Categories
50 State Series

Family travel in Virginia

My son in Jamestown VA aboard the Godspeed, with the Susan Constant in the background (photo by Sheila Scarborough)Every Tuesday (this week we’re a day late – sorry!) until we run out of states, I plan to post about family-friendly travel ideas, attractions and events in each one of the US states, taking input mostly from Twitter and Facebook.

We’re going in alphabetical order but started with the end, so our first state for the series was Wyoming, then we investigated Wisconsin , West Virginia , Washington and now we’re moving on to….Virginia!

These guys are HOPPIN’ online  —  you can find their state tourism organization on Twitter at @VisitVirginia plus @VATourismPR, and here is the Virginia travel and tourism Facebook page.

Their state parks folks are on Twitter at @VAStateParks. There is also a Virginia tourism YouTube channel, the Virginia Flickr pool and a whole site for Virginia Green Travel.

When I asked for ideas, here’s what came in….

Twitter Travel Tips for Virginia

From Dwight Silverman via @dsilverman on Twitter  —  [Virginia Beach’s] Capt. George’s Seafood Buffet is good for kids. Huge amounts of good food; my sister calls it “Capt. Gorge”. She lives in VA Beach.

From Nancy Schretter via @KidTravel on Twitter  — Virginia’s my home state. Two of my favorite VA parks for families are Lake Anna and Smith Mountain Lake. They’re fabulous!

From Jenna Schnuer via @JennaSchnuer on Twitter  — Here’s one of my favorites – and definitely a great family travel spot. Link is to my WorldHum piece about [the Clinch Mountain’s Carter Family Fold dance hall, with old-time country and bluegrass music]  The Most Joyous Place in the World.

From @jayne52 on Twitter  — My favorite place: Arlington National Cemetery, so moving, & historical Tomb of the Unknown Soldier. Kennedy gravesite esp. at holidays.

From Char Polanosky via @charpolanosky on Twitter  — Williamsburg, Busch Gardens, Great Wolf Lodge, Water Country USA make for a great family vacation in VA.

Categories
Photos USA

Photo of the Week: Fun but icky Colonial medicine at Yorktown

colonial-era-medical-procedures-yorktown-victory-center-bfw-scarborough-photoNothing like a semi-gory discussion of 1700’s battlefield medical procedures to make kids appreciate the simple comforts of a modern FluMist squirt.

At the Yorktown Victory Center in Virginia, there are all sorts of kid-friendly demonstrations like this one on Colonial-era doctoring, and as a bonus, this coming weekend is a special two-day Yorktown Victory Weekend to commemorate the American Revolution’s Battle of Yorktown.

There will be encampments with reenactors, demonstrations and interpretive tours – you can take one of my favorite fall scenic drives, the Colonial Parkway, to get there.

Just keep that scalpel and those tooth-pullers away from me, okay?

Categories
Photos USA

Photo of the Week: Lunchtime in Colonial Williamsburg

Chicken pot pie at the King's Arms Tavern, Colonial Williamsburg VA (photo by Sheila Scarborough)This is the chicken pot pie served at the King’s Arms Tavern restaurant in Colonial Williamsburg, Virginia.

Don’t you want to jump right into it?

Anyone can eat at the taverns in the historic area (you don’t have to buy the admissions pass to the other exhibits, buildings and performances, although I’d certainly recommend that if you have time.)

Try Christiana Campbell’s, Chowning’s and Shields in addition to King’s Arms;  they all have children’s menus (and pssst….Tarpley’s store nearby has old-fashioned candies if you don’t want a tavern dessert.)

If you want to stay in Colonial Williamsburg and truly immerse your kids in Revolutionary history, always check on the Web site for special packages that usually include hotel, breakfast and passes for everyone.

For example, I love the interactive street theater of the Revolutionary City mini-plays that reenactors stage all over the historic area, all day. Your family can participate in them with the Revolutionary City Adventure package.

Mostly, just make an excuse to get ahold of some of that pot pie.

(This post is my contribution to this week’s WanderFood Wednesday on the Wanderlust and Lipstick blog.)

Categories
USA

Getting nautical at Nauticus in Norfolk, Virginia

Nauticus National Maritime Center in Norfolk, VirginiaThe Nauticus National Maritime Center in downtown Norfolk, Virginia is a family-friendly travel destination for anyone who is interested in seafaring.

An interactive history, science and technology center, it features hundred of exhibits, including deep ocean exploration, US Navy history and NOAA’s “Science on a Sphere” weather display.

There is also a shark petting lagoon and a 2000-gallon touch tank (with a new horseshoe crab family!) that is quite a hit with young kids.

