Friday, June 5, 2015

✈️✈️✈️2014 ~July 15-23, Trip to Providence, Rhode Island

Day 1: Tuesday, July 15, 2014
From 7 A.M. to 9:05, I traveled on Delta 2225, Zone 2, from Huntsville to Atlanta, GA. 
9:45-12:15, on Delta 2512, Zone 3, Seat 12A, traveled from Atlanta to Providence, Rhode Island.
My daughter picked me up at T.F. Green Airport in Providence, RI, also known as Theodore Francis Green State Airport. (Small Airport)
She drove us to Legal Sea Foods, 2099 Post Rd, Warwick, RI.
Legal Sea Foods
July 13 through 19 was restaurant week in Providence and Warwick, Rhode Island, and Legal Sea Foods participated. 
First, we were brought a basket of bread and butter, and each a glass of water.
Bowl of Clam Chowder
We shared a bowl of clam chowder soup, Caesar Salad with large grilled shrimp, and bread with butter, drank water with lemon, and finished the meal with bonbons. (Bonbons are bite-sized ice cream dipped in chocolate.)
BonBon
The Classic Caesar salad had romaine hearts, garlic croutons, and Shaved Romano, topped with creamy dressing and jumbo grilled shrimp. The Rhode Island clam chowder had clams, potatoes, and Chourico. 
With my daughter's Rhode Island library card, we visited the Rhode Island School of Design (RISD) at 224 Benefit St, Providence, RI 02903.
The RISD Museum has three floors and six levels.
The top level was a replica of the Pendleton house, from the early 18th & 19th Centuries. 
There were six galleries: the Donglia Center Asian Gallery, the Grand Gallery, the Fin Danforth Gallery, and the Porcelain Gallery. Gallery, Chase Gallery & Gelman Gallery!
Art Museum
Throughout the week, it has been hard to find parking, and we finally found parking next to  
The Carrie Tower at Brown University is located at Waterman and Prospect Streets.

We only had enough money to put in the meter for one hour. My daughter would walk back to the car one hour later to refill the meter.

We walked through all six levels of the Art Museum and exited through the gift shop on the ground level, which led out into the historic town of Providence.

We walked past Rhode Island's Design Market House and the Korean War Marker.

At Brown University, we walked past the John Ray Library. Next to it was the Howard Phillip Lovecraft plaque. At the entrance gate, we saw the plaque for Ezekiel Gilman Robinson, LLD, President of Brown University, 1872-1889, and the Clock Tower.
As we were leaving Brown University, we saw children in metal outfits dancing around a tree.

We walked along the canal, where we saw the Jalbert Warner Memorial Pedestrian Bridge.
Every other Saturday, the Boy Scouts light the way along the canal, and boat rides are available. 
Canal in Providence 
The Jalbert Warner Memorial Pedestrians Bridge
In the financial district, we saw two people rappelling down a large building (built in 1917), and they looked like they had an iPad in their hands. What was up with that? We also saw the Arcade building.
People Repelling 
On the Post Office Circle, we walked past Burnside Park, the Federal Building, and the Post Office. 
We walked past the Fleur-de-lys Studio, across the street from The First Baptist Church, founded by Rogers Williams.

After we finished sightseeing, my daughter drove back to the Rochambeau Library to return her free pass to the RISD Museum.

My daughter drove to Planet Hollywood in New Bedford to cancel her gym membership, but they said she would have to cancel at the gym where she started her membership.
We went to Aldie, where we bought tuna, pickles, ice cream, water, Cool Whip, cucumber, bananas, and blueberries. 
Back at my daughter's third-floor apartment, she made Tuna Salad for dinner, with boiled eggs, tuna, olives, pickles, and onions. 
After the long flight, visiting the RISD, and walking several blocks in Historic Providence, I was ready to rest. 
Therefore, we both climbed into bed and watched Netflix.
We both were asleep by the time our heads hit the pillows.

Day 2: Wednesday, July 16, 2014
My daughter went to work at 11:00 A.M. 
It rained all morning, and by noon, the rain had stopped, but it was still cloudy.
Therefore, I decided to venture out of the apartment. I looked around, noting where I was and taking pictures of the area so I would not get lost. 

I started walking from Gano Street to Waterman Street, then down Butler, and onto Angel Street. I stopped at CVS, where I bought myself a large Hershey's Chocolate Candy bar with almonds and toffee. 

I walked one block down Geno Street and two blocks down on Pitman Street, where I saw a Rite Aid.
Behind Rite Aid was the Eastside Market; I did not stop to shop.
I stopped long enough to take pictures of the murals on the back wall of the Rite Aid building. 
I could see the Seekonk River behind the Eastside Market, so I walked past the grocery store down to the river. Where I took pictures of the Seekonk River and the stuck-up bridge (an old disconnected bridge that people call an eyesore)
Stuck-up Bridge
As it started to get dark and looked very much like rain, I began my walk back to the apartment.
I was only three and a half blocks from the apartment and about half a block away when the rain came.
I could see it coming; I could feel it in the air, but it was too far away to beat it.
It hit me like a pail of water. I was drenched, and you couldn't find a dry spot on me.

I tried to cover my camera with my shirt, but it was soaked.
When I finally reached the apartment, I took off all my clothes, climbed into the shower, and took a long, hot shower. I put my wet clothes in front of the air conditioner to dry.
I snuggled into the warm bed, turned on Netflix, and watched a series of shows about three girls becoming mermaids. H2O Just add a little water.

