Ever since our first experiment with AirBnB (where we snagged a New York City...
For a period of time, as a child, I told people that I was the Bionic Man. I wasn’t, of course; but they didn’t know. How could they? I told them I was. At least that was the reasoning of a six year old boy.
Every time we pass a place like Paris, Arkansas or Rome, Georgia I remember my days as the Bionic Man. I can’t help but think that all of these places are trying to be something they’re not.
In a similar vein, a small town near where we used to live and immediately across the river from Manhattan calls itself West New York. Its proximity to the great city is so close that it could very easily be a borough. But unlike my impenetrable childhood lie, everyone here knows the truth. The town’s full name is West New York, New Jersey. Apparently they didn’t think through their cover as well as I did. I’d never have called myself Steve Austin Schmidt. If I did, nobody would have believed I was the Bionic Man. It’s so obvious.
But what West New York lacks in skilled subterfuge and apparently in self esteem it makes up for with one of the best views of the New York City skyline anywhere. Set high upon a bluff, carved eons ago by a river that still rages below, its unobstructed panorama stretches from the financial district at Manhattan’s southern most tip, northward past the Empire State Building, to the George Washington Bridge and beyond. It’s one of the best views anywhere in the world.
Mount Washington in Pittsburgh is the spitting image of West New York. So much so that I thought it was a mirage. We walked along a nearly identical street, lined on one side with two-family houses in a neighborhood that has seen better days. The opposing side disappears down a high cliff to a river that protects the towering Pittsburgh skyline like a moat. I’m told there is no better place to see the city than from this vantage point.
We went there for the view. We found a small slice of home.
We were so taken with Lexington, Kentucky, that for the first time since setting out we evoked one of the privileges of full-time travel: on the spur of the moment we decided to extend our stay by a few days. Aside from the bourbon, the star attractions in Lexington are the horses. Driving around the countryside, with beautiful, sprawling, well-manicured horse farms everywhere, was our second favorite pastime. There was plenty of animal viewing—and the horses didn’t seem to mind when we stopped and stared.
We were told that from our doorstep in Lexington Kentucky we could easily visit four legendary bourbon distilleries in two days. That’s swell, and all, but we figured we’d cover far more ground in under an hour by making a single stop to Lexington’s Bluegrass Tavern. With 209 bourbons on their menu, ranging in price from $4 per glass to ‘don’t ask,’ Bluegrass was the perfect place to introduce ourselves to Kentucky’s amber elixir. Continue Reading →
These ‘no firearm’ signs are something else that seems uniquely southern. We’ve seen them everywhere. I have to admit, it never occurred to me that I might need a gun inside Mammoth Cave. Just in case someone thought otherwise, this helpful sign instructs Yosemite Sam to leave his six shooters behind. Now that I think about it, though, you can’t predict when an uppity cave cricket might need some shooting. You never can be too careful.