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Author: April Pearson

Excuses, excuses…..

Excuses, excuses…..

It’s been nearly another month and still no posts.  Well, there is one, but it never got finished or posted, so that can’t really count.  The excuse?  We were traveling…a lot.  We are now back home and I promise to try and make, at least, one post for every destination along our route.

Today is an overview.  We left on Saturday, September 22.  We crossed Kentucky lengthwise, a pretty but uneventful drive.  After turning south at Lexington on !-75, we stopped for lunch in Richmond, KY to visit with my granddaughter, Tracy.  From there we went to Pigeon Forge, TN and checked into our hotel.  We stayed in the Smokey Mountains until Monday afternoon, then went on to Charlotte, NC.  We spent Tuesday and Wednesday in Charlotte, visiting with my youngest daughter, Jamie and her family.  On Thursday morning we moved on down to Charleston SC for the Combat Camera Reunion.

We were in Charleston until Sunday, at which time, we headed north with a stop for lunch at Fayetteville, NC where we found a Subway restaurant in a train station.  Those of you who know Jim won’t be surprised that we spent some time there.  We finally checked into our Virgina Beach/Norfolk hotel in time to crash for the night.

The next morning we visited Richmond, VA where we took in the Tredegar Museum and walked along the riverfront, from there we meandered through Fredericksburg to visit the battlefield there before moving along to our DC area hotel in Waldorf, MD.

We stayed in Washington for four days.  Each morning, we drove to the nearest Metro station, left the car and took the Green Line into Washington.  We’d then spend the day wandering the Mall, exploring the museums and shooting photos of the city.  We joined the rush hour crowds in the subway to head back to the hotel in the evening.  We drove back into the city for some night shots on Wednesday and again on Friday morning to visit Arlington and the Zoo.  It was a fascinating week, but we didn’t even see half of what we had planned.

We left Washington on Friday afternoon and went to Roanoke, VA so that Jim could visit the train museum there.  On Saturday morning, I stayed in the hotel, did laundry and worked on pictures. I wanted to spend longer and update some websites, including this blog, but we had to check out by noon.  They had two conventions in the area and couldn’t give us another night, so I went with Jim to finish up his “Train Day” before moving along to Bristol, VA/TN Saturday evening.  Sunday morning we got an early start so we could indulge a stop ‘n’ shoot leg on the way to Cumberland Gap.  From the Gap, we hit the interstates again and finally got home Sunday evening.

I spent Monday unpacking and babysitting.  Tuesday was more babysitting and grocery shopping.  This morning, after clearing the email backlog, I got back to work.  Oh, I nearly forgot, I still need to do laundry.  Guess I’d better wind this up and get the first load started before someone else appropriates the washer.  More to come, I swear I’ll get to it, as soon as I figure out what’s wrong with my Photoshop.

Counting Down

Counting Down

I can’t believe it’s been a month since I posted anything here.  In my small defense, I haven’t been going much of anywhere.  Grocery store, church, out to eat, Walmart….just not much material there.  This past month has been dedicated mostly to setting up a new website for a writing group I belong to call Wordsmith Studio. We are in the process of making a community site for writers to meet, discuss, and support each other.  To do this, we are using WordPress and a plugin called BuddyPress.  It has been an adventure since no one seems have a BuddyPress for Dummies book available.

I’ve been to several sites that claim to have info, but none of them seem to be addressing our issue. So all my traveling this past month has been electronic and in vain.  Now I find myself with less than a week to go before we leave for our Combat Camera Reunion Roadtrip.  If you’ve been following us, you may already know quite a bit about that. If so, here’s a recap and update.  If not, here’s a quick rundown.

This site was started a little over a year ago as a place for my brother, Jim, and I to post pictures and information about interesting places we found as we traveled to his Air Force Combat Camera reunion in Albuquerque, then on to Los Angeles and up to Arches National Park where Jim wanted to try some night photography.  It’s hard to believe it’s been a year since then.  It’s time for the reunion again and this time it’s in Charleston SC, a place I’ve always wanted to visit.

We leave home on the morning of September 22nd.  That’s this coming Saturday! To head toward the Carolinas, we would normally go to Nashville first, then head down I-40.  Because I need to visit with one of my granddaughters who is in Richmond, KY along the way, we are going to head directly east on the West Kentucky Parkway instead.  We’ll pick up I-75 in Lexington, stop off in Richmond, then head south, through Knoxville, into the Smokey Mountains.  We plan to spend two nights at Pigeon Forge, then head down to Charlotte for a visit with my youngest daughter and her family until Thursday morning.  Her daughter, Stephanie, is taking photography courses in college and wants her Uncle Jimmie to help her learn more about what her camera is capable of doing.

