Monthly Archives: August 2015

Beautiful Places in the World!

Here are some of the beautiful places in the world:

Warriewood Beach, north of Sydney, where the water is turquoise, the sand is yellow, and lovely headlands frame the beach.

warriewood

Central Park in New York City, an absolute paradise with beautiful spots around every corner.

central park Chastain Beach in Stuart FL, after a storm when piles of shells delight you.

chastain beach

Dubois Lagoon, in Jupiter FL, where the water is so clear and the lagoon wraps around the land in pretty shapes.dubois

Oak Creek Canyon, in Sedona, a town with the most incredible red rocks that tower above you.

oak creek canyon

City Park in New Orleans, where the huge oak trees strung with moss will wow you.

city park

Stone Mountain, in Atlanta, where a huge granite rock pops up out of nowhere!

stone mountain

Laguna Beach, near LA, where the color of the water is blue-green as you look down from the high cliffs.

laguna beach

China Cove, near Monterey CA, the most adorable-looking little cove you’ll see anywhere!

china cove

Lake Eola Park, in Orlando, where there are so many different birds it will surprise you over and over!

lake eola

Cabrillo National Monument, in San Diego, where you are way way high above the sea!

cabrillo

Blue Hole Spring, at Florida Caverns State Park, an otherworldly place where mist gathers around little stumps of cypress trees and surely fairies live!

blue hole spring

Fairies also live in Ferndell, in Griffith Park in Los Angeles, where gnarled wooden railings lead you along a path through a tropical forest.

ferndell

Glacier Point, in Yosemite National Park, in California, where the rock formations created by ancient glaciers are like none in the world.

glacierpt

Zermatt, Switzerland, where you can walk on trails high above the town, feeling like you’re up in the sky! You see the Matterhorn above, and little wildflowers below!

St Ann’s Square, Rennes, France- have a crepe while looking at the cutest architecture all around you!

Versailles, near Paris, France, where the gardens lead from one lovely scene to another- find the secret grotto!

Eze, near Nice, France, a medieval walled town with adorable red tiled roofs, incredibly high up above the Mediterranean sea!

Haarlem, near Amsterdam, The Netherlands, where gingerbread-style houses greet you, and you can visit the Corey Ten Boom house where she hid Jewish people during the war.

Green Island, Queensland, Australia, where you can snorkel in clear water seeing coral of all colors, fish, and funny sea cucumbers!

Lord Howe Island, NSW, Australia- stand in the water at Ned’s Beach as fish swarm around your legs! See the incredible mountains that tower above the island.

It’s a beautiful world we live in!

New Screensaver!

Ron just made a new screensaver! It works better with the new windows versions, and it has larger font, making the location names easier to read. Also it has a description of each photo below the photo. And it works if you have more than one monitor. Try it out! You will love it! http://www.lotsafunmaps.com/download.php

Week 2 of our Grand Road Trip!

smokies

View from Roaring Fork Motor Nature Trail, on the way to Grotto Falls.

Week 2 started with the best part of the trip, Memphis! And it started off with a bang, at the best attraction we visited, Sun Studio! What a cool place, with a super cool tour guide. We learned so many interesting stories. After, we had a chocolate malt in the cafe area where the musicians used to do the same thing! Delicious!

Next we explored the Memphis Botanical Garden, which has a fun area for kids called My Big Back Yard. Here kids can run between different houses and become very inspired by all the imaginative things they see along the way. We spent hours there!

To top off an already great day, we experienced Jerry Lee Lewis Honky Tonk Cafe, on Beale Street! The lead singer of the band put on a real show and even lit the piano on fire! As we drove to our hotel, we saw the sun setting over the riverfront and it was a gorgeous sight.

The only downside of our time in Memphis was that we booked a hotel that was way out of town and this added two hours of driving to our day each day. What a waste! We were careful to check where our hotels were before booking after that- hotels might have the city in their name but not actually be close by.

Day 2 in Memphis we left early for Graceland. At first it seemed like it was going to be a terrible tourist trap but once we disembarked the bus at the house and entered with our self-guided audio tours, we were pretty happy with the attraction. It was very interesting to see the funky 70s decor in Elvis’ house, and amazing to see how many awards he won! The tour didn’t give us any new information about Elvis though.

We headed to a playground to get some running around time. Shelby Farms Playground has some amazing, modern contraptions but boy is it a hot place with not a puff of breeze.

For dinner we headed back to the Jerry Lee Lewis Honky Tonk Cafe for some more gumbo, and this time a Johnny Cash band. Great times! Best of all, we stopped at Beale Street Landing, a park and development on the riverfront, on the way home and watched the sun setting over the river. There was an amazing playground and a huge sloping grass roof you can sit on or kids can roll down. What an awesome place! I fell in love with this place.

