Tuesday, June 30, 2015

Pure Michigan - Douglas and Saugatuck

Sleeping in, then lounging over breakfast, I was content and in no rush to leave Chicago. Following a night of impressive electrical storms, the morning was pleasant, although muggier than it should be after a night like that. The innkeeper careened through the small parlor in which I was pleasantly enjoying my morning, on a quick step in from outside. He said we were in for some wild weather.

Well that was news to me! He said the storm approaching Chicago, had winds clocked overnight in Iowa, in excess of 100 miles per hour. Like a small hurricane except strangely, rotating the opposite way, with the leading edge only an hour away, confirmed by the red, flashing blotches on the weather radar he pulled up on his computer. I thought, "What the heck am I doing lallygagging here when I needed to drive?" And, I was heading in the same direction as the storm! If I didn't go now, I could be driving for hours in a real mess.

So, with the urgency of Tom Cruise in War of the Worlds, I scrambled to get everything in the car and get going, which I managed to do just as a few rain drops started to fall. I got on the highway, and thanked the driving gods that I wasn't in Indianapolis. If I had been, then the storm would have swallowed me whole by now. And the dingbat drivers in Indiana would have thwarted me at every turn, foiling any opportunity to make good time.

Traffic was light, and with some expert moves to gain good road positioning, I was moving East and North around Lake Michigan at an excellent pace. Good thing too, the dark clouds in the rear view mirror were angry, and seemed to rise higher each time I tried to gauge their distance. So, without looking back, and driven by an impressive tail wind, I broke free into sunshine after an hour or so, and sailed up the east coast of the Lake Michigan. I was no longer picturing a house landing on my car, and had stopped my singing repeatedly, "What's she gonna look like with a chimney on her?!"

I found my way to Douglas & Saugatuck Michigan, artist communities on the lake, with hip shops, bobbing boats, and people who were enjoying the afternoon ahead of the storms. I stayed at The Blue Star Motel. It was nice. The rooms there are cute, with private patios and a hot tub! The manager was friendly and helpful, as were the room attendants who serviced the room. After getting a quick bite, I battened down the hatches in the room to ride out another wild night of wind and rain.

I emerged the next morning and found crisp Canadian summer air, brilliant sunshine, and a dew point significantly lower. Now that is how air is supposed to feel after a night of crazy storms. It was a perfect day, really. One that I thoroughly enjoyed. It was beautiful. We get perfect days occassionally, back home in New England. September 11th, 2001, a day that few who were old enough to remember, will never forget, was an amazingly beautiful day too. It was a clear day in Massachusetts, where I lived at the time. It was sunny and warm, without being hot, with brilliant blue skies.

I keep the memory of that dreadful day, although seared onto my soul, buried deep inside me. Unfortunately, it returns painfully and with a vengeance when triggered by any day which dawns as beautifully as it did that day, so many years ago. But, for the first time in 14 years, a day with absolutely beautiful, perfect weather, didn't make me sad. I drank it in, and was completely rejuvenated.

Thank you, Michigan!!



Monday, June 29, 2015

I.Traveller

Check out the Electric Forest Festival! (Video, and Photo/Blog Bomb)

I attended this past week, June 24th-29th - What a trip!






Electric Forest Festival Promo Video

Check out this 2014 Promo Video for the Electric Forest Festival, June 24th-29th, 2015.  I attended this music festival over the past week  - What a trip!


<iframe width="896" height="511" src="https://www.youtube.com/embed/MXy8Lu47f2s" frameborder="0" allowfullscreen></iframe>


Saturday, June 27, 2015

Chicago!

Sometimes a place, evokes an emotional response in people at the mere sight of it, or at the mention of its name.  A biological,  physiological reflex that, when first experienced, will shock or surprise, adding adrenaline to the emotional cocktail.  It can be joyous or dreadful. It is different for each individual and can change over time.  New York City has always had that effect on me.  When living in New York, every time I returned from being away, when I saw that iconic skyline again, it was JOY, heart racing, eye watering, joy, and it sill is.  I have come to expect that.  Chicago caught me off guard.

