Tom Petty Park, Gainesville Florida

We have been Tom Petty fans for a very long time.  His death last year was very sad.  He has become our traveling companion on our road days in the RV via Sirius Radio.  Northeast Park in Gainesville Florida was recently renamed Tom Petty Park.  Tom, Mike Campbell and Benmont Tench the core of his band The Heartbreakers all grew up together in this middle class neighborhood in Gainesville.  Despite his succes in Los Angeles he hung onto his Southern roots recently recording songs like “Gainesville”, “The Bus to Tampa Bay” and “Southern Accents”.

There’s a map of Osceola and his Raiders                                                                                          Fighting off the Everglades Invaders                                                                                                  He burnt them down, he left them for the gators                                                                              And there’s maybe something better down the road  – lyrics from “The Bus to Tampa Bay”

Tom Petty Park

Some of his songs have lines that just resonate with our lifestyle.

“Gotta get going.  Gotta keep movin’  What lies ahead I have no way of knowin”.                     “Never slow down, never grow old”                                                                                                    “Most things I worry about, never happen anyway”

Tom fought for his fans when the record companies wanted to raise prices on his records.  He was furious when anyone suggested using his music for commercial purposes.  He vowed he would never allow the commercialization of his music while he was alive but did acknowledge that his heirs could do as they saw fit.  Just recently we heard Tom’s “Runnin down a Dream” on a college football broadcast.

We love Tom Petty.  His music will be with us forever.

We visited in November 2018.

 

 

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Cuba Cruise

Having lived most of our lives in Miami, we were very interested in visiting Cuba when the isolated nation began to open up.  Many of our friends visited and told us to “get there as soon as you can”.  We cruised on the Veendam ship of Holland America Line, a company that has been cruising for 145 years.  Most of our fellow travelers were veteran travelers and loyal to HAL.  There were many features we enjoyed including workshops and lectures not offered on many cruise lines.

We stopped in Cienfuegos Cuba on the south coast.  Its a small city settled by French people from Haiti and Louisiana.  The architecture is beautiful but everything seemed in need of refurbishment.  We got to see the Tomas Terry Theatre on Jose Marti Park which is being renovated in time for the city’s 200th anniversary next year.  It was/will be beautiful and unique.  We attended a chamber music performance with local musicians playing classical music with a Cuban twist.  They were great.  A highlight for many was a tour of the Botanic Gardens of Cienfuegos.  The preserve was built by Harvard University in the early 1900s to research sugar production and many tropical species.  We knew many of the plants of course but we’d never seen a Brazil Nut tree and its amazing pod.  We had a fine lunch at a Spanish owned hotel with traditional moros and tostones and flan.  The overall impression of Cuba is that time has stood still in Cuba.  The old cars and old buildings make you feel like you are in 1959 again.    People who own the old cars are called “believers” because so little of them is original.  The lack of commercialism compared to the US is startling.  But the people are friendly, optimistic and artistic.  They are welcoming Americans on their own terms.  We hope many more will visit and that relations will become more and more normal.  While Cuba is opening up there are still only  about 600,00 visitors from the US each year.

Cuba is a socialist country

Fidel is still around

Cuban style chamber music

Cienfuegos Cathedral

Town hall

Jose Marti Monument

May 20 1902 Cuba’s
Arc de Triumph

Valle’s Palace in Punta Gorda

50s American car

Another 50s Chevy

Brazil Nut tree pod

Our cruise actually began with a stop in Nassau Bahamas.  We have been there many times and walked to the Queen’s Staircase.  We also found the Bahamas Historical Society Museum open and had a nice visit with Andrea Major the director.  The Pompey Museum is named after a courageous slave and housed in the oldest building in Nassau.  It was built before 1769 and once hosted slave auctions.  It now tells the story of slavery in the Bahamas.

Nassau’s Queen’s Staircase

Bahamas Historical Society Museum

DI with Andrea Major

Pompey Museum

We also stopped at Georgetown Grand Cayman.  It had been many years since our last visit here and we enjoyed the town’s waterfront.  The town library’s ceiling is built like an upside down ship. Tarpon were abundant right in the harbor.

