Thursday, July 26, 2012

Connecticut - Small(ish) state, lots(ish) to do.

Connecticut might not look like that big of a state, but it is. Or maybe it's not that it's big, it's that they pack a lot into it. If you've ever driven down a Connecticut back road you know it's compact! Some of the roads aren't wide enough to spare the room to draw a yellow line down the center. So while I can't give you a 'what-to-do' for the entire state, and I wasn't in one particular big city that I can talk about, I'm just going to highlight a few of the places I visited.

Captain's Cove:
This little gem (oh my gosh, I can't believe I used the word gem), located on Black Rock Harbor, packs a lot of fun into a small place. Like its home state. What you'll find when you arrive in Captain's Cove is a boardwalk, looking out onto boat docks and a small harbor, and a long row of tiny houses, all built in Colonial and Victorian styles. Only they aren't houses, they're stores. Selling stuff and junk alike. Once you walk beyond the stores, you'll find a large restaurant and a fascinating collection of memorabilia; some looks like it came out of a circus tent, and some appears to have fallen off an old fishing boat. The stores open in the afternoon (although some owners open earlier). The Cove was a unique and entertaining find. More than the stores I loved the collection of...'things'...kept on the boardwalk near the restaurant.


Mystic:
There's a lot to do at Mystic Seaport, if you want to pay for it. Which I didn't, so I can't speak personally about most of it. But I can tell you that there's a 19th Century Village where you can see exhibits and roleplayers. See how 19th Century life was with demonstrations and educators. There's also a lot of old historic boats you can go on-board to check out. However, when I was there, the most famous boat, Charles W. Morgan was being restored under a heap of scaffolding and plastic. The seaport also has a planetarium, to fill you in on 19th Century navigation. Oh, and there's a Mystic Pizza, of course. But no Julia Roberts. And most of the movie was filmed in Rhode Island. Darn you, misguiding movie industry!
If you want to venture a couple miles down the street you can visit Old Mistick Village. Lots of stores with lots of shopping, plus a couple snack shops and restaurants. It's a pretty big village, and the stores offer a great variety.

Old Mistick Village Duck Land
And then there is the Mystic Aquarium. Where you do aquarium things. Or get married with a beluga whale officiating. Or if you aren't engaged, you can have cocktails with the whales. Who doesn't want to spend their afternoon with a sloshed whale!


Bronx Zoo

Bronx Zoo:
Ok, technically this one is in New York. In the Bronx, if you hadn't gathered. I've become a bit of a zoo expert, self appointed, and this is a great zoo. It's big, and there's a lot of walking. But it's spacious for the animals and clean. There weren't too many animals hiding out of sight, although the red panda was either hiding or the snow leopard next door ate it. Lots of gift shops, so get ready mom and dad.


Maritime Aquarium
Maritime Aquarium:
Here's a place to do more aquarium things, in SoNo (that's South Norwalk, I'm told SoNo is what the cool people call it). It's a pretty small aquarium, but still a good afternoon filler. They currently have a white crocodile, which I can't accurately describe the creepiness of. They have an awesome touch tank, full of sharks and sting rays. And fish type things. A nursery aquarium shows baby sharks and sting rays.You can view the seals inside or outside, and get up close. There's also an IMAX theater. Also, I'm not sure how long they'll be at Maritime, or why Meerkats are even at an aquarium to begin with, but for now you can spend an hour or two watching the hilarious little things run around in the Africa exhibit. So when you drive up to the aquarium, that explains the giant Meerkat on the roof. You are in fact in the right place. FYI, parking is in the parking garage across the street.

Stew Leonard's:
Yep, you bet I just put a grocery store on my Connecticut to-do list! But this is a special grocery store. For starters, there's a petting zoo in the parking lot. Sheep, cows, ducks. It's also labeled as the World's Largest Dairy, featured in Ripley's Believe it Or Not and the Guinness Book. But that still isn't why this store is the best...at least if you're under 5. While you wander around picking up random food items, you'll find singing milk jugs and butter, egg laying chickens, a six foot cow walking around, and dancing celery. Lots of buttons to push. If you happen to be a button pusher. Don't just 'run in' to Stew Leonard's though. There's no running about it. It's a maze. One way in, one way out. That sounds ominous. As does singing butter.




Well there ya go, I've given you a few things to keep you busy on the eastern part of Connecticut. Especially if you need groceries and like aquariums.

Wednesday, July 25, 2012

Blub, Blub.

