Wednesday, May 16, 2007

Day 10: It's a wrap


After traveling across the Mid-Atlantic states for the past week and a half, it's time to go home and wash my socks.

As I sit in the Washington Dulles airport waiting for my flight and taking advantage of the T-Mobile wi-fi, I'll update one last time before this blog comes to an end.

This morning I stopped by the new National Air & Space Museum at Dulles. It's an addition to the one on the National Mall in D.C. and much cooler. They've got a lot of great planes: An Sr-71 spy plane, an Air France concord, the Enola Gay and the space shuttle Enterprise. I was disappointed to find out this wasn't a real space shuttle. It was only used for training. That sucks. But, there was lots to look at.

More photos here

It's been a long trip. I probably could have cut 2 days off of it and still saw everything I wanted to see. I drove my rental car about 1200 miles and charged up a storm. Saw my buddy Dave yesterday and got to hear some of his amazing stories as a White House photographer. If you think any of us have crazy, hectic lives - you're wrong. He does.

Sorry about not updating yesterday. I got hate mail from Brad G. today for not blogging. I took the day off and didn't shoot anything.


National Air & Space Museum

Highlights of the trip: Gettysburg, Wright Brothers Memorial, Mount Vernon, Murphy's Irish Pub and the National Air & Space Museum.

Disappointments of the trip: Jamestown

--30--

Tuesday, May 15, 2007

Day 9: Nothing to see here

This is going to be very brief and w/out photos. I took a quick trip into D.C. today and visited the Natural History Museum. After a couple hours there, I came back then hung out with my college buddy David the rest of the day.

Tomorrow I head home. But first I'm going to stop by the Air and Space Museum at Dulles Airport. It should be real good.

Monday, May 14, 2007

Day 8; My dogs are tired


It was an action packed day today.

Photo gallery here

First, I headed about 10 miles south to Mount Vernon, the home of George Washington. For some reason, I thought Mount Vernon was in New York. Anyway, it's a great place. It's amazing how much original items and structures still exist from 1799. I was surprised to find that George and Martha are entombed there.

I toured the grounds for a few hours, had lunch then off to stop #2.



Next on the agenda was a stop at Arlington National Cemetery. I've been to a number of military cemeteries, but this place was so impressive. The main highlights President Kennedy's grave and the Tomb of the Unknowns.

I got to the Tomb just in time to watch the changing of the guard then stuck around for a while to shoot photos of the guard on duty make his march back and forth. Luckily, everyone watching showed a lot of respect and kept their mouths shut and their cell phones off.


Afterwards, I headed next door to the cemetery and visited the Iwo Jima (Marine Corps) Memorial. Joe Rosenthal took a helluva photo that looks incredible as a statue.


With still more daylight to burn, I headed about 20 miles south of town to Manassas National Battlefield. I'm starting to think that all battlefields are beginning to look alike. Well, they actually do look alike. Still, they are impressive to see. The battle at Manassas was the first battle of the Civil War and the a defeat for the Union.



After a long day, I finished off the day again at Murphy's Irish Pub for grog and grub.


Remember the other day about when I expressed my love for Golden Corral, this story affirms it.

Observations from the day:
File this under "not ever seen in the South Bay" a dead deer hit by a car in the middle of the freeway just outside of D.C.

Tomorrow: I'll head into the city to visit sites I missed 4 years ago. Also, lunch for sure at Old Ebbitt Grill for the best burger ever.

Sunday, May 13, 2007

Day 7: The Road through Richmond


Happy Mother's Day mom!

I took off this morning from Williamsburg in some rain. The first rain of the trip. I got out of town just before the Prez arrived at Williamsburg.

I headed to Richmond, the capitol of Virginia. I visited the American Civil War Center. It was a real nice informational museum about the Civil War. Learned a lot of things about the war. Things I probably learned in school, but quickly forgot.

After the Museum, I went a short distance away and went to the Hollywood Cemetery. It's the home of former Presidents James Monroe and John Tyler as well as Confederate President Jefferson Davis. The odd thing about this place is that the former U.S. Presidents graves are right next to each other and, with the exeption of Monroe's, blended in with all the other graves. There was nothing special about where they were buried.


After the cemetery, I headed out of town to the battlefields outside of Richmond. This is where, for a week, the Confederates chased and beat the Union army. There wasn't much to photograph, but it was an interesting drive.

