Categories
USA

Blue Ridge Road Trip

Folk Art Center near Asheville, Blue Ridge Parkway NC (Scarborough photo)Earlier this week I promised a separate post on my little road trip from south to north on the Blue Ridge Parkway in North Carolina. Of course, I promised it “early in the week” and it’s now Thursday night — sorry!

I’m home from the North Carolina research trip for Automotive Traveler magazine, but have had a deadline looming for an article on the Old Coupland Inn and Dancehall honky-tonk for Texas Highways magazine, so blogging’s been pretty light.

Finally, here we go….

As always when setting out on a road trip, get a good map. If you are a member of the American Automobile Association (AAA,) remember that you can swing by your local office and get a stack of no-cost U.S. maps and guidebooks.

For North Carolina, I also contacted the friendly folks at the NC tourist Web site and they sent a travel planning packet right to me.

Just Google “XYZ tourist Web site” when planning a trip, and you’ll usually get an official government-sponsored Web site instead of someone trying to sell you a tour or real estate.

I made a loop that started and ended in Charlotte, since I was in that city for NASCAR-related activities (and thanks to the current Carnival of Cities for featuring the related post!)

Enroute the Parkway from Charlotte, I stopped at author/poet Carl Sandburg’s house in Flat Rock NC, discussed in a bit more detail in my NC family fun post.

A map of my basic Parkway route is here. Make sure you gas up your car ahead of time, since there are no stations directly on the Parkway. Not that I didn’t follow this advice myself….:(

At just about the southern base of the Parkway, I spent the night in Balsam NC at the venerable 1905 Balsam Mountain Inn. If I’d had kids along, I probably would have made time for a trip on the Great Smoky Mountains Railroad and a family-style Southern meal at the Jarrett House Inn in nearby Dillsboro.

The next day, I was up and at ’em after breakfast, heading north. The Parkway has a 45 mph speed limit, which is terrible if you’re in a hurry and divine if you just want to see what the heck you’re driving through. I stopped at the Southern Highland Craft Guild Folk Art Center near Asheville; what a wonderful place. There are carefully-screened North Carolina craftspeople demonstrating all sorts of things (it was a broom-maker and woodworker the day I was there) plus stunning crafts to buy. I’m not sure how I escaped with my wallet intact.

The Blue Ridge mountain vistas on the Parkway were stunning, and fortunately there are plenty of designated overlooks to take it all in. Try to pack a lunch before you leave your hotel in the morning — really pretty picnic spots include Craggy Gardens and Crabtree Meadows, but there is also food available at Mount Mitchell, Crabtree Meadows and Grandfather Mountain (just off of the Parkway.)

Grandfather Mountain summit, North Carolina (Scarborough photo)

In the early afternoon, I found myself low on gas, needing a bathroom, needing food, and needing an ATM and contact lens solution, in roughly that order, so I managed to stumble upon a Wal-Mart off of the Parkway in the town of Spruce Pine. For heaven’s sake, get it together better than I did!

I would much rather have had a leisurely lunch in pretty Little Switzerland.

With kids, I would also recommend stops at Linville Falls and/or Grandfather Mountain. The falls are very pretty but you need to hike a ways to get to them, and Grandfather Mountain is privately-run so there’s a nominal entrance fee.

I think kids would enjoy seeing the small mountain creatures zoo at Grandfather, plus a walk on the Mile-High suspension bridge (those with vertigo need not apply.)

1820s log cabin guest house at Mast Farm Inn, Valle Crucis NC (Scarborough photo)

My Parkway journey ended near the town of Boone, in the tiny village of Valle Crucis, where I stayed at the lovely Mast Farm Inn.

A highlight of Valle Crucis is the sprawling old-timey Mast General Store, which is sort of like LL Bean in Freeport, Maine, but with tons more character. They even have little “gift packs” of RC Cola/Moon Pie or Coke/Lance Peanuts, “for the Yankee visitors” said the guy at the cash register.

Boone is home to Appalachian State University, so there are lots of inexpensive lodging/dining options for families. This is a big ski area in the winter, if you are into that. There’s also the family-friendly Tweetsie Railroad Wild West amusement park, especially for younger children.

This route took me a full day, and that was hustling without much time for stops. I’d certainly recommend at least two days if you aren’t a frenetic travel writer! It’s a beautiful drive and you don’t want to rush it.

