Friday, November 29, 2013

'tis the season...

It's time to 'deck the halls'.


We started outside...
and had the perfect day to hang lights earlier this week.
(Actually...we have had more than our fair share of 'perfect days' this November!)
It felt almost balmy.

He does the peaks.
I do the eaves.

Why does it seem we just barely take the lights down...
and it is time to hang them up again?
The years just fly by!


Once the lights were up...
Ranen and Micah came to bake peppernuts
...and packed up their 'take-home' bags.
I haven't found a grand yet that doesn't love those spicy little morsels!



 'Tis also the season for spinning of tires on lawns...
so it seems.
That is a little decorating that we never ordered!
It seems someone finds pleasure in making tracks over front lawns.
And when they were done playing on our front lawn...
they took to the field and did a little more damage.
There is a little consolation in knowing we were not the only ones targeted.
I looked at hubby and said...
'Do you still have your spike rods?'
And we had a good laugh.
A very long time ago...
we had the same thing happen on our front lawn.
Two weekends in a row.
Hubby decided to put an end to it...
and laid down three spike rods that he painted green.
The unsuspecting driver would not get away next time!
It was also November.
We were actually looking forward to have the offending vehicle make another visit!
It/he/she never returned...
though we were ready.
By spring we had long forgotten about the green spike rods...
and our daughter decided she would like to
do the first lawn-mowing job of the year.
She was unaware of the spike rods...
and we had long forgotten about them ourselves.
The John Deere lawn mower never made one round before it found those spikes.
We discovered that the spike rods worked well!
We got caught in our own web.

So now we just smile...
and turn the other cheek.
'Tis the season!



Wednesday, November 27, 2013

the blowing rock and linville falls...

 We made many stops along the Blue Ridge Parkway...
and today I'll take you back to two.


The Blowing Rock...
in the mountains of North Carolina...
 is an immense cliff overhanging St. John's Gorge....
3,000 feet below.

Due to the winds that whip up and around the rocks...
Ripley's 'Believe it or Not' states that  this is the only place on earth where the snow falls upside down!


We soon discovered that there was only one way to the path that led to the famous landmark...
and that was through the gift shop.
:)


A few weeks ago this is how things looked at Blowing Rock.
Since then they have had a lot of snow...
and the local ski hill is now open for the season. 
Not far down the parkway...
also in North Carolina...
we visited Linville Falls.
 

Belonging to the National Park Service...


...the half-mile long trail that leads to the falls is well-maintained.
Once again we decided we couldn't have picked a better time to visit!

We dodged the crowds...
the weather was lovely...
and the leaves were beautiful.
And most of them were still on the trees!


We hiked to the top of the main waterfall on the Linville River.
From the viewing platform we could see two smaller waterfalls just upstream.


Below us...
the water fell away into a canyon.



And that is how we saw North Carolina...
in the fall of 2013!

Things may be quiet at 'My Front Porch' for the next few days...
as I'll be away from the office.
I'm off to the city for...
the B.C. Dairy Industry Conference 2013!


Monday, November 25, 2013

fly over canada...

While we were away touring the US of A...
our oldest two granddaughters had a birthday.
So we took them on a birthday outing this weekend!
We drove to Vancouver to take in the new 'FlyOver Canada' presentation at Canada Place.


Since their brother soon has a birthday as well...
he joined us!

We had lunch on the waterfront...
and then walked around Canada Place to the venue.

Though it is all just pretend...
one sees Canada from up above while soaring through the air in a flight simulation ride.
It comes complete with wind...and mist...and scents.

It was a first class flight.
I'd recommend it...
for all ages!

It's a great way to see our vast country in record time.
No RV required!


Spencer and Emerson ~ 12 years old
Ryder ~ soon to be eight

(Emme has a way of standing on tip-toes these days...
since it seems her twin sister has shot ahead in height lately!)


We drove through Stanley Park before returning home...
with a stop at Prospect Point.
Is it ever too cold for ice-cream cones?
Not according to the grands!
They enjoyed their cones.
We had coffee to keep warm.

We treasure time spent with our grands!

 

Friday, November 22, 2013

the blue ridge parkway...

 The Blue Ridge Parkway is America's favorite scenic drive.

So we were told...
and now we know why.


It is a 469 mile scenic drive that follows the highest ridges of the Appalachians between the Shenandoah and Great Smokey Mountain National Parks.


