Just got back from a long weekend in DC. This one was pure fun, and we drove, so we hit other states on the way. Pennsylvania in October is absolutely glorious. In the mountains the leaves are turning and the scenery is wonderful. I am glad I wasn't driving on that part of the trip out, because it was really worth looking at.
We arrived in DC on Friday evening after a 12-hour drive (which included time getting lost and retracing our steps), then had a meal and a drink in the hotel pub, then hit the sack to rest up for the weekend activities.
Saturday morning we spent at the National Zoo. This time I actually got to see the pandas, which on my last visit had stubbornly refused to emerge for viewing. They actually are not as big as I had imagined, as I had envisioned something about the size of a black bear. They aren't - they are more the size of a St. Bernard dog. But they are well worth seeing. The first one that came in for viewing stared at the people on the other side of the glass while rhythmically scratching his backside against a (fake) boulder. He looked pretty happy.
Of course we had to visit the big cats - tiger and lion - and the smaller ones, cheetahs that were very interested in the zoo keeper who apparently had the bucket of meat scraps for dinner. The cheetah enclosure is next to the zebras, and one cheetah kept venturning that way - he really wanted that zebra but there was no way he could get to it. This must have been an old game because the zebra just went on grazing. He would not have done that in the wild.
After the zoo, and a wonderful brunch, we got on the Metro for a trip to the Mall to see some of the monuments. We passed by the Washington Monument and spent a little time at the World War II memorial - not my favorite by a long shot - there is way too much froofraw on it. It was an important war but the iron wreaths and iron eagles and stone plinths are awfully aggressive. I wish they had done better.
The Korean War memorial is new since my last trip. That was a better one - the statues of the soldiers were solemn and sad. On a wall facing them are etchings of faces of service men and women.
Then we went to the Lincoln memorial - I had been there several times but not all of our group had, so we stayed a while there, then walked the Vietnam memorial wall to finish our tour. That one is my favorite and always is moving. Of course, Vietnam was "my" war - it ended when I was in my teens, but it was high in my consciousness for obvious reasons.
Across Constituition Avenue is the National Science Academy with a huge statue of Albert Einstein out front. He is sitting casually there - and apparently wearing Birkenstocks. Tourists were climbing up into his lap for photos, so I did too.
Then we walked north past the State Department - and quite a ways longer - onto the campus of George Washington University. Even more walking finally got us to a Metro stop, and we headed back to the area of our hotel to find a restaurant and have a drink and dinner. We had done more walking that day than I normally do in a week, so we were all ready for food and beer.
On Sunday, we all participated in the National Equality March. As with all marches, one can count on the fact that it will never start when it is supposed to. With a scheduled noon kickoff, the staging area was so full and crowded that it extended for several blocks and filled the side streets as well. We stood in the sun for over an hour before we detected movement. After about a block of marching, we were told that the front of the march had reached the Capitol Lawn, 2 miles away. Hmm. Sure seemed like there were a lot of people!
Anyway, we did make our way around the White House and down to the Capitol, listened to some speeches, then drifted off to the National Air and Space Museum for a while. Then it was on to the metro to the restaurant we had chosen the night before. Good move. We got there before the dinner rush and had another wonderful meal. I was the only one who skipped dessert, trying to be good after a weekend (so far) of eating things I probably shouldn't have - but the desserts my tablemates shared were pretty awesome, too.
Then it was back to the hotel to take our shoes off, relax, and repack for the trip home on Monday. A nice drive, good weather, but as always, it seems longer when you are going home.
Thursday, October 15, 2009
Friday, October 2, 2009
Washington, DC
As I prepare for a weekend trip to Washington, DC, I realize that I should have named this blog "Wandering Through 50.1" or some such name. DC certainly counts as a unique visiting spot, although of course it isn't a state.
My first trip to DC is probably the most memorable for me, although I have since been there on at least three other occasions. The first visit was an actual vacation, as opposed to the subsequent trips which were for business reasons, so that is the one I want to write about... I went a lot more places on that trip.
My partner and I stayed with a friend who at the time lived in the bottom floor of a brownstone just east of the Mall, only a subway stop or two away. The friend worked at the National Air and Space Museum of the Smithsonian, so of course we had to visit there on our trip. Our visit happened to occur at the same time that the museum had a Star Trek exhibit - a retrospective of the original television series. So we got to view uniforms and equipment. I have a photo of my 20-something self standing in the transporter room with cardboard cutout figures of Kirk, Spock and McCoy, and another of me in the Captain's chair from the Enterprise bridge. (Not digital photos, so I don't have copies to post here.) Since we were all huge fans, it was quite a treat.
I didn't realize before visiting Washington that the Smithsonian Institution was more than just one building. To this day I don't believe I have visited them all. National Air and Space and the American History Museum were on our schedule, along with the National Zoological Park (part of the Smithsonian! Who knew?)
The American History Museum had an exhibit at the time of the internment of Japanese-Americans after the attack on Pearl Harbor. I find it unbelievable that I, after all my formal education, did not know that America had done this. One more reason we should applaud our museums. The exhibit was sobering, to say the least.
On the other hand, the museum also had more lighthearted displays, such as gowns of First Ladies and memorabilia from various famous television shows.
Then there are the national monuments. We ascended the Washington Monument and peered out its small windows in all four directions. I don't recommend the trip - it was pretty cramped. We saw the Capitol, of course, and the Jefferson and Lincoln memorials. The one that touched me most - being from the Vietnam generation, or close to it - was the Wall. It is beautiful in its simplicity and very moving. Especially when you find a name on it that you know.
My first trip to DC is probably the most memorable for me, although I have since been there on at least three other occasions. The first visit was an actual vacation, as opposed to the subsequent trips which were for business reasons, so that is the one I want to write about... I went a lot more places on that trip.
My partner and I stayed with a friend who at the time lived in the bottom floor of a brownstone just east of the Mall, only a subway stop or two away. The friend worked at the National Air and Space Museum of the Smithsonian, so of course we had to visit there on our trip. Our visit happened to occur at the same time that the museum had a Star Trek exhibit - a retrospective of the original television series. So we got to view uniforms and equipment. I have a photo of my 20-something self standing in the transporter room with cardboard cutout figures of Kirk, Spock and McCoy, and another of me in the Captain's chair from the Enterprise bridge. (Not digital photos, so I don't have copies to post here.) Since we were all huge fans, it was quite a treat.
I didn't realize before visiting Washington that the Smithsonian Institution was more than just one building. To this day I don't believe I have visited them all. National Air and Space and the American History Museum were on our schedule, along with the National Zoological Park (part of the Smithsonian! Who knew?)
The American History Museum had an exhibit at the time of the internment of Japanese-Americans after the attack on Pearl Harbor. I find it unbelievable that I, after all my formal education, did not know that America had done this. One more reason we should applaud our museums. The exhibit was sobering, to say the least.
On the other hand, the museum also had more lighthearted displays, such as gowns of First Ladies and memorabilia from various famous television shows.
Then there are the national monuments. We ascended the Washington Monument and peered out its small windows in all four directions. I don't recommend the trip - it was pretty cramped. We saw the Capitol, of course, and the Jefferson and Lincoln memorials. The one that touched me most - being from the Vietnam generation, or close to it - was the Wall. It is beautiful in its simplicity and very moving. Especially when you find a name on it that you know.
I learned to eat sushi in DC. Before my first visit, I had never tried it and honestly didn't think I would care for it. On the other hand, it was before the current trend of sushi restaurants practically on every corner.
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