Technorati tags: travel, family travel, North Carolina, Blue Ridge Parkway, road trip

Categories
USA

More family fun in North Carolina

Taking the rapids at the US National Whitewater Center -- don't worry; it's only 3 feet deep.  (Scarborough photo)My article research trip for Automotive Traveler is almost finished (check out the online magazine’s Issue Two, just posted) and here are a few more family-friendly nuggets that I’ve found in this part of North Carolina.

Obviously there are plenty of NASCAR-related activities in the Charlotte NC area, but I’d like to mention a couple of other worthy attractions.

You don’t have to be a big outdoorsy jock to enjoy the US National Whitewater Center, just outside of town. It’s the largest and only man-made recirculating whitewater venue of its kind in the world; 12 million gallons of water flow through it.

They offer guided rides in everything from two hours of flat river paddling (all ages, on the Catawba River) to rock climbing (age 4+) to whitewater rafting (ages 12+) to mountain biking on 11 miles of trails (no age specified, “technically challenging.”) You can rent everything you need right there, or bring your own gear.

The US Canoe and Kayak teams train here — pretty cool. It’s an amazing facility.

This past Sunday, I walked through part of Charlotte’s pretty downtown (did you know that it’s the #2 banking center in the US behind New York? I didn’t know that, either.) The very well-executed Levine Museum of the New South does a terrific job of detailing the rise of this area “from cotton fields to skyscrapers” using interactive exhibits and voice and music recordings. See the inside of a sharecropper shack, some original cotton mill equipment (this is the home of Cannon towels, among other mills) and a section of an old Belk’s Department Store.

At the start of my 3-day road trip on the Blue Ridge Parkway this past week, I stopped at the former home of noted author and poet Carl Sandburg, in Flat Rock NC.

He won the Pulitzer Prize for both his multi-volume biography of Abraham Lincoln and his poetry (“the fog came on little cat feet”) and his home is preserved by the National Park Service to look exactly as it did when he and his wife Lillian lived there, down to the period magazines, furniture and calendars on the wall. Lillian also raised championship goats on the property; kids love playing with their descendants, who are still there.

The Parkway deserves its own post, so I’ll do that early next week, although I did discuss a couple of neat mountain train rides over on Kid Trippin’, my family travel blog on Disney’s Family.com.

Tomorrow, it’s the Coca-Cola 600 race at Lowe’s Motor Speedway! The NASCAR site has all the details.

Technorati tags: travel, family travel, Charlotte, North Carolina

Categories
USA

Let’s go racing in Charlotte, North Carolina….

Cool zebra painting by Charlotte, North Carolina artist Tony Java!, on display at NoDa art gallery Boulevard.I’m going to be blogging sporadically over the next ten days, since I’m in Charlotte, North Carolina busily researching a combination NASCAR/travel article for an upcoming issue of Automotive Traveler.

For transportation, I’m zooming around in a Dodge Avenger, which is sort of a moderately souped-up sedan that just came out from Chrysler this year. The tie-in with NASCAR is the role that the Avenger is playing as the new Car of Tomorrow (COT) for many of the Dodge racing teams.

I may have interviews lined up with two of the more famous Dodge Avenger drivers — details to follow!

My itinerary is pretty jam-packed with both NASCAR events and investigating attractions that have nothing to do with stock car racing.

Last night I enjoyed dinner at the family-friendly Cabo Fish Taco restaurant, followed by a stroll through some art galleries during the twice-monthly Gallery Crawl in the hip NoDa arts district in Charlotte. NoDa is the “North Davidson Street” area of the city; it’s a National Register Historic District and former textile manufacturing hub (one of the mills has been converted to swank lofts and apartments.)

The galleries were fun and something that older kids would enjoy; I liked the caffeinated paintings by artist Tony Java! but am trying to save my pennies for next week’s Southern Highland Craft Guild Folk Art Center in the NC mountains.

I was particularly interested in the Neighborhood Theatre, which bills itself as a “non-smoking all ages live music venue.” I could hear famous white-haired blues/rock guitarist Johnny Winter wailing away in there last night, so I stood on the sidewalk for a minute and enjoyed my own mini-concert.

Dodge Avenger racing version (courtesy Daimler/Chrysler)

Today I’ll attend the NASCAR All-Star event (a fun race for big bucks) then tomorrow I’ll check out the Levine Museum of the New South for a cultural twist.

Monday is the US National Whitewater Center (if there’s a family-friendly angle there, I’ll post about it) and a visit to Pit Crew U, where they train members of NASCAR pit crews to magically refuel a car, change all four tires and make other adjustments in just a few seconds.

Tuesday I head out for a three-day road trip in the western part of North Carolina, driving up the Blue Ridge Parkway.

