Showing posts with label gardens. Show all posts
Showing posts with label gardens. Show all posts

Thursday, May 5, 2016

Amsterdam in the rain, Raleigh in the sunshine

Cold and Wet Amsterdam.

I was in Amsterdam in April with the rain that would bring the tulips and other bulb plants to this hub of the floral trade. Fortunately, my plan was to see the newly renovated Rijksmuseum and as many as possible of the smaller museums that I had never had time to visit much less explore. Rain kept me on course except for one day when sun had me making a beeline the glorious Keukenhof Gardens.

Pannier supreme at the Rijksmuseum.








The Rijks is better than ever, with a well-lit spacious atrium lobby and more spacious exhibition spaces

Vermeers are wonderful but don't miss other collections at the Rijksmuseum.
Give yourself time to inspect beyond the Rembrandts and Vermeers. I was surprised to find there was a costume collection, not to mention how good it was.

Amterdam's canal houses are fascinating.
Visiting smaller museums has two benefits. You can see some amazing things and in many cases, you can also see the insides of the city's famous canal houses.

The best way to do both: go to the Museum of Bags and Purses and the Van Loon Museum.



 Purse Museum













As you walk through the purse museum you see not only the trends and art of superbly decorated bags from the 16th century to present day designer beauties, but two period rooms where visitors can enjoy lunch and high tea.




The Van Loon Museum


















The Van Loon Museum is authentic and period throughout, from front entrance to gardens and carriage house in the rear. The van Loon family were among the founders of the Dutch East India Company and prominent members of the highest Dutch society.

Micropia showcases and explains microbes.
For something entirely different try Micropia, the world's only museum of microbes. Trust me, it's fascinating for kids and adults. The little "bugs" that get us down or keep us going are not only powerful, some are pretty and colorful.

Keukenhof is unbelievably beautiful.
Speaking of colorful, if you get a sunny day don't miss Keukenhof Gardens. Designed to showcase the best of each season's bulb plants developed in the Netherlands, it is closed and dug up in September and reopened in April with all new designs. Spectacular isn't powerful enough a word to describe the array of color and glories there.

Downtown Raleigh.
Warm and worth a visit Raleigh.

It was sunny and breezy in Raleigh, NC, a surprisingly interesting city with a lively arts community and a thriving food scene.

Symphony in rehearsal.
All of the arts are booming. The North Carolina Symphony is filling also concert halls all over the state as well as in the handsome concert hall downtown. Keeping it company is CAM the non-collecting Contemporary Art Museum, where the exhibits change every 16 weeks. Admission is a nominal $5 but no one is ever turned away for lack of it. Best of all, middle school students are taught to be docents, giving them public speaking skills and art education as well as hefty doses of self confidence.

Artists find studio and gallery room and camaraderie and everyone finds classes and workshops at Art Space, a re-purposed 1911 livery and car dealership.

Rodins in the reflecting pool.
Beyond downtown, the North Carolina Museum of Art sits amid a 164-acre park with sculpture, a theater and a separate building for special exhibits. Consider it a must-see, with its history-spanning collection strong in pre- and Renaissance work of Giotto and Botticelli, the 29-statue Iris and B. Gerald Cantor collection of Rodins and 20th century modern and contemporary art.Time your visit for lunch at Iris, the museum's excellent restaurant.
Iris
Now that food has been cited, here are two that impressed me. Raleigh Beer Garden is perfect to while away a casual, balmy evening. The variety of local, regional and imported brew is expansive and the food fits it to a T.

One of many delicious courses at Babylon.
Inside or out, Babylon is a treat. Moroccan to the core, thanks to its ebullient owner Samad Hachly and his long-time French chef John Paul Fontaine. Everything from decor to food is impressive. Entrees run $14 and up, but splurge for the Moroccan sampler at $45 per person; your taste buds will thank you.

Wherever in Raleigh you go, take a ride on a pedicab. "Drivers" work for tips alone and know all about their city. Fun way to go.

Golden Isles specials. 

Jekyll Island Club Hotel
It's a good time to plan some time at Jekyll Island Club Hotel. From May 31 to August 4, room rates are 20 percent off.  Packages include the July 4th celebration, July 3-5 or July 4-6, with daily breakfast buffet and annual cookout at the Morgan Center, $689 for two nights, double occupancy. August 1 to September 1 Escape for $250 a night with Clubhouse or Traditional accommodations,  a four-course dinner for two in the Grand Dining Room or Courtyard at Crane Cottage with a bottle of signature wine, still or sparkling.