The skyline for Chicago is instantly recognizable, at least to me.  Considering the first skyscraper was built here, sorry New York, Chicago has had a long love affair with architecture and architects.  The city has benefitted from its obsession, and so do we.  The variety is as amazing as the style and building materials used to create it.  To paraphrase, The Devil Wears Prada, "It's art, that people live their lives in."  I stayed at a bed and breakfast in Lakeview, also known as Boystown.  There are no skyscrapers there, however the style and variety of amazing architecture is evident throughout the neighborhood.  Coincidentally, my arrival to Chicago coincided with the start of the city's Pride celebrations.  So, the style and variety of just about everything was highly evident throughout the neighborhood!  'Nuff said...

Getting to Chicago, and tasting that Kentucky Bourbon in the back of my car, meant driving through Indiana on I-65 north from Louisville.  Considering I did not stop, and I did not meet or speak to anyone in Indiana, it is unfair for me to characterize all people from Indiana as ignorant idiots.  So suffice to say, all of the people from Indiana travelling north with me on interstate 65 are idiots.  THERE IS A DRIVING LANE AND A PASSING LANE.  IF YOU ARE NOT PASSING, YOU ARE SIMPLY DRIVING AND SHOULD BE IN THE DRIVING LANE. UGH!  I consider myself a patient person, but there are limits...

Fortunately, I arrived safely in the windy city, which was delightfully cooler and more comfortable, weather wise, than the South.  I caught up with an old friend who's company I have missed.  I stayed in a nice B&B, (which was amazingly reasonable)  during the most colorful week, in the most colourful neighborhood in this spectacular city.  Not too shabby...
Oh, and I almost closed without mentioning, although it goes without saying, that Chicago is in the American Midwest.  Which means, the people there are among the friendliest, most genuinely nice people you will ever have the pleasure to meet.

Friday, June 26, 2015

Kentucky - Horses, Bourbon & Caves

Leaving Nashville, the green countryside is filled with rolling hills, streams and small towns scattered about randomly.  At the Kentucky Welcome Center,  tourist materials highlight - Horses, Mountains lakes and caves, & Bourbon!

Having shortened my stay in the Bluegrass state to just one night and heading for Chicago, going up into coal country, or spelunking was not an option.  The excitement of the Kentucky Derby, held in early May, has passed.  Livestock of every kind is evident in the farms and fenced fields passed on my route north through the middle of the state.  Soooooo, it seemed my only choice left, able to be enjoyed in just one day, from the list of Kentucky ' s many attractions is Bourbon. Fortunately, I love Bourbon!  Personally, I retire the brown liquors and gravitate towards clear alcohols for the hot summer months.  Despite the 95°+ temperatures, I've enjoyed for the past two weeks, Bourbon it is!

Bourbon is the only original American liqour.  Created in Kentucky, and although produced throughout the stae, the area around Louisville is considered it's home.  I arrived late into Louisville, and stayed in an EconLodge Motel right downtown.  Can't say enough about the EconLodge in Louisville Kentucky.  It was conveniently located, very reasonably priced, and the recently renovated rooms could stand up to comparisons with any luxury hotel.  Working late into the night, very hungry, I discovered something else about Louisville.  Restaurants stayed open late.  Delivery choices for food were many and available till 4am!  I decided, I like this town.

The next morning with the car packed, I headed for Chicago, via Bourbon country.   Bardstown, KY bills itself as the Bourbon capital of the world.  An hour drive south of Louisville, is not really on the way to Chicago,  but... I digress.  I stopped at the Bourbon Heritage Center expecting to taste a few different bourbons.  Curses!  The tasting tours are approximately every hour and I had just missed the start of one.  Plan B.  "Get the Cliff Notes".  I asked some questions, read some promotional and informational materials, and bought four bottles of different styles of Bourbon.  The tasting and savoring of these delightful liquors would be delayed.  So, with this precious cargo loaded carefully into the car, next stop, Chicago!

Pictured here are the four I chose:

Tuesday, June 23, 2015

Nashville - Final Thoughts

- Overall, Nashville was an interesting stop, with plenty to do and see. If you haven't been to Nashville, you should go. 