The two days in Memphis were awesome, and now we headed to Nashville. We ate at the main street, Broadway, while listening to some live country music. In Nashville we visited a super place, Andrew Jackson’s Hermitage, the former president’s house on farmland outside the city. The audio tour was done so well, and you could even choose from three options at each station: regular, from his wife’s perspective, or for kids. The kid’s audio tour was fantastic and it kept my daughter happily occupied through the entire visit. We learned a lot and it was peaceful just walking around in our own world listening individually to our audio devices. We continued our long drive, staying overnight in the cutest spot under a pointed mountain, in a town called Kimball.

Now we were in the mountains! We visited some way touristy attractions: Ruby Falls, a huge underground waterfall that was pretty incredible, and Rock City, gardens with a view. After these our wallets were empty! Next we had lunch and walked around the lovely town of Chattanooga. What a cool development on the river, with a pedestrian bridge called Walnut Street Bridge where you can feel a great breeze high up over the river! We were so happy to be out of the heat and in the mountains! Although it would have been good, we were tired of attractions so we didn’t go to the Tennessee Aquarium or the Hunter Museum of Art, though I’d like to do that next time. Instead we went to the carousel at Coolidge Park and had dinner at the same place as lunch, on Market Street.

Because this part of the trip was not really planned in advance but was a last minute add-on I didn’t really have time to research the spots to go. Once home I realized that I missed a great bakery (always a bad thing to do!)- good bakeries in America are a rare thing, so I will have to go back for this. This one is in that lovely part of town I described earlier, where cliffs over the river make for great views, the Bluff View Art District. It’s called Bluff View Bakery.

The next day we visited University of Tennessee at Chattanooga bookstore for a fun browse and then headed on our way, to Knoxville. Knoxville has a very nice square called Market Square, with sidewalk cafes, a splash fountain, and statues. It was a great find for a lunch stop!

We continued our drive- the kids were real troopers- and arrived in Gatlinburg, a town at the entrance to Great Smoky Mountains National Park. What a weird surprise this was. Instead of finding a charming nature-filled get-away town, we found three towns (Pigeon Forge and Sevierville included) with the most gaudy stores and attractions- true tourist traps! Gatlinburg was the prettiest of the three at least, so we settled in for the night, eating a very patience-requiring dinner at Bubba Gump.

Oops I forgot the best part- one of the loveliest, nature-filled parts of the trip. In the afternoon, we did a hike to Grotto Falls in the national park! It was getting stormy and we didn’t know if we’d get stuck in a lightning storm but we had to continue on because my son had gone way ahead. I’m glad we did because it was beautiful. On the trail were flowers everywhere. We saw alpacas, returning from a delivery of supplies to the LeConte Lodge, which can only be reached by foot. Once at the falls, we stood behind them and it was exhilarating to see the sheet of clear water in front of us!

On the drive to Grotto Falls, I was happy to get a shot I’d been wanting to get for a long time: of the layers of blue mountains. And even with a bird in it!

The next day we drove through the park on the Newfound Gap Rd. What a beautiful drive! As you get higher the vegetation changes and you see spruce-fir trees like in Canada! It was a rainy day and mist filled the valleys, adding atmosphere. At Clingman’s Dome we couldn’t do the hike because of heavy rain and winds, but Ron ran up despite it! On the way out the park, we stopped at Mingus Mill, an interesting turbine mill on a beautiful stream, and Mountain Farm Museum, where trees with big leaves line the river and historic farm houses have been transported from other areas to this one spot.

We headed onward to Asheville, which is always voted one of the best places to live, so I was curious to see what it was like. It wasn’t actually that pretty, with some fairly ugly streets and architecture, and not many mountains views, but the people were interesting. They are a sort of hippy meets goth, with a ton of tattooes. The main street in town, Lexington, has some great restaurants, and we had a heavenly meal at Mela Indian Restaurant. Omg the mint sauce that came with the samosas- yum! We were really enjoying dining with huge windows open and fresh air blowing in. What a contrast after months of summer heat in Florida!

The next day we rose early to go to another touristy place, Biltmore Estate. This place was grossly overpriced, at $60 each. It is a gorgeous mansion though, in an adorable French style, with some small gardens filled with flowers. My daughter was not interested in the kid’s audio tour, however, and we were all getting a bit vacationed-out. We ate at Lexington Street again, this time not as lucky with our restaurant choice. Then we drove to Columbia SC. We were too tired to look around! So we ate at Chick-Fil-A (you really know you’re burned out from traveling when you do this!) and stayed in a roadside motel in a dreary part of town. The next day we headed to the main street, Gervais Street, near the university, but it was pretty dead on a Saturday morning. We ate at a Starbucks in a pretty historical building with a decorated ceiling. Then we drove to Savannah.

It’s hard to say whether Savannah is a place I like because by now we were exhausted. It is in a low-lying marshy area (not the prettiest) but the town itself is gorgeous with its famous squares. Every few blocks there is a square with a fountain, statues, and huge oak trees hung with Spanish moss. These squares were built for defense purposes originally. The architecture all around you is lovely, with ironwork staircases, balconies, and gates. We visited the square where Forrest Gump was filmed, when he says “Life is like a box of chocolates…”

It was hard to enjoy ourselves because the heat and stickiness was really out of this world, and hundreds of gnats were flying around us. Note to self- come in winter next time! There was a wonderful playground in Forsyth Park, but there were also lots of sketchy people there that harass you when you stop to look at the beautiful fountain. We ate lunch, which ended up giving two of us an upset stomach, and then headed on. Yikes we were glad to be in the AC once we reached our car.

