Friday, September 30, 2016

New York City - Day 3

We took yesterday off after two days in the city and a late night Wednesday.

I asked the kids this morning if they would prefer to squeeze everything else in today or return to the city tomorrow and they all wanted to do everything today. Since it costs at least $50 every day we go in, I'm in favor of that as well. We still wanted to see the Empire State Building, Rockefeller Center, Times Square, and The Metropolitan Museum of Art.

Unfortunately, the weather today was not great. It was drizzling or raining all day long which wasn't a big deal, except the views from the Empire State Building and especially Rockefeller Center were really poor. I didn't take nearly as many pictures today because of the rain.

We went directly to the Empire State Building and made our way to the top. The kids thought it was cool and you could barely see downtown, but you could see nearby buildings. We also passed by the New York Public Library on the way.

Wednesday, September 28, 2016

New York City - Day 2

Same story...new day. The novelty of the train ride has worn off and the kids are already asking, in a slightly whiny voice, "How long will it take to get there?"

Today we were shooting to see the Statue of Liberty and Ellis Island and, if possible, the 9-11 memorial because it's within walking distance of the ferry. It turned out to be a long day.

The subway was actually simple. The most important aspect is whether you are going "downtown" or "uptown". You must know this. For the most part, anything south of you is downtown and north is uptown. As the ferry to the Statue of Liberty is at the southern most point of Manhattan (Battery Park), it was obviously downtown. It was also direct from Grand Central Station, so it was simple today.

After some research last night, I found this CityPass option. There was a lady in the museum yesterday yelling out for it and people that had it could skip the line. If you buy it, you can go to the Statue of Liberty and Ellis Island, the American Natural History Museum, the 9-11 memorial and museum, the Empire State Building, Rockefeller Center, and The Metropolitan Museum of Art. These were all things we wanted to do anyway and with the CityPass you save about $50, so I bought it. We went to the Natural History Museum yesterday, but even considering that, we still save a little money.

When we got off the subway, we were in Battery Park, another rare green area in the city. We basically just bought tickets and made our way directly to the line for the ferry. I took almost 200 pictures today, so I'll try my best to prune out some.

Tuesday, September 27, 2016

New York City - Day 1

For all you noobs out there, let me give you an insider pro tip. New York City is big. I've been to Dallas, Houston, Chicago, Rome, Paris and, heck, I was just in Boston a few days ago. Nothing is even close. It's pretty absurd, when you think about it. There are more people in a single, mid-sized office building in mid-town Manhattan than there are in my entire home town. It's crazy to think about.

We scouted out the train station near our campsite yesterday evening and figured out where to buy the tickets. There are peak and off-peak trains. The off-peak trains are slightly cheaper and are basically those that arrive at Grand Central Station after 10:00 am. Brady and I are full price, but the girls are only a dollar each (12 years old is an adult). Even then, it costs about $50 for the four of us to take the train round-trip each day. Add another $20 for a subway round-trip somewhere else in the city and it's pretty pricey to do anything.

This morning we got up early enough to eat, drive over and park, buy our tickets, pay for parking over the phone and then get on the train about 15 minutes early. I overthink everything.

These are the things on our (my) must-see list while we are in NYC and in roughly this order:
1) The Statue of Liberty and Ellis Island
2) The 9-11 memorial and museum
3) The Empire State Building
4) The American Museum of Natural History
5) The Metropolitan Museum of Art
6) Central Park
7) Times Square
8) Rockefeller Center

Even Grand Central Station is a cool place. There are stars on the ceiling arranged into constellations.

Monday, September 26, 2016

To New York City

Saturday, we just stayed at the RV. I considered returning to Boston for a second day, but I'm not sure what we would have gone to see, which sounds ridiculous...there must be a hundred things we could do, but we have to take days off now and then. The kids woke up about 10:00 (yesterday was a long and tiring day), ate breakfast, and then went outside and played on the playground until I went and got them about 7:30 pm. Brady and Adria wandered in at some point to eat lunch, but Haley never came in. There were dozens of other kids playing, so they had a blast.

Yesterday, we went through our 11th and 12th states! I don't have any pictures of Rhode Island because there wasn't a good stopping point. We are staying in New York very near some friends who live in Sleepy Hollow (yes, THAT Sleepy Hollow), which is about a 45 minute train ride from Grand Central Station.

I think Adria had just gotten in trouble before I took this picture, hence her face :)

Friday, September 23, 2016

Boston

After transportation study, we decided to catch the 8:37 train at the Kingston stop, which we drove over and saw last night. I have to get there early enough to buy tickets, so I woke the kids up about 7:15, which is about an hour earlier than they have been getting up. I probably over thought it, because driving over there, parking, paying on the phone for the parking, buying the tickets, and getting on the train was very easy. They were excited to ride the train!