A zippy AEGIS Command Center lets visitors see a narrated, simulated engagement using much of the display equipment that is currently installed aboard Navy AEGIS destroyers and cruisers.

The 887-foot-long battleship Wisconsin is permanently docked adjacent to the main Nauticus museum building, and you can climb around on a lot of it, both topside and below decks.

There are often special events and exhibits, and on January 21, 2009 there’s a day of educational programming just for homeschoolers.

The city of Norfolk (adjacent to Virginia Beach – the whole region is called Hampton Roads) has a promotional right now called “Half-Off.”  Family travelers can get 50% off of admission to many popular city attractions (including Nauticus) and some restaurant discounts by booking one night at participating hotels, until January 31, 2009.

I’ll bet you anything that given the current economic client, they’ll either extend that offer or come up with a similar one, so contact the Norfolk CVB at (757) 664-6620 or click here for info on tourist special offers and packages.

Remember that this is a heavily military area, with lots of bases and Department of Defense facilities, so military families may have options available in temporary lodging. For more details, I like the military recreation facility books by retirees Ann and Roy Crawford: Military Living.

Update: I forgot to include a link to this excellent article by Budget Travel on other things to do and see in Norfolk VA.

Categories
Photos USA

Photo of the Week: Hey, doll face!

Dolls in period costume for sale, Colonial Williamsburg, Virginia (Scarborough photo)

These dolls were in a box in an outdoor, tented market stall on Duke of Gloucester Street in Colonial Williamsburg, Virginia.  Vendors in Colonial dress were selling all sorts of related gizmos – penny whistles, tri-cornered hats, butter churns (OK, just kidding on that last one.)

I have photographic evidence of my teen daughter wearing a replica of a late 1700s women’s cap, also for sale at the stall, but I can only push the Blogging Mom thing so far!

Check the Colonial Williamsburg Monthly Specials page for deals on lodging and admission, and the Calendar page for upcoming events and focused tours for children, like a chance to be a pretend trade apprentice (like a weaver or silversmith.)

Related posts:

Categories
Blog Photos USA Video Posts

Video of the week: Colonial Williamsburg

Earlier this year we took a family press trip to Virginia’s “Historic Triangle” (Colonial Williamsburg, Jamestown and Yorktown) and our tourguides gave us a disposable digital video camera to play with.

The CVS disposable costs about US$30 and then another US$12-13 to develop, but it did motivate me to film without my usual over-analyzing and artistic angst. Once I show you the good clips from it, I’m going to start using the video mode on my Kodak digital camera, for better video quality.

I’ve never had a video camera, so I made all of the usual newbie mistakes: panning/moving the camera too fast so that the resulting video induces vomiting, simply forgetting that I had the thing in my purse, and then not getting around to getting the clips off of the camera and onto my computer.

With great fanfare, I’d like to announce that in addition to filming a little video clip of me with a laptop camera, I actually drove over to my local CVS pharmacy yesterday and got the contents of the camera onto a DVD. I popped the DVD into my laptop and voila — a whole lot of “OMG, I forgot I filmed that!”

So, here is my first attempt at doing a little travel video work for Family Travel’s Photo/Video of the Week — it’s a short narrated clip from July 2007, taken on Duke of Gloucester Street in front of the King’s Arms Tavern in Colonial Williamsburg.

(1/12/08 – The original video seems to have somehow disappeared, so here is a link to it on YouTube in case it drops out again….)

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6uAza9uCLKM

Categories
USA

Colonial Williamsburg: a homeschooler report

Last month I put up a post announcing Home Educator Week in Colonial Williamsburg, Virginia, and one of our homeschooling readers seized the opportunity to take her two kids and immerse themselves in Colonial America for a day.

I thought you’d enjoy Lydia’s fun report (complete with her son in a tri-cornered hat) on her Little Blue School blog: Colonial Williamsburg in Inappropriate Shoes.

The next special educational event is African-American history programs throughout February 2008, and the next Home Educator Week is February 20 — March 5, 2008.

Technorati tags: travel, family travel, homeschooling, Colonial Williamsburg

Categories
USA

It’s Home Educator Week in Colonial Williamsburg

Colored yarns at the weaver's, Colonial Williamsburg, Virginia (Scarborough photo)

For those of my readers who homeschool, next week (September 17-21, 2007) is the designated “Home Educator Week” on site at Colonial Williamsburg, the 1700s living history museum in Virginia that my own family visited earlier this summer.

The Home Educator Week information sheet lists all sorts of places that you can visit and the role that they played in America’s Colonial daily life.

There are tradespeople like weavers and the wheelwrights (who kept carriages and wagons on the move) that you and the kids can watch in action, and the info sheet tells you who’s doing what and on which day.