For breakfast, my daughter made French toast with bananas and blueberries, topped with Cool Whip. She made her lunch and was off to work. 
I ate leftover Tuna Salad for lunch.
A man came by to install a fire alarm. 
My daughter mixed up a protein shake after she got home from work, which we drank for supper.
We climbed into bed and watched The Guilt Trip with Barbara Streisand on Netflix.

Day 3: Thursday, July 17, 2014   
My daughter bought tickets online at Captain John's for $30.00 each for us to go whale watching at 2P.M. Their tickets go fast. 
We had several hours to kill, so my daughter drove to Fall River, and we stopped at Battleship Park to see the Battleship USS Massachusetts (BB-58), which was located on the Taunton River and Mt Hope Bay.
Battle Ship USS Massachusetts (BB-58) 
The battleship was partly under the Braganza Bridge.
The Braganza Bridge was being repaired, with huge, noisy vacuum pipes connected to it to collect the debris. 
All in the same area was the Railroad Museum, which was closed.
Railroad Museum 
The Marine Museum smelled musky, so we stopped for a peek.
Marine Museum at Fall River
The Lincoln Park Carousel was closed for repairs.
Lincoln Park Carousel 
There was a lot of construction going on in this area.

Our next stop was in New Bedford.
My daughter parked the car next to a meter and Captain Paul Cuff Park. 
I took pictures of Captain Paul Cuff, Trial By Fire, Captain Paul Cuff Compass, and History Markers. We also saw a large coffee pot hanging on the side of a building.
Then we walked up to Johnny Cake Hill Street (a one-way street). We walked past a sign that read, "Preservation Works!" We walked past Saving Mariners' Souls and the Seaman's Bethel Church, the Mariners' Home, built in 1787, the Corson Building, Arthur Moniz Gallery, and Whaleman's Shipping List.
Captain Paull Cuff Park and Johnny Cake Hill Sign
We stopped outside the Jonathan Bourne Whale Museum, where we saw the sign that read: Preserving Whaling's Legacy: The New Bedford Whaling Museum.
We saw a small boat, a sign welcoming the Charles Morgan from June 28 through July 6, a telescope, tables with umbrellas, a whale statue, a large squid hanging off the side of the building, and a sign underneath reading: 
Erik Durant
"Giant Squid"
Part of the outdoor sculpture project: 
"In the Unequal Cross-lights: Contemporary Sculptors
Responding to the Whaling Museum Collections"
A collaborative art project between the University of Massachusetts Dartmouth and the New Bedford Whaling Museum. 
Please do not touch or climb on the sculptures
A man walked up to us and said, "My son made that sculpture."
Statue of a whale at Jonathan Bourne Whale Museum
Inside the Jonathan Bourne Whale Museum, we saw a full-scale whale skeleton hanging from the ceiling.
Whale Skeleton
We went aboard the half-scaled Lagoda Whaling Ship.

Ship Lagoda 
We saw Paintings, drawings, manuscripts, books, photographs, maps, charts, navigational Instruments, whaling prints, and ethnological and tribal art objects.
New Bedford housed the most outstanding collections of scrimshaw (the practice of drawing on whale teeth or other forms of Ivory), including canes, watches, hutches, birdcages, pie crimpers, and many other items. 
We saw the world's longest painting, "Whaling Voyage' Round the World.
Whaling Voyage Round the World
My daughter went to get the car, and I walked across the street to the Seaman Bethel Church at 15 Johnny Cake Hill.
Inside the Seaman Bethel Church
In 1851, Herman Melville published his famous tale of the white whale. In it, he wrote:
"In this same New Bedford, there stands a Whaleman's Chapel, and few are the moody fishermen, shortly bound for the Indian Ocean or Pacific, who fail to make a Sunday visit to the spot."Moby-Dick, by Herman Melville

We ate lunch at Black Whale's Seafood and Raw Bar in New Bedford, located at Pier 3.
We both ordered Cod Fish Sandwiches, which came with Coleslaw and fries. Each cost $ 6.99, and we got water with lemon to drink.
In front of the Black Whale Restaurant sat a giant, blue, wooden chair. I climbed into it, and she took my picture.
I walked along Pier 3, which was covered with fishing boats. I saw Halima M, Hear no Evil, Alaska, Mistress, Janice & Jud, Hedy Brenna, Police boats, and many others. I walked past the City Wharfing, which now housed the Visitors Center. It still had a bell, and the American Flag attached to it.
Pier 3
I saw the Whaling Capital, Working Waterfront, A Whaling Town, From Whales to Flatfish and Scallops Markers, and a large sign that read PIER 3.

Now we are on our way to Plymouth, MA, for our 2:00 P.M. whaling tour. 
It took two boats to carry all the passengers, and we were on the second boat (the spillover boat).
The pamphlet said you might need to bring a sweatshirt or jacket. 
They were not kidding because the further we got into the Ocean and the faster the boat went, the colder it got.  
It was a beautiful day for whale watching, and we stopped just short of our journey and saw a mother and her calf.

We journeyed further out to sea, where we saw five whales together. Everyone was excited.
The whales would go under the Ocean and come back up for air. The whale spits water into the air, and he went back down again. They were never in the same place, and our ship was constantly moving, turning, and following the whales.
Three Whales
It was getting late, so we headed back to the dock. My daughter and I went inside for most of the way back. 
Such a beautiful day to take pictures with blue skies, white clouds, and islands dotted with houses, sailboats, fishing boats, paddle boats, cabin cruisers, and Lighthouses.