Veendam from Georgetown waterfront

Georgetown library

Waterfront

Cayman style traffic control

After leaving Cuba our next stop was scheduled to be Roatan, an island off the coast of Honduras.  Alas, the winds were too high to make a safe approach and our Irish Captain Colm Ryan cancelled the stop with apologies.

We then anchored off Belize City in Belize formerly known as British Honduras.  The city itself seemed pretty drab but we were off to Xunantunich, one of the great Mayan city-states.  It is a mile from the Guatemalan border and in the jungle.  We had to cross a river on a crank ferry to get to the site.  Howler monkeys played in the trees.  At the temple we were able to climb to the top led by a local guide who has been an archeologist there since the 80s.  The views and stories were great.

Crank ferry to Mayan site

Native iguana

Colorful crafts for sale

El Castillo – 130 feet high

Reproduced glyphs on El Castillo

Views of 3 river valleys from the top

A last highlight of the cruise was Chichen Itza in Mexico’s Yucatan state.  We reached it on an excursion from Playa del Carmen on a new expressway.  Our Mayan guide told us the story of not only Chichen Itza but of the Mayan region.  He told of the Spanish conquest and decimation of the native people and also told of what he called the second conquest when Spanish corporations came to the Yucatan coast to build resorts like Cancun and Playa del Carmen.  All this with little to no benefit to the surviving Mayans.  From 2002 to present Playa del Carmen grew from 22k people to 500k with Mayans a tiny minority.

The Temples at Chichen Itza are incredible works of astronomic brilliance, art and stonework.  Their calendar is accurate to within 2 seconds annually of our calender.  They thrived from about 600 to 1200 AD.  Many believe they had help from aliens but we may never know since the Spaniards destroyed all but 4 of the thousands of books from the Mayan culture.  “Thanks again Spain” says our Mayan guide.  Chichen Itza is a UNESCO World Heritage Site.

Temple of Kukulcan

Huge ball court

Glyphs and the snake

Temple of the Warriors

Holland America is a great cruise line and we enjoyed the Veendam as it was smaller (1200 passengers) than some of our recent ships.  All cruise lines need to do more to prevent the spread of viruses especially in the winter season.  The food was really good, service excellent, front office management excellent, boarding and port visits well managed.  We will cruise with them again.

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2018 Year End Wrap

2018 was a year of new destinations, big changes, milestones and old haunts.

We began the year in Florida and upgraded our motorhome to a beautiful 2014 Holiday Rambler Ambassador.  37 feet long with 3 big slides, king size air bed, full size residential fridge, central vac, fireplace and more.  This is our home and its nice.  11 months later we still love it.

Goldie – our new motorhome

One milestone reached this year was the high school graduation of our first grandchild, Bailey.  We stayed in Florida to congratulate her and her mom.  In the meantime we were able to take a Caribbean and transatlantic cruise thru YMT Vacations and the Elks.  It was 35 days from Ft. Lauderdale to the Bahamas, Dominican Republic, Antigua, St. Kitts, The Canary Islands, Spain, France, Croatia and Italy.

The graduate

On Michaelangelo Hill

When we finally left Florida our goal was to visit New England and especially Maine.  Our Mainer friends Paul and Kay encouraged us.  On the way we found many treasures and stories.  We visited Cumberland Island GA, Ft Sumter, New York City, Steamtown in PA, FDR’s Hyde Park, Cape Cod, Acadia National Park, Campobello, the Bay of Fundy, Fort Ticonderoga, Lake George, Mt. Washington Cog Railway and so much more.  Along the way we visited friends Rod and Jane, Ken and Donna, Linda, Sandy, Sean and Paul and Kay.  We would like to return to the region since there is so much more to see.  We took time off from our Northeasern trip to fly to Seattle to see Jason, Connie, Graham and Awen.  A Tillicum Native American salmon roast was a highlight of the trip.

On top of Mt Washington

High tide, Low tide

Lake George

Rail Explorers

Big Boy 4012

Awen and Mimi in Seattle

Fall is an inexpensive time to cruise and we found a cruise to Cuba on Holland America Line.  We sailed out of Ft. Lauderdale so we had no need to fly.  We found Cuba very interesting and would definitely visit again.  We also stopped in the Bahamas, Grand Cayman, Belize and the Yucatan region of Mexico.

