Wednesday, March 28, 2012

Driving through GA, TN, and KY

It surprises me even though we drove this same route south.  Tennessee and Kentucky are beautiful states.  I'm sure there are cultural issues for northerners who move down here, but the beauty of the land and the much more moderate climate are very attractive to a native Michiganian.  I know my commie, pinko, liberal heart would quail at some of the cultural issues, but I have to consider ways to spend more time in more moderate climates.  The question is: how do we do that without going broke?

Dennis and I were discussing some of our favorite moments as we were driving today (9 hours of driving).  We started laughing about the "silver alert" in Florida.  Come on all my friends - do you know what a silver alert is?  If you do, or think you do, post it on facebook or send an email to one of us. 

We will be stopping to visit Emily tomorrow.  I'm looking forward to that - I do not see her nearly often enough to suit a mother's heart.

Tuesday, March 27, 2012

Heading North

We had such a lovely time in Florida that it was hard to leave this morning.  You know I love food and we had some exceptional meals here.  My favorites:  our grouper and shrimp dinner at the condo after buying fresh-caught fish at the Rusty Anchor; breakfast sandwiches and bloody marys at the Schooner Wharf Bar on Nancy's birthday; grilled steak salad at Clayton's Siesta Grille, and fried oysters with an ice cold beer at Captain Curt's.

We walked for miles around Key West and along the white sand beaches of Siesta Key.  We saw (and photographed) many sunsets.  The tropical nature of southern Florida is vastly different from the forest and water beauty of Michigan and it was great to experience that difference.  We feel positively rejuvenated and are looking forward to Holy Week at St. MM in our hometown.

We left Siesta Key around 8:00 a.m. and headed north.  We took turns driving and the trip is really straightforward and all on I-75.  Our destination was Macon GA.  Of course, I had a stop in mind.  I watched the roadside signs and picked a likely one - Ellis Brothers nut distributors.  They are located around Perry GA about two miles off I-75.  They sell an incredible variety of pecans and peanuts in a variety of sizes and types.  They also sell yummy treats such as spiced pecans, cinnamon pecans, pecan logs, peanut butter cookies - you get the idea.  I wanted shelled pecans at a lower price than I pay at Meijer and I found a lovely three pound bag - yay!

We are recovering from the road and looking for a place to eat.  Tomorrow we will go to Lexington KY.

Here is our morning picture of the entrance to the condo where we stayed in Siesta Key.

Sunday, March 25, 2012

Birthday on the Road

We got up at the same early time as usual and had coffee.  Then we went down to work out in the exercise room in the hotel in Ft. Myers.  I don’t really feel any older, but I’m 64 today.  I have so much to appreciate and be thankful for.  It’s great to celebrate another year.

I can’t recall the last time I was away from home on my birthday, so this feels exotic and special.  We drove up from Ft. Myers to Sarasota after breakfast.  Dennis and I like to drive the back roads when we are not in a hurry, so we stuck with highway 41 instead of I-75.  We drove through lots of towns along the way:  Cape Coral, Venice, Osprey.  It is interesting to see the towns and what is happening to them.  There were many stretches of road that had seen better days.  I told Dennis that the buildings and deserted strip malls look sunburned and tired.  It seems like the population and money have left them behind.  The wealthy communities all look sparkling and green and lush, but the not-so-wealthy communities just look old and sad.  The other thing that occurs to me time and time again is how homogenized our lives are getting.  All of the malls have the same stores.  All of the restaurants are chains.  We are eating the same food and buying the same clothes and losing our regionality.  It makes me want to learn to cook older regional specialties and to look for unique and different clothes and eschew the sameness. 

Once we arrived in Siesta Key, we realized exactly how spring break affects Florida – traffic is awful and the place is crawling with people!  However, this condo has the most awesome view of the ocean!  Gary and Nancy stayed here earlier this month and invited us to stay a few more days before we head back north.  The condo overlooks a beautiful white sand beach on the ocean.  You can see this fabulous view from every window in the condo!  We have already toasted with champagne and will be walking out to dinner later.  This is a very nice vacation.

We went to dinner at Clayton's Siesta Grille.  It was awesome!  The food was both delicious and beautiful.  The best part was that we could walk there and back.  We had a ferocious thunder storm at night and the power blinked off several times, but everything cleared up by 11:00 a.m.  Here are some pictures.

 Beach details of weather on Sunday.  An awesome day!

 These pictures are of a couple doing a big sand sculpture - they took many hours to do this and it was amazing!

This is proof that Dennis is really on vacation with me - and obviously having a great time!

Friday, March 23, 2012

How to celebrate a birthday

Wednesday we had a pretty quiet day.  We hung around the condo, walked to the cuban sandwich shop, hung around the pool, and walked to the Irish pub for dinner.  We had to rest up so we could celebrate Nancy's birthday with energy.