Again, we stayed in a roadside hotel and ate fast food for dinner, in Jacksonville. First thing in the morning we ate at Dunkin Donuts and then drove straight home. We made it home by lunchtime on Sunday, and were satisfied to have completed our epic road trip! The south definitely has some great places to explore and I’m glad we had to opportunity to see it!

Grand road trip around the south!

jackson

Jackson Square in New Orleans.

We recently went on a summer road trip covering 3,000 miles in the south! The unanimous favorite place was Memphis!

We started in Florida, having our favorite Jamaican food for dinner (palm hearts curry-amazing!) at Reggae Shack in Gainesville. It was incredibly hot, 98 degrees everywhere for the first few days of the trip. Our first attraction was a dud, Haile House, which is not air-conditioned (yikes!) and not pretty either. To cool off, we went to Ginnie Springs, gorgeous nature but loaded with drunk people. The next day we had another miss- the Challenger Science Center in Tallahassee, which is no longer a science center but solely an Imax theater- what bad marketing! We were finding there’s not much to do in this kind of heat. We went to a mall- not much fun- but then had a good idea to go to the Florida Caverns which are always cool since underground! It was our second time there and we loved it. Next we visited Falling Waters State Park just nearby, and it was so interesting to look into the deep chasm where a waterfall usually falls (it was dry on the day we came but still so gorgeous). We walked the boardwalk peering down into sinkholes which was a little unsettling!

The next morning we hopped out of bed early and beat the traffic to Seaside! What a cute town! This is where The Truman Show was filmed. The town has tall architecture providing lots of shade, and the ocean breeze cools you as you walk around. Even more cooling is a dip in the ocean, which is paradise because of the white sand and cute views of the beach tower.

At night we ate dinner at 5 Sisters Blues Cafe in Pensacola.This was our best meal of the trip. Yum! Who knew that southern comfort food is SO good! The best part was the sweet potatoes, which had a taste like apple pie. The recorded Jazz music was great too!

We were ready the next morning to explore the military base at Pensacola! We walked around Fort Barrancas which was really fun. There are long tunnels, plenty of views from high up, and a drawbridge. The heat was pretty unbearable, but nothing compared to the heat when we watched the Blue Angels practice at 11am. Still, that was worth it! What an incredible sight! It’s amazing how close the planes fly to each other and at such speed!

Next we drove to Mobile AL for an icecream on their main street, Dauphin Street. What a cute place with a beautiful basilica and wonderful architecture. For sure check out the History Museum of Mobile if you ever go- a lovely museum with interesting exhibits, and free!

New Orleans was to be our base for the next three nights! We visited Jackson Square, which is just as pretty as you’ve seen it in all the photos, though even more tropical. The need for a clean restroom led us to have pecan pie at a restaurant in the middle of the morning- isn’t that just what traveling is all about? The voodoo museum was closed, even during its advertised open times so my daughter and husband headed to the Louisiana Children’s Museum while my son and I explored the Ogden Museum of Southern Art. This is one of the nicest art museums I’ve been to and highly recommended! Its building is inspirational and the art is colorful.

We had lunch at a favorite spot from our last trip to New Orleans, La Madeleine Cafe on St Charles Ave, and though it was more crowded and quite loud, we enjoyed it. The heat was unbearable but we bravely tried and tried to venture over the potholes to find The Fly in Audobon Park. There are so many potholes in New Orleans, it’s surprising! This spot was not worth the effort. I soon realized that we hit up the very best spots in New Orleans on our last trip without even realizing how lucky we were! So I decided to stick with some old favorites, and we had dinner at Little Gem Saloon, where we ate three times on our last trip! The interior is so pretty, the gumbo with a side of sweet potatoes was delicious, and there was live piano music.

The next day we tried to beat the heat early but we arrived an hour before opening time at Storyland so we walked around the Besthoff Sculpture Garden which is free to enter. It was a pleasant stroll. Next my daughter and I had a blast walking into all the fairytale sculptures in Storyland. For the afternoon, we escaped the heat at National World War II Museum, which my husband and son really liked, and my daughter was interested in too. The price was a bit steep, I thought. Escaping the heat can be really expensive!

We finished our time in New Orleans in the best possible way, with a stroll down Frenchmen Street listening to the sounds of Jazz wafting out the clubs and restaurants, and with a meal at Bamboula’s. Of course, a stroll always involves a lot of whining from the kids- just thought I’d throw in a little realism there! But overall we still enjoyed ourselves.

The last day of the first week involved a lot of driving, with a stop at Jackson, Mississippi for some time at the Mississippi Children’s Museum and Mississippi Sports Hall of Fame and Museum then we headed to Memphis!

See the next post for Week 2 of our Grand Road Trip!