Tuesday, April 20, 2010

The Concert Band Trip

It was the earliest of my travels - back in college when I was 20 years old, my college concert band did a band trip from Michigan to New York city, with stops along the way. We stayed with families from town to town until we got to NYC, where we stayed in a hotel and played our final concert in Town Hall.


This was the first time I had ever been in Pennsylvania and heard Pennsylvania Dutch accents. It was the first time I had seen an urban, mostly black high school (in New Jersey). And of course it was the first time I had been in New York, seen a porn movie house, or dealt with panhandlers on the street as I and another 20 year old wandered around Times Square.


This was probably my first taste of travel, and even though the majority of it was hard work (rehearsing and performing, sitting on a bus for hours every day), it was enlightening. I wish I remembered more about the trip, but it was quite a while ago.

South Carolina - the Low Country

Adding another state to my list with a visit to my nephew who currently lives and teaches in a small town in South Carolina.

I took a flight down on Friday from home to Savannah, Georgia, which was the closest airport to my nephew's home town of Hampton, SC. From the Savannah airport, I took a rental car (silver Mazda 6 - nice car!) to Hampton - partly highway and partly a 2-lane road through rural country, with an interesting juxtaposition of palm trees and more conventional-looking trees (they aren't maples, I knew that, but they look bushy rather than tall and thin). Many have long ropes of Spanish Moss on them.

After arrival, I called my nephew, C, and we had dinner at a local pizzaria and planned our activities for Saturday. One of the first things we had done was visit a local man-made lake to see if we could spot any alligators. C had rented a boat the week before and gone out to see if he could spot and photograph one. He saw three, but the single photo he got wasn't very good - three bumps protruding from the lake surface was all he got. I took a couple of shots of the lake, which had some nice lily pads on it, but we didn't see any sign of a gator.

On Saturday we went to Charleston. Our plan was to take the ferry to Fort Sumter and perhaps visit the Aquarium nearby. But on the ferry back from the Fort, we instead got to watch the Blue Angels perform their airshow over the harbor. This was an unplanned benefit and one we took full advantage of. But no photos - they were just too fast to capture in a still shot.

We had lunch after the performance and then headed home for the day.

On Sunday, we drove to Hilton Head Island to see the lighthouse and the beach, play some mini golf, and do a little shopping. The weather continued to be gorgeous - sunny and in the 80s - and it was a pleasant drive, until we got to Hilton Head and realized that there was a major golf tournament taking place there and found we could not get to the lighthouse after paying to get access to the area. Everyone was being herded into parking for the golf tournament, and it was with some difficulty that we finally got out of the stampede.

So we gave up on the lighthouse and went to play mini-golf instead. That was fun, although of course I lost again - 57 to 55. Tough course! I was wearing a Michigan State t-shirt and the guy who took our fee asked me if I knew our basketball coach, Tom Izzo. Then we discussed the team's chances to return to the Final Four in the NCAA tournament next year. Spartans rock!
All in all, a great vacation weekend in SC, and I added another state to my list.

Tuesday, December 29, 2009

Iowa City

A trip to University of Iowa for a Big Ten conference was a long road trip for me in 2003. Since there were four of us, driving a university van was cheaper than flying everyone to Iowa City, but it did take about eight hours.

We stayed on campus at the university hotel. Contrary to my expectations, Iowa was not flat. Along the Iowa river, the university campus was hilly and green (of course there have been major floods of the river, including one a couple years ago that severely impacted the university). Other than that, it was a typical college campus.

The best thing about visiting Iowa was that I got a chance to see a friend. T had been a graduate student in political science at Michigan State and a co-worker of mine when I worked in a bookstore in East Lansing. All these years later, he'd completed not only the Ph.D in political science but a J.D. as well, and now was a professor at U Iowa. He'd asked me to bring him some Spartan gear but told me when I got there that he wished he'd asked me to bring him some Vernors as well. (Vernors is made and sold in Michigan but apparently not in Iowa.)

I met T for dinner at a Chinese restaurant near campus and then T showed me his office. We had a great conversation. That was probably the best part of the trip.

On the way back, somehow I ended up being the driver through the Chicago-Gary stretch of Interstate 80 - not recommended. I've driven that stretch several times and I always hate it. It isn't only that the traffic is heavy, always - though it is. The worst thing is that there are so many semi tractor-trailers that I always feel claustrophobic. It's very stressful.

But all in all, a good trip. Road trips with work colleagues are always fun.

Tempe, Phoenix, Sedona

I had the opportunity to visit Arizona when I was asked to consult with Arizona State University on their computer systems. Even though it was business, I did get a chance to play tourist a bit as well. I flew into Tempe, which is right next to Phoenix, and spent a few days on the Arizona State U campus. It was interesting to be somewhere that it never snows - people park on the perimeter of campus and move about by golf cart.

Although I had expected sun, I managed to catch a rare pair of wet days - I would have called them showers but the folks there were amazed with the amount of rain they got. Because the ground is sun-baked, it even caused some local flooding. Yet in Michigan it would have been nothing to speak of.