I took many pictures as we sailed past the Mayflower ship, Plymouth Rock Memorial, and Plymouth Colony.
Replica of the Mayflower
There was a crowd leaving the tour, and it took at least 15 minutes to get off the boat. 
The parking lots were full of tourists, and we found a park just as someone was leaving.
We walked through the park to get a closer look at Plymouth Rock, the Mayflower Ship, and the Plymouth colony.
Plymouth Rock
Plymouth Rock is the traditional site of disembarkation of William Bradford and the Mayflower Pilgrims, who founded Plymouth Colony in 1620.
We walked through the town of Plymouth, stopping to visit some of the graves of the early settlers at Burial Hill. 
William Bradford, the Pilgrim Governor, Edward Doty, Richard Warren, and John Howland were Mayflower passengers. William Brewster, a Church Elder, and Mary Allerton, the last surviving passenger of the Mayflower, were also on board.
Here lies the body of Mrs. Hannah Cooper, the wife of Mr. John Cooper, who died March 14, 1763, aged 52 years, 4 months, and 18 days
I took pictures of the First Parish Church in Plymouth, founded in 1620 by the Pilgrims; it is the oldest church in the US that has been in continuous operation.
We saw a statue of William Bradford, the Governor and Historian of the Plymouth Colony.

We saw markers that read: Pilgrim Memorial State Park, Brewster Garden, (the Pilgrim Trail), Plymouth Waterfront, (telling about Plymouth Rock, Mayflower II, and Town Brook), Leyden Street (Telling about Leyden Street, Town Square, Burial Hill, and Current building and history), Cole's Hill, (telling about the Massasoit Statue, The Bride Tree and the Sarcophagus.

As we were leaving Plymouth, we stopped at Papa Gino's for dinner.
We ordered a Greek Salad, four-cheese breadsticks, and an oatmeal-raisin cookie.
We ate at 7:31, and it was an hour's drive back to my daughter's apartment.
We were in bed and asleep by 11 P.M.

Day 4: Friday, July 18, 2014
Washed two loads of clothes and talked to my daughter's proprietor, Miss Marcie.
Marcie and I talked bout her two sons and ex-husband. She told me about his many wives and how he had called her numerous times, apologizing for their breakup.
He begged her to come to Texas from Rhode Island, so he left her two sons with her parents and took a bus to Texas. 
When she arrived, he then took a taxi to his apartment and knocked on the door. It took him several minutes to respond. He opened the door, and she walked inside, only to find him with another woman.
She turned around and repurchased a ticket to Rhode Island, never to set foot in Texas again.
In her later years, she met a charming, big husky man, and they corresponded for some time. He got cancer of the throat, and he moved in with her while she nursed him, but he died a few years later. 
We left a load of clothes in the dryer and one in the washer.

My daughter got ready for work, and we rode to Fox Point so she could get her nails redone.
I wanted to explore India Park, which is located in Fox Point along the Seekonk River. 
We parked next to Our Lady of the Rosary Church, where I took pictures, and then I walked to India Park.

Our Lady of the Rosary Church
I crossed over the very high India Point Park Bridge, which spans the I-195 Interstate.
India Point Park Bridge
After crossing the bridge, you walk several flights of stairs. If you are in a wheelchair, pushing a stroller, or riding a bike, there is a walkway for each activity.

My daughter called me to say she was almost finished getting her nails done, so I started my walk back to the car. She was not finished, so I walked through the stores in Fox Point.
I stopped at Sweet Berry 218 Wickened St, Fox Point, Providence, RI 02902, and bought myself a cheesecake yogurt with almonds. I walked up Wickened Street, ate my yogurt, saw a large brick wall lining a storefront, and sat down to finish it.
I saw her running down the street, and she said I have to hurry because my work called me in at 4 P.M.
We loaded into her car and headed back to her apartment, which was just a few minutes away.
She was already dressed for work. She grabbed something for her dinner and off she went.
I folded the last load of  clothes
Ate the leftover salad from the day before and ate some banana pudding 
I wrote in a journal for the rest of the afternoon. 
That morning, for breakfast, we ate French toast with bananas and blueberries, Cool Whip, and she made a fat-free banana pudding.

Day 5: Saturday, July 19, 2014
We left the apartment at 5:30 A.M. and rode to the South County Hot Air Balloon Festival at the URI Athletic field at Keaney Rd, Kingston, RI. To watch hot air balloons ascend into the sky at 6:30A.M.
We watched the balloon inflate. There were four, and only one was used to go up; the other three were used for tethering. 
Tethering a hot air balloon involves inflating and operating it on-site using a series of ropes to hold it in place, which is highly dependent on the weather.
We both tethered.
Our balloon could hold six people, plus the pilot. 
Our flight took five minutes to reach the top of the ropes and back down again.
As each person got out, another took their place to keep the balloon balanced.
The cost to tether was $15 per person.
Tethering 
Hot air balloons
The burners that lift the hot air balloons are loosely modeled after the thrusters on the space shuttle.
The burners have coils, and when you hit the blast on the burner, propane flows from the tank through the hose into the burner. The propane goes to the top and runs down the bottom of the burner, where the jets are located. It superheats the propane, giving you three times the power compared to just burning raw propane.

