Saturday, January 20, 2018

Texas loop trip


Moonset
Flying West BOS->DFW at dawn on Nov 4, 2017

In odd numbered years we have timeshare points to use. This year we went to Newport, RI in January, and National Harbor in May for 3 days each.
We decided to try an 'experimental'  two week vacation, combining 1-2 night hotel stays with longer(3-4 night) timeshare stays to use the remaining points. Sort of a test run for our longer cross country trip which we're planning to start in late 2019. By then we hope to be camping in the van most of the time and staying in hotels occasionally.

We decided to fly to Dallas, TX using Frequent Flier miles, and use the timeshare in San Antonio that we knew we liked(Wyndham La Cascada) and another in Fairfield Bay, AR  that we had not been to but had been thinking about trying for a while.
We also used this as a chance to get used to using a smart phone. I finally got one the week before we left. It was very useful getting us from place to place and finding restaurants. Very different from having a map. Better in some ways, not as good in others.


Fri. Nov , 2017
Our flight was early, 6:30AM, so we wanted to stay near the airport, and we'd previously used the Park-Sleep-Fly at the Quincy Adams Inn  which is a shorter drive than going all the way past the airport to Revere.
We left Falmouth around 3PM and ate at Bertucci's in Brockton along the way so we got to sleep early.


Sat. Nov 4, 2017
Up early and to the airport without incident. flight was on time and uneventful.
We landed in Dallas at 12:30PM Local time and quickly got our bags and the rental car(a black Ford Escape with Mass. plates!) and headed away from the DFW Citi-plex and into the dry flatness of Texas.
We headed for Lockhart, TX. Famous for Barbecue. We had been to Smitty's before, and headed straight back there. It was all as simple and wonderful as we remembered. More crowded than last time. So hot while waiting in line near the fire, which is burning on the floor next to the door.
Here's the wood pile they had out back:


We had 2 'hot rings':

and a pound of pork ribs; they just put it on brown paper and then crumple it so you can carry it to the table. With a couple of Lone Star beers, a side of cole slaw and another of beans. Everything was as amazing as we remembered. We couldn't even finish it! We took it with us and eventually ate every bite.

When planning our first two nights, before we checked into the timeshare in San Antonio, we decided to book a Holiday Inn Express in New Braunfels, TX.  We figured if we used Holiday Inn Express for the whole trip, we'd accumulate points for a free stay. We picked New Braunfels because it was in  Texas Hill Country and we'd been there before in 2015 and enjoyed it very much.
After I booked the hotel, we found out it was the first weekend of Wurstfest!
It looked like good food, good music and good beer so was decided to embrace it!
Saturday evening we checked into the hotel, put on summer clothes as it was very hot, and headed to the parking lot to meet the 'Wurstwagon', a bus ride to the festival.
The entire festival is very well organized. The bus drops off at the place where one can buy a ride home, and a ticket to get in, and beer tickets using a credit card. There are many places to get beer tickets inside but they only take cash.
You get a colored wrist band which signifies the hotel you're going back to.
Inside, there were five stages all with bands playing all the time. In most places people were dancing. A few of the stages were inside. Tons of tables full of people with plastic beer pitchers stacked high.
Nowhere did we see drunkenness or unruly behavior. Just tons of people (maybe 10,000?) having lots of fun celebrating being German, or wishing they were. Leiderhosen and dirndls everywhere, or people in beer-mug hats, some plush, some inflated. Chicken hats were also very popular. They played the Chicken Dance about every half hour.

We drank beer and tried to stay cool, listening to music and people watching.
We stayed pretty late and took the Wurstwagon back to the hotel (as mentioned above, they give you a wristband color-coded to your hotel - Smart!)


Sunday Nov 5
We slept late and ate breakfast from the lobby in our room.
Around noontime we decided to go back to the festival to look at the booths and eat something...  the night before we were too full from the barbecue to think about eating any food.
Turns out the Wurstwagon runs only on Friday and Saturday.
So we called Uber! Another new and wonderful thing the phone can do. I still haven't used it much as a phone. Hardly anyone has the number yet.
Anyway, Uber turned out to be great!