We ended the year in Florida and visited some of our old haunts.  As full time traveleres we have the time to visit places we never had time for as workers and homeowners.  Some of our favorites were Silver Springs State Park with Ginger and Adam, Barberville Pioneer Village with Joe and Diane, Disney’s EPCOT with Ginger and Bailey, Bulow Ruins State Historic Site and Tom Petty Park in Gainesville.

Tom Petty Park
Gainesville Florida

Silver Springs SP

Traveling is our job right now and we had a good year. Our motorhome took us to most of New England and New Brunswick.  We cruised the Atlantic, Mediterranean, and Caribbean on 2 cruises.  All totalled we visited 15 states and 14 countries.  Not bad for beginners.

 

 

 

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Jimmy Carter Plains Georgia

Pine Mountain State Park is the closest park to both Warm Springs and Plains GA.  Its a beautiful park on the highest land in the area.  We picked a nice site overlooking a small lake.  Some bridges in the park have the distinct style of CCC bridges that we’ve seen in other areas.

After spending a day exploring FDR’s history we drove to Plains, the boyhood home and current residence of Jimmy Carter and his wife Rosalynn.  Plains is a tiny town even today.  The former high school is home to the Jimmy Carter Museum and Visitors Center.

Former Plains High School

Plains is little changed over the decades

Railroad depot that was Jimmy’s Campaign HQ

Jimmy’s book “An Hour Before Daylight” details the future President’s life in rural Georgia.  Born in 1924, he grew up during the Great Depression in the severely segregated deep south.  His boyhood home and farm are open to the public.

the Carter home

the Carter Commissary

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Warm Springs Georgia

Since we had visited Hyde Park and Campobello we decided to visit Warm Springs GA where FDR had many polio treatments and his Little White House.  He first visited the warm springs baths to treat his polio.  He became a part of the community and purchased the facility to keep it going.  While Governor of New York he built a home in Warm Springs.

FDR’s Little White House

 

When he became President he continued to visit the place as his personal retreat.  Many of his ideas for the New Deal and Rural Electrification came from his expereinces in Georgia.  It was during a visit April 12, 1945 as he sat for a portrait that he suffered a severe stroke and died a few hours later.  The chair, the room and the unfinished portrait are part of the tour at Roosevelt’s Little White House.  After visiting the home we toured the baths and even FDR’s favorite picnic spot atop nearby Pine Mountain overlooking the valley.

Room and chair where FDR suffered a stroke

Unfinished portrait

Warm Springs polio baths

FDR’s favorite picnic site

 

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Cape Cod

Cape Cod is a destination all on its own.  We only had a few days in the area due to the campground closing but we think we got a good taste.

The Cape Cod Canal was developed in the early 20th century to benefit shipping around the Cape Cod peninsula.  It was started privately but unsuccessful until the Army Corp of Engineers rebuilt it to safe standards.

Cape Cod Canal

Cape Cod Potato Chip Factory offers factory tours.  We like these kind of tours but this day they sent everyone home early – so no tour.

Hyannis is well known as the haven of the Kennedys.  We saw the Memorial at Veterans Park and visited Kalmus Beach as the sun was setting.

Hyannis – Nantucket Ferry

Cape Cod National Seashore has several beautiful lighthouses and long stretches of sandy beach.  It is also well known for dangerous sharks.  Unfortunately there was a fatal shark attack a few weeks before our visit.  Provincetown seemed to us like a tiny Key West.

Nauset Light AKA the potato chip light

Outer Cape beach

Recent shark attack victim

Province Lands sand dunes

Highland Light
Cape Cod Light

One very nice stop for foodies on the Cape was Atlantic Spice Company in Truro.  Great selection of bulk herbs, spices and teas as well as kitchen tools.  Free shipping on $50 orders… https://www.atlanticspice.com/ Thanks to Sandy for recommending it.

It was very nice to visit in the off season.  We can only imagine what its like here in August!  Its a special place.

 

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Newport

On our way south from Maine we stopped near Cape Cod for a few days before the campground closed for the season.

