriental" band?)
  • Sons of the Confederacy. "Southern Loyalty is Not Hate" said their sign. I had my doubts. The places we went were sprinkled with memorials and plaques honoring the confederate dead and their good fight and oh isn't it a tragedy we lost the war? It made me very curious and very irritated-- did these people honestly believe that victory should have been theirs? Obviously the war was about many things, but slavery being a part of it, I found many of these plaques offensive, and imagined that all people of non-white heritage would too. So when the confederate glorifiers came by during the parade, there were a few very noisy people cheering them as loudly as they could, and the two African-American guys next to us were visibly discomforted (I can't remember their comments, but Paul heard them berating this part of the parade)
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The parade went on forever. Thankfully, we had brought a bottle of wine and some plastic cups to get us through it. After the parade, we walked around some more. Every square was packed with people. We found a pizza place that had been recommended, and it, too was completely packed. It was a 45 minute wait just to get seated! Once seated, we were too exasperated to try to speak to each other over the noise. Every few minutes, someone in the restaurant would go "Woo-ooo!" and then a wave of "Woooooo" would rip through the place. It was crazy loud and crowded. St. Patrick's Day in Savannah is just too much for little old me!
After walking around the waterfront, in the evening, we hit up The Pirate House! Which sounded totally cheesy, and I guess if animatronic pirates are cheesy, I'll take the cheese! It was also set in several historic buildings that had been cobbled together, so we had fun poking around there a bit after dinner.
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(Paul took a liking to the pirate. I think the feeling was mutual.)

The next morning we headed back to the Jacksonville airport, a little sad to leave so early. We loved Savannah, and really wished we could have seen her without all the St. Patrick's Day craziness. I definitely want to return to Savannah someday, to spend more quiet time, and to see some other nearby sights, and more swamp please!