Kids Cooking Camp convenes June 26-29 with three days of breakfast buffet, a welcome reception, hands-on cooking classes, education in kitchen safety and food handling, chef demonstrations, a graduation dinner and two tickets to Summer Waves Waterpark and Georgia Sea Turtle Center. Cost is $999 for one child and one parent. Relax at a Yoga Retreat Weekend August 5-7 led by Savannah Yoga Center's founder Kelley Boyd, $539 single, $699 double.

Discovery Days are coming at Little Simons Island. During Shark Days, July 10-15, guests join shark researchers from the University of North Florida, Georgia Department of Natural Resources and NASA  to learn about Georgia's sharks. Two spots on the special charter boat fishing trip July 14 are included in the special $1,999 inclusive package for two. Three days without the fishing trip is $1,425. Taxes and 18 percent service charge are extra.

During Turtle Days, July 17 to August 18, the 100 Loggerhead Sea Turtle nests on the islands's 7 miles of beach are expected to erupt with newly hatched baby turtles heading out to sea. Guests get to learn about monitoring techniques, participate in post-hatch nest evacuation and data on and data collection and possibly watch hatchlings go from nest to ocean.he Afieldst

Polar Ice, Bears and More.


Want to go where almost no one else does? Explore Franz Josef Land, an archipelago of 191 islands in the high Arctic, now the Russian Arctic National Park. Poseidon Expeditions is your only way in and space is still available aboard the Sea Spirit July 7-20 and July 30-August 12 sailings from Longyearbyen, Svalbard, starting at $7,295.

Don't forget your long johns.





Thursday, July 23, 2015

Maritimes, Maine and more

Snowbirds head south in the winter, southerners return the favor in the summer. Try these destinations I recently visited in Nova Scotia, New Brunswick and Maine.

Nova Scotia. 

Liscomb River.
Get away from it all. Liscombe Lodge Resort & Conference Center offers cabins or rooms, all with great views, a dining room that serves delicious food with views a bird watcher will love, heated pool, marina and a friendly staff. A two-hour drive from Halifax will put you amid trails galore. En route you will pass folk artist Barry Colpitts' eye-catching house and workshops. Nearby, Sherbrooke Village recreates an 19th century river town.

Halifax
Have it all. Halifax offers dramatic history, a bustling downtown, memorable food colorful wharf, scenic trails and outdoor recreation. Don't miss the Maritime Museum or the Museum of Immigration at Pier 21 a short walk away along the waterfront. Westin has nicely renovated the historic Nova Scotian Hotel which is well located for exploring the city.

Lobster and scallop boats at Digby Harbor.
Scallop capital of the world. You will find lobster, too, from the fishing fleet at Digby. The town is quaint, there's a fun walking tour with "Admiral Digby" and it is surrounded by a plethora of little towns, coves, bays and places to visit. To the north, Annapolis Royal is a charming town with a Historic Garden for strolling, excellent restaurants and a ghost tour that many enjoy. To the south, the Acadian Center, Rendez-vous de la Baie, and the tallest wooden church in North America. All are on the famous Bay of Fundy complex. Digby Pines Golf Resort and Spa, a haven for visitors since 1929, is an elegantly comfortable home away from home from which to explore it all.

Ferry across the Digby Gut to....

New Brunswick

Kingsbrae Gardens.
... where we made a beeline to The Algonquin Resort in St. Andrews-by-the-Sea. Opened in 1889, this commandingTudor-style hostelry added a golf course in 1894, and is an ideal spot from which to explore the wonderfully named Passamaquoddy Bay area. You could spend a day roaming beautiful and welcoming  Kingsbrae Gardens, and don't miss waiting for the tide to recede for the drive to Minister's Island or sign on for a whale-watching excursion.

Maine

Lucky Catch's Capt. Tom measures a lobster to see if it is a keeper. It wasn't.
Time and rain limited exposure to Portland but it has become a foodie magnet with 300-plus restaurants, most chef-owned and/or independent, for its population of 66,000. The Public Market is a co-op of dealers in delectibles, Dean's Sweets (try a Needham) is a chocolate lovers paradise, Gritty McDuff's is the city's first brew pub, handsomely packaged oils and balsamics attract cooks to Vervacious and Vena's Fizz House is the hot headquarters for flavored bitters and bartending secrets. A highlight was a trip on the Lucky Catch lobster boat with its hands-on lesson in catching lobsters. Follow that with a stop at Fort Williams Park and the Bite Into Maine food truck, a locals' pick for best lobster roll.