After Richmond, it was north to Alexandria. Traffic was heavy most of the way north. Pulled in to my hotel, a quick call to mom then off to old town Alexandria for dinner. Since it was Mother's Day and the place was packed with moms looking for dinner, the choice for me was obvious. Murphy's Irish Pub. I was confident that no kid would take their mom to a pub for dinner. I WAS RIGHT. The Guinnesses was cold and the fried clams were good.



Observations from the day:
After a week on the road, I finally saw my first graffiti. There may have been some before, but I didn't notice it. I pulled into Richmond, VA and there it was. On the walls and signs. Feels like home. Richmond could be a really nice city, but it needs a power wash and a fresh coat of paint.

Tomorrow: ??? I don't know. Either I'll take the Metro into D.C. for the day or head in the car to Mount Vernon and Arlington.....

Saturday, May 12, 2007

Day 6: Hot, muggy and crowded


Whew. What a day. Spent about 5 hours at the historic Jamestown Settlement where, 400 years ago today, the first English settlers built the first colony.


After parking at one of the 7 sattelite lots, lining up and taking a shuttle about 6 miles to Jamestown, we were dropped off into a sea of humanity. My fears were coming true. It was very crowded. It was hot. It was muggy.



The worst part was seeing the media parking lot right at the entrance. That's where I should've parked. VIP treatment is what i'm used to. I don't like paying for things when the media gets in for free. Oh well, I wasn't working. I saw plenty of news photographers working throughout the day. None looked thrilled to be there. Of course, I've never met a journalist who wasn't complaining about something.


I toured the visitor center, the settlement area with the recreation of the fort then boarded another shuttle bus for the historic Jamestowne site and the archealogy that's still being done today. I couldn't really make any photos that I really wanted because of the crowds. I had to settle with just snapshots.

Photo gallery here

Tonight I'm off to an Italian restaurant then perhaps back to Pints and Pipes or Hooters for drinks.

Observations from the day:
If you're walking in a sea of people with everyone heading in one direction at a nice flow, for God's sake, don't stop in mid-stream to look at your map. This causes human gridlock. Pull to the right out of foot traffic then look at your map.

There is a certain segment of our society that are notoriously bad drivers. A certain sex and a certain ethnicity. They are all over L.A. and you can spot them just by their driving techniques. It turns out they are on the east coast too.

Tomorrow: Head to Washington D.C. (actually Alexandria, VA) with possible stops in Richmond and Mt. Vernon.

Friday, May 11, 2007

Day 5: Delightfully Tacky.....


Hooters motto starts with "Delightfully tacky...." but at the Williamsburg, VA Hooters, they are just moderately tacky. Following Chuck's suggestion, I visited my neighborhood Hooters for some wings and a few Sam Adams. I kept looking for the hot waitress. Every Hooters has 2 or 3 hot ones and the rest are just delightfully skanky. Well, I guess the hot ones in Williamsburg are off on Friday nights. Anyway, the wings were good, beer was cold and the chocolate fudge cheesecake was one item too many. I'm stuffed.

Maybe if I go back tomorrow the hot waitresses will be there. Or is that just wishful thinking?

Day 5: Kill Devil Hills



Photo gallery here

I spend the day at the Wright Brothers National Memorial in Kill Devil Hills, NC. Took about 2.5 hours to get there, but worth the drive. I'd love to spend some summer time here on the Outer Banks of North Carolina. It seems to be the place everyone comes to hang out on the beach.



The memorial consists of a 60-foot tall monument on top of a hill which overlooks the exact spot that the lads from Ohio flew their Wright Flyer including markers showing how far their first four flight went.




After touring the site, I took a drive further south to Nag's Head and walked out to the beach. It's amazing how different the two coasts are. In N.C., residents build their own fences and wooden platforms and stairs on what seems like public property. You can't do that in California - unless you live in Malibu and ignore the California Coastal Commission.



Photo gallery here

Observations from the day:
I spotted my first mullet today. Very exciting. It was in its native habitat too - riding shotgun in a Ford truck. I didn't get a good look at before it slipped out of sight, but I'm nearly positive it was the North Carolina species I've heard so much about. He was quick and flighty, but dag nabit, there it was.
Traffic in Norfolk sucks just as bad as L.A. There was a five mile backup getting back today through Norfolk. The radio people made it sound like an everyday occurrence.

Tomorrow: Colonial Jamestown as they celebrate their 400th anniversary tomorrow.