Thursday, September 22, 2016

Cape Cod Potato Chips

So rather than rushing into Boston today, we decided (with Stacey's recommendation) to just hang out here and use the day to plan tomorrow. The kids did their school work early and then about mid-day, we took a trip out the Cape Cod Potato Chip factory which is about a 45 minute drive out on Cape Cod.

Along the way, we ate at a Friendly's, which we don't have around home, and it was pretty good. It strangely felt like a Denny's with less emphasis on breakfast and with the addition of ice cream.  Weird comparison, I guess, but that's what comes to mind.

So, the potato chip factory was not at all what I was expecting. The tour was self-guided, which meant that you walk down a straight hallway about 100 feet long which just dumps you into the gift shop. Along the hallway, there are windows where you can look onto the factory floor, but you don't really know what you're looking at, despite the signs. For example, there is a machine that is shaking raw potatoes, and the next station appears to be frying the sliced potatoes. Where were they cut??? I wanted to see a bad ass slicing machine, but too bad for me. No photography was allowed in the factory, so we'll settle for the signs outside. In hindsight, I would have driven five minutes to see it, but not an hour and a half round trip. We did all get tiny sample bags though, so not a complete waste of time.

Wednesday, September 21, 2016

Plymouth

Today we visited Plimoth Planation, the Mayflower II, and an old working grist mill. We went to the plantation first. As touristy as this stuff is, this place was actually educational, I thought.

At Plimoth Plantation, there is a winding trail that leads you to several points along the way. The first was the Wampanoag Homesite. This is a replica homesite of the way these people would have lived in the 17th century. The people there, however, are not "role-playing". They are actually Native American, but dressed in historical clothing. They talk to you about the history from a modern perspective. In contrast, the people in the English village role-play as if they were from that time.

I don't remember what this was, but there were toys on the ground that the kids got to pick up and play with. One had hollow bones attached to a string, which was attached to a stick and you swing the bones into the air and try to catch them on the stick. Brady was the only one to do it successfully!

Tuesday, September 20, 2016

To Boston

Yesterday, we ended up skipping Kennebunkport. I've heard it's a cute little town, but I just didn't want to drag the kids through it and I saw all I felt like I needed to of the Bush compound on Google images. We had plenty of work to catch up on anyway.

This morning, we headed off to Boston (actually, Plymouth is where we are staying). Robin left us a nice package of post cards on our step...so thoughtful! If you are in the southern Maine area, I highly recommend them (www.wassamkisprings.com).

We are in our tenth new state!

Sunday, September 18, 2016

Portland, ME

Happy birthday Jacob!!!
At breakfast, the kids and I sent Jacob a short video saying happy birthday and he and Mommy sent this back. Not related to our travels, but he is just so cute even with donut all over his face.

Saturday, September 17, 2016

Goodbye Acadia

Thursday and Friday we literally did nothing. Well, not literally. I think we went to the grocery store again, which was better (slightly) because we went at 10:30 in the morning.

The remainder of the days we just worked, caught up on school work, and watched this great TV channel they get up here called Create. It has a lot of cooking, woodworking shows, and similar things and the kids (and I) love them, especially the cooking shows. We have a few favorites: Project Smoke (all about smoking and grilling meats) and A Chef's Life (about a couple who open a restaurant). Pretty good stuff.

Saturday, sadly, we left Acadia. After packing up everything, hooking up HQ, and a trip to the dump station, I took a final picture of our vacant spot. Sniff, sniff. We've had a good time here.

Wednesday, September 14, 2016

Acadia National Park - Day 6, Cadillac Mountain

After breakfast and some school work, we decided to go see Cadillac Mountain this morning because there is rain in the forecast this afternoon/evening. You can drive all the way to the top and there is a relatively flat, paved half mile path that circles the top of the mountain with views of the entire area. On the way up the mountain, there's a scenic overlook with a pretty view of one of the lakes on the main island.

Tuesday, September 13, 2016

Acadia National Park - Day 5

Another slow day around here catching up on work. Our RV spot is so shaded that it seems pretty dark all morning and that, coupled with a later than usual bed time, kept the kids in bed until almost 10:00. I woke up at 7:00. When I walk in there, I find they are actually watching Netflix on their Kindles and Brady is just laying there.

Monday, September 12, 2016

Acadia National Park - Days 3 and 4

It was an early Sunday morning, but Jacob handled it like a champ. When I sat down in his bed to wake him up, he said, "I want to get up." Easy enough for me. We pretty much got dressed and headed out the door to the airport. He fell asleep in the car probably ten minutes before we arrived in typical kid fashion.