We decided that the best way to start a birthday celebration was with breakfast and bloody marys at the Schooner Wharf Bar at sunrise.  We were the first customers and had a great time.  Nancy walked around the boats taking pictures and meeting various people.  After breakfast we walked around the wharf and stopped in to the Key Lime Pie shop.  Then we came back to the condo to rest up for awhile. 

After lounging around the pool and reading in the afternoon, we headed back to Schooner Wharf for dinner.  We all had different fish dishes for dinner and every single one was awesome. Then we wandered around the wharf area until after sunset and headed back to the condo.

One of the interesting things about going out and about in Key West in the early morning is that we were able to see the town that is behind the "tourist face."  Key West is very diverse - both the residents and the visitors - and we were able to see the people who work every day in "paradise" - not just the other vacationers.  Lots of people work in the tourist industry, serving the public, cleaning up, entertaining, etc.  There are also lots of folks who rely on the fishing industry for a living.  One of the things we couldn't help noticing was the relaxed, casual, nonjudgmental attitude of so many folks.  For the Key West residents who are poor and/or homeless, this is not an easy life - but, unlike life in Michigan, they will not freeze to death if they are living on the streets (or beaches).

The island has many natural beauties - beaches, waterways, gardens - but it is reliant on fresh water being shipped from the mainland.  That fresh water also enables the beautiful gardens to grow.  We loved our time in Key West.  We are headed to Siesta Key in the Sarasota area on Saturday to spend a few more days with Gary and Nancy before we head back to Michigan.

 Headed North on US 1 on Friday morning.

Thursday, March 22, 2012

Real Tourists in Key West, March 20th

We thought we'd celebrate the first day of spring with a trolley tour around the island.  We were able to pick up the CityView Trolley about a half mile away from the condo.  You can get on or off at any of the eight stops and the trolleys run every 15 minutes.  We made a list of potential places to visit, a list of the prices for museums, and set off for the trolley stop before 9:00 a.m.

The first stop was by the Butterfly Conservancy, so we hopped off and went in to look at butterflies.  It was a very humid start to the day, so now I have curly hair.  We didn't want to take the camera bag (too heavy), but we wound up using our phones to take pictures.  There were many beautiful butterflies and the pictures were pretty good (especially with a little cropping), but I'm just posting my two favorites here.


I couldn't believe how close I could get to some of the butterflies.  I love the shot of the butterfly on Nancy's hat.  Dennis took a nice video that shows how active the butterflies were.  I don't know if we can post that here.  Maybe he'll post it on facebook.

After the Butterfly house, we hopped back on the Trolley and rode all the way to stop number one at Clinton Square.  We got off there, bought tickets (they let you ride until you can buy tickets at a stop), and headed to Margaritaville for a munchie and some margaritas.  The food is good but a little overpriced, but the maragaritas were really good.  We headed to the Audubon House next.  The gardens were nice and the Audobon originals were awesome.  The house gives you a look into housing in the 1800s for well-to-do families - no indoor plumbing or running water and the kitchen is in a separate cook house.  Really, we live like kings and queens today in even the most modest homes.

We wandered back to Clinton Square and hopped back on the trolley heading for our home stop, but we got off at stop three to see the Florida Keys Eco-discovery center.  It was free admission and was really cool.  There were many displays about the ecology of the Keys and of Florida.  We hopped back on the trolley and went back to the stop on White St. where we had started.  The four tour guides we heard were all very entertaining (one was a former fourth grade teacher - a job that requires the skill to hold an audience's attention) and we learned several interesting things from them including the origin of all the roosters and hens and the origin of the Conch Republic.  This was a good way to get the lay of the land and to see places that we might want to come back to visit.

Monday, March 19, 2012

Things to do in Key West

We have spent time walking around the island and admiring the sunset.  We have lounged poolside and walked the beaches.  We have admired the houses - both cottages and larger homes.  There are still parts of Key West that are quaint, but the city is very built up and some of the shops on Duval St. are shops you would find anywhere - not exactly a taste of island flavor or the Conch Republic.

We have seen a community of homeless people who overnight on the beach about a half mile from the condo in which we are staying.  We saw them when we went out walking in the morning, before the town got busy.  It gives me a different perspective on life in "paradise."  I love the climate here - it is sunny and warm most of the time.  The overnight temperature falls to the mid seventies and the daytime temp rises to the mid eighties (just about perfect). 

Today we got up early and I talked Dennis into going for a walk with me.  I had to promise that it was not a four-mile power walk.  We walked to White Street where the homeless people overnight on the beach.  Then we turned toward town and walked past Flagler and turned right down a small street.  We loved many of the houses we saw.    We walked back toward the condo and completed the circle in about one hour.  It was a good walk. 