Friday through Sunday I’m back in Charlotte for racing activities and the big Coca-Cola 600 race on Sunday May 27th.

Whenever I can post, I’ll certainly try to get you some North Carolina family travel info “hot off the presses.”

Technorati tags: family travel, Charlotte, North Carolina, NASCAR

Categories
Blog Tips

Your Cruise Director Speaks

I’ve never taken a cruise, but have learned a lot about them from Wendy Perrin’s insights in both Conde Nast Traveler magazine and her blog Perrin Post. She ran a blog series fairly recently about the frustrations of taking her family on a big cruise ship and finding that some things didn’t quite deliver.

In fact, it was that series that really got me reading her blog and ultimately led to our meeting this past weekend at the SOBCon 07 blogging conference, with lots of gabbing and a fun dinner with her in Chicago. She’s such a wealth of knowledge.

If you want to read about cruising straight from the “bridge of the ship,” take a look at John Heald’s blog.

He’s the Cruise Director of the Carnival Freedom, and he takes the time to answer guest questions and offer anecdotes and stories. There’s even a Blogger’s Cruise aboard his ship in January 2008….hmmmm. 🙂

My previous cruises have been aboard gray Navy ships, mostly to the Indian Ocean, Persian Gulf, Western Pacific and Mediterranean, but I did post here about a memorable trip through the Panama Canal.

Here’s a great time-lapse video of a Panama Canal transit from the bow of a ship going through from the Atlantic to the Pacific….

The next quest is to figure out how to embed an actual video box into this post — apparently I’m in search of something called an API Key to do so. One of the inspirations from the great SOBCon bloggers was using video and podcasts, so look for me to try to figure that out over the next few months.

Technorati tags: family travel, travel, cruise, blogging

Categories
Blog USA

My kinda town….Chicago is.

Chicago skyline (courtesy Shane Bee at Flickr Creative Commons)Frank Sinatra sang that the Windy City was his “kind of town” (courtesy songwriters Sammy Cahn and James Van Heusen) and I have to agree.

This is just a quick post while I’m here this weekend for the fabulous SOBCon 07 blogging conference, which ends today.

We are out near O’Hare Airport, not downtown, but yesterday I did manage to run into the central Loop area on the “El” (elevated train, a transportation fixture here) for a couple of hours.

I’ve only been here once before, years ago, for a Navy engineering school at the nearby Naval Station Great Lakes. All that I had time for then was one afternoon walkaround plus an amazing outdoor concert with folkie Tracy Chapman and South African rocker Johnny Clegg.

This is such an open city, with rivers running through town, the ever-present breeze, polite people and amazing architecture. Do you know that I heard “Please, may I have….” about five times yesterday at various food service counters and transport stations? How nice, and unfortunately how unusual in some cities.

Later this summer I’ll be back here on a Midwest road trip with my teenager, and I promise to write lots of posts.

For now, you can see some Chicago info on my guest post over on Darren Cronian’s well-known Travel Rants blog in the UK. I highlighted five places in the U.S. that are off the beaten path; maybe they are familiar to North Americans, but they are not as well known to international visitors.

Besides Chicago/Door County, Wisconsin, I chose Providence RI/Block Island, north central Florida/Panhandle beaches, Portland/Astoria Oregon and Forth Worth/east Texas.

Stop by Travel Rants and visit!

Technorati tags: family travel, travel, Chicago

Categories
Blog

A 1000 Voices (well, over 370.)

I’ve been hopping over at one of my other blogs, the Perceptive Travel Blog, where I’m a co-author.

Dynamic Australian blogger Darren Rowse, who runs the ProBlogger site, has a Group Writing Project going on — I’m one of , oh, over 370 submissions so far on the topic “Top 5.” It can be “Top 5” of anything, which is great because that means an enormous variety of blogs can participate. 

My own post was Top Five Travel Blogs You Gotta Read, featuring the Perrin Post by Conde Nast Traveler magazine’s Consumer Travel Editor Wendy Perrin, hilarious travel writer Leif Pettersen’s Killing Batteries, Budget Travel Online‘s useful blog  This Just In…., New Zealand writer Liz Lewis’ My year of getting published and three blogs at CHOW, the online food magazine. 

For Day One and Day Two of the Project, I looked for posts that were travel-related, but since there were so many interesting ones, I got rather distracted.  For your reading pleasure, here are my faves:

Five gems: what makes a good pub?  by Michael Scott (well, of course I picked this one.)