We enjoyed a much less crowded day although it was still very hot.
The photo above of the stage is from Sunday. Notice the people are sitting in the shade but not in the sun. On Sat night there were no seats available and the pitchers were stacked 10+ high.
We ended up splitting a Reuben which was really good, but our appetites were low so we never got to try the sausage on a stick wrapped in a spiral potato:

We shopped a bit  but didn't buy anything. I was surprised at how much they were asking for the dirndl outfits. Some of them $250. which makes me think about a costuming career. There is a market for quality costumes here and there.

 The previous evening, this was a solid crowd of people!
You can't see the river, but the path in the background is on the far side of it. There was an occasional breeze in this area so it was very popular Saturday night.

We were pretty wiped out as it continued to be hot so we Uber'ed back to the hotel. This driver told us about a great restaurant in San Antonio, La Gloria. We put it on our list which seemed already too full to manage eating at all of our favorite places there.

We laid low for the night.


Monday Nov 6
Another lazy morning. Or goal today was to keep occupied until it was time to check into the condo in San Antonio, only an hour away. Checked out of the hotel and drove to downtown New Braunfels. Walked around looking at the old buildings and the local DPW setting up Christmas decorations!
Tried the strudel at Naegelin's Bakery and it was delicious. We'd seen them at the festival but weren't hungry enough at the time.
Wandered through an antiques market which is half museum and half nostalgia, and a little bit of 'gee, this is where all of my stuff will end up'.
This piece of art caught my attention:


idea for future project: denim and lace oceanscape!

Will found this 'Sellers' cabinet/hoosier:


We walked around waiting for the Railroad Museum to open. It was small but very nice. A dining car that can be rented for functions and a caboose. And a couple of really nice model train exhibits.
We headed west out of New Braunfels, on a back road, and roamed through Hill Country on our way to La Gloria. We got there around 2:00 and sat outside under the trees, sipping Bohemia and splitting a few small plates:

It was still very warm and the shade was welcome, as was the breeze.
It is right by the river, near the Pearl Brewery. We saw some people pull up on a water taxi. We definitely planned to come back!

The phone helped us find our way across town to the Central Market where we stocked up on smoothie supplies and then it was time to check into the condo.

We had a two bedroom unit with a full kitchen, 2 baths, 3 TV's and a jacuzzi.
We relaxed and laid low again.


Tuesday Nov 7, 2017
It was much cooler and we walked to Mi Tierra for breakfast. It was amazing as  always!


 

Will particularly liked the pork in red sauce he had and my breakfast enchiladas were also delicious.
We walked back through the park by the market and through the square by the cathedral.
Went back to the condo and did laundry etc.
In the early evening we walked south along the Riverwalk to the Blue Star Brewery, another of our favorite places from a previous visit.
The same delicious beer and great food but this time there was an added surprise; Tuesday is Jazz night and there was a 17 piece band playing from 8-10PM.

They were just great!
We enjoyed the walk back along the river. The full moon was barely visible, glowing through the clouds,
Notice the flag on the Tower of Life building at half mast, for the victims of the shooting at the church in Sutherland, TX which is less than an hour south of San Antonio. The shooting had happened on Sunday, while we were at the Wurstfest.


Wed. Nov 8, 2017
Today we walked north on the Riverwalk, all the way to the Pearl Brewery. Over 2 miles.
We visited 2 bars that we didn't realize connected through the lobby of The Hotel Emma, until we walked out the back of one place and into the lobby, then into the other bar where we had been much earlier. It is a large complex.




The more interesting of the two bars was

 

Interesting combination of industrial and old-world oak and leather.




We would have eaten here except we wanted to save our appetite for La Gloria.
And it was worth it.
It was much colder than the first time so we ate inside. Just as delicious. Can't wait to go back!
We Uber'ed home since it was dark out and 2.5 miles back in the cold. Wow, the phone is really handy!


Thurs. Nov. 9
Time to hit the road. Headed out of town East on Rt. 40 toward Houston. 
We ended up finding a hike at Lake Livingston State Park.
It was an easy hike mostly through the woods. We also looked at the camping areas.
We stopped for Mexican food along the road. A sleepy little place, the food was good but unremarkable.
We stopped in Lufkin, TX at a Holiday Inn Express.
There was a restaurant in the parking lot, but we weren't hungry.


Fri. Nov 10
Up and out with breakfast from the lobby. After driving for a while we were a little hungry so we stopped for a What-a-burger. It was ok but had mustard and no ketchup... different. I guess we don't know what to ask for. It gave us the energy for a walk so we stopped at Piney Point Park for a walk through the woods. It was actually the path between this park and the park next door. Both are on the Wright Patman Lake. More features than Lake Livingston. And nice camping right by the lake.

