Tuesday, August 31, 2010
Grand Canyon
Vegas, Baby! Kel and El
Thursday, August 26, 2010
4th of July in Havre de Grace
Austin Texas
Too much time has passed since we visited Austin for Andrea and Clint's wedding. But I wanted to make an entry for a wonderful trip. Bob and Kelly traveled to Texas via North Dakota. She has officially visited all 50 states by the age of 25! I flew into San Antonio (actually, got bussed from Austin - since San An airport was closed for bad weather.) My first day in Austin Andrea and Alicia were whisking me to Lady Byrd Johnson Wildflower Center and then to the spa. En route we saw a naked bicyclist riding around the lake. That should have been a hint of the surprises to come. They included Drag Queen Bingo at Joe's Coffee Shop, the Cowboy Hookah Bar across from UT, wonderful trailer park food, a chef at the Embassy Suites who treated Kelly like a queen, a night at Jenifer's beautiful home, great barbeque at the Salt Lick (the #1 bbq place in TX) for the rehearsal dinner, and a fabulous wedding and then a reception that concluded with a full mariachi band on a terrace overlooking the lit skyline of Austin. Great trip.
Monday, March 22, 2010
Last Day in Rome - the pickpockets hit
Other than that experience (and the constant onslaught of beggars) we had a great time here in the city. We even went to the opera. (first and last) . I still prefer the quiet unpopulated areas of sicily but Bob liked the hubbub of the city. Italy was great to us. Tomorrow we fly home.
Sunday, March 21, 2010
Exhausting day in Rome
Friday, March 19, 2010
Damn Carthaginians!
Tuesday, March 16, 2010
Caltigerone and Morgantina
Beautiful day driving from Siracusa to the interior of Sicily. Bob had made an offhand remark to our Taoromina hotel manager, Paolo, that I had Morganti blood. He said “Ah, Morgantina!” and then told us about an excavation of a bronze age Greek town called “ Morgantine.” We made our way to the site (2 hrs. with a bit of confusion). I had expected brown, scrubby landscape but since it is springtime we were rewarded with lush green vistas. Our route on this back roads sojourn took us through hundreds of lemon and orange groves. The trees were so full of ripe fruit that, at one point, the sides of the two lane road were lined with big, fat oranges that had fallen from the trees. We found the huge site that is a Princeton excavation and we stumbled on a wonderful little “cucina Contadina” that was empty – but open. Named “EYEXEI” after a mosaic found on-site. Lunch was a delicious Sicilian meal of grilled lamb, rabbit, sausage and maybe chicken, two kinds pasta, great breads, green salads with fennel, a good local wine made from the Nero d’aviola grape and dessert of strawberry semifreddo, almond semifreddo and a warm, sweet ricotta ravioli. Earlier in the day we had stopped in Caltigerone which is famous for its ceramics. The town has >100 ceramic decorated steps which connect the old town to the new town. It was just by dumb luck that we pulled in the side mirrors and aimed the car down the narrow streets into the old town. The GPS was useless because in this situation an old town like this looks like a plate of spaghetti on the GPS screen. On one hairpin turn I noticed the steps and then we found parking! It was a miracle!
Sunday, March 14, 2010
Siracusa and Ortygia
Today is a beautiful day in Siracusa - a little chilly but that is good for all the walking and climbing steps that we did. If we had posted any pics from yesterday they would have been a big square of gray. It was just miserable yesterday. Even if you tried to carry an umbrella, it was turned inside out by the wind. Today we saw countless umbrellas lying broken on the sidewalks. We did a little exploring yesterday but came back to the room soaked and chilled. We ended up watching Peter Pan, the movie, in Italian. The hotel is one of those old, 18ft ceilings, spare, marble/tile buildings so we never quite warmed up. We couldn't figure out the buses (yet) so even though we had bought tickets -today- we still ended up walking from the island of ortygia (where we are staying) to the Greek Theatre and Roman Theatre ruins, and the Archeological Museum that are all across town.
Friday, March 12, 2010
florence Trevelyan's Follies
Ex Votos in Taormina Musuem
Volcano alert!
Wednesday, March 10, 2010
Sicilia
We had a wild ferry ride from Naples to Taormina, Sicily. The sea was turbulent for the first few hours. The ferry would be a great place to meet men. There must have been 10 men for every woman on the boat. It seemed very odd. It is like a small cruise ship with a casino, wine bar, restaurants, dancing. Thank goodness Bob was there to protect our honor. We arrived in Sicily to a full rainbow over Palermo. Since it was rush hour traffic was crazy. There appears to be no such thing as official lanes - it's just how many cars can cram into the space. But no one is vicious or angry. Taormina is in sight of Mt. Etna which was shrouded in the blackest, lowest clouds I have ever seen. Our hotel is gorgeous and we have plenty of space. Tonight we will be having appetizers in the lobby in front of the fireplace (it was sunny but chilly) We took the bus to Castelmola - a town of stone built on the top of a mountain.
Tuesday, March 09, 2010
Food facts
A rainy day in Sorrento and soon we leave to catch the ferry in Naples for an overnight passage to Sicily. Luckily we have a cabin so we may be able to hide from the cold, rainy weather which will probably make for a wild ride. The gelati has been delicious everywhere. Breakfast at the hotel has been a huge buffet of sweets, a buffet of fruits and cereals, and a sidebar of eggs. But the best thing (that we discovered on day 2) is the stainless steel orange juicer that we found on the side of the buffet. They bring in oranges from the garden and you can have really fresh juice that you squeeze yourself. The down side is that the juicer sounds like a Boeing 747 taking off. (So we don't like it when other people discover the secret.) We went to dinner at a local restaurant and I had the strozzopreti (priest choker )noodles with shrimp scampi. Apparently in this area the priest were not always looked upon kindly and this speically shaped noodle was created. You can wikipedia the noodles for a description. The breads are out of this world - soft inside, crusty outside. Limoncello is a locally made product because there are lemon and orange trees everywhere! Tasty. The streets are lined with orange trees that are loaded with fruit. I'll post food pictures when I get back to using my own computer. Now, onto the wet, curvy road that runs along the water.