Top 5 Steps to Securing your Data  by Geoff R (“got backup?”)

The Top Five Firsts of the First Two Years of the American Civil War by Mike Goad (this guy is seriously into the Civil War.)

Top 5 Techniques for Sermon Idea Generation by Sherman Haywood Cox II (a whole blog on being a preacher.)

Top 5 Reasons Why We Travel by Timen

Top 5 Spanish Tapas by Matthew Bennett

The Top 5 Reasons to Start Your Weight Loss Plan Today by JoLynn Braley Top 5 Reasons Freelancing is a Bad Idea by Mike Sieber

Top 5, mojich pät najlep’ích ucitelov by Peter Druska (’cause I have to give props to bloggers in Slovakia)

The Top 5 Reasons To Make Nova Scotia Your Next Vacation Destination by Bryan Henry

Top 5 Unusual Guitars Owned by Popular Musicians by Adam Ferguson

Top Five Languages I Would Like to Learn by Darrell Pursiful

The Top 5 Time Savers in My Kitchen by Maricar

Top 5 Gardening Tips by Kenny Point

Since Sunday, 13 May is Mother’s Day in the U.S.:  5 Gifts for Mom That Won’t Ever Go Out of Fashion by ispf

Jackie Chan’s Greatest Fight Scenes by Chris  (reminded me of Hong Kong.)

Top 5 Great Birding Moments by Trevor Hampel  (all over Australia)

5 Top Myths Foreigners Have About Ukraine by Alexander Radich

5 Top Things I Miss About Harare, Zimbabwe by Sharon

What Are Your Top 5 Travel Dreams? by Stacy

5 Reasons Queen’s Market Must Be Saved by Jon Tillman (an East Londoner’s point of view)

Top 5 DC Things To Do This Summer by Francoise Galleto  (Washington, DC) 

I’m a stranger here myself by Jul  (an expat sees her home with new eyes)

5 best places to go while visiting Acadia National Park by Norman Sargent  (a popular US park in Maine)

Top 5 Australian beach locations for the IT commuter by Vincent McBurney  (finding that life balance)

My Five Most Awestruck Travel Experiences by Steve Madsen 

Top 5 most entertaining foreign films of the last decade by Jithin Jerald

Top Five Strategies For Travelling Light by Graham Barker

and finally, Top 5 Monkey Songs by Martin Breton  (Obvious travel tie-in, right?)

Go ahead and read through them; I’ll wait here. 🙂

(This was originally posted at my Kid Trippin’ blog, on Disney’s Family.com.)

Technorati tags: travel, family travel, blogging, ProBlogger, Group Writing Project

Categories
Blog

SOBCon 07, for Successful and Outstanding Bloggers (you!)

I love blogging, especially the wonderful people I meet in the blogosphere.

It’s not surprising; bloggers are just writers online (with a somewhat different bag of tricks, to be sure) and since writing tends to be a solitary profession, the more gabby and social of us really enjoy the chance to meet fellow writers.  

This Friday, I’m flying to Chicago from Texas for basically one day of blog-o-mania.  It will be worth every penny and every moment of lost sleep — not to mention having dinner with Wendy Perrin of Conde Nast Traveler magazine, whom I convinced to drop everything and attend since she blogs at the Perrin Post.  I participated in a fun contest on her blog and did well enough to win a chance at dinner, and we found that our paths would intersect in Chi-town.

SOBCon 07 (for Successful and Outstanding Bloggers) will be hosted by community-builder Liz Strauss and a gaggle of extraordinary speakers and panelists.  One of them was even featured by a Business Week blogger….

In the May 08 issue of his column, Nussbaum on Design, Bruce Nussbaum shines the light on SOBCon and speaker David Armano.

“Blog conferences are proliferating and I think it’s because people are discovering that blogging – blogging with a purpose – is harder than it appears. This is a lesson that I’m discovering as I meander into the blogopshere. If you want to influence an audience, you actually have to know how.

And there is no better teacher of these skills than David Armano over at Logic + Emotion. David is talking this Saturday at SOBCon07 (who makes this stuff up?) about taking blogs to the next level.”

“If you want to influence an audience, you actually have to know how.”  Very true.

The Successful and Outstanding Bloggers Conference begins this Friday, May 11, with a great bang and fanfare. Check the Schedule Of Events for all the details.

If you haven’t registered, there is still room, so sign up now to ensure a seat in this jam-packed conference.