Continued driving to Hot Springs, Arkansas and arrived at the Holiday Inn Express around 5PM. Along the way passed a lot of older development along  Lake Hamilton but the road was being widened and a new road with Big Box stores, restaurants, and hotels had recently been developed. Our hotel was on this new road. We were tired and didn't want to explore in the dark and ended up going to the Longhorn Steakhouse. It was ok but a little salty. The atmosphere was nice and the bar was not crowded.


Sat. Nov 11
Had breakfast in the room. Will got some stuff from the lobby.

Drove into Hot Springs Park which is a main street with bathhouses on one side, backing up to the hill where the hot springs emerge; and shops and restaurants on the other side. There is a big parking garage one block back from the shops.
One bath house is the Visitor's Center and Museum.
The ceiling in the men's changing room:
Below it, this fountain:




Then we walked around the springs. There are paths behind the bathhouses and a path to the very top. Abut a 1/2 mile almost straight up. We decided to save that for next time.




 We took a break for some good beer and a meat and cheese plate at the Superior Bathhouse Brewery which is in one of the old bathhouses.
Some of the seating is at a counter facing out the window.
Here's a view of the buildings and hillside across the street:

Under the street is the river bed. There used to be a series of bridges but they covered it over many years ago.
View from the parking garage, one block back from the main street:

Went to the Back Porch Grill at the Sun Bay Resort for dinner. It is right on the lake but it was dark so we couldn't see if the view is nice, but the steak was wonderful, with a nice glass of wine and salad.
It is in an RCI resort, so it might be a future destination.

Sunday Nov 12
Left Hot Springs and stopped at Little Rock on the way to Fairfield Bay.
Walked along the Arkansas River by the Bill Clinton Library and Museum.
This is a lovely park with an old railroad bridge, additional paths over the water's edge and a big amphitheater:

which was in front of this market:


which was closed on Sunday. The street behind it had a streetcar going down the center and lovely old-time buildings(a lot like Hot Springs)  housing interesting restaurants.
I'd previously scoped out the Flying Saucer Bar with 200 taps! Amazing place!

Those are saucers.... all over the walls and ceiling.
This is the largest space without any saucers or other picture:




We sat at the bar and the place was almost empty but filled up a bit before we left. Our server was a student and a very interesting young woman who was friendly and attentive, as we've generally found all of the bartenders on the trip.
We had a meat and cheese plate, which is fast becoming one of our favorite ways to keep it small and eat more often.

We learned a while ago that we can't eat in restaurants three meals per day. Breakfast is almost always a non-restaurant meal. Either Shredded Wheat and a smoothie if we're in a condo, or occasionally bacon and eggs(but still with a smoothie), or a hotel breakfast which is less than ideal. We try to have our own cereal also and avoid the white-flour-rich components.
By having an appetizer for lunch we can then enjoy a dinner out later. That one day we had a Whataburger but otherwise successfully avoided Fast Food for the entire trip, except in the airport where it is usually the most economical option and sometimes the only option early in the AM.
Other times we eat a big lunch and only nibble on leftovers and snacks at dinnertime.
We walked back to the car along the river.
We saw this plant:

We have this same type of bush in our yard. Here the purple berries are about 1/4"+, ours are less than 1/8".... must be the climate.




Here is a plaque on the actual 'Little Rock':
 And this page is someone else's blog all about the significance of it.

We saw these kids sliding down the man-made hill on cardboard.
I guess when you don't have snow you figure out another way.

Stopped in Clinton, AR at Walmart for groceries on the way to the condo at
Fairfield Bay, Arkansas. The roads leading to the resort and through it were very narrow and often steep; sometimes with deep gullies on either side. Pretty harrowing at times when you're not used to it but it must indicate how much water gets flowing when it rains.

We arrived around 4PM. Our condo was in the Mountain Meadows section over by one of the golf courses. It was nice and big. 2BR, 2BA, Full kitchen with table and big living room. Fireplace, hot tub and loft with 2 more beds. 3 decks with 6 sliders.

On a pedestal so no common walls with another unit. Here's another unit across the street from ours:

 Golf course view, and short walk to the clubhouse.


Again, when warmer, it would be lovely there. It was still nice, and VERY quiet.
A little water view across the driveway, beyond other units which would have an unobstructed water view.

