Coping With Corona

As the world hunkers down to try to stop the spread of the Covid-19 virus, many travel restrictions are in place around the world. I decided about a week ago to postpone my bucket list travel trip to Egypt. In the meantime, unless there is a “shelter in place” for our area, I have decided to get out of the house to a local park where there is fresh air and no need to maintain a distance of three to six feet between myself and others, as there really are not that many people out and about right now.

I traveled to Ravine State Park in Palatka, Florida, which is a beautiful state park with large suspension bridges along a 2.5 mile loop wooded trail. This place is very interesting, as it is elevated in some spots beyond our usual “sea level” flat trails here in Florida. Although this place has had some damages from recent hurricanes, it is known for its display of azaleas and LOTS of them. At this time of year in 2020, most of the azaleas have already bloomed, but I saw an occasional bloom peaking out among isolated branches. A spot of color on an otherwise green branch here and there gave me pause and reminded me that all things are temporary, including this Covid-19 virus. It will run its course eventually, and eventually life will return essentially to normal for the most part. I am not sure what this will do to our economy or way of life long term, but I do know that the Covid-19 will eventually run its course. In the meantime, I will get out to local travel places, now that even Disney has shut down, to find inspiration…….find inspiration in nature and revisit places I have visited already again in my mind……

A lonely bloom which reminds us that everything is temporary

I ALWAYS will agree to the sentiment behind the company whose logo says, “Life is Good”.

Try to see the beauty and stay calm…..stay safe.

Maybe I can find a four leaf clover among the oxalis…………

A link to the Ravine Gardens State Park can be found here: https://www.floridastateparks.org/parks-and-trails/ravine-gardens-state-park

Bark that almost looks painted

“There are moments when all anxiety and stated toil are becalmed in the infinite leisure and repose of nature.”

-Henry David Thoreau

Head to Providence, RI

Headed to New England a few weeks ago and couldn’t help but look forward to the cold weather. Wish there was a Waterfire going in the state’s capital, but that is reserved for warmer months. Check out this site here: https://waterfire.org/

Waterfire lights up the Providence and Woonasquatucket Rivers in downtown, Providence. Such an artistic effect in Providence’s “Renaissance City”. Definitely something worth checking out if you are in Rhode Island.

River in downtown Providence where “Waterfire” is held, viewed from Providence Place Mall
Rhode Island School of Design Museum exterior

Another great place to visit in Providence is the Rhode Island School of Design Museum, a place where I first saw an Egyptian sarcophagus and a fragment of relief from the Egyptian Karnak Temple. This is where I knew I wanted to visit Egypt some day and planted the seed for my wanderlust.

Fragment from Karnak Temple in Luxor, Egypt

Check out the Museum page here: https://risdmuseum.org/

Coffin and mummy of Nesmin, 170-30 BCE, Rhode Island School of Design Museum

Providence is a magical city, where a statue of Roger Williams overlooks downtown near the First Baptist Church of Rhode Island.

Roger Williams, founder of Rhode Island and the first Baptist church in America, located in Providence, RI
First Baptist Church of America, 75 North Main Street, Providence, Rhode Island

Of course, Rhode Island is home to a couple of world famous colleges, most notably Brown University and Rhode Island School of Design

Brown University, an Ivy League university in Providence, RI
The courtyard outside the “Met Cafe”, Rhode Island School of Design’s cafeteria in Providence, RI

Of course, one can spend the day looking at many interesting examples of architecture in Providence, especially on the East Side. You can read more about the architecture in Providence here:

https://www.brown.edu/cis/sta/dev/providence_architecture/index.html

This is an example of one of many private residence homes in Providence’s East Side that looks like a dollhouse
Another example of interesting architecture in Providence

Providence is easily accessible by plane into T.F. Green Airport in Warwick, Rhode Island, although the airport code is technically “PVD” for Providence. You can ride by car to Providence from the Airport in about fifteen minutes. A train also connects the PVD airport to Providence for about $3.00-$8.00. Providence is a great city to walk around by foot. In fact, in winter time, you can even go ice skating in Kennedy Plaza in downtown. While you are there, check out some Rhode Island Italian food on Federal Hill, which used to be a little like a smaller version of New York’s Little Italy, but now is more multi-cultural. You can still get some of the best Italian restaurants here like Joe Marzilli’s Old Canteen Restaurant, Enoteca Umberto, Cassarino’s, Venda Ravioli (where you can also purchase fresh pasta in the store), among others. While in Providence, you might want to check out Cafe Nuovo if you want to dine by the riverside with “global dishes” downtown or Al Forno, which is a wonderful Italian restaurant near the river in Providence as well.