- I visited The Hermitage, President Andrew Jackson's estate (he's on the twenty dollar bill) If you are interested in history (or Marketing, Communications and Public Relations for that matter) you can see how they tell the story of a very important man in our nation's history.  His principles and his election as president changed American democracy into what we recognize it to be today.  He is also the President most responsible for the decimation of the native peoples who lived in America before our ancestors arrived.  And it was largely his actions that created the disastrous system we have today, of Indian reservations, dependency, addiction, despondency, sadness and pain for generations of people imprisoned on them. (spoiler alert, they did a pretty good job of it)

- Don't stay at the Drake Inn "Where the Stars Stay!" The best thing about it is the large neon sign in front.  Otherwise, it's a rundown motel, deceptively selling itself as a classic.  
However, if you are willing to stay up all night to ensure a swift departure at day break, you will feel better about your own lot in life, considering the other poor souls you'll encounter there. 
Like this one guy, who referred to himself and his lady as a couple of "swingers" when asking me for money to have sex with the girlfriend... That's not swinging.  But, I didn't have the heart to correct his vocabulary.  And, "swinger" is certainly less offensive than "prostitute" when talking about your girlfriend.  And,  to bring it up might embarrass her. I'm sure she doesn't know that her best feature, according to him, and the only selling point he stressed in his pitch, was that "She will be real quiet."  (clearly he doesn't know me)

- Anyway, Nashville was my first use of "Air B&B".  The jury is out still on that experience for me.  I'll let you know after a few more times, in other areas, with other hosts, if I can recommend it's use, or not.


Provolone

Sunday, June 21, 2015

Friday, June 19, 2015

(Nashville 2 of 2)

Who are the people in your neighborhood?

Generally speaking, the people I encountered in Nashville were friendly, polite and gracious. Similar to those I met in the Carolinas and Georgia.  I had the  opportunity to have more than a passing conversation with a variety of people in and around Nashville.

One gentleman, "Bo", I had dinner with at a burgers & beers restaurant in East Nashville.  We had met the day before, when he had offered to show me the city.  He's tall, good looking, super fit, and very personable.  The dinner, the conversation, the restaurant, and East Nashiville... were all good.  I had a drink.  He did not.  We went  downtown to Broadway to one of the showcase clubs/bars that populate the area.  Live country music, and mobs of people filled the sidewalks. The club was fun because he was very good company, and we met two funny, and gregarious women from LA, in town for a convention. (Shout out! Hope to see you when I get to California)

Otherwise the club was typical of a tourist area almost anywhere, poor service, or no service, by employees who seem to be preoccupied with other things.  And, the breaks between sets, or acts on stage, were longer than the sets themselves.  What was not typical was the interaction we had with some fellow patrons seated next to us at the bar.

Bo was telling his personal story, that he had already shared with me at the restaurant,  to the LA Ladies.  He was recently separated from his wife of twenty-plus years.  After sleeping on the couch for a while he had taken an apartment nearby, but he and his wife were friendly, and with the kids schedules, he was often back at the house for one reason or another.Although he had never cheated on her, and she had been the one to ask him for the separation, he blamed himself for the love lost between them.  He was gay, and he had come to grips with that.  He went on to talk about the new life he was making for himself and his family, the new gay friends, etc.  I knew the people around us could hear him, and I expected they would have opinions on the matter. But, I didn't expect any to insert themselves into the conversation,  and then confront us.

The young couple in their twenties, seated next to us, got up to leave.  They had been looking around the bar, keeping to themselves, very quiet, but obviously taking in all of Bo's story.  As they stood to leave the young man grabbed Bo by the shoulder, and pulled him in closer.  Their positioning prevented me from  hearing or seeing what was happening, and I, like the LA ladies, thought these must be people Bo knew.  Nope!  He did not.  After literally giving him an earful,  the young man turned and left, taking his girlfriend's  hand and walked out.  Bo spun back towards us and was speachless.  I asked what had happed.  What was that all about?

He said the couple wanted him to know that they had overheard his story, and they wanted to shake his hand, and let him know that they supported him 100%!!!  You could have knocked me over with a feather.  Then I was the one who was speechless. 

Thursday, June 18, 2015

Nashville, Tennessee

Nashville - Day & Night
1 of 2

Nashville has an energy, a vibe, often associated with much larger cities. Music City is well known internationally, as the creative and business center of American Country Music. This week, the city was recovering from the Country Music Awards (CMA's), hosted last weekend, and gearing up for the largest concert ever held in Nashville.  The Rolling Stones played LP Stadium, home of the NFL's Tennessee Titans, Wednesday night. 