On Thursday we report to Charleston for the actual reunion.  The reunion committee has a couple of tours scheduled, but they’ve also allowed some free time for people to check out the historic district.  I’ve been told for years that Charleston is a beautiful city and I’m really excited to finally be able to see it.  We’ll be there from Thursday until Sunday morning.

We plan to drive up the coast on Sunday, staying as close as possible to the beaches along the way.  At Norfolk VA, we will turn west, visit the battlefields at Fredericksburg, then head into Washington DC for the remainder of the week.  I’ve never been to the capital either and I love visiting new places. Jim plans to take extensive photos of the monuments on the mall.  He wants to get some night shots there as well.  I want to visit the Smithsonian and the National Zoo.  We won’t get there until Monday and we leave Friday morning so time will be constrained, but we’ll pack as much into as possible.  On the way home we’ll be making stops in Roanoke and Cumberland Gap for photos.

Two weeks to make a big loop east, south, north, then back west to reach home again on Sunday evening of October 7th.  I promise to make time for, at least, 3 posts during that time and there will be photos as well.  If you’ve visited these places yourself and have recommendations of places to see or eat, leave them in the comments below.

 

Home Again, Home Again….You know the drill.

Home Again, Home Again….You know the drill.

I can’t believe it’s been a month since the last post here.  I apologize for being so lax.  The only defense I have is frustration with trying to work from a small laptop when I’m used to a desktop with two large monitors.  The ability to have multiple windows open and in full view, at once, has spoiled me.

I’ve decided that I must carry an extra monitor with me when we go on our next extended Roadtrip in September.  The small single screen added to the need to learn alternate software was just too much.  I managed for a while, but eventually the frustration overwhelmed me.

Train, water, leading lines…only thing missing is clouds.

So, I didn’t write or edit photos at all for the last week we were there or on the way home.  Since I’ve been home, I’ve just been too busy with getting caught up on “stuff.” I have gotten all the photos off the camera.  I’m now in the process of editing.  Once that is all finished, I’ll make a new album here.  Watch for it.  We visited another botanical garden along the way and did a few more “nowhere” shots as well.

The only thing I’ve photographed since I got home is great-grandsons.  This is my final catch-up week.  Next week, I promise to be back on schedule.  My previous editorial calendar called for updates here on Friday afternoons.  One thing I’m doing this week is revising my writing schedule so that may change somewhat.  However, I promise to touch base here on a regular basis.  In the meantime plans for the September trip are ongoing. The dates and route are pretty much set.  We’ve got our itinerary loosely planned and reservations made.   We leave home on September 22nd, spend the weekend in the Smokey Mountains, head for Charlotte on Monday, Charleston on Thursday, and Virginia Beach on the next Sunday, Washington on Monday, a stopover in Virgina to shoot trains on Friday, Bristol on Saturday to visit Cumberland Gap and home Sunday night.  Hope you can join us along the way.  We plan to be posting as we go both here and on Facebook.

Wide Open Spaces

Wide Open Spaces

I’ve checked in on Facebook from several Nowhere, (insert state name) places along the road this week.  Now it’s time to post photos of the places in between.  This is the first full day I’ve had for working on pictures.  I’m kind of frustrated because I’m having to learn to use a new software program while working in a strange environment.  We recently installed Lightroom on the laptop.  I’ve never used Lightroom at all and I don’t enjoy working on the laptop.  I’m longing for my desktop with the two nice 23 inch monitors and the wireless keyboard.

As a kind of fix for the laptop problem (my biggest complaint is the smallness of the screen, I’ve taken over Brad’s (my grandson) game console television in his “man cave.”  He had a cable to hook it up to my laptop so I’m using it like a monitor.  I am sitting in his “game playing” recliner with the keyboard on my lap and my writing pad on the right arm to serve as a mouse pad.  I might eventually get used to it but, at the moment, I’m staving off Alzheimer’s by learning to live outside my comfort zone.

