14 July 2009

Art Art Bo Bart, Bananafana Fo...

So last month, Sarah, Sarah W., Michael and I ventured to downtown Frederick to wander around. As mentioned earlier, the pictures have only now surfaced to be blogged about. But they were well worth the wait!

We began the afternoon with lunch at one of the greatest restaurants known to downtown Frederick - Wag's, home of the greatest burgers ever. No picture, but chances are if you're one of the people who is reading this, you are very familiar with the establishment. And if you're not? Let me know. We'll go. Right now.

After Wag's, we wandered over to the creek, where they were having the Frederick Festival of the Arts. There was plenty of art to be seen, including some very phallic paintings.

There was also a very interesting wrought iron towel rack (in the back left corner of the tent):
In addition to the art that was being shown, there were also quite a few other interesting activities. They had paddle boats that you could rent (as it was still early in the summer and the creek hadn't developed it's standard late summer stench yet), as well as canoes. This gentlemen had either won a prize somewhere for some child, or has a very interesting date with him:
We also noticed quite a few environmentally minded people wearing hats that I think were supposed to entice people to recycle. At least, I hope that's what it was. But there were quite a few nutjobs at this thing - I wouldn't have been suprised if they thought it was simply a new fashion.
On the way out of the festival, we also noticed a giant patch of mint. As Sarah is as allergic to mint as I am to peanuts, we of course made her pose with the allergen garden:
All in all, the festival was a special place. Many unique sights and products, and even an interestingly named company. Note that we originally didn't notice the "I" in this acronym:
After leaving the festival, we wandered around downtown Frederick window-shopping. And we noticed the remains of the massacre of dozens of roses outside of my favorite florist:
We also stopped at my favorite store, Retro Metro. I swear when I win the lottery I'm refurnishing my house in the stuff from this store. They also had a very interesting new product. Sarah referred to it as "[her] kryptonite," as she doesn't like bacon and, as mentioned, is allergic to mint. I, on the other hand, have no such deficiency. This, my friends, is awesome in a tin:
Clearly, nothing else could top this item, and there was very important movie-watching planned, so this was the end of our tour of downtown Frederick. But now everyone can relive it with our pictures!

13 July 2009

That's What She Said, Installment 3

Dear readers, I bring you yet another installment of That's What She Said, this time a very artistic version. Awhile ago, Sarah, Sarah W., Michael and I went to the Frederick Festival of the Arts on Carroll Creek. I forgot that Sarah and I were taking pictures, so I had missed this beauty until she posted it on Facebook earlier today. To paraphrase her caption, it's good to know that this artist doesn't discriminate based upon race...
(Side note - now that I've stolen the pictures from her, expect a few more highlights at a later date!)

09 July 2009

That's What She Said, Installment 2

The following is an article noticed by a colleague in her hometown newspaper...
Well, if ever there was an eye-catching, attention-getting headline.....

06 July 2009

Meet Virginia: Day Three

If you're looking for Day Three of our visit to Williamsburg, it's not here - you have to go visit Taryn's blog to find it. Have fun!

(And if you're just joining us now, start at the beginning here.)

On a related note, while we were gone, Holly and McKenna got to be quite good friends. Holly even let her join the Backyard Groundhog Patrol as an Honorary Deputy.