The conference is at the Hotel Sofitel Chicago O’Hare
5550 North River Road, Rosemont in Chicago.
Tel: (+1)847/678-4488

Need directions? Here’s the Sofitel Chicago O’Hare Hotel on Google Maps for driving directions.

The hotel is sold out but there are other places to stay nearby. Check the Accommodations list.

Some of the brightest blogging stars and experts in blog building will be at the conference, sponsored by Blog Herald, Blog Talk Radio, Evoca, Podblaze, MyBlogLog, TheGoodBlogs, Haneberg Management, among others.

The speakers include Phil Gerbyshak of Make It Great!, David Armano of Logic + Emotion, Andy Sernovitz author of Word of Mouth Marketing: How Smart Companies Get People Talking, Liz Strauss of Successful and Oustanding Bloggers, Mike Sansone of Conversations and BlogTalk Radio, Drew McLellan of Drew’s Marketing Minute, Mike Wagner of Own Your Brand, Rodney Rumford of PodBlaze, Ben Yoskovitz of Instigator Blog, Chris Cree of Success CREEations, Scott Rafer of MyBlogLog, Vernon Lun of The Good Blogs, Diego Orjuela of Evoca, Wendy Piersall of eMoms at Home, Terry Starbucker of Ramblings from a Glass Half Full, and many other blogging experts.

This is your last chance for this one-time blogger’s special event, so sign up now and learn how to take your blog beyond.

Need more convincing? Here is what others have been saying about it:

What more do you need? See you there!   

Technorati tags:  blogging, travel writing

Categories
Blog Europe

Tips for Tuscany and the ProBlogger Guy

Duomo di Siena, Tuscany, Italy (courtesy Geo8 at Flickr Creative Commons)If you want some fresh, no-holds-barred advice on travel to Tuscany (my post on Pisa/Florence with kids is a bit long in the tooth, although I try to add links with updated info) look no further than the Tuscany lists.

It’s Leif Pettersen’s latest post on his trenchant Killing Batteries travel writing blog.

Leif is usually offering up his expertise in Romania and Moldova, among other garden spots, but thanks to a scheduling glitch with Lonely Planet‘s guide to Tuscany, he’s been able to live the “high life” (not!) updating the LP Tuscany guidebook.

He’s definitely become one of my Five Travel Blogs You Gotta Read, which is the post I did for the Perceptive Travel blog as a part of Aussie Darren Rowse’s latest ProBlogger Group Writing Project.

If you’ve never participated in one of these Projects, and you’re a blogger or like to read blogs, get your self over (Down Under?) to the fabulous ProBlogger site and check out the Project.

It’s a no-brainer for fun and bloggy traffic.

If you participate in his Group Writing Project, and follow the directions, Darren generously links up to your blog and your post. Now, if you’re a biggie like LifeHacker or something, that’s no big deal to you. But if you’re like most of us, toiling out here in the hinterlands with pretty good traffic but not blowing anyone away, a couple of big fat links from ProBlogger are a nice gust of exposure.

Even better, you’ll find hundreds of new blogs to enjoy, and they will find you.

Technorati tags: travel, blogging, travel blogs, ProBlogger, Group Writing Project

Categories
Tips

Home-swapping, house rentals….anything but a hotel

I’ll have to admit, this is an idea that I haven’t personally tried (but would love to!)  

Everyone knows that hotel costs can really eat into your vacation budget, especially with a family.  The kind of low-end semi-flophouse that might have seemed terribly adventurous to a single, backpacking traveler is just not going to cut the mustard when you travel with kids.  Those tiny little garret rooms for two in Paris simply do not fit three or four.

The concept behind couchsurfing/hospitality exchanges creates real opportunities to meet people and travel to all sorts of places, but at this point in its development, couchsurfing appears to be geared towards singles.

I’ve been reading a lot lately about home exchange programs — there’s an article here on the new Disney site Family.com.  Home exchange companies like Intervac have been around a long time, and there’s great information on my RSS feed from the Travel the Home Exchange Way blog, part of UK company Home Base Holidays.

If you don’t want to go the swapping route, then investigate renting a home during your travels. My blogging compadre Darren Cronian of Travel Rants also runs a home/villa rental business, Worldwide Holiday Homes, with a variety of properties available across the globe.  The Perrin Post has a whole section on villa/apartment rentals.

You can even get close to the land and explore agritourism farm stays worldwide, or maybe take your house with you in an RV.

Think beyond the hotel room next time you travel.

Update 7 May 2007:  The ever-useful Budget Travel Online has an article on unique hotels and alternative lodgings.

Technorati tags: travel, family travel, home exchange