Restaurant schedule is strange. Everything is closed by 8 or 9. On Sunday only one or two places were open. Most places are closed at least 2 days per week.
Went to go out to the Mexican restaurant at 7. Was supposed to be open until 8 but they were closed although still cleaning up inside. Next door was a pizza place that had lights on but looked very quiet.
They had a bar but no drinkable beer and no red wine at all. Their excuse was that is is Sunday, so I guess they were expecting a delivery at some point?
Even their menu was restricted to pizza. And it was not like any pizza from the Northeast. An odd crust and the toppings under the cheese. We got it to go and they didn't even have a large box, they had to put it in three small boxes... really weird.
It didn't taste bad though so we ate enough to be full.
We didn't have any logs for the fireplace but listened to music for a while.

Monday Nov 13
Healthy breakfast in the condo then drove around the resort. It is a huge place with lots of hills and hollers. one place is so steep it has gates so you don't get stuck at the bottom in the ice.... or flood. Drove around by the Marina and the camping area.


Ended up at the museum on the other side of the resort and walked to
Indian Rock.








As we walked along the scarp to we noticed many other caves but none as large as this one.

Next we drove to the market for fire logs and cold cuts. A very well equipped grocery and a 'dollar store' which was more like a Job Lot, not just stuff costing a dollar.
Went to the Mexican place for lunch. It was quite good and they had Bohemia.

Tues Nov 14
 We signed up for a boat ride on the Greers Ferry Lake that started at 9:30 AM. It seemed really early! We've been pretty lazy. The boat trip really didn't get going until 10 or so... at least it seemed we waited around for a long time. There weren't very many of us. Mostly people from Oklahoma. Maybe 10 of us in all.
The driver and guide runs the Marina. He's a local guy. He and his wife are both from the area and moved back after college. He described how all of the floating docks must be hand cranked when the water level changes. If it rains 1inch the lake will rise 1 foot! This explains the roadside gullies.
We found out the lake was made to help control the flooding in the area. One can only imagine what it was like for folks living in this craggy and wrinkled area.

Here is a view from inside the boat. On the right is our guide. The others are getting coffee and donuts. In the background you can see the rock scarp rising from the water and some houses at the top. There were lots of houses on the lake but it wasn't really crowded.



 Above is Sugarloaf Mountain from inside the boat with a reflection of our guide in the window.
The lake is huge. We only covered a small portion of it in 2 hours. 

Mexican lunch again. It was so good and other places seemed sketchy.
We spent the rest of the day at the condo.

Wednesday Nov 15
Our last day in the condo. A rainy day so we didn't do much. We finished up laundry, used the hot tub, and had a fire. We ate leftovers for lunch and went to dinner at the Little Red Restaurant. It was ok. Nice, friendly people as we found everywhere but the food was nothing inspired.



Thursday Nov 16
Got up and had a huge breakfast. Packed up and headed west. We arrived in Texarkana in the late morning/early afternoon. We visited the small but nice museum in the center but were stunned by how abandoned everything was.
Some lovely looking buildings but all closed up. Very sad.
I'd looked up the Perot Theater before we got there and hoped we could get a tour of it.
We went into the Box Office and lo and behold a lovely woman named Deb gave us a fabulous tour. So much history. Beautifully restored by Ross Perot's parents.







And had lunch at another Brewery restaurant right near the theater and where we'd parked in downtown Texarkana.
From the window of the brewpub we could see the art center across the street and the sign for the old Hotel Grim in the background.  There are plans to renovate it and hopefully the rest of this downtown area will begin to rise again.
Then to the Holiday Inn Express back by the highway. No need for dinner after the big and late lunch which was just amazing... Monte Cristo sandwich on a croissant with raspberry dipping sauce!


Friday Nov 17
Texarkana, TX to Holiday Inn Express, Grapevine, TX(near the airport)
Almost ran out of gas on the highway! Of course just when we needed it it was 15 miles away, but we made it.
Traffic on the way through Dallas was busy! Got to the airport and dropped off the car, then waited for the shuttle and got to the hotel in the mid-late afternoon.
Great dinner at the bar at Mi Dia in Grapevine. We were able to walk to it over the highway due to great sidewalks and pedestrian lights. There are a couple of restaurants grouped together here.
This interesting statue was outside:
It is a little difficult to see just how large this is!