Thursday, May 10, 2007

Day 4: The ghetto Sizzler



Photo gallery here

After getting my A/C working in my room (still no wi-fi) I took off for some dinner. I passed by a Golden Corral (a sort of ghetto version of a Sizzler). I had eaten at one years ago and thought it was pretty good. Boy have they changed. They're still ghetto, but now they're a buffet. All the other fat people and I lined up like cattle to get in, slap our $9 down for an all-you-can-eat extravaganza. Meatloaf, mashed potatoes, steak, mac-n-cheese, salad, and anything else you could want. Finished it off with hot fudge ice cream. It was disgusting. Delicious, but gut-bustingly disgusting. There's nothing healthy in that place whatsoever. If I could swap the Torrance Souplantation for a Golden Corral, I'd do it in a second.

As if I wasn't full enough, I went across the street from the "Corral" to Pints and Pipes Scottish pub for a few Guinnesses. mmmmm. I played the electronic trivia game against some regulars and kicked their Confederate asses.

I'm glad I bought my ticket to Jamestown for Saturday because I found out that Pres. Bush is coming here for a visit on Sunday and it will be a traffic and access nightmare.

Observations from the day:
It's weird to walk into restaurants and bars and find people smoking. It's been so long since I've experienced that in California. Good news is that I can light up a big, fat cigar and enjoy my Guinness.
There are so many trees and wooded areas here. I think all the trees in the desert we call SoCal have been paved over with concrete.
I haven't seen a mullet hair cut yet, but plenty of people missing teeth.

Tomorrow: I'm driving down to North Carolina's Outer Banks and will visit Kill Devil Hills, the site of the Wright Brothers first flight. I spotted a Hooters in town tonight so guess where I'm having dinner tomorrow.

Wednesday, May 9, 2007

Day 4: What? No wi-fi?

I just checked into my hotel in Williamsburg, VA and much to my chagrin, they don't have wireless internet (wi-fi) here. Barbarians. They've got a brochure announcing high speed wireless, but nothing's active. I'll have to have a chat with the front desk. Also, the AC isn't working and it's hot and muggy. I'll have to talk with them aobut that as well.

Spent the day driving from Maryland to Williamsburg. Stopped at Fredericksburg, VA and toured the battlefield. There's still a house riddled with bullet holes from one of the battles that destroyed the town in 1862.

More to come.

Day 3: Gettysburg and even more monuments



Photo gallery here

If I thought Antietam had a lot of monuments and statues, you should see Gettysburg. Ai yai yai, there are over 1300 monuments alone. Plus, there are many more markers and placards.

Anyway, I took a short drive from Frederick to Gettysburg, PA to the National Military Park. I pulled into the visitors center and the place was full of tour and school buses and a ton of kids on field trips. I wanted to turn around and go back. I don't want any runny-nosed kid mucking up my photos. It turned out not to be a problem. The place is so big that everyone just spreads out as they tour the sites on their own from their vehicles.


One of the cool things to see are the areas of the park that were photographed after the battle. The famous photo of the dead "sniper" at Devil's Den taken by Alexander Gardner is perhaps the most famous faked photo ever. The photographer dragged the dead Confederate soldier from about 40 yards away, propped a rifle against the rocks and shot the photo. Were there no ethics back then. Of course I've dragged dead bodies into different positions to make better photos. Who hasn't
Gardner's photo from 1863

My photo of the same spot in 2007

Over the 3-day battle of Gettyburg from July 1-3, 1863, 51,000 Americans were either killed, wounded or missing. Antietam was the worst single day battle and Gettysburg was the worst battle ever fought on U.S. soil.

It's afternoon now and I'm beat.

Photo gallery here


Last night I went online to check my hotel reservations in Williamsburg, VA and then checked out the Jamestown website. The same Jamestown that the Queen of England visited the other day. I was hoping all of the hoopla would be over. WRONG! It turns out that this weekend is their big 400th anniversary celebration. Crap. That means big crowds. I had to buy my ticket in advance (triple the normal price). Found out where to pick it up at will call and which parking lot I need to park at in order to be shuttled in to Jamestown. Since they are anticipating huge crowds, the regular parking lot is closed and there are 8 shuttle equipped park and ride lots. Wait, it gets even better. It turns out Ricky Skaggs is performing the same day I'll be there. Not the day before or the day after, the exact SAME day. How awesome is that! Aw Crap.


Observations from the day:
Why would a kid - probably 16 or 17 - wear a heavy, wool Union "uniform" and hat to Gettysburg. It was way too warm for that. I mean, great, you're a Civil War buff, but relax kid and have a good time. Leave the uniform at home.