Blub, Blub. That's the noise people make when they're underwater.In case you were wondering. And apparently, more and more people like to go 'blub, blub.'


Sea.Fire.Salt.Sky Restaurant
Although there are already underwater hotels, such as Jules Underwater Lodge in Key Largo (looks a little claustrophobic to me) and a few underwater restaurants like Sea.Fire.Salt.Sky in the Anantara Kihavah Villas in Maldives, there has yet to be an underwater resort. But not for long. There is currently a bit of a business race between Fuji and Dubai to see which location will sport the world's first underwater resort. However, Bruce Jones (president of the company building Fuji's Poseidon Undersea Resort) is confident that his resort will be completed and opened first. 



Poseidon Undersea Resort - Proposed Room
The Poseidon Underwater Resort will be composed of 24 underwater suites as well as suites situated over the water and beachfront suites. A one-week stay will allow you to move (with the assistance of a butler) between the various types of suites -  for just $15,000 a person. Your hard earned cash will get you all the usual resort amenities and plushy things, as well as piloting lessons in a mini-submarine. Don't expect the steep price tag to deter people, the resort already has 120,000 people wanting to be informed when booking can begin.


The Water Discus - Proposed Design
Dubai's resort, The Water Discus, will house its 31 underwater rooms in a giant disc. Separate discs above water will house the spa, swimming pool, helipad, and whatever other extravagance they deem necessary. And don't worry, the entire hotel can be raised above the water in case of an emergency. Or, the entire hotel can be bobbed to some other location. 

So if you want to spend your vacation watching fishies from the comfort of a plush, king size bed (and you haven't seen the movie Deep Blue Sea), then keep an eye on these two resorts. Although various dates seem to be floating around (floating...you get it?), there doesn't seem to be a definitive opening date for either resort. Until then, we'll all just have to sleep on land, the normal, boring way.

Tuesday, July 24, 2012

To Tour, or Not to Tour?

I'm not a big fan of taking tours. Cramped up on a bus with a bunch of people you don't know while you snap photos of the landmarks you speed by? No thanks. Be on someone else's time table and risk being left in a cloud of dust if you're late getting back to the bus? No thanks. Forgo activities and sights that interest you because they aren't on the itinerary? No thanks. Save a bunch of money and let someone else do the planning and booking for you? No th--wait, what? Uh yeah, that sounds good.

I was given a tour book today with this company's tours for the rest of the year. And there are some good prices in there. The one that looks the most fun to me (and the best cost) is a trip to the Grand Canyon, Death Valley, Vegas, and Zion National Park for just over a grande. That one I can guarantee you would cost me way more on my own. Plus this way someone else gets to do the extensive driving between all these locations.

But at the same time I remember the Great Switzerland Tour of 2009. I would have loved more time in Lucerne. Plus, the entire time I was there I was so wrapped up in getting back to the bus on time, that I'm sure I missed things. And I forgot to get a nutcracker, one of the only things I wanted from Switzerland. And we couldn't eat or drink on the bus (maybe those were crazy Swiss rules). We couldn't even have phones on (that was a crazy Mercedes rule). Or these rules were all made up by the possibly and probably crazy Swiss/German woman who was our tour guide.

The tour in Switzerland is the only one I've taken, and it was just a day tour. So...who out there has toured. Anyone? Anywhere? Is the frustration of being on someone else's schedule worth the money and time savings?

Anyone seen My Life in Ruins? I would undoubtedly end up on a bus full of those people, in a hotel with no elevator where I'm staying on the 32nd floor, and a bus driver who nearly drives us off a cliff.

Wednesday, July 18, 2012

Free is Best

It costs a lot these days to fly or even drive somewhere. Then you have to pay for a hotel, pay for food, and probably pay for every little thing you go out and do. It can really break the bank. But, it doesn't have to. At least not if you find yourself in one of the ten cities featured in Yahoo Travel's "America's best free attractions" list.

The list includes a few parks from across the country, including the International Rose Test Garden. 4 1/2 acres of roses and other species of flora. That's a lot of rose sniffing to do. The Lincoln Park Zoo in Chicago is free, as is the Smithsonian National Zoo in D.C. In fact, there's a lot in D.C. that is free (one of the cheapest vacations I've had in awhile). Yahoo's article mentions the mall, but also check out any of the Smithsonian museums and national monuments without paying a cent.

So it might still cost you your life savings to get to some of these locations, but at least you won't have to dip too deeply into your pockets once you're there!

Here's Yahoo's full list. - Sorry, this list is no longer available.