When Gary and Nancy got back from their walk we discussed the activities we wanted to do today and tomorrow.  Gary had asked a local man about purchasing fresh fish and the local (Clem) directed us to Stock Island (5 miles from Key West central) to a place called the Rusty Anchor.  We found it with after a few mis-steps.  It is obviously a place that sells fish wholesale to restaurants.  When we pulled in, one of the fish mongers was delivering a load.  A man who reminded us of Popeye came up and asked what we wanted.  We told him that Clem had recommended his place (he seemed unimpressed) and asked what he had.  After he described what was available, I asked him for two pounds of shrimp and 1- 1 1/2 pounds of grouper.  We brought it back and stopped at the grocery store for beer, wine, and the ingredients for tartar sauce and cocktail sauce. 

After we got back from our trip to the fish market, we all put on swimsuits and headed for the pool to lounge in the sun and shade.  I worked on my music for the Livingston County Chorale Spring Concert.  (I will send emails out about tickets because it is a really great concert with awesome big-band music.)  I sang silently so as not to disturb people in the pool.

When we came back to the condo, we decided on a dinner time and made a fabulous dinner of pan-fried grouper, beer steamed shrimp, roasted potatoes and brussels sprouts, and bread.  It was a wonderful meal and fairly colorful (see the photo).  Fresh caught fish has no equivalent.  We decided that a similar meal in a restaurant would cost at least twice as much - and that's if you cold get grouper at all!

Tomorrow we will do a walking tour of Key West and visit many places we want to see.  We'll post pictures.

Dinner tonight.  The grouper is in the center of the table and the awesome Florida shrimp in in the background.
Sunset from White Street Pier last night.  Very beautiful.

Saturday, March 17, 2012

In Key West

I did not blog yesterday because it took so long to get here!  My advice to fellow adventure seekers is to avoid driving to Key West on a Friday!  Once we were on U.S. 1 - the only road in, traffic was very slow.  Gary and Nancy were ahead of us and they got stuck at a solid speed of zero for 45 minutes because there was an accident.  By the time we got to the same spot traffic was moving but only about 5 mph.  The highway is a beautiful drive across the ocean from island to island.

Yesterday we decided to take US 27 down through the middle of the state.  We stayed off the tollroad for the most part and drove through Florida's orange groves and cattle country.  Orange trees were everywhere. Some in neatly tended rows and others just growing wild.  I really wanted to pull over and grab a few.  It seems so odd to have a crop being harvested in March.  We drove past the Florida Natural plant - it smelled like fresh squeezed orange juice for a few miles!  We also noticed the smell of orange blossoms for miles along the road.

We did wash the car, so I don't feel so bad about the way it looks.  And we took a detour out of our way looking for a gas station or rest area where we could change drivers.  Those two activities set us back about one hour!  Oh well - we are on vacation after all.  When we arrived in Key West we used the locator on our phones to find the condo.  The traffic was jammed and confusing and the roads are under construction near the condo, so it was very confusing.  The locator on the phone really saved us!

Today it is sunny and warm - no surprise - and it rains a bit each day.  When we went out for a walk this morning, we walked on the beach and felt a few rain drops as we were finishing our walk.  Since it is St. Paddy's Day we walked to the local Irish bar a couple of blocks from the condo (it was called Shanna Key) and had a couple of beers and split a corned beef sandwich (excellent).  Then we walked back to the condo, stopping at the local market for a small bag of charcoal to cook some steak.  The market was hilarious.  Someone called the owner and then hung up!  He said that he hated "drive by phoning."  I teased the person ahead of me in line about the beer being mine and he volunteered to buy me a beer.  Great attitude.

We are headed out to the pool for some lounge time.  Time has a whole different meaning here and I'm not quite with the program yet.  Everyone else seems to be with it, so I'll get there eventually.
 U.S. 1 South - we were there for a looonngg time!
 Coming into Key West.  Traffic was still heavy (but moving) and there were crowds of people everywhere.  This seems to be a very festive place!

Thursday, March 15, 2012

Driving South ever South

We arrived in Ocala, Florida around 7:00 p.m. this evening.  Long day of driving - but it wouldn't have been so long if we had not spent so much time looking for a car wash!  The car is dirty and I just have to live with it.

We drove through the Smoky Mountain area on our way out of Tennessee.  It was so beautiful - we really wanted to visit the park but decided to save it for another day.  We discovered that Georgia is a very tall state - it took many hours to drive from top to bottom and the terrain changed dramatically during the journey.  Kudos go out again to the Dept of Transportation for keeping such well-maintained roads.  The north end of Georgia is very hilly, but that gave way to more gently rolling hills and then to farmland.  We could tell it was farmland by the numerous signs about pecans!