While you are in Federal Hill, don’t forget to check out DePasquale Plaza, which has a fountain in the middle of the plaza, which reminds me of a piazza in Europe where folks congregate on warm summer nights. DePasquale Plaza is a short walk from Pastiche, which has many wonderful desserts or Caserta Pizza, which has delicious pizza and Rhode Island style “spinach pies”, a variation of what is known as a calzone in the rest of the country. Simply delicious! Spinach pies are sold in many bakeries here as well as pizza parlors, too.

Several other foods to try while in Rhode Island are “quahogs”, a type of mollusk which is served in chowder (or “chowda” as the locals call it), clam cakes, baked stuffies. Rhode Island is known also for Saugy hotdogs (Cranston) and hot wieners, a type of hot dog served with Rhode Island’s special meatsauce and other toppings like onions and celery sauce. Don’t forget their “party pizza” which is typically purchased at bakeries or grocery stores, not pizza parlors, and is served at room temperature with sauce but no cheese. These traditional party pizza strips, which are often sliced in square or rectangle pieces, are often found at graduation parties, birthday parties, and other social gatherings.

There have been several movies shot in Rhode Island you might want to watch after your trip.

Dumb and Dumber (1994) directed by Peter and Robert Farrelly,

There’s Something About Mary (1998) directed by Peter and Robert Farrelly,

Dan in Real Life (2007) directed by Peter Hedges

The Great Gatsby (1974) directed by Jack Clayton,

Amistad (1997) directed by Steven Spielberg ,

Meet Joe Black (1998) directed by Martin Brestm

Me, Myself, and Irene (2000) directed by Peter and Robert Farrellym

27 Dresses (2008) directed by Anne Fletcher,

Moonrise Kingdom (2012) directed by Wes Anderson,

Irrational Man (2015) directed by Woody Allen

All in all Providence, and all of Rhode Island, is a delightful little place to visit. Consider visits to Narragansett, Block Island, and Newport while you are there, too. Boston is only about an hour away from Providence, and New Hampshire is about two hours away. Parts of Maine (Kittery) are only about two and a half hours away, and Mystic, Connecticut is only about an hour away. There are lots of options to visit New England if you start your trip in Rhode Island.

#wanderlust #Providence #FederalHill #RISD #RISDMuseum #travelinspiration #moviesfilmedinRhodeIsland #restaurantsinRhodeIsland #traveltoRhodeIsland #travelInspiration #BrownUniversity #ProvidenceArchitecture #RenasissanceCity #USTravel #NewEnglandTravel #travel #tourism #bucketlisttravel

WHO WE ARE…..

“We are the sum total of our experiences. Those experiences…. make us the person we are, at any given point in our lives. And, like a flowing river, those same experiences, and those yet to come, continue to influence and reshape the person we are, and the person we become. None of us are the same as we were yesterday, nor will be tomorrow.”

-BJ Neblitt

A Cruise from Greenland to Quebec City

Photo by stein egil liland on Pexels.com

A few years ago, I had the good fortune to travel aboard a ship in a two week journey in the Arctic Circle from Greenland to Quebec City with one of my best friends. The trip was meaningful in so very many ways. It was chance to reconnect with my friend in ways I couldn’t even imagine because we had the luxury of time. Staying up late and talking well into the night in our cabin reminded me of talking well into the night with my college room mate, exchanging ideas and thoughts about life and living. What a wonderful gift to have the luxury of time in order to connect with another person so deeply. This cruise visited many wonderful sights, including L’Anse-Aux-Meadows in Newfoundland, Canada. L’Anse aux Meadows is the first and only known site established by Vikings in North America and the earliest evidence of European settlement in the New World. As such, it is a unique milestone in the history of human migration and discovery. To think that I might have been walking among the same path that Erik the Great once walked was so humbling. The cruise was memorable for many reasons but because of the people I encountered. Connections with people make all the world of difference to me.

This cruise was truly  life-changing because I met so many inspirational people.   I met a woman who grew up in East Berlin before the “wall” fell.  Her mother was a doctor, and her dad was a professor.  After the wall fell, her mother was no longer allowed to practice medicine but finally got an assistant job in a medical clinic with HIV patients.  Her dad ended up selling insurance.  Many of her parents’ friends committed suicide because the change in their lives was so difficult, yet this young woman saw the change as opportunity, even though it radically changed her world.  I couldn’t help but think that everything is perspective. We Americans thought the wall falling was a good thing, yet many of those in East Berlin may have thought it wasn’t such a good thing at the very same time. Very inspiring. Very life-changing.

I met an 88 year old man from England who sails on a cruise every month for the past fourteen years since his wife died.  Instead of pining indefinitely for her death, he has moved on, although he misses her.    He gave half of his business away to a friend because he no longer needed it, then gave the other half to another friend because his kids no longer needed the business.  His goal now in life is to be arrested for speeding when he is 110!  He said the secret to his success was to always be himself, work hard, and be kind to others.  Such a simple ideology that I share. 