My daughter drove to the beach, and we stopped at Point Judith Light House, built in 1856. It's an octagonal granite tower painted brown and white, with a fog signal that emits a whistle.
Point Judith Lighthouse is located on the west side entrance of Narragansett Bay.

Point Judith Light House 
The coastline is covered in rocks, and visitors stack one rock upon another, making a tower of stones. 
Instead of sandcastles, you have rock castles.
Tower of Rocks
Then we headed to Malcolm Grant Trail/Black Point Fishing, which has two paths to walk. We chose one and went to Ocean Ocean.
There were many huge rocks (boulders) where we stood taking pictures. 
This is one of the few areas where you do not pay to park.
Malcolm Grant Trail/Black Point Fishing 
We stopped at T'S Restaurant in Narragansett to eat breakfast.
We shared a waffle, scrambled eggs with cheese, each with two slices of bacon and a cup of fruit, and we washed it down with water and lemon.
Then we rode to Narragansett Beach, where we stopped to use the restroom
We walked to the iconic Tower, which is now just a remnant of the Narragansett Pier Casino built in 1880.
We walked to the top level of the Tower. What a view! We both took several pictures of the beach, the people on the beach, the people surfing, and the people swimming.

Inside the Tower was the visitor's center, where I bought a bottle of cold water and picked up a few brochures.

Across the road, under the arch of the Tower, was the art center.
The curator told us about the Tower's history and showed us several old photos.

We stop at Rick's Roadhouse in Providence for dinner.
We shared a large plate of pulled chicken with tomatoes, olives, peppers, chips, cheese, sour cream, and guacamole dip.
This whole running around and getting up early was very tiring, so both of us took a nap.
We had a late snack of banana pudding.

Day 6: Sunday, July 20, 2014
While my daughter was taking a shower and getting ready, she said I should fill the croissants with the beef franks. 
When she came into the kitchen, she said, Mom, what have you done to these croissants?
She said you have done it all wrong!
Well, she popped into the oven, and we ate the croissants filled with beef franks. 
After an eventful breakfast, we went to Rogers William Park.

We stopped at the Museum of Natural History and the Platinum building.

On the first floor are the main office, women's and men's rooms, the lobby and check-in, Africa, many places, many faces, a statue of Pharaoh's daughter holding Moses, and a Couple of paintings on the lower level.
Along the stairs were the Comet Tales:
Wondrous wander: temporary exhibit.
Second floor
Planetarium, Natural Selections:
Museum's Victorian Past to Present
Dynamic Galaxies: our place in the universe
Craft activity station
In addition, the Circle of the Sea was closed.

We went to the Roger Williams Zoo, where we saw some of the newer animals, including bald eagles, giant anteaters, River otters, tree shrews, and Chinese alligators.
Roger Williams Zoo
Roger Williams Zoo
We rode around Roger Williams Park, where we saw statues of Abraham Lincoln, Roger Williams, Brigadier General Casimir Pulaski (a Polish-American Revolutionary hero), The Fighting Gladiator, and a Union Soldier.
We also saw the Cottage of Betsy Williams, the Rose Garden, the Japanese Gardens, and the Carousel Village & playground.
The Rogers Williams Park spans 427 acres and includes the Rogers Williams Zoo.
  
We rode to Lola's Cantina on 525 Water St, Providence, where we shared a chicken fajita with added Guacamole.

On Meeting Street, we saw Shakespeare's Head and The Brick School House.
Welcome Congdon House 1820-24
View of Providence from Roger Williams Park
First Church of Christ, Scientist, is one of the highest points in Providence.
Lovecraft Plaque
Our next adventure was traveling up to Lovecraft's College Hill.
On Benefits Street, we saw:
Sarah Helen Whitman House, Home of the poet courted by Poe.
Sullivan Dorr House, Land that was owned by Rogers Williams
F.E. Seagraves House - Lovecraft nearly moved into this house 
Stephen Harris House, "The Shunned House" of Lovecraft's Babbitt House
The Old Court Bed & Breakfast, this building was Lovecraft's basis for the home of Dr. Elihu Whipple in "The Shunned House."
The Old State House, Rhode Island, declared its independence from Great Britain on May 4, 1776
Home of Franklin C. and Lillian D. Clark. This was once the home of Lovecraft's uncle and aunt.
The Marine Corps Arsenal. This building is the armory of the Providence Marine Corps of Artillery.
The Colonial Apartments, Lovecraft bemoaned the fact that this "wretched ultra-modern apartment-house with all urban sophistication"
Benefit-Dexter House, once the Knowles Funeral Home, where the funerals of Lovecraft and his aunt, Lillian, were held.
Providence County Superior Courthouse. This immense building houses the State Supreme Court, the Superior Courts, and the Attorney General's Office
Pendleton House - Lovecraft visited this museum, which was the first in the United States to have an American wing. It contains Charles L. Pendleton's collection of 18th-century American furniture, silver, china, and paintings.
Providence Athenaeum, a frequent haunt of Lovecraft's, Poe courted Sarah Helen Whitman here.
On Meeting Street, we saw Shakespeare's Head and The Brick School House. 
On Prospect Street, we saw John Hays Library, Samuel B. Mumford House, Henry Sprague House, and Halsey House.
We walked down Jenckes Street, one of the steepest streets on College Hill.
We saw the little white house farm, 10 Barnes Street, we saw Lovecraft's home from 1926 to 1933; Prospect Terrace on Congdon Street, this small park is one of Lovecraft's favorite haunts
We saw the First Church of Christ, Scientist, one of the highest points in Providence.
We saw H. P. Lovecraft's Memorial, Van Wickles Gates, and Brown University.
We saw that the List Art Building, which was Lovecraft's final home, had been moved from this location.
We saw Stephen Hopkins House on Hopkins Street, John Brown House, Market House, First Baptist Meeting House, and Cathedral of St. John, Episcopal, on Main Street.
We saw Fleur de Lys Studio and Providence Art Club on Thomas Street. 
Roger Williams National Memorial Park, Benjamin Cushing House on Court Street, and the site of the Golden Ball Inn.