It was pretty empty when we arrived and we got a good seat at the bar.


By the time we finished it was really hopping. Nice seating outside


but we were fine at the bar... it was actually rather warm outside.

Got back to the hotel in time for sunset.



Saturday Nov 18
Time to fly home.
To the airport, DFW->PHL, I had a nice conversation with the guy next to me. From PHL->BOS where we were in a smaller plane with only a seat A on the left and 2 seats on the other side.
Home before dark. Uneventful travel, best kind.
What a fun trip!































































Comments about timeshare:
 Although the timeshare purchase isn't an ideal fit for us, I think we've done a good job of making it work for us. It was great for relaxing when we both spent a lot of time at sea. It has brought us to places we probably wouldn't have visited. It will serve us well when we're touring the country.
We don't golf or ski or have kids. If you do, a timeshare might make some sense, but it doesn't seem particularly cost effective. I've found we can often rent the same unit we get with the timeshare exchange. It might be slightly more expensive, but considering the upfront purchase price, it is many years before it pays for itself. We are currently $X ahead/behind -*** calculate this!)



Tuesday, January 9, 2018

Mobee - our great white whale!


Our van.....
Purchased in Oct 2016
Ford F250 E-Series XLT
Looks like a whale so we call it Mobe-ee?
Thinking of painting a tail 'swoosh' on the back.

Before:
It has metal cabinets on the left, a wall between the seats and the cargo area, a plywood wall on the right, nasty flooring with a yucky rug pad hiding rust beneath!


 After:







What you can't see: Had the body rust repaired, new front brakes, shocks, tires and battery; radiator and transmission fluid change
What you can see: new floor, insulated with a fleece blanket; bed frame, headboard and storage beneath; 'kitchen' area with fold out table, solar powered battery, microwave, toaster oven, electric kettle dishes, pots and pans and storage. New seat covers, curtains, window and door screens. Exhaust fan in roof, also solar powered.
Still to come, t-shirt quilt by summer 2018... stay tuned.

Tuesday, July 4, 2017

Walk for Wil


This is the route 

Wil's friend, Chris, and I walked 

on June 20, 2017 

in memory of Wil 

on what would have been his 57th birthday






It is in Wellfleet, on Great Island. The red route, as depicted, is over 13 miles, however, the parking lot is at the northernmost point and the 2 miles to the east of that was the drive back to the cottage so it seems we walked about 11 miles!
Thanks to Chris for providing the data for the route and Google for the maps

Here's my recollection of the walk

written on Thursday, 6/22/17  

(Note: The photos are not mine but borrowed from the internet)


Today is crystal clear but on Tuesday it started out 'dreary' to say the least.
The forecast promised at least partial sunshine, for the first time since my arrival in Wellfleet on Saturday. Actually, there had been a few peeks of sun on a few afternoons but all in all it was not 'beach weather'.
Actually, cool and cloudy is ideal weather for the hike upon which we were about to embark. 'We' being Chris, my brother's close friend, and myself. 
An offer had been made to include others, but only a very few including Ted, who wrote the eulogy, seemed sincerely sorry to miss the opportunity. So be it. The weather, the fact that it was a Tuesday, and the truly daunting length of the hike is plenty of reason for most to beg off. This was really for myself. I was glad to have Chis along, though. I am not in very good shape and thought I might need a cheerleader, or even a rescuer to complete the hike.


Chris and I met a few minutes before noon, in the parking lot at the trail head, as arranged by email. We embarked at just about noon. Low tide would be at 2:30 so we had plenty of time, and we needed it!
I had hemmed and hawed about footwear and whether to wear my knee brace or not. I ended up in Birk's(vs sneakers and orthotics) and with the knee brace, which was a good idea as I was glad to have the support as the long trek wound to a close.

The first part of the walk is nice and pretty easy; descend newly repaired stairs through the pines to a circular 'track' around a tidal bowl. 

The tide is well on the way out and the bowl seemed mostly empty with lots of dry ground amid the marsh grass and the holes of fiddler crabs pocking the landscape. The crabs themselves are mostly hiding. 

The footing is solid but about 1/2 mile in, the soft sand begins as the wind-swept dunes break over into the path for about another half mile. Once fully into the dune, we notice the environment has shifted from low-tide swamp to pristine dune with completely different plant life. We see evidence where turtles have gone up into the dune to lay eggs. The symmetric pattern in the sand shows many 'paddle strokes' to get to a suitable nesting location.