I don't have any pictures, but it went just as you'd expect. The Bar Harbor airport is tiny and probably only has five or six gates, so security was a breeze.

On my way home, I figured I'd need to get the other kids something to ease their pain. I didn't eat any, of course.

Saturday, September 10, 2016

Acadia National Park - Day 2

Thanks to those wild blueberries that Jacob helped pick, we finally got to enjoy that maple syrup that we bought with some blueberry pancakes and they were amazing. Of course, Brady's had chocolate chips instead of blueberries.

This morning was much slower than usual. Stacey cooked breakfast (and cleaned it all up) while I did seemingly endless laundry at the little laundromat here at the campground. I met a lady in there from Lufkin, TX, so that was pretty cool. While doing laundry, Stacey took the kids swimming again.

We obviously have to try lobster while we're here, but no one except Haley and I like it, so we're going to go for a lobster roll instead. Someone (I don't remember who) recommended C-Ray Lobster which is nearby, so we headed there to try it. We only ordered one, which was $18, and split it up six ways. Haley and I liked it, Stacey and Adria liked it, but not as much as we did, and Brady didn't like it at all.  Jacob spit it out.

Friday, September 9, 2016

Acadia National Park - Day 1

Hold your horses...this post is long!

We woke up sort of early, excited I think, and decided to shoot to make the 8:33 shuttle that picks up at the front of our campground. I keep calling it a campground, but it's really an RV park with a sprinkling of tent sites. There's really no difference, I think, you just either have an RV or you put up your tent. Some people have both.

The shuttle that picks up here goes all over the island including the rinky-dink airport here in town and drops you off at the village center of Bar Harbor, a really awesome little town. From there, you catch other shuttles that take different routes throughout Acadia. Here are some pictures of the center of Bar Harbor.

Thursday, September 8, 2016

To Acadia

320 miles today. It seems like a long way considering how much we've driven the past week and a half. Texas, Arkansas, Tennessee, Kentucky, Ohio, Michigan, Canada, New York, Vermont, New Hampshire, and Maine. Seems like a long way to me when you look at all the places we've been already.

It's very beautiful country side along the way. Here is a shot from a scenic overlook and I think that river is the border between Vermont and New Hampshire. We're still in Vermont at this point.

Wednesday, September 7, 2016

Quechee Gorge

This may be the best camping spot I've ever been in. It is gorgeous, quiet, pretty isolated from neighbors, and just serene.

Tuesday, September 6, 2016

On to Vermont

We tried for another early start and did OK I suppose, but it was a pretty late night last night. I forgot to take any pictures of our campsite near Niagara Falls, but there was a big lake about 20 feet behind HQ that had big bouncy things in the water that the kids desperately wanted to play on. Since we wanted to get an early start and you had to pay $15 if you checked out after 11:00, we told them they could swim in the morning. However, along our route to Acadia, there is an awesome swimming hole that Stacey found a few months ago (swimming hole pic), so we let them decide where they would rather swim: here at the lake or at the awesome, amazing swimming hole, which I was voting for. They decided on the swimming hole.

Monday, September 5, 2016

Niagara Falls

Today is our first attempt to drive somewhere and really see it in one day. Since Mommy and Jacob are with us, we want to squeeze as much in as we can. Niagara Falls is about 335 miles from Van Buren State Park, so we started pretty early again. Within minutes, we are in Michigan!

Sunday, September 4, 2016

Toledo Zoo

Today was just the zoo all day. I took too many pictures, but you don't have to look at them all.

Friday, September 2, 2016

Nashville

Turns out, Nashville's a really awesome city. We aren't hard core county music fans and the museums and similar things are really expensive, so we looked elsewhere for our entertainment.

Stacey has a friend/fellow teacher who used to live in Nashville who gave us some awesome suggestions (thanks Emily!) starting with The Pancake Pantry (www.thepancakepantry.com). As we drove by, this is what we saw, although in this picture, we are actually already in line and you can see the kids at the very back.

Thursday, September 1, 2016

Headed to Nashville

We have 415 miles to drive today, so we got an early start. I forgot to mention before that the kids have been doing their school work in the truck and that has gone really well. On our first attempt, we put all the stuff in the truck at once, but it was too much. So, now we just grab one subject at a time and switch when we stop to get gas or eat lunch.

I also haven't really mentioned the plan here, but we are just trying to get up to Acadia National Park, in Maine. The stops in the meantime are just to break the trip up and see some things along the way, but most of the "trip" was to start in Acadia and stop at places along the way home. I thought that traveling everyday would be too much and the kids would mutiny, so we've been trying to find cool places to stop and then we spend one full day in each. Jellystone and Hot Springs were cool, but Nashville was really just a logical point to stop along the way. We got in about 8:00, so we just ate dinner and hung out before bed.