Thursday, April 23, 2015

Tenting



When we crossed the border into Canada, it was sunny and very warm. What a great welcome!

But it didn’t last. In true Canadian style, the rain and cold came back, and even hail and snow flurries. I guess it can’t let us forget what we tried to get away from in the winter time.

But because the fickle ways of Canadian nature means that winter could return for some last blasts anytime before the end of May, open campgrounds are scarce. And even the open ones rarely let you hook up to water. You only let the water connections freeze solid once before you realize that it’s easier just to shut the whole system down.



We were very lucky to find a campground that would let us stay for a week just north of Peterborough. 

It was made clear, however, that we would have no services. No electricity or water would be provided. 

In other words, we would be sitting in a great big aluminum tent. On wheels.







Over the years, hubby and I have done a great deal of tenting. When we were young, we even enjoyed it.  

Sleeping on the cold, hard ground, and warming yourself on a log so close to the campfire that your shoes melted was fun in those days.

Bathrooms with walls were an adventure best enjoyed quickly. And in those days, we could.







Now, we are sitting in our aluminum “tent”, on a cold, snowy day. Snow is building up along the truck windows. 


The trees are bare and rattling in the wind. What birds are here are puffed up against the cold. 

It would be a perfectly miserable time to be outdoors.







But we’re not. 



I am sitting comfortably on my couch, with the heat on. 

There is electricity from the battery to run the furnace, the fridge, and the lights. We have just finished breakfast cooked indoors, and eaten indoors.

 I have used my warm indoor bathroom to brush my teeth and wash up with water from our holding tank.







Best.  Tent.  Ever.

W


Friday, April 17, 2015

A Monumental Small Town


We have just come from Washington DC, a very large city, with numerous monuments and statues strewn throughout its environs. They seemed to be everywhere, but in fact there can be a good mile or two between some of these special places.



Not so for Gettysburg. In a rectangular area of 3 by 5 miles, there are over 1,400 monuments, statues, and plaques.

This little town was the spot where two armies met and had a small disagreement. The resolving of this argument left about 51,000 men dead or wounded – all of them around or within the town that only had a population of 2,500.









The town is larger now, thanks to a bustling tourist industry. It has roads specially designed to carry cars and buses in a pattern built to display the most number of monuments in the most efficient manner and still not disturb the townspeople’s lives.










Most people drive or take a tour bus, but because the area of interest is small, there are other ways of getting around to see everything. There are bicycle tours, horseback tours, and segway tours. I would even suggest walking except that there are no sidewalks outside of town. Besides, you do enough trudging over fields and rocks to get to some of the statues that you really don’t need the extra exercise.




The statues are in places depicting where certain generals or other important people died or did an act worthy of noting.  Since battles do not stay nicely on the clean roads and paved drives, you sometimes find these works of art in remote areas, like right in the middle of fields or hidden in the woods. 











Monuments and plaques are put where a regiment held its ground, with smaller stones on either side showing the right and left flanks or the rear. Really, you can literally trip over them, there are so many.













And then there are the cenotaphs, often huge monuments to the soldiers of each state. These can be graphic or whimsical, ornate or simple.


Interpretive signs will detail for you all the tactical strategies that the officers used as the battle raged. And also any errors in those strategies, and failures that occurred due to mistakes made. In short, far more than I had ever wanted to know about war.







It is admirable that the government has kept most of the battlefield out of private hands, and with buildings and fences just as they were during the battle in 1863. It gives you an idea of what obstacles the infantry and cavalry faced during advances, charges, and retreats.











They have also set up the cannons where they would have stood during battle, aimed out over the fields and hills.













The only thing “new” is the cemetery. It was created a few months later, to give the Union soldiers a proper place to be buried. The poor Confederates were shipped home or buried in a group. 

But even the “winning” team had so many unidentified dead, that most of the stones in the cemetery just have the word “Unknown” on it, or sometimes only a number.










Ok, we all know the words, so let’s sing it together:


 

War, huh,
Good God, y’all
What is it good for?
Absolutely nothin’……



W

Sunday, April 12, 2015

A Slice of Cherry Pie

It was the best time to be there, it was the worst time to be there. (Apologies to Charles Dickens)


We came to Washington DC to see the cherry blossoms, and indeed, it was the perfect time to see the cherry trees bloom. 

We watched as the trees started out bare, with no leaves and barely the nubs of buds. Despite optomistic newspaper predictions, we thought we had misjudged our timing.










But over the span of just one week, clusters of these tiny, fragile blossoms began appearing on the stark branches. A tree that we had not even noticed earlier in the week would be bursting with petals by the time we left.