Monday, March 08, 2010
Como dice (how do you say?) STOP Feeding us!
We spent so much time waiting for the bus to bring us back to Sorrento from Positano (almost 3 hours waiting) that we built this small hut AND then had time to buy this horse! Today we took the city bus to Positano. Apparently schedules don't mean much here. The bus left an hour late. It dropped us off at the top of town and we hiked the 1.5 mi to the beach. It was the 1st beach where we ever found sea glass. But after a few hours walking we decided to hike back up the steep 1.5 mi road to the bus stop. There we waited for more than two hours and there were no buses to be seen running either direction. So, we hiked back down to the beach and looked for the Tourist Info office - but of course that wasn't open in off season. So we hiked back up the steep hill and waited another hour and a half. Finally, a bus came! We cheered, we danced the tarantella, we sold the hut and gave away the horse.
Sunday, March 07, 2010
Sorrento
We left Virginia and the tall mounds of dirty snow behind. We landed in Rome around 8 a.m. and were one of the few people to get a rental car. Saturday must be laundry day in italy because most of the balconies in the apartment buildings had laundry drying on them. Here in Sorrento it's chilly - in the 50's but there are ripe orange and lemon trees everywhere. The hotel garden has camellias and rosemary bushes in bloom. Cyclamen and birds of paradise are all around. A rooster crowing woke us up this morning (in town). We took the train to Pompei and saw orange and lemon "groves" right up to the railroad tracks. Everyone with some land seems to have fruit trees and gardens. Now i understand my Italian grandfather's need to garden a little better. But enough of the beauty, we drove from Rome and were surprised to see vendors at toll booths trying to sell stuffed animals or trinkets to you while you wait in line to pay the toll. Also, the scooter riders are INSANE! We were in a long line of traffic going up twisty two lane roads. The motorcylists and scooter riders were weaving in and out of traffic and riding down the middle of road at full speed - showing no fear. The other bizarre thing was having little children (maybe 3 or 4 years old) going from train car to train car begging for money. Pompeii was amazing - so much bigger and more technologically advanced than we had imagined. We spent about 5 hours there. No one seems to want to hear my Italian. It is pitiful that we must only be in tourist traps because everyone is speaking English to us.
Saturday, January 09, 2010
At sea
It’s the last day of the cruise. K band I are sitting outside on the Promenade Deck enjoying the calm sapphire seas, 73 degree temp. and warm breeze. It’s all the sweeter because we know we are heading back to gray skies and Arctic temperatures tomorrow. Yesterday was what I think of as an archetypical island day. We landed on the tiny island of Grand Turk to crystal clear blue waters and sunny skies. Bob spent some time on the beach but left K and me so we could go into the water. It was sandy and then we walked onto flat coral and could see fish swimming around our feet. After the beach K and I had a couple hours so we parked ourselves at the bar/pool/restaurant at Jimmy Buffet’s Margaritaville. I imagine it to be a tame version of spring break and thought she should experience it. It was packed with people from our ship and the Carnival ship that also had docked. There were a lot of college kids and twenty-somethings on both ships – quite different from our previous cruises of old people. So the DJ devised contests to pit the two ships against each other. Carnival won all. There was the beer drinking contest and then the “strongman” contest. Six buff bucks took turns having the same bikini-clad girl (a Carnival hussy) lie on their backs while they did push-ups. The winner was able to do 31 push-ups but then the Adonis DJ was persuaded to take off his shirt and compete and he did 33 pushups with the girl on his back. Ah youth! The weather was perfect last night so we watched Jim Carrey in “Yes Man” . This ship has a huge drive-in type screen on the upper deck. There are hot tubs and a pool and a bar. We had lounge chairs, the porters brought out blankets to protect us from the evening chill, delivered warm cookies, drinks and popcorn to us. The sea was calm and it was a perfect evening.
Wednesday, January 06, 2010
Sunny and hot, hot, hot
Warm and sunny day at last! Everyone onboard rejoiced and formed a long conga line to get off the (line, yes. Conga, no) We were just one of six ships docking in town today. The huge Oasis of the Seas was also here – so maybe it should count as two ships instead of just one. It holds 6,000 cruisers plus the staff. Walking down the pier was like being in Manhattan but instead of skyscrapers blocking out the sun, there were huge ships towering over us. We had the choice of going to the French clothing-optional beach or going to the Dutch side and shopping. In a unanimous decision, we went shopping. Actually, it was more of scavenger hunting for the freebie gifts that the stores giveout to lure gullible shoppers into their lairs. We left Kelly alone in her wheelchair on the street for 30 seconds and when we returned, a woman was wrapping jewelry around her arm, in hopes of making a quick sale. Apparently other families did decide to go to the clothing optional beach because we overhead the “Jersey Shore” family at the next dinner table talking about how unattractive everyone was on the beach. Everyone on the ship had all been warned that drugs are very common and people might approach us. Apparently we are just too old because no one approached us with that commodity. Tomorrow we have vowed we will not go in any stores. We go to St. John’s to visit the national park
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