And I'm thinking we picked the absolute perfect time to drive the Parkway!

I like green...
but nothing beats the colourful foliage of autumn.


At Milepost 61 of our drive...
we paid a visit to The Natural Bridge.  

Twenty stories tall, one hundred feet wide and forty feet thick...
 Virginia's immense Natural Bridge is a National Historic Landmark
 shaped by Mother Nature over thousands of years.

Once owned by Thomas Jefferson...
and said to have been surveyed by a young George Washington
...the Natural Bridge is a window into the American past.

Though the Natural Bridge can be viewed for free from above (it is part of US Highway 11)...
one needs a ticket to hike down the trail and along Cedar Creek...


...the lazy creek that can be credited with carving through the limestone terrain...
to form the gorge.


 The Blue Ridge Parkway follows the crest of the mountains through the far western edge of North Carolina.


Who knew we would find rugged peaks...
and many deep valleys?


The stone guard walls along this section of road were most impressive!
Apparently they were constructed in the 1930's...
and many have recently been rebuilt.


Our guidebook says the Blue Ridge Parkway...
 'is a high road of adventure,
intended for gypsy-like travel on the ride-awhile-stop-awhile basis.'

We made good gypsies...
and stopped often!



Sometimes just for a picture of an old barn!



And sometimes to read the historic markers.


We also stopped at Blowing Rock...
and at Linville Falls.
I'll take you there another day.


If one picture tells a thousand words...
I'll leave you six more.

Like I said...
we couldn't have picked a better time to do that drive!



I had no idea we would be climbing to an elevation of more than 6,000 feet.
The higher we climbed...
the cooler it got.



Soon there was ice beside the road...
and then we reached snow.



As long as it was just on the trees...
and not on the road...
it was all good!

We passed by Little Switzerland...
and then on to Asheville...
a mountain resort made famous by the Vanderbilt family.

And that is where we parted ways with the Blue Ridge Parkway...
and took a road more traveled into South Carolina.


Have a great weekend!






Wednesday, November 20, 2013

from maryland to monticello and mount cheam...

We were reunited with our motor home in Pennsylvania on a Sunday...
a day later than planned due to flight cancellations...
and decided we would 'hit the road' immediately.

We headed south...
planning to travel the Blue Ridge Parkway through the Appalachians.

After a few hours...
I could barely keep my eyes open.

That's OK for the passenger...
but the driver was having trouble staying awake as well.
That's what happens after a red-eye flight.

Just about that time we saw a KOA sign...
and so we stopped in Williamsport, Maryland by mid-afternoon.


After a bit of a 'Sunday afternoon nap'...
we went for a walk.

There were dairy farms and rivers to check out.
I thought Golden Lea Lane was the perfect name for the road we strolled along...
with the setting sun turning the corn fields into a sea of gold!
Merryland...indeed!

In the morning we carried on...
through West Virginia and into Virginia...
 where visited Shenandoah National Park.


Could there be a better time than October to visit?

We spent the night in Charlottesville, Virginia...


...and visited the Meadow Run Mill and General Store nearby.


It is housed within the Meadow Run Gristmill circa 1797.
Nothing is that old where I come from!


Next door was the Michie Tavern that has welcomed guests for more than 200 years.  
Though I wasn't much interested in joining the bus tour hordes for a meal in the tavern...
I quite enjoyed a walk about the grounds where the buildings from yesteryear were blanketed in leaves.

The gristmill and tavern are situated in the valley just below Thomas Jefferson's home...
Monticello.


We had thought we might just do a 'drive-by' of Monticello...
rather than actually doing a tour.

But this was all we could see from the road...
a long and winding driveway through the trees.

We had come this far...
so we decided to drive up that winding lane...
and take the tour.


And we were glad we did!
The house was designed and built by Jefferson over a period of forty years...
and holds many of the gadgets he invented.

Things like the double-pen device that made a copy of everything he wrote.
Brilliant! 


Born in 1743. Died in 1826.
Thomas Jefferson lies buried at Monticello...
on the grounds which were part of a large plantation worked by slaves back in the day.

It is a wonderful and most interesting historical place...
so worth touring!

Close to Charlottesville, Virginia lies the north entrance to the Blue Ridge Parkway.
 And that will be my next 'milepost' along the journey.