Nubble Lighthouse at Cape Neddick.
Ogunquit is the quintessential Maine coastal town and nearby Perkins Cove will remind you of the fictional Cabot's Cove of "Murder She Wrote." Treat yourself to a lobster roll crawl and definitely include stops at Lobster Shack, the oldest restaurant in Perkins Cove; Jake's Seafood (the full-bellied clams are great here, too) in Wells, and Shore Road Market & Restaurant,www.shoreroadrestaurant.net.
Walk it off with a jaunt to Nubble Lighthouse at Cape Neddick. If you can snag a ticket, by all means catch a performance at the famous Ogunquit Playhouse. Perfect headquarters for it all, although you won't want to leave it, is the venerable Cliff House Resort & Spa overlooking the rocky waves and crashing waves.

Maine Lobster Festival

 Celebrate the crustacean July 29 to August 2, 2015, in the towns of Rockland and Camden, located in Penobscot Bay.

This year's festival expects to serve up 20,000 lbs of Maine Lobster and 1,700 lbs of Cabot butter. Special entertainment includes a Lobster Parade on Saturday, August 1 complete with lobster floats and a marching band. www.mainelobsterfestival.com .

 Family Fun in the Fjords


Kids Sail Free in Patagonia
Book a three- or four-night all inclusive trip through spectacular Patagonian waters in December 2015 with Australis by Oct. 31, 2015 and one child (age 17 or under) per adult comes along for free. Rates per adult for the three-day cruise are $1,895; $2,298 for the four-day.
www.australis.com.

Jekyll Island Idyll

Book a weekend getaway for two at the historic Jekyll Island Club Hotel, Jekyll Island, GA, Aug. 2-Sept. 1, 2015, and accommodations plus a five-course dinner for two with a bottle of signature wine are $250 a night.
www.jekyllclub.com

Dolphins frolic in Jacksonville's St. Johns River.

 Win a Vacation for Two to Jacksonville, FL

Like to share your vacation photos with friends? Bask in a a bit of green-tinged envy? Have we got a contest for you.

One lucky person will be the winner of Visit Jacksonville’s interactive summer postcard contest “Vacations Should Be Shared.”

Five easy steps does it. Create it, Post it and Win it!

1)  Go to www.VisitJacksonville.com  and click on the contest logo or go to www.visitjacksonville.com/vacations-should-be-shared.
2)  Choose your postcard theme: Beachy, Artistic or Ticket.
3)  Customized your postcard with Visit Jacksonville’s memory-worthy #OnlyInJax images.
4)  Add a message to your postcard. Tell us why you would love to win a vacation to Jacksonville.
5)  Then share your postcard on social media, ask your friends to vote and start packing your bags!

The “Vacations Should Be Shared” contest will run from July 22 until August 23 and winners will be announced August 25. All the postcards generated during the contest will be available for public voting on Visit Jacksonville’s website. The postcard with the most votes will be the grand prize winner of a vacation for two to Jacksonville. A second and third place postcard will also be selected for prizes.
For more on the prizes and the rules of the “Vacations Should Be Shared” postcard contest go to www.visitjacksonville.com/vacations-should-be-shared.
 

Friday, August 5, 2011

A Splashy Geogia Deal

 Albany lemurs


What: Albany, GA, "Wet, Wild and Away" family getaway package.

Deal:  One-night stay at any of six participating hotels, breakfast for a family of 4 plus four tickets to Chechaw animal and adventure park, Flint RiverQuarium, Thronateeska Heritage Center, Albany Museum of Art, Albany City Rights Institute and new Radium Springs Gardens starting at $124.

Dates: No expiration set.

To book: Contact a participating hotel.

Merry Acres Inn                     229-435-7721        rates from $124

Comfort Suites                      229-888-3939                          $129

Best Western Albany             229-446-2001                          $130

Hilton Garden Inn                 229-888-1590                          $139

Country Inn & Suites             229-317-7100                          $140

Wingate by Wyndham          229-883-9800                           $142