04 July 2009

Meet Virginia, Day Two

***For Meet Virginia, Day One, click here***

Day 2 started bright and early with a trip to my new favorite place, the Williamsburg Winery.
All the times that I’ve been to Williamsburg and had their wine, I had never been to the winery itself. Clearly, I was stupid, as it was awesome. We found a deal online where you could do the tour and tasting, as well as lunch at the adjacent restaurant, for a very reasonable price – I would highly recommend this option to anyone heading to the area!
The tour took us through the winecellars, where we saw a number of wine barrels.
The tour guide told us that these wine barrels, which are very expensive, can only be used four times before they have to be discarded. To try to recoup the cost, the winery sells the old barrels to various places, including Colonial Williamsburg, to be used as trash cans. Until then, though, they are put to good use. This one was making Merlot:
Next, the tour took us past the room where the wine is bottled (the tour guide thought that this was their blackberry dessert wine being bottled here),and into a room which displayed a number of wine-related antiques, including old bottles that lined the display cases.Finally, we arrived at the tasting room, where we tasted six of the wines that were availableout of our pretty souvenir glasses (because that’s what I needed – another wine glass!).After the tasting, we headed over to the restaurant for lunch.They seated us on the outside patio,and soon, lunch was served, including this gorgeous cheese platter that Taryn ordered.
After lunch, we headed back inside to the gift shop to make our wine purchases. The winery gave a discount if you purchased more than 12 bottles of wine, so we decided it was only polite to take advantage of this generous offer.On the way out of the winery, we stumbled over something quite surprising – our foreign friends from Sunday, the ones from the first plantation, had followed us to the winery and were heading in as we were heading out. Luckily, no one used any racial epithets this time, and we were not there to watch them harass yet another young female tour guide. We can only imagine that it would have been worse here, as there was alcohol to fuel their interrogation.

After we left the winery, we headed over to Jamestown, where Taryn had never been. For those of you who haven’t been there before, this is the site of the first permanent English settlement in America, and it’s still actively being preserved by archaeologists. A good deal of the site has been identified or reproduced already, including the remains of a tavern,
a church,and a fort.The site is right on the James River, and still has a great view (which I'm sure was foremost in the mind of the starving, freezing colonists).They also have a very 70’s-looking museum that displays some of the artifacts they’ve unearthed, and other historical information. And also air conditioning. We were ready for air conditioning by then.
After Jamestown, we went for a quick drive around the Yorktown Battlefield, stopping at the most photogenic sites, including British redoubts (now helpfully protected by a chain link fence so you can’t impale yourself on the spikes),cannons,and an old house called the Moore House, which was the site of surrender negotiations in 1781.
To finish the day, we headed to Colonial Williamsburg. We shopped for awhile, including at The Allergen Store, as I like to call it:
We also saw the reality of what happens to wine barrels when they become old and decrepit:and also, a colonial squirrel! This one is for you, Larry:
We went to dinner at the King’s Arms Tavern, or, as a work colleague of Taryn’s calls it, The King’s Armpit.Despite the nickname, the tavern ended up being a rather lovely way to end the day – any place that has champagne cocktails and wine coolers (real ones that were a lovely blend of red wine and lemon soda, not those sickening things that come in bottles) on their menu is fine by me! After dinner, we headed back to the hotel to prepare for the next day, arguably the most exciting day of them all – Busch Gardens day!

01 July 2009

Meet Virginia: Day One

So this past weekend, Taryn, Kathy and I traveled to southeastern Virginia to engage in general merriment. We left early Sunday morning. McKenna was a little confused - she's very used to being left at my house when Taryn leaves with suitcases; however, when I brought one out, she was a little freaked.
Taryn, the master packer, managed to fit all of our stuff, as well as McKenna's stuff, into my car with room to spare.
With everyone in the car, we set off for our first stop: my parents' house, where McKenna had reserved a room for the next few days. She was a bit perplexed - I'm convinced that dog can figure out the direction of the car, and knows when she's going somewhere new.
However, once we arrived and McKenna saw the size of my parents' yard as compared to mine, she brightened up a bit. According to my mother, she and Holly got along very well during her visit; they chased squirrels and flirted with the young stud next door and had a wonderful time.

Once we left McKenna, we set out through Virginia, making only short pit stops at Starbucks for breakfast and at Target to buy a new ipod radio adaptor to replace the crappy one I had, which was broken. After we got out of northern Virginia (where there was surprisingly little traffic!), we stopped at a Subway in a gas station for lunch.
This was quite an interesting place. The Subway advertised a monstrous sandwich known as "The Feast,"
and the gas station advertised plenty of "Clean Restrooms." I suppose, as opposed to dirty ones? Which, why would you advertise that? Is it implying that they're dirty if they don't use an adjective?