 The path continues turning back into harder packed sand below the tide line. 



About 1.5 miles around the bowl(a little more than halfway around) the path to Jeremy Point cuts into the woods of Great Island, and the environment changes again to woodland, pine barrens. After a few hundred steps the landscape almost resembles something computer generated as each tree is so similar to the others. 
The gray trunks blending into a colorless curtain capped by a deep green canopy of pine needled branches, twisted and gnarled by the wind into grotesque shapes.

The path is a ribbon through the landscape, lined with a bright green carpet of moss and paved in white sand.

After being mesmerized by this unchanging environment for 20 minutes or so, we emerge into... another tidal bowl that looks remarkably like the first. 
Rather than walk this bowl, we took a chance on a path to the left,  which headed toward the 'inside' of the peninsula. as we made our way through the tidal runoff from the bowl, we saw a turkey buzzard flying low, a snake across the path, and a sandpiper feeding in the runoff stream. Moon snails were abundant here as well. We continued toward the point. It was a straight path across the sand flats, another environment which was dominated by plume worms.
This looks scary but is only a few inches long. The top part of the worm's tube is decorated with bits of shell and seaweed. The tube extends down into the sand a foot or more. When the water is high the worm comes up the tube to feed. At low water, the worm is deep in the tube. There are many of them but not so many they can't be avoided when walking barefoot.
The only thing between us and the point was vast stretch of sand flats and a rather relentless wind! I felt my heart pounding as we walked into it, south, toward the point.
As we approached it, I decided to hike diagonally up the beach to avoid the steep climb at the very end. A couple at the top was watching something. I got to where I could see a family of seals, a big bull, a cow and a silvery pup, so cute!
I couldn't get Chris's attention without making noise so the seals got startled and went into the water as he came around the end of the tall sand spit, the part that isn't covered at high tide.
We sat down facing west, toward Cape Cod Bay... another amazing landscape change! More sand flats but on this side HUGE ripples indicate a powerful flow as the water exits here.

 Chris wanted to explore further where it seemed the sand bars linked out to the remains of Billingsgate Island but I was already thinking of the long walk home and it was almost time for the tide to turn.
After eating I contemplated what to do with the necklaces of Wil's ashes I'd brought along. I originally thought I might fling one into the sea, or empty one into the sea, but in the end I decided to just emmerse them in the water at the very end where the water is deep. Where the seals had disappeared.
As I approached, both mother and baby popped their heads up to see what was I was doing. The baby seemed particularly curious, watching me with his soulful eyes and silvery head shining in the sun.

 I guess we know what Wil's toten animal is! Or is it mine?
* 
Hearing and balance are very important for a Seal totem. ... The Seal has an inherent sense of balance, and lives in the water but gives birth on land. Seals do not have external ears, but hear from within, which symbolizes our ability to listen to our inner voice.

*
We began our trek back, heading north along the 'outside' or Cape Cod Bay side of the peninsula. Sand flats quickly became covered with the rising tide. We passed some large boulders and the high cliffs of the Great Beach Hill.

At the base of the cliff were large clay deposits. The environment is now 'beach'. It looks a lot like the Atlantic side although the shallower water has a tamer feel even though we can't see the other side of the bay due to persistent clouds in that direction. The winds persists also. The weather seems stuck. A cloud line carves across Wellfleet Harbor, clear and blue to the Northwest, gray to the Southeast.
But it is a blessing because the wind is now at our backs and feels less intense until we turn to face it. A bright sunshine would make us feel rather hot.
We cut through the dune where Great Beach Hill meets Middle Meadow Marsh(aka, Bowl 2), and return through dunes to the marshy environment.

We re-entered the woods where we had exited the original path earlier. This time we veered off the original path toward the remains of a Tavern from the 1800's...