The Tennessee State Capitol and government offices are here as well as large banking and communications firms chasing the tremendous amount of money generated by the country music artists. As is the case in lots of places, the wealth generated by the area's vibrant and growing industries, does not translate to the general population and to all of the city's neighborhoods.  However, the skyline is filled with construction cranes downtown, and consequently, the accompanying air and sidewalks, with the noise and workers that go with them.

Did I mention the air?   Well, summer weather arrived early in Tennessee, with temps in the high 90's, and humidity that forces you to chew the air before inhaling it.  If neighboring Arkansas' weather is similar to Tenessee's, and I have to imagine it is, then President Clinton's infamous comments, "I tried marajuanna, but I didn't inhale", are completely fair and accurate. Air is eaten in the south, at least in the summer, not inhaled. Just an observation... I promised myself there would be no complaints re: the heat during this trip, considering the "brickdiculous" winter we just had in Boston! 

Next post (Nashville, 2 of 2):   The Drake Inn -"Where the Stars stay!",    "Nashvillains",     Air B&B

(As a little, elderly innkeeper from India remarked after seeing my driver's liscense, "You from Massachusetts? With all that snow, how did you get out?"  I reassured him that the snow had all melted in Boston)

Thursday, June 11, 2015

Asheville, NC

Asheville, NC

I.TravellerPublished by Kevin Will · 2 hrs · 

The Mountaineer Inn
Asheville, NC
                                         * Scavenger Hunt Checklist *
                             Find an Asheville, NC motel with the following:
(Must have Vegas style larger than life neon signs to be entered into competition.)


1. Outside, screen doors at the each guestroom entrance.
   (Extra Points if it has outside "louvred" doors instead)                   - X
2. Push button telephone next to the bed with a separate
    earpiece/mouthpiece on a cord.                                                      - X
3. Creepy blue tile shower that is prohibitively skinny, precluding
    most Americans from using it.                                                        - X
4. Knotty pine panelling.                                                                    - X
5. Bed that collapses to the floor if you sit on the end of it                  .- X
6. First floor rooms with direct access to the parking lot,
   and entrance door locks that can easily be left unlocked by mistake. - X
- Bonus for any dead bug carcasses in excess of an inch in length
found on the carpet (or stains)                                                   - X - X
- Double bonus points if the local police charge into the parking lot
and bang on the room two doors down!!!                              - X - X - X

(doesn't count if they are carrying sandwiches for a guest in the witness protection program,  like in Athens, GA yesterday) ***

The Mountaineer Inn is rated "Fair" by our guests. Take a look through our photo library, read reviews from real guests and book now with our Best Price Guarantee. We’ll even let you know about secret offers and sales when you sign...
HOTELS.COM

Schoolhouse Rock - A Noun is a Person, Place or Thing

https://youtu.be/3P2NgVq9Foo

Monday, June 8, 2015

South Carolina - Georgia

When you know that you are dreaming, things, which in reality would be frightening or unnerving, can be viewed without those emotions.  As if watching horror movies, or WWII documentaries for a film class, in order to write a report on the directors' techniques with camera angles or lighting.  Or, marveling at  how ordinary household objects, seem to have been recently set on a Pompeii dining table, with no care for the owner who is not in the next room getting a cup.  However, it is very unsettling to realize that you are not asleep, but have been similarly disassociated from the feelings, or reactions normally experienced when confronted with the evidence of human suffering, even long after the fact.

That sense of being disconnected from reality, dogged me the entire drive from Charleston, SC to Athens, GA.  I had  chosen to follow the state roads today,  instead of the interstate highways, in order to connect with the people and the communities I was passing.  And, to give myself the opportunity to stop wherever, for whatever that might be coming my way.  As I scanned the the quiet countryside for anything that seemed worthy of investigation, I kept reminding myself to pay attention.  Like a kid on Christmas Eve, staring out at the night sky, and fighting the overwhelming urge to close an eye, even for just a moment, I chastised myself for contemplating what percentage of drivers don't know the proper ettiquette for highway driving (it's very high, trust me).  Or, which of the Madonna tracks playing from my ipod was my really favorite. 

