- Hot
- New
- Categories...
- Producer's Lounge
- Producer's Vault
- The Gulch: Live! (New)
- Ask the Gulch!
- Going Galt
- Books
- Business
- Classifieds
- Culture
- Economics
- Education
- Entertainment
- Government
- History
- Humor
- Legislation
- Movies
- News
- Philosophy
- Pics
- Politics
- Science
- Technology
- Video
- The Gulch: Best of
- The Gulch: Bugs
- The Gulch: Feature Requests
- The Gulch: Featured Producers
- The Gulch: General
- The Gulch: Introductions
- The Gulch: Local
- The Gulch: Promotions
- Marketplace
- Members
- Store
- More...
http://www.galtsgulchonline.com/posts/29...
I just received an email that I recently got 8 replies on this post and I see no new replies..they're all 2 1/2 months old and doesn't show 21 comments like the post says it has... sheesh. Duped again.
Then the park ranger came with a flashlight. We followed him out of the crater, back up the trail, and he drove us back to our car. It was kind of like the ride of shame. We sat in his backseat, dirty, sweaty, and disheveled. He told us that while other people had to be "rescued" before, we at least didn't try to climb up the way-too-steep volcano walls without using the trail like others had. Before he let us go, he took our names and information. I wouldn't be surprised if our info is on their "Wall of Idiots" right now.
Still, it was worth it. In the city, I've never been be able to see a view of the night sky the way I had since then. Even when we go out into the "country"--it just doesn't compare. After the ranger dropped us off, we just got back in our car and drove to the lookout point to see Kīlauea continue venting. It was like a live watercolor in the sky. Getting stuck in a volcano pit at night wasn't what we had intended to do, but it was perfect.
This New England gal fell in love with the prairie and the desert during that vacation. There was so much sky I felt as if I was going to fly off the face of the earth! Land and sky, sky and land. You could even see bad weather forming miles away. It was so alien. I loved it. The beauty of the Painted Desert was just stunning. Mesas were awesome.
This was (obviously if all I needed was $300) before cell phones and GPS. Summer of '75. Somehow I survived using the good old Road Atlas and prayer. No car insurance, no health insurance, no job. I didn't doubt for a moment that once I landed in CA, and my vacation ended, I would be able to find a job with which I could support myself. That's exactly what happened. I wasn't even worried about a job if I ended up getting stuck in some other state - I knew that even if I couldn't work as a nurse (licensing reciprocity issues) I could get something that would provide me with enough to live on AND save.
Had a month long vacation exploring the United States...mostly by myself! It was an incredible experience. Definitely an adventure with some hair-raising moments :) I will never forget it.
If I didn't build my business, why do all of the bills (not to mention the quarterly taxes) keep coming in my name?
Diego Garcia, BIOT. 1998. 6 weeks of paradise. It was a military TDY (temporary duty assignment). LOVED IT. Oh yeah, when they say use your 29 SPF sun tan lotion, they aren't playing around. Only 7 degrees below the equator and it is quite hot. Aruba, Jamaica...whatever...the Beach Boys obviously never went to DG.
We had hoped to meet you too?
Minnie Puck! I have had many wonderful adventures. However, nothing compares to your night in the volcano!,,
I went down in the Ubehebe crator in Death Valley, but with much difficulty, came up the sane day.
First one was Hawaii in 1985. I was in the service and stationed there. My parents had claimed they were going to come visit all throughout my enlistment. Oddly enough when I was in HI instead of Korea in winter, or Okinawa in summer, they decided that was where they should come visit. Not only that, they brought along my grandparents as well. Saw the sights, and were awed by the beauty of the islands outside of Honolulu. A wonderful vacation all around. The last vacation my grandparents were able to take unfortunately, so bittersweet in some ways.
The second was Vegas in 2000. Wife and kids on that one. Flew out of NH through a snowstorm to land in NV with no snow in sight :) What we did was in the morning one of us picked something to do or see, in the afternoon someone else got to pick. We did that every day we were there, so that everyone got to pick stuff they wanted to do or see. The kids talked about that one for years. Everyone enjoyed it.