Thursday, July 12, 2012

The Dangers of Traveling...with Me!


 1va·ca·tion

noun, often attributive \vā-ˈkā-shən, və-\
: a respite or a time of respite from something 


1re·spite

noun 
\ˈres-pət also ri-ˈspīt, British usually ˈres-ˌpīt\
: an interval of rest or relief

Those two definitions do not go hand-in-hand in the Kasey Lee book of travel (and there is a book, an ever-growing book!). I've actually had people comment "I don't think I would enjoy vacationing with you." That doesn't hurt my feelings though. I know their wariness isn't because I snore at night, or sit in the hotel room and order pay-per-view, or pack 7 bags of luggage that I expect someone else to haul around. It's because my vacations are not a time for relaxation, napping, and recouping. My vacations are a veritable marathon of fun, new experiences, learning, and sightseeing. So if you just want to spend a week not moving from a beach towel spread beneath a beach umbrella...you do not want to go to the beach with me!

Most places I visit I know I will probably never see again. No matter how much I love a place, there's always something new to see, somewhere else. So when I am on vacation I try to pack in as much as possible. This means no sleeping in, no time to primp; just get up and get out the door. Early mornings in turn mean no late nights at the bars (except for that one time in Nashville!). If I'm going to be up late, it has to be something worthwhile (a late show, an attraction that closes late, etc.). I realize that exhaustion eventually sneaks up, and then it's just plain time for a nap. An hour nap. Then back up and out!

Another facet of my vacations is walking...lots and lots of walking. Touristy areas charge to park, and they often charge a lot. So if I can reach it from my hotel without taking the car, we're walking. If we can park once and then leave the car for the rest of the day, we're walking. Sometimes we might be walking in the wrong direction for 2.5 miles. It has happened. I also have a habit of making a lot of sudden stops when I'm walking, mostly to snap a photo. So you really can't walk behind or in front of me (or we'll crash or you'll lose me). Just be ready for me to stop without any notice.

I also don't care how hot or cold it is. Or if it's raining or snowing. I'm not wasting a day inside...short of a hurricane or ya know, a tornado. I find the mind can overcome all sorts of weather if it's distracted by something interesting. If there are inside things to be done, then that's great...but if not, grab your umbrella. I went to the desert when it was 108 degrees, and rode rides in Disney World when it was below freezing.

Vacations with me can also be a tad expensive. I don't stay in the Ritz, or eat at Ruth's Chris, but I love new experiences, even if I have to pay for them. Parasailing, swimming with dolphins, ziplines, taking a ghost tour, horse back riding, petting a lion, snorkeling, renting a bike - all things I've paid for on vacation. Sometimes it's something planned and paid for ahead of time, sometimes it's spur-of-the-moment, out-of-the-pocket. I almost always find it well worth the cash (or let's be honest...worth the charge on my credit card). 

So if you want to run yourself ragged, sleep less than normal, walk til your feet cramp, and stand in a thunder storm, while having a great time full of new experiences that you'll remember for the rest of your life...then a vacation with me is a great idea. If you want to spend a week not moving, catching up on three month's worth of sleep, and avoiding the crowded tourist spots...then you want to be vacationing with the rest of the crew who doesn't want to leave town with me.

How about you? Do it all, or do nothing on vacation?


Tuesday, July 10, 2012

Moonbows

Everyone knows that just the right combination of sunlight and water will create a beautiful rainbow. But I'm sure not everyone knows that there is such thing as a moonbow. In Corbin, Kentucky Cumberland Falls sometimes interacts with lunar rays from a full moon in such a way that a colorful bow is formed at the base.

There are only a few places in the world where a moonbow might form; Victoria Falls in Africa, Yosemite Falls in California, Waimea Canyon, Hawaii, and a much lighter one at the New York side of Niagara Falls. The moonbow is still a rare occurrence, where several factors must line up just right. Factors needed for a moonbow? A full moon, cloudless sky, and misty falls. Cold nights in the fall and winter often create good conditions. The internet is full of calendars predicting the best night to observe a moonbow. If you can't make it to these falls on just the right night, you could just scroll down and take a look at a few pictures.



Cumberland Falls -
http://redandthepeanut.blogspot.com/2010/10/ghostly-slivery-white-moonbow-at.html  

Victoria Falls
http://getoutzine.com/cumberlandfallsstateparkky

Yosemite Falls
http://groundhog.smugmug.com/Nature/Yosemite-Moonbows/3702781_7k9qfM/212124678_jYn6m#!i=212124678&k=jYn6m