I'll leave you with one image of the here-and-now.


I couldn't resist an i-phone photo of Mt.Cheam with her new crown of snow...
taken as I paid a visit to our accountant...
out Rosedale way yesterday.

Have a wonderful Wednesday!


Monday, November 18, 2013

road trip usa ~ how it all began...

The year was 1971 and we had been married only a few months...when we took our first lengthy road trip. We celebrated our first Christmas together in our new-to-us home, then packed the car and headed south for California. The trip through Washington, Oregon and on to Los Angeles took us two days. We spent the first night in a Motel 6 in Redding, California...and then stayed with my uncle and aunt in West Covina (LA area) for the rest of our vacation. We did Disneyland, Knott's Berry Farm and took in the Rose Bowl Parade on January 1, 1972. On the trip home...



...we traveled north along the coast, visiting Hearst Castle and spending a night in Monterey. We so enjoyed that first road trip, we decided then and there that we would take many more in the years to come. We thought we might even buy an El Camino one day...
 
 (El Camino that we spotted in California a few weeks ago.)

...and do an extensive road trip of the USA. Wouldn't that be fun? We could drive where we wanted and sleep in the back (we were envisioning one with a canopy). Why...that would be much more economical than Motel Six! :)

And that is how the dream of seeing all of the US states was was first hatched...over four decades ago. We hadn't really factored in how children might affect our plans...and so things never unfolded quite as we envisioned so long ago. But the idea never quite died...and now we can say, 'we did it!' From that first road trip in 1971 to our entry into the last state (Kansas) on October 31 of this year, many changes occurred. We took a few road trips with our children, but mostly we carried on with our 'road trip usa' once our kids left home.

The following is an overview of the many trips involved over the years that eventually led us to complete our goal of driving in each of the 50 states.

1971...Washington, Oregon, California 


(Photo at Hearst Castle ~ Jan 2, 1972)


 1973 ~ Florida

(We toured Florida in a rented Pinto following a missions trip to Haiti)

1977~ Hawaii


(The Hawaiian sunsets are timeless!)


1977 ~ Nevada, Idaho (along with Washington, Oregon and California)

 (in our pick-up and camper with a two and four-year-old)
 
1986 ~ Iowa We flew to Iowa for my brother's wedding and rented a car.

(this was not our rental vehicle!)

1988 ~ Texas We flew to south Texas with Kris, Jeremy and Heidi to visit my sister and her boys.


(photo at the Alamo, San Antonio)

1999 ~ Alaska We drove to Alaska with our Swiss friends, Pierre and Ute.



(an Alaskan rainbow framing our rental motor home)

2005 ~ Montana, Wyoming, South Dakota, Minnesota, Illinois, Wisconsin, Nebraska, Utah. We finally made the long road trip out to visit my brother Bill and his family in Iowa...and visited many sites along the way.


(our first visit to Yellowstone)
2007 ~ Arizona  After thirty years, we traded our camper in for a small motor home. 


(our first major trip with the new RV)
2010 ~ Colorado, New Mexico


(Garden of the Gods ~ Colorado)


2012 ~ Louisiana, Mississippi, Alabama   We flew to Houston and did a driving tour of the gulf coast in a rental car.

(Gulfport, Mississippi)


And that takes us to this year...with 28 states left to visit.  This summer we were in North Dakota, Indiana, Michigan, Ohio, New York , Vermont, New Hampshire, Maine,

(Acadia National Park, Maine)

Massachusetts, Connecticut, New York, New Jersey, Maryland, Delaware and Pennsylvania.

That left 11 states...and those are the ones we paid a visit to on our last leg of the journey this fall.  West Virginia, Virginia, North Carolina, South Carolina, Georgia, Tennessee, Kentucky, Missouri, Arkansas, Oklahoma ...



...and last (but not least) Kansas!


States Visited Map
 
We did it.  We 'coloured' in every state!  That doesn't mean we won't be crossing that border ever again.  There are plenty of places still left to visit...and re-visit.  But maybe we should finish 'colouring' in the Canadian provinces first.  We have yet to visit New Brunswick and PEI.  Maybe one day!

So that is how our Road Trip USA unfolded...bit by bit...over four decades.  I'll be sharing some of our most recent adventures with you over the next few weeks...but thought I'd give you a little of the history behind our 'road-tripping' experiences first. 

Have a great day!