For example:

“If you make your way back to Duke of Gloucester street you will find the Blacksmith ready to meet your needs Monday through Sunday from 9-5.  Directly across the street, visit the Print Shop in the mornings from 9-1, and the [book] Bindery in the afternoon from 1-5.”

There are also special learning programs this week at the Museums of Colonial Williamsburg. For example:

September 19

** 10:30am – Wee Folk – meet in the museum’s Introductory Gallery. This program is geared to children ages 3-7 and their adult friends. Participants explore the galleries through stories and activities. 45 minutes.

** 3:00pm – Crack the Code – meet in the museums’ Education Gallery. See if you can Crack the Code as we investigate various Secret Codes used during the [American] Revolution. One hour. Geared for ages 8 and older.

If you are there during this event, don’t miss musician Dean Shostak and his glass armonica (invented by Benjamin Franklin in 1761.)  He’ll play it and other instruments in concert on Wednesday, September 19th at 11:30am and 1:30pm at Williamsburg’s Kimball Theater.

If you can’t make it to Virginia, there are electronic field trips and other teaching resources available, including a teacher’s e-newsletter.

Related post:

Technorati tags: travel, family travel, homeschooling, Colonial Williamsburg

Categories
USA

Explore before you go with travel video

Get it on film (courtesy Dom Dada on Flickr's Creative Commons)

Online video is a great concept, but I rarely have time to sift through the thousands of clips to find the good stuff, and then spend time watching the clips.

(You will never get me to confess my addiction to finding old 1980s Van Halen music videos and watching David Lee Roth jump around, no matter how many pointy objects you stick under my fingernails!)

Still, the idea of exploring a place through video before you travel there (or nostalgically looking at stuff after you return) has a lot of appeal.  I thought I’d try a little experiment from our family trip to Virginia and see what sorts of videos I could find to highlight some of the places that we visited.

My inspiration was a post at Brave New Traveler called 5 Places To Watch Free Travel Video Guides.

**  At GeoBeats, they feature non-US destinations, but they’re still in beta so I’m sure the offerings will expand.   I was immediately distracted by their numerous videos for Hong Kong, which as you know is probably my favorite city in the world.  There is plenty to see for London, Paris, India, Italy….go check them out.

**  Zoom And Go has a ton of clips, submitted by members called “Travel Reporters” (membership is free.)  That means that quality will vary greatly, but I was impressed with the level of professionalism of many of the videos; people really seemed at ease in front of the camera and they did a nice job splicing together scenes and music.  Some videos were rather jerky, but not intolerably so.  I was excited to find Shellseeker‘s gallery of photos and a few videos from Colonial Williamsburg, one of the places we visited in Virginia.  The little thumbnail boxes with a “play” arrow are the videos, and the rest are still photos.  She made a video of a lady singing and playing the pianoforte at the Peyton Randolph house.

**   I cannot recommend the Traveler Videos site, which basically aggregates video content from a variety of other sites. It was too slow and clunky, my computer froze up a few times, and many of the linked sites seemed very commercial.  I’d rather watch a regular person’s humble efforts to capture a place than deal with pop-ups and ad-packed sites.

**  The Travelistic video site was fun, and I found some unique twists on places we’d just visited, like this more urbanish/hip-hop video about Virginia Beach, made with a local guy who’s a poet.  Older kids would like it — he talks to skateboarders and surfers, and the video is made in the winter so you see the Virginia Beach oceanfront when it’s devoid of tourists. 

**  Obviously the granddaddy of online video is YouTube, and when I searched the YouTube travel section for Virginia I did find some good items among the weird, dumb ones like “Girls with Guns.”  There was art and culture in Norfolk VA, a nice long one with music about Jamestown, and when I searched for “Colonial Williamsburg” I got a long group of video links.  How about a short clip of the costumed Fifes and Drums as they march down Duke of Gloucester Street

More and more tourist Web sites and CVB (Convention and Visitor’s Bureau) Web sites are featuring podcast and video, and this part of Virginia is no exception. 

I found this page of Colonial Williamsburg-related audio and video, including a high-bandwidth video about Revolutionary City, which is sort of an ongoing living history play about the Revolution that is performed out in the streets of Williamsburg where visitors can enjoy it.  

National Geographic magazine did a big article about Jamestown and I found a page of video links about it (mostly talking heads, so not that great for kids, but full of info.) 

The Jamestown Settlement site has two Flash videos, one about the 1607 voyage of the colonists from England and another about Powhatan and Pocahontas.