Our first excursion in the area was to Newport Rhode Island.  We have heard about Newport for years and fellow travelers told us “If you liked the Vanderbilt Mansion and The Biltmore, you gotta see Newport”.  They weren’t kidding.  One after the other we toured five of the “cottages” as these mansions were called.  Traditionally they were only occupied 6 to 8 weeks each Summer.  This was the Gilded Age and each tried to out-do the other.

The Breakers was the summer home of Cornelius Vanderbilt II.  He made his fortune in steamships and the New York Central Railroad.  Built from 1893 to 1895 it has 70 rooms and over 125,000 square feet.  It was designed by famed architect Robert Morris Hunt in the style of an Italian Renaissance palazzo .  The Vanderbilts had 7 children.  The youngest of them, Gladys, was an ardent supporter of the Preservation Society of Newport and opened the Breakers to tours in 1948 to raise funds.

The Breakers

The grand staircase

The dining room

The music room

Typical ceiling

Marble House  was built for William K. Vanderbilt from 1888 to 1892 and has over 500,000 cubic feet of marble.  It set the pace for the stone palaces of Summer Newport society.  Upon completion Mr. Vanderbilt gave the home to his wife Alva.  The home cost $11 million to build.  Alva called the home her “temple of the arts”.  They  divorced 3 years later.  It was an interesting time.  Their daughter Consuelo married into British royalty and became the Duchess of Marlborough, son William Jr became a leading figure in auto racing while son Harold became a world famous yachtsman winning the Americas Cup 3 times.  Mom Alva held women’s suffrage rallies on the lawn.

Marble House

The Gothic Room

The Tea House

Yachtsman Harold Vanderbilt

Women’s suffrage rallies at Marble House

We also visited Rosecliff.  Commisioned by Nevada silver heiress Theresa Fair Oelrichs in 1899, architect Stanford White modeled the palatial home after the Grand Trianon, the garden retreat of French kings at Versailles.  Many films were shot in this home including The Great Gatsby.

Rosecliff

Chateau sur Mer was built in 1852 for the China trade shipping merchant William Wetmore.  The home was built in High Victorian style inside and out.  It was the center of Newport society until the Vanderbilts moved in.

Chateau sur Mer

China trade on display

Victorian style

Servants stairs

The Elms was our last stop of the day.  It was the summer home of Edward Berwind of New York and Philadelphia who made his fortune in coal.  The home was modeled after a chateau outside Paris and the interior and furnishings were designed by Jules Allard of Paris.  Allard was the interior designer of choice for Newport.

The Elms

Allard designed interior

The conservatory

Over time the homes became obsolete and over 40 were torn down but what remains is a testament to the excesses of obscene wealth during times when the average family was barely getting by.                                                                                                                                The Preservation Society of  Newport  https://www.newportmansions.org/ has purchased or acquired all these homes and more and does a great job preserving and hosting tours.

 

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Portland Maine

Portland is a small city with a progressive vibe.  We visited on an amazing day in October with 87 degrees!  The city has a nice little railroad museum and preserves a 2 foot gauge railway.  Thats 24 inches between the rails as opposed to standard gauge 48.5 inches.

Maine Narrow Gauge Railroad and Museum

The harborfront is a busy place with ferries coming and going and 2 cruise ships the day we visited.  Its a very walking biking friendly city with an interesting history.

We visited two beautiful lighthouses that guard the coast, Bug Light and Portland Head Light.  There are many more along the island dotted coast.

Bug Light

Portland Head Light

Old Orchard Beach is the nearby town we camped at.  In October this is a pretty quiet place but we could imagine in season it would be extremely busy.  We had a nice beach day while there.

Old Orchard Beach

The Pier

Maine is a great destination for many reasons.  We had a good time and know there is so much more to see and do.  We’ll be back.

 

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New Brunswick

We really did not plan to see much of New Brunswick on this trip.  While we stayed at a campground near Calais Maine it was so close and such an easy border crossing (think no lines, relaxed border guards) we thought, why not?

St. Croix Island is a National Park Service site near Calais Maine and a Provincial Park in New Brunswick.  Its one of those surprise little parks with a huge historic story.  It was the first attempted European settlement in 1604, 3 years before Jamestown.  The French settlement was a total failure but lessons were learned that enabled the next group to succeed.

