Recently in travel Category

Omni Shoreham, Washington D.C.

| 8 Comments | No TrackBacks
shoreham c.jpg


I arrived today via the Amtrak Acela train to Washington D.C. I am staying at the famous Omni Shoreham Resort. The hotel is beautiful and worthy of its 4 Diamond award.

I got here early and made it a point to run around the town. I started off this morning with a visit to the Smithsonian National Zoo. It is big and the facilities house a whole lot of animals. My favorite was the panda exhibit! Those pandas are too damn cute!

I also made it a point to swing by the White House, Abe Lincoln's Memorial, The Wash. Monument, the Reflection Pool, The Korean War Memorial, and ended up on the shore of the Potomac where I sat under a willow tree and read a chapter of my book while my feet took a rest.

Later, I got back to the hotel and eased some tension in the spa and hot tub.

When I got back to my room, there was a birthday package waiting for me. My boy Brian Aviance sent me, not one, but two beautiful new sunglasses from his store here in D.C. A pair of gold framed Oliver Peoples and a silver toned pair of Ic Berlin's. They are OVAH and I can not wait to sport them.

After, a quick shower and some phone time with mom and Eddie, I headed back out and had a HUMONGOUS margarita for a night cap, even though I am nowhere near ready for bed. lol

Aside from missing Eddie and wishing he were here, I am having a great time and looking forward to attending my conference tomorrow.


Cascade

| No Comments | No TrackBacks
cas.jpg

Pemigewasset

| No Comments | No TrackBacks
Pegmigewasset Covered Bridge.jpg Pemigewasset Covered Bridge Pemigewasset river.jpg Pegmigewasset River

Rocky Gorge

| No Comments | No TrackBacks
Rocky Gorge.jpg

New Hampshire

| No Comments | No TrackBacks
moose.jpg Photo: Visitors Center: Lincoln, NH

Eric and I arrived today in New Hampshire after many months of anxiously awaiting a much needed vacation.

We booked our stay in a beautiful resort nestled in the White Mountain National Forest off the Kancamagus Highway, considered one of the most scenic byways of the United States. The timeshare was lofty 3 bedrooms, two baths, with full kitchen, dinning area, fireplace and all of the amenities expected of a 5 star ski lodge.

My favorite of those amenities was the outdoor heated hot tub which helped ease the muscle and knee aches associated with hours of skiing down white powdered mountain slopes but the indoor pool and sauna are also worth mentioning.

There is something instantaneously rehabilitative about majestic mountain ranges and endless spans of wild green spaces. The calm seems to immediately absorb into ones soul and ease worldly tensions away and such would be the case for the following eight days.

SINH Living room.jpg SINH Kitchen.jpg SINH room 3.jpg SINH room2.jpg top views.jpg

Inlet, NY

| 2 Comments | No TrackBacks
Inlet NY.jpg

Playa Brasilito

| No Comments | 3 TrackBacks
brasilito.JPG

In Arenal

| 2 Comments | 1 TrackBack
yusef Arenal.JPG

The Road Less Serviced

| 1 Comment | 1 TrackBack

CR Roads.JPG

It was in many ways what I imagined it would be and in many, completely unexpected. The country is much less developed than I expected, except for that of major cities and towns, all of which are extremely small in scale by my Western comparisons. Much of the country is green and untouched; the rest is composed of rolling hills, mountains and farmland.

Roads in Costa Rica are in awful conditions. Consider yourself lucky, should you be driving on anything paved, everything else is rocky, muddy dirt roads which require a 4x4, ATV, dirt-bike, or horseback. The roads are scary in that a great many run alongside high mountain sides with very little to keep ones vehicle from flying over in the event of an accident.

Bridges are also of concern as they tend to allow for only one vehicle crossing at a time. One should practice caution when crossing them and ensure that there are no other vehicles speeding across it or about to on the opposite end. They usually cross rivers and brooks which cause the supporting earth around their bases to suffer the effects of erosion. One can not help but wonder when was the last time that an engineer or land surveyor made it out to the site. You can always tell when a tourist is crossing them as they speed across at glacier speeds and not the gazillion miles per hours that Ticos average.

Costa Rica does not have the best of roads signs in the world, so make sure that you either have a GPS or one hell of a roadmap and sense of direction. With a little trouble and the help of locals, the latter worked fine for us, just make sure that you have a full tank of gas and fill up whenever possible as gas stations are sparse and those you find are charging roughly about $4.00+ per gallon/ ¢2,000+ colones. (¢514 colones to the dollar) Expect traffic delays, mud during the wet season, yielding the right-of-way to horses, cattle, and other livestock not to mention the numerous tropical wild animals you are sure to encounter on the road.

Furthermore, if you are ever planning a visit, be aware of the sky-high rental car insurances and required deposits which the rental car agencies fail to make tourist aware of until they have arrived. Expect to pay an extra $200 to any vehicle you may have reserved, to be given a manual operated vehicle even if you requested an automatic (that’s where some of the extra comes in), then you have wheel and windshield insurance, and a hefty $900-1,500 (refundable…If you are lucky) deposit.

Next stop: Nicoya, Central Highland’s, Arenal Volcano Region.

At the Kawabe

| No Comments | No TrackBacks

river dip.JPG

1   2   3   4   5   6   

Calendar

<  July 2010
Su Mo Tu We Th Fr Sa
        1 2 3
4 5 6 7 8 9 10
11 12 13 14 15 16 17
18 19 20 21 22 23 24
25 26 27 28 29 30 31

About this Archive

This page is an archive of recent entries in the 064travel category.

061odds & ends is the previous category.

065oldies is the next category.

Find recent content on the main index or look in the archives to find all content.

Pages

OpenID accepted here Learn more about OpenID
Powered by Movable Type 4.21-en