I will confess that I’ve never owned a video camera myself, but we had a small one-time-use digital video camera with us on this Virginia trip.  I kept forgetting that I had it until finally on the last day, I filmed a few scenes in Williamsburg and discovered that I loved making little movies.  Once I fill up the camera and have it developed I’ll try to upload a few scenes to the blog, and I plan to keep practicing by buying another one for our upcoming road trip to Chicago. 

If I really do continue to enjoy filming, then I guess it’s time to start pricing video cameras for when I hit the lottery.  Meantime, enjoy surfing for travel videos; I certainly did.

Technorati tags: travel, family travel, travel videos, Virginia

Categories
USA

George Washington Fought Here: Yorktown

Yorktown Victory Center Colonial Army encampment (Scarborough photo)I’m going a little bit out of order here as I post about our family trip to Virginia; after my Historic Jamestowne write-up I was going to cover the living history museum at Jamestown Settlement, but decided to cover Yorktown next.

Now that we’re back home in Texas, I have a little more time to catch up on my blogging before my daughter and I turn right around and leave next week for our road trip to Chicago, where I’m speaking at the BlogHer blogging conference. Yes, it IS a good thing that I drink a lot of coffee!

Yorktown is set up much like Jamestown; you get a two-fer. There are the original sites, administered by the National Park Service, and then “living history museums” where reenactors and recreated places give visitors the flavor of the 1600s (Jamestown) or 1700s (Yorktown.)

It seems silly and duplicative at first, but when you see the original sites such as Yorktown Battlefield and Historic Jamestowne, it begins to make sense to put the larger museum buildings and re-created spots a slight distance from the historic parks because of space constraints and the need to protect the original areas and allow ongoing archaeological work to continue relatively undisturbed.

At Yorktown, we visited the Yorktown Victory Center, which includes a re-created Colonial Army encampment, a post-Revolution 1780s working farm and an extensive museum with galleries and a film. Our time was fairly limited, and even though I’m a terribly geeky plaque-reader who willingly reads every word of every plaque if there’s time, we had to move along quickly.

Visitors initially pass through the gift shop/tickets/Welcome building (horsewhipping children away from buying stuff and reminding everyone to go to the bathroom) and follow a pathway that lays out the timeline of events building up to the American Revolution.

For my international readers, the bottom line is that Colonial Americans did not like paying taxes without having some say in how they’d be taxed, what would be taxed and the amount, particularly when it came to their tea (hence, the 1773 Boston Tea Party when they dumped three hundred chests of tea into Boston Harbor to show their pique.) Many Colonials certainly considered themselves good British citizens until they felt that they were treated as second-class persons, then they got their pantaloons in a twist.

A Colonial Army soldier calls the troops to muster at Yorktown Victory Center (Scarborough photo)My seven year-old son actually paid more attention than I expected to the Yorktown Victory Center’s many displays, dioramas and “Witnesses to Revolution,” which were audio recordings made from original documents of those who lived in the times.

My teenage daughter also enjoyed the Center, but she felt that the featured short documentary film A Time of Revolution was a rather dry presentation of “a bunch of people talking” about their feelings and impressions of the Revolution.

The impressive museum galleries just went on and on, with a wealth of information about the course of the Revolutionary War and the events and converging of armies that led to Yorktown and the American victory (with considerable French help via Lafayette) over the British General Cornwallis.

I tried to give my son the ten-second summary — it’s a miracle that we won the Revolutionary War. George Washington fought an excellent insurgency with limited resources against a powerful, better-equipped foe. He didn’t have many outright victories, and he withdrew often to “fight another day.” His insurgency is taught at our nation’s graduate-level military War Colleges; I spent a week studying it while a student at the US Naval War College in Newport RI.

Since we won against a great power, Britain, using a well-executed insurgency, you’d think as a nation that we’d understand such warfare a little better than we do, and we’d understand that massive firepower and manpower do not always mean victory. I hope this lesson at least got through to my kids.

My teenager in costume, Yorktown Victory Center (Scarborough photo)The Colonial Army encampment at Yorktown Victory Center had numerous costumed historical interpreters and a small “tent city” with reproductions of period furnishings and accoutrements.

Interpreters did an excellent job of interacting with visitors, conducting musketry demonstrations, describing 1700s battlefield and dental surgery (one word — ick!) and showing how the soldiers were trained to fight.

We had less time on the working farm, but it was nicely laid out to show the crops, outbuildings, farm animals and challenges of small farmers, again with costumed and exceptionally knowledgeable interpreters. The assorted chickens and other farm fowl running around were a big hit.

I really like the living history concept, because it is so difficult to get kids engaged in the past unless you can engage their imaginations, which is hard to do in the standard museum setting.

Spend some time in Yorktown, and your children may actually pay attention in their school’s American History classes.

Technorati tags: travel, family travel, Yorktown, Virginia