As I recall, I arrived late Saturday and on Sunday, my host took us on a road trip to Sedona, a tourist town further north. It was quaint, a series of little shops that reminded me of those on Mackinac Island here in Michigan. They were filled with arts and crafts objects, souvenirs, snacks, ice cream, tapestries - etc. A lot of stuff that I didn't need and didn't want, but it was fun to shop around.

I liked the desert but it was too different for me. Not pretty but exotic, interesting to see but not somewhere I would want to live.

Saturday, December 26, 2009

New York

I've been to NY several times - once to Niagra Falls via Buffalo, which I'll talk about in a later post, and my first time on a band tour when I was in college - also will describe later. But probably the best trip I had where I was able to be a tourist was in 2005, when I went for a conference and stayed a couple of extra days so I was able to see some of the sights in New York City.

The sister of a close friend of mine lives in Manhattan, so my friend M and I overlapped some of the trip so we were able to spend some time together with her sister MT. I was there over the 4th of July so we viewed the fireworks over the East River as a part of the trip. But the first couple of days, I was there alone. I had dinner with some professional colleagues the first night, then during the free time I had the next day, I visited Julliard to see where one of my characters went to school. I wanted to see it, and the area around it where he would live.

On the 4th, besides the evening fireworks, M and MT and I walked through Rockefeller Center, where the Today show films. We visited the NBC store nearby, then saw St. Patrick's Cathedral. That was very interesting - large and beautiful. We also saw the Chrysler Building, the Empire State Building, and the United Nations.

Next day, I was at the conference but in the evening, there was a perk for some of us - a trip to a Broadway show. We saw "The Producers" - that was fun. Although I had no idea that Broadway theatres are so small. Compared to Midwestern venues, it was tiny.

The conference wrapped up the next morning, so in the afternoon after lunch, the three of us went to Coney Island in Brooklyn. It took almost an hour on the subway. We wandered the boardwalk, had dinner, then went to a minor league baseball game - the Brooklyn Cyclones. I bought two T-shirts there that are still among my favorites.

The following day, MT had to work, so M & I visited the Museum of Modern Art. The three of us had dinner at a cozy neighborhood Italian restaurant near MT's apartment called Nochellos. The food was good and M & MT had a lot of wine.

My final day in New York, the three of us braved a cold and rainy day to take the ferry to Liberty Island and Ellis Island. We didn't disembark on Liberty but spent quite a bit of time on Ellis Island. I knew my grandparents or great grandparents had immigrated in through Ellis Island but wasn't sure exactly when. I found a couple of men named Meyer, which I knew had been our family surname before we came to America. I wish I had known more about my ancestry before I went.

Great trip, all in all.

Denver, Breckinridge

Colorado is one of my favorite states. I like mountains. I have been lucky enough to visit Denver several times and once had a conference in the ski resort town of Breckinridge, albeit in the summer season. It was still wonderful.

My memories of Breckinridge are of taking a ski lift up to the top of the mountain - great view. I stayed in a privately-owned condo at the resort. This was the first time that I had known that this is a common practice in resorts and I was a bit stunned by the decor of the condo I got, including the massage chair, the huge bedroom, and the fully stocked kitchen. It had two full baths - which seemed excessive for one person. And two balconies.

My other memory of Breckinridge was finding an extraordinary sushi restaurant and having the sushi chef, surprise to find a somewhat knowledgable Caucasian at his sushi bar, try me out with a seaweed salad that I absolutely loved. Unfortunately, I never found it served anywhere else.

Several conferences in Denver have made me reasonably familiar with the downtown area - Larimer Square. One visit involved a dinner and wine with some colleagues, an after-dinner visit to a Russian tea room for samplings of flavored vodka, and then a beer in the hotel bar on the way to turning in. I don't think I have had that much alcohol in one session since, but it was memorable.

I also found a downtown mall where I discovered a beverage that I believe was called a Polar Bear - coffee, chocolate and milk on ice, with whipped cream and garnish of finely-ground chocolate-covered coffee beans. It was quite good.
Every time I visited Denver, I would buy and bring back a different kachina doll. I tried always to buy a new one by the same artist so they matched in size and style. The photo I'm attaching here isn't one of mine but is a typical sample of a Navajo kachina. Mine are tourist versions - not unique or valuable, but they are fun to have. After I had collected about six of them, I decided I really had enough. I am not a serious collector of stuff, and by that time a trip to Colorado wasn't all that exciting.
The final thing I will mention about Denver, though, is that I really like their airport. I have been in a lot of them but the open feeling of the main terminal in Denver is unique and I really enjoy it every time I am there.

Reno

My only visit to Nevada was a conference trip to Reno. I didn't like it, and I saw practically nothing of the city. The conference was held at a casino, and I barely left the grounds when there. Additionally, I had a diabetic episode due to the time difference and totally embarassed myself in the process. It wasn't a good trip, all in all.

With that said, I did gamble a little - slots mostly. And it wasn't a bad trip otherwise.