P.S. Took the long tour of the dam, well worth it. A very impressive piece of engineering and construction, especially since it was the 30s.
to Juneau to Ketchikan, to Skagway, back to
Vancouver and then by bus to Penticton, B.C. and
then to Spokane, Coeur d'Alene, Idaho, Butte,
Montana and Salt Lake City. . then we rented
an HHR and drove to Napa, SF, Carmel and
Monterey, to Yosemite and back to Salt Lake.
she had never seen any of these spots and
I had seen some -- bucket list for both of us!
film at eleven. . That Was A Trip!!! -- j
.
without bordering on the "ignore" category! -- j
.
.
The best experiences for me:
- Six weeks exploring Western Europe by train
highlighted by
-La Boheme at Vienna State Opera,
-wine tasting in Beaune (Marché aux Vins touristy but fun cave experience that led to an all night dinner with couples from Canada and Australia- we were all dying to speak English for a change) and Reims (Champagne),
-catching a midnight train in Dijon (like a scene from a movie, racing the moving train to the end of the platform and barely jumping on board)
-eating fresh baked goods every morning and fresh produce for lunch on the go in Paris
- finding the leather goods market in Firenze Italy at the perfect time to replace my companion's lost gloves
- in Dijon Museum seeing a 18th century painting of a merchant with a striking resemblance to me. Not remarkable, you say? My companion had told me on the flight from the US that it would happen.
- searching for and finding a unique coat of arms in Bellinzona
- soaring arches and dome architecture
- Michelangelo's David and Pieta
- Venice
- Lake Thun
- biggest disappointment, the Hanna and Barbera quality of the Sistine Chapel ceiling
- A year seeing Australia by car (part camping, part visiting new friends, some resorts) highlighted by: wine tasting in Hunter, Yarra, Bendigo, Pyrenees, Barossa, Clare, and McLaren Vale regions. Too many glorious experiences to detail. Australia is an amazing place with most welcoming people.
- A month traveling Thailand (including a populist political uprising)
- Five months experiencing Honduras (considering relocation there)
- Diving the Barrier Reef (and coming face to face with a 600 lb Grouper while solo snorkeling a wreck)
- Wine tasting (and buying) trip in Napa and Sonoma, staying at winery guest houses
BTW, my companion in Europe was the person I mentioned in a recent email to you, kh.
- a spur-of-the-moment trip to Paris I took in early 1998 with a guy I worked with at the time - mostly because he'd stumbled onto RT airfares from Portland, OR and CDG for (get this): $350. I said "What the hell" and went along, basically backpacker-fashion. We emerged from the subway right next to the Louvre, picked the first hole-in-the-wall dirt-cheap hotel we saw, walked around all of the core sites for five days, then left. Sometimes you have the most fun when you plan little or nothing;
- the trips to Thailand I took in '08 and '10 with my girlfriend, who was born there. The '08 trip had an enjoyable political coup right in the middle of it, which required racing the army to the bus station to catch an overnight to Chiang Mai, which was the only functioning airport out of the country at the time (one of two warring mobs had "occupied" both of the Bangkok airports.) Serious political unrest works really well for dispelling the end-of-vacation blues, incidentally, 'cause it makes going home a really enjoyable thing. 8^]
Though I'm deeply regretting not having stumbled onto the practice in 1998 and earlier, by 2008 I'd become a fan of doing travel journals. So for that trip and the one in '10 I took notes at the end of every day, then fleshed them out and put them up at http://Travelpod.com. (Well, the first one's up, at any rate - the second one has been on a back burner for a long, long time but will eventually be ready for the table...)
http://www.travelpod.com/members/bahtman...
It's maybe fit subject for a separate thread, but I encourage any and all with a writing bug to do travel journals whenever you go on vacation. Not only can you allow friends and family to tag along vicariously, you too can read them years later and re-live details you would otherwise have forgotten. They're also useful for passing tips on lodgings, eateries, points of interest, customs to be aware of and hazards to avoid - to random readers.
Anyone else done travel-writing?
(P.S. - Duncan Scott's recent T-pod journal, and the one by a guy I've never met calling himself "Battlemonkey" - both are linked at the right side of my T-pod page - are must-reads.)
.
It also gave me an unplanned bus trip from Phuket to Bangkok. More fun than flying, for certain!
from Nov 72 to june 73 with Curtis LeMay's Silly Air
Circus. -- j
.
I missed that party thanks to a lucky draft lottery number. Its the only good lottery number I have had.
and receiving fed dollars for some school expenses.
may your future lottery numbers be luckier!!! -- j
.
That is a GREAT photo!
Load more comments...