On the way to our hotel in Williamsburg, we stopped at a few plantations. The first, called the Shirley Plantation, was rather entertaining. The house and grounds were lovely, of course, but it was the company that made the experience what it was. First, we bought tickets in the gift shop, and learned that they had a contest to name their baby chickens. Of course, we suggested a list of Dynasty-inspired names. Hopefully they will choose our entry, and Fallon and Alexis will be running around the Shirley Plantation for years to come.
Next, we met our tour group on the steps of the main house. It was there that we met our tour guide, a knowledgeable lady close to our age. She complimented our chick name entry, so we immediately liked her. However, the poor girl had to deal with the rest of our tour group, which contained a handful of old foreign people who persisted in asking useless and/or inappropriate questions.
One such gentleman asked if the plantation had slaves. When this fact was confirmed, he proceeded to ask questions about the slaves using words that nice people do not say. Hopefully, he just was unaware of the inappropriateness of these words, as he was clearly from another culture, but either way, it did not set a nice tone. To the tour guide's credit, she did keep things moving briskly after that question.
The same group was also quite enthralled with the plastic food that was set out throughout the grounds to illustrate what colonial people ate. Now, as you all well know, I am plenty enthralled with bacon, but not to the point that I'd hold up the tour to discuss a fake version of it (which I think should be called 'facon') with the poor tour guide.
After the tour, we went outside to view the grounds. There was a lovely view of the river,
the smoke house,
other plantation animals (including a exhibitionist goat who stuck his posterior into most of my pictures),
and our personal favorite, a kid on a leash (who at one point, did a face plant walking out of a building. Don't worry, he was fine.)

After we left Shirley, we went to another James River plantation called Berkeley Plantation, the birthplace of William Henry Harrison. This plantation was also beautiful, with a huge old main house
and extensive grounds that offered lovely views of the river,
as well as some hay that we think was just there as a prop (as it was growing foliage).
There was a very informative tour of the main house, and our tour group was much larger than at Shirley. None of the people in this group used any racial slurs (accidentally or not), which was nice, although some people did have trouble following the directions not to touch anything. One room has a shawl that was said to belong to William Henry Harrison; in fact, the tour guide said that rumor has it that he used it during his last few weeks of life. Despite the fact that it was likely teeming with 200 year old germs, and that it was ancient and probably very fragile, one lady decided it was OK to touch the thing as soon as the tour guide moved on. Niiiiice.

After the tour, we wandered down to the James River.
There were a bunch of flowers along the paths that were in full bloom,
as well as one lonely, tiny, empty colonial vodka bottle that someone has graciously left to decorate the landscape.
There was also a willow tree that tried to attack Taryn.
After the vicious willow tree attack, we set off toward Williamsburg and our hotel. After checking in, we headed back out to Yorktown to see what was going on. We walked past a concert in the yard of Grace Episcopal Church,
and went to the Riverwalk to search for a place for dinner. We ended up at the Riverwalk Restaurant, which was right on the York River.
We all got various salads, which came on super cute fish-shaped plates.
After dinner, we wandered around the area, looking for places to take pictures.
It was still early when we left Yorktown, so we decided to go play miniature golf. Pirate Mini Golf was down the street from our hotel, so we headed over.
It was pretty crowded, and we ended up waiting awhile before we were able to start.
At one point, Taryn made quite an impressive hit...so impressive, in fact, that her ball went all the way off the green and down a waterfall. We had to share balls after that.
There were some interestingly designed holes...such as this one, which had two protruberances blocking the hole.
We took the game very seriously, though, lost balls and strange green bumps included.
Finally, we finished the game and retired to our hotel for the evening, to rest up for a busy Monday.