Day 7: Monday, July 21,2014
We are on our way to Fore River Shipyard, MA, to see the battleship USS Salem.
USS Salem
The ship was docked, but we could not board it because the pier at 729 Washington St, Quincy, MA, was closed for repairs.
We then traveled through Boston to Charlestown Navy Ship Yard to climb aboard Charles W. Morgan's last Wooden Whaleship.
First, we had to find a place to park the car.
We parked on the side streets of Bunker Hill and walked up the steps to the monument.
We did not climb to the top of the monument, which has 294 steps up and 294 steps down.

We talked to the Park Ranger. He was from Gulf Shores, AL, and he was glad to speak to someone from his home state. He said his commute was four hours every day.
He had to tell someone in the Tower to get out of the window, as they could fall through the plate-glass window.
We walked over to the Bunker Hill Museum, where two levels told the story of the battle of Bunker Hill. 
We walked from Bunker Hill to the Navy Shipyard in Charlestown to see the USS Constitution, the Charles W. Morgan, and the USS Cassini Young DD793 (built in 1943, a destroyer).

The Charles W. Morgan is making her 38th voyage and is berthed next to the USS Constitution.
The 19th-century whaling ship recently completed a 6-year restoration project at Mystic Seaport.
We stood in line to board the Charles W. Morgan, and then walked across the walkway to board the Cassin Young DD793.
Charles W. Morgan Ship 
Cassin Young DD793
We bought BQ from a vendor at the pier and ate lunch on a bench.
My daughter ordered a large barbecue with Mac & cheese and water.
I ordered a small barbecue with chips and water.

After we finished eating, we walked back to Bunker Hill, where we had parked the car. 

We then rode to the Parker Hill Library to get free tickets to the Boston Science Museum with her library card.
We then rode to the Boston Science Museum where we spent several hours I think we left around 6:30 P.M.
The Museum of Science has three levels.
On the lower level are the (Green Wing) Shapiro Family Science Live Stage, Colby Room, A Bird's World (Blue Wing) Energized, to the Moon, catching the Wind, Transportation, Beyond the X-Ray, Take a Closer Look, Triceratops Cliff Dinosaurs, and Living on the Edge.
Level 1 
(Red Wing) $Charles Hayden Planetarium, Cosmic light, $Mugar Omni Theater, Discovery Center, $Simulator Experience, Atrium, Polage, Sound stairs, Riverview Cafe, Museum store
(Green-wing) New England Habitats, globe.
(Blue wing) Making models, Special Exhibits, Gordon's Current Science & Technology Center, Innovation Engineers, T. Rex, Cahners Computer Place, Theater of Electricity.
Level 2 
(Greenwing) Hall of human life, Bees & Chicks, Tamarinds, whale migration, 2nd Extreme Math Alive.
(Blue wing) Cahners Theater, Water Stories, $Butterfly Garden, Seeing is Deceiving, The Lighthouse, $4D Theater, Investigate, Conserve@ home.
Museum of Science 
Museum of Science 
Museum of Science 
We rode to Quincy and ate dinner at Captain Fishbone.
We shared a plate of baked Scrod filet, lightly breaded and topped with mild vinaigrette, baked to perfection.
It was served with Green beans, garlic mashed potatoes, and fresh-cut onion rings.
My daughter ordered a glass of nutty Irish coffee.
We stopped at CVS in Quincy, I went inside and bought baby aspirins, headache tablets for her, a Hershey Symphony chocolate candy bar with toffee chips and almonds, and one diet Pepsi.

She said she had a headache as she drove home.
She had a hard time falling asleep because she had to work the next day.

Day 8: Tuesday, July 22, 2014 
Today, my daughter worked, and I stayed home and worked on this journal.
I walked a few blocks up Water Street, but my legs started cramping, so I came back to the apartment.
I baked three sweet potatoes and made tuna salad for supper.
I ate a plain bagel with tomatoes and cheese for lunch. 
I packed my bags for my trip home tomorrow. 
I watched two episodes of H2O, the three girls who were mermaids.
We went to bed early.
My plane leaves at seven, and boarding starts at 6:20 A.M., so I have to be at the airport before 6 A.M. 
My daughter's work called and said she did not have to come in until 11 A.M. 
I think she went back to bed after she dropped me off at the airport.