This little island made history

First European attempt at settling North America

St. Andrews by the Sea is a lovely seaside resort town with a historic British Blockhouse, lighthouse and famous botanical gardens.

Pendlebury Lighthouse

Low tide at St. Andrews by the Sea

Early 19th Century Blockhouse

Low tide bar to Ministers Island

Kingsbrae Garden

Hopewell Rocks is a popular site in the Bay of Fundy and home to the “Flowerpots”, rock structures visable at low tide in an area of 40 foot tides.  Seeing these rocks at high tide and then walk the area at low tide is incredible.  The tide here can rise up to 13 feet in an hour.  We stayed in nearby Alma NB where the impact of tides on the local fishing fleet is obvious.

Hopewell Rocks low tide

High tide

High tide

Low tide

40 feet underwater

Low tide at Alma NB

The Moncton Tidal Bore is world famous for the tidal wave (not tsunami) rushing upstream twice per day in downtown Moncton New Brunswick.  It is amazing to wait and wait and then here it comes.  The visitor center has the timing down to within 15 minutes.

Moncton River

The Tidal Bore

Deer Island is a small island in Passamaquoddy Bay between New Brunswick and Maine.  We took the free car ferry.  This is a very rural quiet place.  It is most famous for “Old Sow”, one of the largest tidal whirlpools in the world.  Tides are so serious here anything can happen and this whirlpool is awesome.  Scary!

Free ferry to Deer Island

Typical shoreline

Old Sow tidal whirlpool

New Brunswick is a very pretty province with great roads and friendly people.  It is probably the most bilingual of all Canada.

Cape Enrage Light

Sawmill Creek bridge 1905

 

 

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Campobello and Eastern Maine

Our Northernmost goal this year was Campobello Island International Park off the extreme east coast of Maine.  Campobello is actually located in the Canadian Province of New Brunswick.  In Roosevelts time the nearest ferry was from Lubec Maine.  Now the bridge from Lubec connects the island with the US.  Due to some ferry closures the only way to reach the island is through Maine.  So, much like Hyder Alaska, Campobello residents must have a passport to visit the rest of their own country.

Campobello is best known as the vacation home of Franklin Delano Roosevelt and his family.  The Roosevelts called it the Beloved Island.  FDR swam, sailed and enjoyed family time on the island.  The home is preserved almost exactly as it was in 1920.  There was no electricity or telephone.  It was here that FDR came down with polio when he was 39 years old. The first thing to do at Campobello is have “Tea with Eleanor”.  Tea is served at least twice per day and the first tea is free if you arrive early enough to book a seat.  Tea is served in the Wells-Shober Cottage a short walk from the Visitors Center.  It includes not only tea and ginger cookies but a detailed presentation by 2 women about Eleanor Roosevelt, a truly extraordinary woman.  Plan on an hour.  The park also offers home tours and guided walks of the area.  There are carriage roads to many points of interest.

The Roosevelt home at Campobello

Relaxed interior of FDR cottage

The Wells-Shober Cottage where Tea with Eleanor is served

One of our wonderful hostesses at tea

Campobello Island is home to East Quoddy Lighthouse.  It sits on the northeastern end of the island and is accessible for walkers and occasional tours at or near low tide.  We were lucky enough to arrive in time to hike and a volunteer was giving tours all the way to the top.  We kept an eye on the time as the tide can rise up to 5 feet per hour.

East Quoddy Lighthouse

Volunteer guide and the red light

Rugged hike to the light

Lubec is the Maine town nearest Campobello and the easternmost town in the United States.  West Quoddy Lighthouse stands nearby.

West Quoddy Lighthouse

Eastport sits in Passamaquoddy Bay.  It was the commercial center of the area in the 1920s and today. The Roosevelts got most of their supplies from here.  Its another Maine city with huge 25 foot tides.  In 1833 it was the second largest trading port in the United States behind New York City.  Back in the day it was a big cod fishing port.  Sardine packing was big business here and as an ice-free year round port potatoes and hay were shipped.  Though much has declined fishing and tourism are primary today.

Low low tide at Eastport

Monument to the cod fisherman

We were surprised to learn that Campobello is considered the second best place to view sunset in the US.  #1 is Hawaii.

Sunset from Campobello

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