Tomorrow: Travel to Williamsburg, VA

Tuesday, May 8, 2007

Day 2: Monuments and Statues

School kids visit the New York Monument at Antietam

This is quickly becoming the summer tour of monuments and statues. I mean they are everywhere. And if there's not a statue or monument, then there's a historical marker telling you what happened on that spot 145 years ago. History is everwhere.

I got up very early and was out by 8:00. I was surprised that I only had to drive about 1/2 mile to Monocacy National Battlefield. I think I can actually see it from my hotel window.
This was the site of a July 1864 battle which stopped the advancing Confederate army from crossing the Monocacy River and eventually reaching Washington and is referred to as the "battle that saved Washington D.C." There's not a lot to see at the site. Mostly statues and monuments (of course) which are spread out over several acres of the battle site. There's also empty farm land and farm houses that got caught in the middle of the two armies.


After about an hour of touring Monocacy, I made the drive over to Sharpsburg, MD and the Antietam National Battlefield. This was the site of the bloodiest single day of the Civil War.

On September 17, 1862, 87,000 Union soldiers came upon the 40,000 Confederates who had dug in defensive positions. The battle lasted all day and no army really gained or lost much ground, but there were 23,000 killed or wounded soldiers left on the battlefield.

It's amazing to stand on the same spot where 145 years ago over 100,000 men were engaged in this huge battle. Even though nobody really won the battle, the South took it as a defeat because it stopped them from advancing North into Union territory. Also, photographer Alexander Gardner took those famous photos of the dead lying in the field two days after the battle. When published, people were shocked because it was one of the first times people could see the carnage of war instead of just reading about it. It helped sway public opinion to end the war as soon as possible.


Photo gallery here


After a couple of hours at Antietam, I headed to West Virginia to Harper's Ferry. The town holds a lot of historical significance in the Civil War as well as the efforts to free the slaves. It's very well restored and maintained, but it was kind of boring. I didn't shoot many photos and walked around for a little more than an hour then headed back to Frederick .Greetings from Harper's Ferry

Photo gallery here



After I got back to the hotel, I decided to check out the Frederick Keys minor league baseball team. They were playing the Kinston Indians.
The cheapest ticket at a Dodgers game: $10
The cheapest ticket at a Frederick Keys game: $8
Beer at Dodgers: Free in the press room after the game
Beer at the Keys: $8 for 12 oz.
Attendance at the Dodgers: 46,000
Attendance at the Keys: maybe 250
Better value: hmmm, let me think.


After the game I headed into town for dinner and then stopped by Frederick's only Irish pub for a Guinness or two.



Observations from the day:
I have yet to see a house made with stucco or an Hispanic person. All houses are made with bricks and most of the people are white. Where are all of the Latinos? I miss them. There's a Mexican restaurant in town, but I dare not go inside if there are no Mexicans working there making the food. They probably pronounce their tacos with a hard A as in tAcos.
There are a lot more bugs flying around than I'm used to.
Also, my shower sucks. A little water pressure would be great.


Tomorrow: Gettysburg, PA

Monday, May 7, 2007

Day 1: What the hell am I doing in Maryland


Off to an early start with a non-stop flight from Long Beach to Washington Dulles. When I boarded the flight I spotted a small baby in the row in front of me. I thought I was screwed. Luckily, the little person didn't cry the whole flight.
Whew!

Landed about 4:45 pm, got my rental car (a new Mistubishi Eclipse sports car), ran a red light leaving the airport (oops, I was still trying to figure out the car) No harm, no foul.
The good news is I remembered to bring my GPS navigator. What a great invention. Plug it in, tell it where I want to go and off I went to Frederick, Maryland. About an hour drive from Dulles.


One goofy thing I noticed on the airplane is an ash tray in the lavatory. What? Who puts an ash tray in a place where they warn us not to smoke? I realize the plane was built in France, but I don't think even the chain smoking French are allowed to smoke on planes. The funny thing is that there were ashes in the tray.


After checking in to the hotel, I searched the internet for restaurants, then it was off to downtown for dinner. I went to a micro brew/restaurant. It wasnt' bad, but it wasn't great. Had pulled pork sandwich and salad. Hefeweizen and Indian Pale Ale.

Observations from the day:
Beer costs the same, but gas is $2.95
I probably passed 100 antique stores on the way to Frederick. In L.A. you pass 100 Starbucks.
Everything is green and there are woods everywhere.
Signs with silhouettes of leaping deer have me worried.

Tomorrow, the actual vacation begins. Off to Harper's Ferry in West Virginia and several other sites.