Shortly after we crossed the state line into GA, we stopped at the visitor welcome center to pick up a map.  They had a nice display about GA agriculture (this is Ag week in Georgia) and I noted that their top products are very percussive (Peaches, Peanuts, and Pecans).  Yes, it is true that I am easily amused.  Then as we drove along and I saw all of the "pecan" sightings, I began to wonder.  Those familiar with Georgia (cousins?) might be able to satisfy my curiosity:  Are shelled pecans cheaper in Georgia?  I have to pay $12 per pound at Meijer.  Are some of the peanut farmers picking up on the artisan food trend and producing specialty peanut butters?  I love peanut butter and would definitely buy something special.  Just wondering.

Traffic was very heavy on I-75 and the drive through Atlanta was hair raising for a couple of small town folks like us.  We narrowly missed being in an accident - we were able to stop in time - in the middle of the city.  Two cars crunched together in the middle lanes of a six-lane highway.  Very messy, but it did not hold us up long because we were at the front end of the line of traffic.  Rural Georgia was much nicer for driving. 

When we crossed into Florida, traffic seemed to really pick up and there was lots of road work, too.  When we reached our destination (a very full La Quinta in Ocala), Dennis logged on to facebook and found out about the tornado that touched down outside of Dexter!  Yikes!  A big shout out goes to our friends - we hope you are all OK.  It is very disconcerting to see your home area on the Weather News feature when you are far away from home.

Tomorrow we will arrive in Key West though we expect to face a bunch of traffic on the way.  We will post pictures for sure.

Wednesday, March 14, 2012

Knoxville TN

We left home at 6:00 a.m. as planned and I took first shift.  We stopped in Wapakoneta OH at 9:00 for breakfast and then switched drivers.  We are very familiar with I-75 in Ohio all the way to Dayton because of visiting Emily.  But we had never driven as far as Cincinnati before.  We could tell we were there when we saw a hazy smudge on the horizon.  Cincinnati has smog!  It also has some cool architecture that you can see from the highway.  We snapped a picture as we crossed the bridge into Covington, Kentucky.

Kentucky was a beautiful state to drive through.  I-75 was in great condition - smooth and pothole-free.  The land sweeps in rolling hills that are already starting to green up.  I made note of a few places we need to visit in Kentucky when we take a trip there instead of just passing through.  First of all, we must visit some of the bourbon distilleries!  I also want to stop in Berea to see the arts and crafts of the area and we both want to visit some of the MANY historic sites.  Our drive took us through some of the vast Daniel Boone National Forest.  We worried a bit when we saw signs that said I-75 South was closed ahead.

We found the radio station that explains the road conditions.  There had been a rock and dirt slide that closed the road just into Tennessee at exit 160.  So the state dept. of transportation routed us off I-75 and onto a back road - and I do mean back road!  We drove along a curving two-lane road that crouched under huge rocky outcroppings.  The speed limit was 45 and we were not even tempted to travel faster than that.  We saw some beautiful land, some forbidding land, and evidence of deep poverty.  The area we drove through was very isolated.  There were no gas stations, no stores, no schools, and only a few beat-up looking houses and trailers.  We passed a tiny white church with the sign for service times nailed to a post outside.  It said that services were once a month.  It gave me a really clear picture of the meaning of "itinerant preacher."

We were routed back onto the highway about 30 miles north of Knoxville,  so we stopped here after 9 hours on the road.  This has been a good first day of our adventure.

Friday, March 9, 2012

On the Road Again!


Yep .... we had such a great trip that we are hitting the road again. This time for only a little over a week but the travel bug has us.

You see us here at road's end in Santa Monica. We will be at road's end in Key West.

The draw of Key West is not only the weather, it's the whole aura of sun set parties every night, sea food and of course the beaches.

We leave, as MaryAlice said, this Wednesday and plan on meeting Gary and Nancy on Friday at our condo.

Stay Tuned!!

Monday, March 5, 2012

Preparing for the Florida Trip

March 5, 2012

We have purchased the sunscreen and emptied the memory card for the camera.  We have signed the condo lease and ordered a map of Florida.  I think we are ready.

Dennis and I had so much fun traveling Rte 66 that we decided it is time to hit the road again.  Our friends, Gary and Nancy, travel to Florida every year and so we all decided to travel to the Florida Keys together and rent a condo in Key West (the warmest city in the US!).  They are already in Florida and we will join them at the condo we selected on Friday, March 16.  We are leaving on March 14th.

We've never been to Key West, so this is a new adventure for all of us.  The drive is part of the adventure.  When Gary and Nancy drove down, they were checking the sky and fighting the wind - it was on the Friday and Saturday of the tornadoes that hit Indiana, Kentucky and 10 other states.  They called to let us know they arrived safely.  We are hopeful that the weather will be a little more calm for our drive down.  We will blog and post photos as we travel and Dennis will probably post highlights on Facebook!

"Travel" with us and check out the food, fun, and sun!