Today, my 3-day adventure to the land of the Mainiacs ended
in grand fashion, with the best weather (and not coincidentally, the best
pictures) of the trip.
Relive the excitement of my cross-country trip and keep track of my new adventures.
Wednesday, July 18, 2012
Running On Empty
Labels:
Acadia National Park,
Beaches,
Camping,
Driving,
Heat,
hiking,
Maine,
mountains,
National Parks,
Oceans,
Scenic Routes,
Sunrise
Location:
Marlborough, MA, USA
Tuesday, July 17, 2012
Waterworld
Water, water everywhere. Except I’m really not that thirsty.
If Captain Planet
were real (don’t tell Don
Cheadle it’s not), the girl with
the 4th ring would have loved today, because it was all about water.
It made its presence known before today technically began, by way of a massive
rogue thunderless storm whose path was trained directly on Mt. Desert Island from 10pm until about 3am. I know because it woke me up and kept me nervously
checking the corners of the tent for the water that never did manage to get
inside.
Labels:
Acadia National Park,
Beaches,
Camping,
clouds,
hiking,
Lighthouses,
Maine,
mountains,
National Parks,
Oceans,
Rain,
restaurants,
Sunrise,
Sunset
Monday, July 16, 2012
Lights in the Darkness
In New England, if you
don’t like the weather, just wait an hour. Even though I hear it all the time,
whenever I visit one of the region’s natural landmarks (Cape Cod, Mt. Washington,
the Berkshires…) it seems to go out of its way to affirm it.
Sunday, July 15, 2012
The Downeaster Adventure
Early tomorrow morning, Gordo and I will be heading up to Maine and Acadia National Park for a few days. Since I turned off the mobile hotspot on my phone (I'd rather have the extra $20 a month), and since I'm already stretching each day to at least 18 hours, I won't be able to update from our tent, but I'll write something every night and I'll post it all when I get back.
Watch this space...
Labels:
Acadia National Park,
Maine
Location:
Marlborough, MA, USA
Monday, April 16, 2012
Sunday, April 15, 2012
Saturday, April 14, 2012
It's Always Mothra, Mothra, Mothra!
| Horseshoe Falls |
| Bridalveil Falls |
| American Falls |
| American Falls |
| From the Observation Tower |
| One of many hobbit holes |
| The smurfs come marching in |
| From Maid of the Mist |
| Maid of the Mist |
| Maid of the Mist |
| Maid of the Mist |
| Maid of the Mist |
| Maid of the Mist |
| American Falls from Skylon Tower (in Cananda!) |
| Horseshoe Falls from Skylon Tower (in a whole nother country!) |
| His brother Mothra always gets all the attention! |
| Torontonto |
| Torontonoto |
Labels:
Canada,
Cities,
Driving,
New York,
Niagara Falls,
Ontario,
Toronto,
Waterfalls
Location:
Toronto, ON, Canada
Friday, April 13, 2012
General Malaise
Labels:
Cities,
Driving,
Massachusetts,
New York,
Niagara Falls,
Syracuse
Location:
Niagara Falls, NY
Thursday, April 12, 2012
This Trip is to Cananda, C-A-N-A-N-D-A
(For the record, that title should be read in the style of Gwen Stefani's Hollaback Girl).
Just a heads up that tomorrow, along with my friend Lindsay, I'll be embarking on a little trip to Niagara Falls and Toronto (which, from this point on, will never again be spelled correctly). I'm not going to take the time to write real entries, but I'll do my best to post some pictures every night.
Now, back to packing and cleaning.
Friday, February 24, 2012
I Saw Below Me That Golden Valley
Finally.
After a week of delays, my Great Dixie Adventure culminated
with a visit to Virginia’s
Shenandoah National Park, which was once again open
for business. Well, at least the road was open for business. From what I could
tell, I seemed to be the only person who knew about that, because I only saw 7
other people during my day in the park. This helped to provide an added measure
of privacy and seclusion, because those are two things that Shenandoah, through
an unfortunate accident of geography – doesn’t really have going for itself,
most of the time.
Labels:
altitude,
clouds,
Dénouement,
Driving,
hiking,
mountains,
National Parks,
New Jersey,
New York,
Rain,
Scenic Routes,
Shenandoah National Park,
Skyline Drive,
Sunset,
Virginia,
Waterfalls,
Wildlife
Location:
Colonia, NJ, USA
Thursday, February 23, 2012
Country Roads, Take Me Home
Most of the time, I love my Copina Jr.
She reliably gets me from point A to point B, only ever getting confused at
times when it doesn’t affect (there’s that word again) my directions. She can
usually figure out where I’m trying to point here, even if, like today, all I
tell her is to find “Grandfather” near “Newland,
NC.” Her “warnings” about traffic
conditions are largely useless, but we’ve come to an understanding on that
point, and I no longer hold it against her. She can even perform slightly
better than a blind toddler when GPSing in Boston.
But sometimes it becomes painfully obvious that Copina Jr. a
machine and doesn’t comprehend the emotional impact of sending me through, say,
25 miles of hilly southern Virginia farmland via windy backwater roads on a day
when I’ve already traveled 300 miles and still have another 150 to go. When we
can manufacture a GPS that takes this into account and offers “least
frustrating route” under its options, then we’ll know that we’ve truly created
an artificial sentient being.