Day 9: Wednesday, July 23, 2014
We both got up at 4:30 A.M.
I took a shower, dressed, and made sure I had packed everything.
My daughter's work called and said not to come in at 7 A.M., but to call around 9 A.M. to see if they needed her then.
Our plane started boarding at 6:20 A.M. 
I sat next to a woman traveling to Wisconsin.
She said her husband had taken a job in Wisconsin two years ago and was the marketing manager for small appliances there. 
She had a good job in Rhode Island working for an Insurance Company. 
She said that she and her husband had computed back and forth for the last two years. They had two sons in college, and she loved her job, so she did not want to move.
The flight attendant served me cranberry juice, pretzels, and a cookie.
When we arrived in Detroit, we said goodbye.
My gate was Gate C6, which was a very long way from Gate A12.
I had to take the first flight of stairs (escalators) to the Express Tram South Station, which took me to the Express Tram Terminal Station, where I got off.
Then I took another set of escalators down and walked past the water feature, through the tunnel. 
The tunnel was cool; it had revolving sides that changed colors—red, blue, and yellow—and two moving sidewalks on each side.
There were two sets of escalators going upstairs, one for Gate B and one for Gate C. 
Finally, I arrived at Gate 6. 
The people started boarding the plane while I was in the restroom. 
I sat next to a man who was traveling from Iowa back home to Huntsville.
He was not very talkative; he was looking at the pictures on his phone. 
I asked him if those were vacation pictures, and he said they were from a prior trip to Luxembourg and Germany. 
This trip was a business trip. 
I tried to take a nap. 
We were served cranberry juice, pretzels, and cookies. 
When we got closer to Huntsville, I took out my camera and started taking pictures.
We finally arrived at Huntsville Airport. 
I went to the restroom while waiting for my bag.
I changed the lenses in my camera and started taking pictures at the airport, capturing images of their space-related depictions, which Huntsville is known for.
Hubby was waiting for me at the airport.
I loaded my luggage into the van and off we went to Athens to eat lunch at Logan's. 
I ordered a sirloin steak, Caesar salad, and sweet potato. (I had enough left over that; Hubby took it for lunch the next day.)
We arrived home at about 2 P.M.
I uploaded a few of my pictures to Flickr and to my computer.
I called Charity to ask the boys if they wanted to go to the movies tomorrow. 
Thursdays are a four-dollar day; you get a movie, a small popcorn, and a small Coke.
While on my trip, we visited four museums: Science, Natural History, Art, Bunker Hill, and Whaling.
We saw several ships/boats: Captain John's Whaling Boat, Mayflower II, USS Massachusetts, USS Constitution, USS Salem, and USS Cassini Young DD793. We went aboard all but two.
We rode along the beaches of Rhode Island, walked in India Park, up Lovecraft's College Hill, and through Brown University, the Historic town of Providence. We walked to Bunker Hill and then to Navy Pier in Charlestown. We walked through the city of Plymouth. We visited the zoo in Providence.
We ate cod & scrod fish, shrimp, clam chowder, Greek salad, bon, bon, pulled chicken, and lots more.
We walked, ate, visited, and wore ourselves out every day, but we had lots of fun.

Places that I ate while in Rhode Island
1. Legal Sea Food 2099 Post Rd, Warwick, RI 
We shared the week's special of Clam Chowder and salad with
Jumbo Shrimp, bread with butter, water with lemon, and for dessert Bon, Bon 7/15
Legal Sea Food
2. Black Whale Seafood & Raw Bar Pier 3 New Bedford, MA 508-990-7100 
We both ordered a Cod Fish sandwich with fries and Coleslaw on 7/17

Sitting in a big blue chair at Black Whale Seafood
3. Pappa Geno's 7 Samoset St, Plymouth, MA 
We shared a Greek salad with cheese breadsticks and one large oatmeal cookie with raisins and walnuts. 7/17

Toast at Pappa Geno's 
4. Pizzico Restaurant 762 Hope St, Providence, RI 
Went with George, I ordered Gamberetto Portobello, and she ordered 
Maryland lump Crab cakes, George ordered the week's special. 7/18

5. Rick's Roadhouse 370 Richmond St, Providence, RI 
We shared pulled chicken over chips, with tomatoes, olives, peppers, sour cream, and guacamole dip on 7/19

Rick's Roadhouse
6. T'S Restaurant Narragansett 91 Point Judith Road, MA
We shared one large waffle, scrambled egg with cheese, a bowl of fruit, and water with lemon on 7/19

T's Restaurant is eating breakfast
7. Lola's Cantina 525 S. Water St, Providence, RI 401-383-0220 We split one chicken Fajita and added Guacamole with water and lemon 7/20

Lola's Cantina
8. Captain Fishbone Marina Bay 332 Victoria Road Quincy, MA
We shared a plate of baked Scrod filet topped with a mild vinaigrette
Lightly breaded and baked to perfection
With green beans and garlic mashed potatoes. She ordered a fresh-cut onion ring and topped it off with a glass of nutty Irish coffee. 7/21
Onion Rings at Captain Fishbones

2014 July 15 Ate lunch at Legal Sea Foods, supper
Ate supper at my daughter's, we ate tuna wraps

2014 July 16 
Ate breakfast of French toast with blueberries, whipped cream, and a banana
Lunch: Tuna salad wrap
Supper protein shake

2014 July 17
Breakfast BLT 
Lunch Black Whale New Bedford, MA
Supper at Papa Gino's Plymouth

2014 July 18
Breakfast French toast with blueberries, banana, and whipped cream
Lunch leftover Greek salad
Supper Pizzico with George in Providence

2014 July 19 
Breakfast @ T'S Narragansett, RI
Lunch Rick Roadhouse
Supper banana pudding

2014 July 20
Breakfast croissants with beef wieners
Lunch at Lola's Providence
Supper, Lola's leftovers

2014 July 21 
Breakfast: 2 waffles with croissants, a beef Weiner
Lunch bar b q on the pier
Supper Captain Fishbone Quincy, MA