I met the hotel director who eats dessert first (and sometimes two) every night. On occasion my friend and I eat dessert first now in deference to all that we learned on that wonderful journey.

I met the ship’s doctor who had served in Kosovo and Afganistan but still remains to be light-hearted and smiles a lot.

I met a couple from America. She used to be an opera singer who gave that up to open a pottery studio.  He used to be a high-powered marketing entrepreneur in Silicon Valley.  They decided to sail to New Zealand, and stopped in Hawaii for a few years along the way.  When they went to New Zealand, they loved the attitudes of the people and found them so refreshing that they decided to become citizens there. They now reside there and are citizens of New Zealand.

I met a German woman who lives in Abu Dhabi and works in Dubai.  She traveled on the cruise as single woman without any companions and is a strong and powerful woman, having overcome a difficult family and homelife as a child.

I met one kindred spirit who smiled at us when we first boarded the tender to get us to the ship in a tiny little cove in Kangerlussuaq, Greenland. This boarding was not what we expected, with make-shift home-made wooden steps, when we thought about the luxury cruise for which we signed up. The cruise line was French-speaking, so some of the conversations around us were difficult to understand with my limited French speaking ability. This beautiful kindred spirit near us spoke to us and simply said, “Strange, right?” in English. He is the first person who understood our thoughts about which we dared not speak. I felt like the “Emperor Who Wore New Clothes” looking around to all the others who thought the embarkation was wonderful, yet this stranger from Belgium who later became our friend had the courage to reach out to us with his similar thoughts. His joie de vivre that we had come to know on that ship still inspires us to this day. He reassured us that once on board, the cruise would be wonderful and luxurious, and he was right!

Finally one of the most magical moments of the that cruise was having the captain wake us up in the middle of the night over the PA system to see the Aurora Borealis one night. Seeing the Aurora Borealis was always on my bucket list, and I am humbled and grateful to have had the opportunity to see it.  It was magical. We all scrambled to the upper deck, with our parkas over our pajamas to catch a glimpse of what the ancient people in Greenland thought was the spirits of children who died at birth. The dancing of the children around and around caused the continually moving streamers seen in the Aurora.

Life is, indeed, good…………

A trip to soothe my soul……..

This week end, I traveled with my thirteen year old daughter in order to experience life together away from the noise of school, homework, daily life, etc…When I first read about the synchronous fireflies at Congaree National Park, I just knew we HAD to go. Evidently, these male fireflies that light up at the same time as other males in the woods to attract female attention as part of their mating habits is pretty rare. There are only a few places in the world to see these, and one of the lesser known places is Congaree National Park. We traveled by car for about 6 and a half hours to see these beautiful creatures along a small trail in the woods that is known as the “Redwoods of the East” because of the many tall trees there. While I was there, I was thinking of my  experience as a summer camp counselor as a teen at a camp in the woods that had a beautiful causeway road where we used to lie in the middle and just listen……there was that magical moment when you could see the stars and hear the bullfrogs calling that always took my breath away.  That moment of excitement combined somehow with peace and solitude at the same time.  A sense of wonder and excitement that there was a whole life happening around us at the very same moment in time, even though that moment felt somehow frozen in time for us.  I felt almost like that somehow with the fireflies, especially when I closed my eyes and could hear the wood pecker and the birds sing earlier in the same forest around twilight during our two and a half mile hike.  It was one of those moments that take your breath away all over again, even in my 50’s.  Life IS good. It has been said that it is “the little” things that make life rich and full. These fireflies is one of those very “little things” that at the same time is a once-in-a-lifetime experience.

Musings about the journey of life…………

I started this blog to share some of the thoughts I have along the journey of life. I love to travel and spend time with my family and friends. A good meal, breaking bread with those I love, gives my life meaning. So does travel. I adore dreaming of sites to visit, not just to check them off on a list. Rather, I consider myself a student of life, traveling as an explorer, to open my mind to all the possibilities the world holds in store for me and for others. I love to travel to discover how different the world is in terms of climate, cultures, politics, terrain, economy, etc. but also to discover how SIMILAR the people are. Despite language barriers, much can be communicated with a smile or gestures. Language is simply a means to communicate, yet there are so very many other ways to communicate. Once when I was in French-speaking Canada, I realized that my 7th grade French class didn’t teach me the word for “straw”. However, when I thought about it, I was able to communicate to the very French-speaking waiter in a very French-speaking restaurant about my need for a “cylinder through which to drink” in my limited French vocabulary. Travel challenges the mind and soul, stretching us to problem solve and form conclusions about all that we experience. THAT is the type of travel I enjoy best.

“All’s well that ends well”, as they say………….”Life is Good” as well.