Wednesday, February 22, 2012
Blue Smoke
Have I mentioned that mountain
weather changes rapidly? If not, you should know that mountain weather changes
rapidly. In addition to doing things like closing Skyline Drive in 13 minutes, today I saw
firsthand some more results of the strange confluences of moisture and strong
winds that occur in places like this. And once again, nature did its best to
foil my plans. But today I was not about to be defeated.
Labels:
altitude,
clouds,
Driving,
Great Smoky Mountains National Park,
hiking,
mountains,
National Parks,
North Carolina,
Rain,
Sunset,
Tennessee,
Waterfalls
Location:
Pigeon Forge, TN, USA
Tuesday, February 21, 2012
Can’t You Just Feel the Moonshine?
This morning I awoke in the east, and now I am in the
uttermost west. Well, probably not the most uttermost, but there are several
6,000-foot peaks between Asheville and my
current home: The Comfort Inn & Suites at Dollywood Lane in Pigeon Forge, Tennessee. Let’s parse
that name for a moment, because it’s perhaps the greatest place name in the
history of mankind. Dollywood Lane
does, in fact, refer to the theme park based around the large-bosomed country
singer. Dollywood is right down the street, and while I don’t plan on going, Ms. Parton
has infiltrated much of this town, for better or for worse. Her ghoulish likeness
is on my room key, advertising “Dolly Parton’s Dixie Stampede,” which is
apparently some kind of strange animatronic dinner theater production. I bet if
I tried hard enough I could come away with at least a life-sized cardboard
cutout of her. But wait! We haven’t even talked about the name “Pigeon Forge”
yet! Picture, if you will, a pigeon forge. Is this an iron smelting forge fed
by pigeons? “Quick, Larry! Throw some more pigeons on
the fire before that metal hardens!” Or maybe it’s a forge that makes pigeons?
Who knows.
Labels:
altitude,
Asheville,
caves,
Driving,
Great Smoky Mountains National Park,
hiking,
mountains,
National Parks,
North Carolina,
restaurants,
Sunset,
Tennessee,
Waterfalls
Location:
Pigeon Forge, TN, USA
Monday, February 20, 2012
Snow & Opulence
Really only one thing happened today: The Appalachian
mountains became larger, closer, and more picturesque; going from
this:
to this.
Labels:
altitude,
Asheville,
Biltmore,
Cities,
Detours,
Driving,
hiking,
mountains,
North Carolina,
restaurants,
Snow,
Sunset,
Tennessee,
Virginia
Location:
Asheville, NC, USA
Sunday, February 19, 2012
In Eli We Trust
“Caution: mountain weather changes rapidly.” If you spend
enough time perusing any National Park Service webpage you’re bound to come
across this warning. I know what it usually means – that storm you see way off
in the distance will be on you much sooner than you think and it will be more
severe than you expect, so be prepared. In general, I do come prepared for such
eventualities, entering parks with a full tank of gas, an emergency blanket
(Thanks, Zach’s Bar Mitzvah),
something to start a fire, and enough food to last the rest of my trip. But
there’s one thing that I have never brought and today it finally came back to
bite me: A backup plan.
Labels:
caves,
Cold,
Detours,
Driving,
Luray Caverns,
Monticello,
mountains,
National Parks,
Scenic Routes,
Shenandoah National Park,
Skyline Drive,
Snow,
Virginia
Location:
Waynesboro, VA, USA
Saturday, February 18, 2012
On the Road Again
I have bad news and good news. The bad news: I appear to
have grabbed the wrong AC adapter for my computer and for the moment I have no
way to charge it once I use up the remaining 72% of the battery. It looks like
I took the adapter from my old computer (you remember the old computer – that’s
the one that died in the middle of Utah
last summer. It’s the gift that just keeps on giving). Fortunately there also
appears to be good news about the bad news: There’s a Best Buy about 20 miles
down the road from the middle of Shenandoah
National Park and that
store purports to carry all manner of AC-adaptive thingers. So my new plan for
tomorrow includes getting up a little earlier, doing the first half of the park
as scheduled, then taking a 20-mile detour to Harrisonburg, VA before getting
back on Skyline Drive and finishing the park in time to get to Blackrock
Mountain by sunset. The most disappointing thing about this mistake is that it
will certainly introduce more stress into tomorrow morning, much like my quest
last summer to “do” Crater Lake one morning
and get to a camera store before it closed that evening.
The real good news is that I successfully spent the
afternoon in Gettysburg
and then made it to world-famous (or not) Front Royal, Virginia
without getting a speeding ticket (more on why that’s significant another time).
Labels:
Civil War,
Driving,
Gettysburg,
mountains,
National Parks,
New Jersey,
New York,
Pennsylvania,
Virginia,
West Virginia
Location:
Front Royal, VA
Friday, February 17, 2012
For I Must Be Traveling On Now
Six months to the day since
crossing the Delaware Water Gap and retuning To New Jersey after my 11,000-mile
journey west, I again stand upon the precipice of another grand Elantra
adventure. Granted, this precipice is not quite as steep, nor is the adventure
quite as grand, but it is perhaps more necessary.
For schools in New England, the
week of President’s Day is known as February Vacation – a 10-day school recess
coming after the post-New Year depression and before the furious 6 weeks of
instruction leading to April Vacation and which includes the first rounds of
MCAS testing. As Gandalf would say, it is the deep breath before the plunge. Knowing
that this would be coming, and suffering from premature cabin fever after last
summer’s travels, I began contemplating plans for February Vacation in October.
It was never a question of if I would
be going somewhere; it was a question of where
I’d be going.
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