Places that we visited 
2014 July 15, RISD Art Museum, Providence, RI
2014 July 17, Captain John Whaling Boating Outin,g Plymouth, MA
2014 July 17, Plymouth, MA
2014 July 17, Plymouth Rock, Plymouth, MA
2014 July 17, Mayflower Ship, Plymouth, MA
2014 July 17, Seaman's Bethel Church, New Bedford, MA
2014 July 17 Whaling Museum N,  New Bedford, MA  
2014 July 17, USS Massachusetts, Fall River, MA
2014 July 17, Battleship Cove, Fall River, MA, MATrain Museum, Marine Time Museum)
2014 July 18, Fox Point Area, Providence, RI
2014 July 18, India Point Park, Providence, RI
2014 July 19, Point Judith Lighthouse, Narraganset, RI
2014 July 19, Black Point Malcolm Grant Trai, Narragansett, RI
2014 July 19, Narraganset Beach and Tower, Narraganset, RI
2014 July 19, MA, Balloon Festival
2014 July 20,  Lovecraft's College Hill, Providence, RI 
2014 July 20, Superman Building
2014 July 20, Storm Trooper, Providence, RI
2014 July 20, Rogers William Park and Zoo, Providence, RI
2014 July 20, The Hot Club, Providence, RI
2014 July 20, Federal Hill, Providence, RI 
2014 July 20, Museum of Natural History, Providence, RI
2014 July 20, Cormack Planetarium, Providence, RI
2014 July 21, USS Constitution, Charlestown, MA
2014 July 21, Charles W. Morgan Whaling Ship, Charlestown, MA
2014 July 21, Science Museum, Boston, MA
2014 July 21, USS Salem, Quincy, MA
2014 July 21, Bunker Hill, Charlestown, MA
2014 July 21, USS Cassini Young DD793 Charlestown, MA

July 15-23, 2014, Providence, RI

Delta Ticket 00623623729750 GG9HYI COST $398.00

Leave (HSV) Huntsville, AL at 7 A.M. Tuesday, July 15, 2014, 13d
Arrive (ATL) Atlanta, Ga 9:05 A.M. on Delta 2512 

Leave (ATL) Atlanta, GA at 9:42 A.M. Seat f 13
Arrive (PVD) Providence at 12:14 P.M. on Delta 2225 

July 23, Wednesday, 2014 
Leave At 7:00 A.M. (PVD), Providence, RI, Seat 19c
Arrive at 9:03 A.M. (DTW) Detroit, MI On Delta 2490 

Leave (DTW) Detroit, MI at 1015 A.M. Seat 03c

Arrive (HSV) Huntsville 11:05 A.M. On Delta 3741

1992~ Saturday, December 12, Trip to the Art Museum Huntsville, Alabama


At the art museum, they were giving lectures to several small groups of school children.
They were divided into three groups and each group was being told the stories about the art in the area where they were.
I overheard one lady telling about a girl in one of the pictures, how life must have been in the early 1800s. 
As I ventured into different areas of the museum I came across a painting by John Kutzik called, Man and his toys.
It was watercolor on paper and was 21 3/4” x 1/2”.
It was my favorite piece. 
Why did I like this piece? Because it represented man and his machine from youth until manhood, or if you please, the man who never grows up.

The picture of the man and his toy contained a small pudgy man wearing a blue suit and a small blue cap, with a ball of twine around his hands and feet.
All around him is a clutter of toys, as you looked into the picture you can see how Kutzik depicted different areas of his life. There were circus clowns, trapeze artists, acrobats, monkeys, kites, small cars, dolls, and wind-up toys.
Then as he grows older he has a leg of a woman a half-dressed woman, tools and all sorts of gadgets.
The picture has varied shapes, rhythmic patterns, using colors of green red, blue, orange, yellow and neutral colors.
Kutzik has balance, first, you see the man and then he makes you go further into the painting to9 see all the pieces that represent all the clutter of his life.

Each area is a scene yet it interwinds together.
To me, it represents the man who has nor or will he ever grow up.

In the next area of the museum was the Space Works, a synthesis of Science of Art. A room of our future and our past, about space our final frontier.
These pieces were very impressive to me.
There were two very large pieces that were 12 X 20 feet that I enjoyed
One was the Symbiont Manned Autonomous Workstations (MAWS) 1987 by Paul Hudson,

and the other was the New Pioneer Lunar Utility Vehicle LUV 1989 by Paul Hudson, brainstorming or glory days of the open cockpit.

My favorite piece was the Discovery Sunrise Command Controlled Suit Pressure 48 X 96 inches 1992 by Paul Hudson.

Why I liked this piece was his usage of the colors of orange and red, how they represented sunrise on the moon. The hot colors were not inviting and even the rocks looked hot.
The clouds swirled around as the two astronauts worked to set up a satellite communication to earth.

What I liked least was the silver from London, which was okay but I am not into silver.

There was a room of Expression and Discovery which held a painting I liked called The Sacred Spring, by Robert Lewis. It was 21 1/4 x 25 1/2 inches made in 1975.
The painting has a soft yet rustic, outdoor texture.
The colors were muted and the people were small and distorted. There was a tree that appeared to be growing out from under a rock bank, which overlooked a spring.

It also gave a shadow covering the small spring.
The picture had depth, yet it held a mystery to it. 
I thought it was very interesting.

There were a few Japanese Netsuke figures made of ivory and bronze.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Netsuke


The trip was very interesting but I had expected more for a city as big as Huntsville.