Samuel Smith, he has good flip, good toddy if you please, the way is near and very clear, ‘tis just beyond the trees


The only evidence of the tavern now is some rocks and a sign but there are also some pictures of an excavation they did there in the 1970's. I always wonder what the people were like who rowed ashore from their boats and walked through the trees to the tavern.
We sat atop a dune near the tavern site a looked out over the Harbor

I was weary! A sign said we still had 1.8 miles to go to get to the trail head! Yikes! or Oy! as I found myself saying more and more often. Eventually we emerged from the woods and back into the original bowl('The Gut' on the map above), the home stretch.... always the longest part of the hike. And we came out further around than where we'd gone in so it was even longer.
 Sunny now and not as much breeze, it was, at times, starting to feel like a slog. But we rested often and made our way along. My left foot didn't seem to want to work properly but I managed, although I felt I was walking very slowly. Chris was kind and patient with me. I can understand why Wil valued his friendship so much.
We got to the turn where the old road is accessible and went up that way. Solid footing helped going up the hill. I ended up barefoot most of the time as the strap of my shoe seemed to be causing pain. I did put my shoes back on as we got to the parking lot where there was a lot of loose gravel. 
We arrived there at 6:15! Wow! What an epic day! So many amazing sights sounds and smells.







Friday, April 14, 2017

60 years ago...





1957 - the year I was born.
Funny to have nostalgic feelings about a year I don't actually remember.
But somehow, when I was in high school, 1950's rock and roll nostalgia was rampant. My first concert was in about 1971 or '72; Sha Na Na playing at a local high school gym. We did Bye Bye Birdie for a musical that year and I sang backup in an attempt at a 50's band that never got off the ground.

So my friends and I are turning 60 this year and a theme party is coming up, a '1957' theme.
Everything from music to food to clothing styles.
I've offered my collection of 45RPM vinyl records and a record player(never throw anything away! :) )

...and to make some 'clip-on' necktie thingies I'd conceived in my head. Later I thought, why not just tie on a necktie? But I decided to try the idea I had.

I bought some plastic headbands and some necklace sized memory wire.


I dug out some white fabric and decoded and combined instructions from online and a book I had to make a white men's shirt collar, with the opening in the back. I combined the collar and band but maybe next time wouldn't do that.
Maybe I could make a band that is one piece across the front and stuff the collar part in the seam... seems WAY easier than the one piece I made at first.....


Also, in my first prototype I put stiff interfacing in both outside and lining which turned out to be too much. Second time around only stiffened one piece of the collar and none in the band


I had a bunch of ties but they were all wide.
I bought a few more online and they were wide also.
One I had was pretty skinny(then I did some research and it seems ties were not so skinny in 1957) so I used it for the first prototype.



I took my collar with the plastic headband going through it, tied the tie,
then slipped it onto the collar and tightened it.
It took several tries to get the tail short enough...
     I don't have much experience tying ties.

I ended up with extra tie fabric in the back and let it stick out.
After adjusting and fiddling I liked how it looked and cut the tie in the back.
I stuck the tails into the back of the collar and sewed it shut by hand.
It came out ok but is too stiff as I mentioned.



So for the rest of the ties I wanted to make them narrower.
It turned out to be relatively simple.

I undid the stitching on the back of the wide end of the tie, enough to make the interfacing loose, open the wide end of the tie completely, turn it inside out, and iron it flat.

Then I used the skinnier tie that I already had for a pattern on the interfacing and cut off the extra, up to the point where I could blend it in with the skinny end of the tie. I also cut off about 1/4" of the length but I'm not sure I needed to, it was just ratty.

I pinned the interfacing onto the tie and sewed a new point to fit the interfacing.

I turned the point right side out and folded the 'inside' side of the tie across the back and cut off any excess. Then I double folded the other side to cover the first side, making sure the new point shape is even.
Press and sew up by hand.

And it looks not too bad! Now I'll try it on the second prototype collar......



Voila!
How many of these should I try to make? I've got over a dozen ties but will poop out before I make that many.

I was also thinking of making some tie-on aprons. I don't think my mother had any left, but they should be easy enough to make a couple.
I could use this as a chance to learn more about my new Singer 7258 by trying the gathering and rolled hem attachments.

First try not all that great:

but not terrible either. Just a little small for me.
Remember when mothers had a dozen or so of these aprons, to cover their lovely dresses that they cooked in! There were even 'fancy' ones to use when serving, and holiday themed ones.
I have none of these from those old days. I have a couple of aprons but they have a bib and are more like chef's aprons.... mostly hand made though. :)









Tuesday, March 14, 2017

Another cute purse

My cousin sent me a link to a video to make this: cute purse



Here's the two I made so far:

A cotton one(my cousin might remember this fabric I bought while with her at Marden's in Maine):





And a silk one made from a recycled sari(it looks blue but is very purple. It was low light and raining outside when I took the picture):




Very quick and easy!