 But we learned an important lesson.

In the north, March break is in March. In much of the States, it seems, Spring Break can be the second week of April. So, in our northern ignorance, we visited Washington, DC at the height of its tourist season.






We experienced masses of blooms and masses of people. Simultaneously.


But although we came for the cherry blossoms, we stayed for the man made attractions.










When it comes to monuments, the capital of the United States does it right.

Every day, for six days straight, we journeyed into the core of the city to see something amazing. 











Considering that we used transit each day, and that it cost us a small fortune over the week, it was a good thing that all the museums and monuments were free to the public.













We started out with the obvious. We walked the National Mall to see the Washington Monument, the Lincoln Memorial and the White House.

The Mall is just a big long park, with grass and geometrically shaped ponds. It appears to be well used by walkers, picnickers, kite flyers, and bike and segway riders.








Well used, and well loved, much like this Charlie Brown kite tree that we found along the way. 

Kites on the top, kids on the bottom. Actually, an apt description of the National Mall, too.











The Lincoln Memorial is breathtaking. Right from the moment you climb the long, long set of stairs, up to the time you see the much-larger-than-life statue of Abraham Lincoln, surrounded by his most famous speeches. 

You recover your breath just in time to go back down again. And those steps are steep going back down.












We spent a day at the Arlington Cemetery and saw the Iwo Jima Memorial, surprisingly set outside of the cemetery grounds.
















Perhaps it is only proper that they saved the space for the soldiers that deserve it.











During a night tour we saw the monument of Martin Luther King, Jr.  With 2 large granite rocks framing the entrance, and the sculpture of King carved out of the matching third, it was just as impressive as if we had seen it in full light.











Then there were the building tours. The Capitol building tour was incredibly efficient, even with the other 15,000 people that toured it the same day we did. 

The 5 pubs that we checked out during the week were not nearly as crowded, but just as satisfying.











Although we stepped into four different museums of the Smithsonian complex, it was the first that was most memorable. The Air and Space Museum was packed stem to stern. It was the perfect time for the power to go out, and for the authorities to declare an evacuation of the building. It gave us time to have a drink at a pub nearby, and to return to find much more elbow room than before. They should have done that all week.












We didn’t have nearly enough time to properly view the museums. We got a taste of some, but plan to come back so that we can really savour them again at a slower pace and discover several more.


Just like the cherries. A slice is not enough when there is a whole pie to enjoy. W


Saturday, April 4, 2015

Southern Hospitality



After spending a few days in a swamp, we stopped for a week in higher country in the northwest corner of South Carolina. On a good day, you can see the Blue Ridge Mountains from the high point of Spartanburg.  Ah, yes.  Yet another place we would like to travel. 


We didn’t stay too close to the city, but rather visited with friends outside of town. They live in the country on a lot with several acres of woods. I was told to watch my step if I took a walk, as they have had copperhead rattlesnakes at times. Given the colour of the fallen leaves under the trees, I understand how easy it would be to accidentally step on one.









Our trailer was parked right outside their kitchen garden. There were several birdfeeders beside us, well used by the sparrows, cardinals, and even a couple of wild turkeys.


We met this couple when we traveled on our caravan down the east coast. A true southern gentleman and southern belle, we really enjoyed their company. It was difficult not to imitate the lovely soft drawl in their voices. It is such an attractive sound.





A long, curvy driveway leads to their beautiful one story brick house. It's the end of March, spring is starting to come to this part of the country, and the tops of the trees are beginning to show green. There is a "barn" beside the house, a specially built garage to hold their Airstream motorhome, wood shop, tractor, and assorted other toys.

These lovely people invited us into their home and their lives with no hesitation. I certainly hope they didn’t regret it.





I especially hope they didn’t regret mentioning to Hubby that they were tired of the carpet in their motorhome, and would like to have a wooden floor like ours. Four days later, it was done. Even with the laid back attitude of this southern state, it is hard to get my man to relax.


Meanwhile, we got to experience real southern grits, southern sweet tea, and pulled pork BBQ. In turn, we prepared spring rolls, stir fry, and pancit for them.





Our trailer stayed happily outside their barn while the men toiled in their man cave. The women enjoyed several excursions in the city.  We shopped, attended Garden Club with other southern ladies, and waited in a line of at least 140 cars for the grandchildren to get out of school so we could pick them up. They do have school buses here, but they do not appear to be popular.

It was nice to experience a real southern lifestyle. It's even nicer that this charming couple says they would like for us to come back again.




It is the people we meet that make our travelling life so very interesting.

We are very glad we met these ones.

W