Wednesday, October 27, 2010

Summary, but not last entry

From Monticello, we went to Culpeper, VA, Bowie, MD, New Rochelle, NY, and Hadley, MA ... and finally home to Essex Junction.

Mike and I went into NYC and took the subway to the ferry to the Statue of Liberty. The ferry had airport style security, so we had to remove everything from our pockets and take off our belts, etc.

I never could get our videos to upload onto the blog, so I've begun posting them on YouTube. You can click on the link below to go directly to the Old Faithful video. While there you can look at any of the Tom Cotton (that's me) videos, some from the trip, some not.

Friday, October 15, 2010

Thomas Jefferson's Monticello

This is not the place nor the time to sing the praises of Thomas Jefferson. Let JFK's quote suffice. It went something like this:

In front of a White House dinner for all the Nobel Prize winners, President Kennedy said, There has never been a gathering of such intellect in the history of the White House, except possibly when Thomas Jefferson dined alone.

Science, history, languages, architecture, agriculture, art ... they were all absorbed by President Jefferson.

He designed every detail of Monticello, his house on a mountain top south of Charlottesville, VA. Later he oversaw the creation of the University of Virginia.

No cameras inside of course, but we toured Monticello and then its grounds and his family burial ground with the relatively new monument to him.



Monticello, from the "backyard"



Monticello has around 45 rooms, half of them underground. This is a kitchen of the latter.



Thomas Jefferson's final resting place







A very protective tree within the cemetery. (I want to believe that it watches carefully through the night ... and heaven help anyone who goes over the fence with malice aforethought.)



An appropriate ending to the day, in Culpeper, VA


Wednesday, October 13, 2010

airy blueberry?

That didn't get your attention did it?

You try putting together: blue berry mount ridge way park may airy

Anyway, this probably is for the older folks out there. Andy Griffith's Mayberry was Mount Airy near the Blue Ridge Parkway. So much of that long running wonderful TV show came from real people and places in the Mt Airy area. From Floyd the Barber to Sheriff Taylor himself, the roots are showing everywhere.

Here's some pictures and a few words to go with them.




This barber, whose habit of talking way more than cutting (at least sometimes) was incorporated into Floyd the Barber's character, cut Andy's hair in real life in the very same 1929 barber's chair that Mike got his trim in. He is really a terrific man nearing 90 named Russell Hiatt. There are roughly 30,000 photos on his wall of people whose hair he cut or who just walked in to say hello ... as did about a dozen while we were there.


Not one of the police cars from the TV show, but one that we road around in for a tour of Mayberry.

Oops! Make that Mt. Airy.



The house that Andy grew up in. His father was a supervisor at a furniture making factory. You can rent the whole house for $179 a night.



Sheriff Mike at his desk in a recreation of the show's jailhouse.



A section of the Blue Ridge Parkway. Last year we saw a lot of it north of Roanoke, VA. This year we covered a lot from Asheville, NC, to Roanoke. It is a lovely drive.






Important note: last year, staying at maybe 60 motels, never did we reach for a motel tissue and find the box empty. This year, it's a running joke between us. Maybe a third of the motels had four tissues or less left in the box. Last night, I grabbed for some. Two popped out together. No more after that.

We think that all the motels in the US are tracking our travels and as shown as we show up and are assigned a room, they send a runner to the room to empty all but a few tissues.

I'm pretty sure this is what's happening.

Tuesday, October 12, 2010

Biltmore

Dateline: Asheville, NC

America's largest house finished. Party Christmas Eve 1895. Be there or be square.

(A National Forest was created from some of their land.)





No inside pictures. 40+ baths. Renoirs. Winter garden inside. Fabulous gardens outside.













Sunday, October 10, 2010

Nashville:Ryman:GOO

Until 1974 The Grand Ole Opry was staged at the Ryman Auditorium. Whether or not you're into country music, it is a very historic place. From Mary Pickford to Bo Jangles to W.C. Fields to Bob Hope to Isadora Duncan to Elvis, everyone pretty much showed up at the Ryman at one time or another. Google it.

Stage costumes from all the stars through the years are there. Flashier and flashier as time marched on.

After that the GOO went to its own new HQ a dozen miles away. This May that whole area flooded deeply and has mostly not recovered, BUT the 85th anniversary of the GOO was Saturday night and there was a huge show with Dolly Parton and many others. We didn't know about this ahead of time. We could have gotten SRO tix, but decided against them.



Minnie Pearl's




Jewel stopped by for a jam session.




June and Johnny's wear.



And an even more famous country star. Just can't remember his name right now.



The new place


Thousands and thousands of people were there. The first concert was only hours away. Mike asked everyone to clear the plaza so he could get a pristine picture of it. Surprisingly, they did.

Oh ... we're back on eastern time.


Belle Meade Plantation

Outside of Nashville, TN. No inside pictures. There's been a lot of that recently.

Interesting to visit one time. Serious history behind it. Many famous visitors.




Those are Civil War bullet holes in the columns.






Nashville


Thursday, October 7, 2010

Wednesday, October 6, 2010

to Jonesboro, Arkansas

Two items only:

One a bridge made out of ten bridges ...




Two, a sunset shot through the smoke of burning rice fields. (Looks like an alien planet to me.)