The dense forests that lined the roads were dense, their monotony only broken by equally monotonous chains of abandoned buildings, homes in extreme disrepair (let's play the "People do, or don't, live there" game), or shuttered strip malls.  In my mind, I began to excuse my growing attention deficit, given the circumstances.  When it hit me.  The mind numbing flood of empty structures built over years, by people who invested their futures in them, stood (barely) with heads bowed begging for a passerby to care.  Literally, hundreds of miles had passed beneath my wheels, as I debated my musical Madonna obsession, cursed at those with road etiquette ignorance, and pondered the amount of rainfall that fell from passing storms occasionally bursting overhead.

This beautiful, warm,  Spring afternoon was not making me happy. Rather than feeling contented, sitting at a sidewalk table with my iced Starbuck's, I felt uneasy.  Fortunately, a surprise phonecall from my cousin shook me out of the funk I felt.  She had hit my mood "reset button" at just the right time.  And although not conscious of it, I was uncharacteristically chatting with two homeless people.  We were having easy conversations about difficult topics.  Subconsciously, my mind was way ahead of me.  It had made the connection, and the correction, to my clueless behavior exhibited throughout today's drive.  And THAT realization did put things right in my belly.  

Note: add to your Todoist - "Did the government test atom bombs in the South in the fifties?" (I thought it was just in Nevada and New Mexico...)

Tuesday, 2am.

St. George, South Carolina - Augusta, Georgia - Athens, Georgia

When you know that you are dreaming, things, which in reality would be frightening or unnerving, can be viewed without those emotions.  As if watching horror movies, or WWII documentaries for a film class, in order to write a report on the directors' techniques with camera angles or lighting.  Or, marveling at  how ordinary household objects, seem to have been recently set on a Pompeii dining table, with no care for the owner who is not in the next room getting a cup.  However, it is very unsettling to realize that you are not asleep, but have been similarly disassociated from the feelings, or reactions normally experienced when confronted with the evidence of human suffering, even long after the fact.

That sense of being disconnected from reality, dogged me the entire drive from Charleston, SC to Athens, GA.  I had  chosen to follow the state roads today,  instead of the interstate highways, in order to connect with the people and the communities I was passing.  And, to give myself the opportunity to stop wherever, for whatever that might be coming my way.  As I scanned the the quiet countryside for anything that seemed worthy of investigation, I kept reminding myself to pay attention.  Like a kid on Christmas Eve, staring out at the night sky, and fighting the overwhelming urge to close an eye, even for just a moment, I chastised myself for contemplating what percentage of drivers don't know the proper ettiquette for highway driving (it's very high, trust me).  Or, which of the Madonna tracks playing from my ipod was really my favorite. 

The forests that lined the roads were dense, their monotony only broken by equally monotonous chains of abandoned buildings, homes in extreme disrepair (let's play the "People do, or don't, live there" game), or shuttered strip malls.  In my mind, I began to excuse my growing attention deficit, given the circumstances.  When it hit me.  The mind numbing flood of empty structures built over years, by people who invested their futures in them, stood (barely) with heads bowed begging for a passerby to care. 

Literally, hundreds of miles had passed beneath my wheels, as I debated with myself, my musical Madonna obsession, as I cursed those with road etiquette ignorance, or as I  pondered the amount of rainfall from passing storms, never focusing my attention on the very real condition of my surroundings...

This beautiful, warm,  Spring afternoon was not making me happy. Rather than feeling contented, sitting at a sidewalk table with my iced Starbuck's, I felt uneasy.  Fortunately, a surprise phonecall from my cousin shook me out of the funk I felt.  She had hit my mood "reset button" at just the right time.  And although not conscious of it, I was uncharacteristically chatting with two homeless people.  We were having easy conversations about difficult topics.  Subconsciously, my mind was way ahead of me.  It had made the connection, and the correction, to my clueless behavior exhibited throughout today's drive.  And THAT realization did put things right in my belly.  

Note: add to your Todoist - "Did the government test atom bombs in the South in the fifties?" (I thought it was just in Nevada and New Mexico...)

Tuesday, 2am.