Our trip went smoothly, but the schedule was more strenuous than anticipated.  We got started later than we planned which put us into our first night’s hotel after 10pm.  That meant we were late getting on the road the next morning which put us into our second night’s hotel the same way.  We elected not to sight-see in Casper, but we stopped along the way and still wound up not getting here until….wait for it….AFTER 10PM.

The road between here and home has lots of long empty stretches.  The last day, we told the GPS to use the “fastest route” instead of “most freeways.”   Unfortunately, we lost this round of the GPS game.  It might have been faster, but it sure didn’t seem like it.

I was pleased with it’s choice, at first, since it followed the roads I had chosen on Google.  I thought it would be nice to get away from the tourist trap places and see some local sites, plus it was a more direct route that the interstate.  That was before we hit the Road Construction. I’m not talking about squeezing everyone from two or three lanes into one that used to be the shoulder of the highway.  We handled that coming across Missouri and Nebraska.  It was frustrating, but doable.  This was a two lane blacktop road reduced to very rough gravel.  Then, after going thirty miles an hour for miles on end, there was a stop light with a sign saying “Wait for lead car.”  After sitting there, fourth in a line that was growing behind us like a snake, for an endless 15 minutes or so, the “lead car” came churning along through the dust with one truck behind it.  He did a U turn and we all followed him through the actual construction site.

On the other side of what seemed to be about a five mile stretch, the two lanes of gravel resumed.  Over the next several hours, we passed through small wide places in the road that had been named as though they were towns, but apparently had no need for gas.  There was a bar and grill at each one with a full parking lot.  Some of them also had schools and post offices, but it seemed they didn’t feel the need for a place to buy gasoline.  We started to really worry when we saw a sign that said “Road Closed Ahead.”  Luckily it ended at an intersection with the road where we were supposed to turn next.

There was a gas station there, attached to a Casino, in the middle of Nowhere.  This, my friends, is not Kentucky.  The new road, while still only two lanes, was paved.  As we started out, they threatened us with construction ahead again, but we didn’t see any.  Maybe they are just warning the locals.  Along here, we came across a cool windmill farm.  We had been wondering all across Nebraska and Wyoming why we hadn’t run across one.  The wide open spaces seemed like a perfect place to put them.  Maybe they were away from the highway, like this one.

Even though I had extended the Nowhere joke across the mostly empty countryside, it was beautiful and the cities where we spent the night were active and well maintained.  If they had areas of decline and boarded up structures, they weren’t visible from the roads we were on or the hotels where we stayed.

In fact, the main reason we got such a late start from Lincoln, Nebraska was their gorgeous public garden areas near their zoo.  While we love zoos, we decided we would not take the time.  We were just going to stroll through the attached rose garden to photograph the huge fountain on the other side, then check out the Sunken Garden across the street.  We expected to spend an hour at most.  Let’s just say we lost track of time.

 

Tripping in Kentucky

Tripping in Kentucky

Kentucky State Capitol Rotunda

It bothers me how many people plan vacations to far away places and only bother with local points of interest when relatives come to visit.  I’m not just talking about other people.  It’s a long standing joke that New Yorkers don’t visit the Empire State Building.   The same is true of Kentuckians, and our family has been as guilty as anyone.

We go frequently to Land Between the Lakes, less so to  Mammoth Cave and Cumberland Falls, but I had never been to Boonesborough, My Old Kentucky Home or even our state capitol until a couple of years ago.  As I have looked at guide books for various far off areas where we plan trips, I realize there are many places in Kentucky that I’ve never been.  In an effort to correct this and educate people about places to see closer to home, Jim and I have a year long series of posts in the planning stages for this blog.

Cumberland Falls

We intend to take a hard copy map (Yes, Virginia, they do still exist.) and divide it into a grid of 12 equal areas.  We will pick points of interest in each grid and spend a month researching and visiting each one. We’re thinking that we’ll try to do some local interviews as part of the process. We hope to provide in-depth coverage of each area.  It will be a regular feature and may include more than one post a month, depending on how much information we dig up.

Included will be events of interest, not just the month we’re covering, but all year long.  It will be kind of like one of Jim’s photography club “year long challenges.”  We may even decide to turn the year’s posts into a Travel Guide book of some sort.  If it turns out well, we’ll extend it further afield the next year to cover an adjoining state, maybe Tennessee or Ohio.

I’m not sure yet when the series will start.  We’re already committed to major road trips into October.  Maybe we’ll plan something to hit the ether waves during November, just in time for the holiday kickoff.