Tuesday, June 2, 2015

2015 ~ Tuesday, June 2, Rosenbaum House Museum Florence, Alabama

For entertainment, we went to the Rosenbaum House built by Frank Lloyd Wright in 1939.
The group waiting to go inside (from Virginia)

It reminded me of a really nice passenger train with the close proximity of each room, how everything was built into the house, in the boy's room the bunk beds built into the walls as were the closets, cabinets, & draws.
Boys Room 
I loved how the many doors leading outside opened outside instead of inside.
How the light filtered inside the home where you could take a book from the long bookshelf to read from the light that filtered in from the long windows.
Living or entertaining room with a long row of shelves for his many books
In each room you could see outside so you could watch the birds, the squirrels and the rain, also they had their own private botanical garden with Japanese Maples, a flowing fountain and this could be viewed from the boy's room, or the room for entertaining.
I loved the house!

Frank Lloyd Wright grew up in the low green hill country of Wisconsin, where he was inspired by sketches of the local river and the arch of oak trees on the surrounding riverbanks.

He used his nature as an important factor in hi tranquil designs.
Wright's design of homes was influenced by the forms of nature, the stretches of rivers and the sky.

His home and studio were in Oak Park Chicago, Illinois. In his home, he used a design of windows that let nature inside.
Letting nature inside view from the bedroom 
It had long compressed hallways and geometric patterns in the windows and throughout the house.
Wright was an apprentice of Sullivan an architect in the early 1900s.
Compressed hallways
Wright wanted to get away from the victorian style.  In his design of the Winslow home, he used the arch, and he used the color of the earth which gave the home a sense of feeling.

In his design of the Moore home, he used the horizontal form and a more private form.

Wright used an arch for the entryway, an arch for the fireplace and he used his open form design throughout the home.

In his design of the Thomas Gale home, Wright's use of light brought the outside inside, which gave the house a unique effect.

Wright used the laws of nature to create his architecture. His opening outside and nature come inside. 
In 1902 Wright designed the Susan Lawrence Dane home. Wright had $60,000 to design the home and it was a masterpiece of prairie architecture.
Wright had butterfly lamps hanging from the ceilings, he used color of golden glass elegant pieces locked in time.
Wrights used repeated shapes and designs or prairie architecture. His patterns of music and design gave unity to the Unity Temple he built-in 1904.

He used the cubic design, open rooms(where the walls seem to disappear) with the light of nature coming inside. 
His space within was to give unity. In 1908 Wright built the Robbie home which had perpetual horizontal motion.
He used his open design with wrap-around windows, free-standing rooms, with the color of trees to represent the organic architecture. His use of space within on his roofs and walls takes the home inside out.
The roof and lighting 
One of Wright's greatest designs is the Johnson Wax Building, where he uses mushroom columns and glass tubing of windows, a remarkable building.
Architecture critic Peter Blake wrote in 1960 that during the 1930s Wright built four structures of a beauty unexcelled in American before or since. Three of these are Falling Water, The Johnson Wax Administrative Building and Taliesin West. The fourth is the Rosenbaum House 
Some of Frank Lloyd Wright's architecture 
Some of Frank Lloyd Wright's architecture 
Front of the house
In 1935, Wright built and designed for the man and his environment. The building had its own waterfall. The building and its surroundings enhanced each other. He painted the home a dried Rhododendron color.
A home where man and nature interlock.
Wright continued to create architecture until his death in 1959, at the age of 91.
Why I like Wright's architecture is because of the way he created beauty in everyday life.

His use of life and nature in his homes brought a unique quality that will last for several lifetimes.
Wright created form and substance in his architecture.
He understood the importance of a home and family life.

He loved nature and he knew how to create that form in his architecture.

I loved the Rosenbaum home with the simplistic yet unique design, how Wright used simple nature to create such a livable environment.

It's not a home everyone would enjoy but if you love light, and nature then you would love this home.

I loved it!


Monday, June 1, 2015

How does my garden grow?


How does my garden grow?
It grows with
Flowers red, orange, green, yellow, purple

Green Apples waiting to ripen
Tomatoes they are great between bread
Pecan, Walnuts the squirrel's store for the winter
Blackberries great for jam, pies, and hotcakes.
Sun Parasol dark red original sunparabeni usppaf Mandevilla
Peach Hibiscus 
Green Apples 
Green Apples
Tamed Blackberries
Blooms in the fall Autumn Sedum
Heaven's Gate birds love this flower
Raised beds of Tomatoes
Raised beds of Hot banana peppers
Mistress Mary, Quite contrary,
How does your garden grow?
With Silver Bells, And Cockle Shells,
And so my garden grows
Pecan Tree (nuts are always full of worms but the squirrels still eat them)


Birds that are attracted to wild bird food and sunflowers

Wild Bird Food 

American Goldfinch *
American Gold Finch 
Black-capped Chickadee*


Black-capped Chickadee & Nothern Cardinal  
Chestnut-backed Chickadee*
Chestnut-backed Chickadee
Carolina Chickadee *
Common Redpoll*
Dark-Eyed Junco *
Common Redpoll*
Dark-eyed Junco*
Downy Woodpecker*
Downy Woodpeckers
Evening Grosbeak*
House Finch*
Northern Cardinal*
Northern Flicker*
Pine Grosbeak*
Purple Finch*
Purple Finch 
Red-breasted Nuthatch*
Red-winged Blackbird*
Tufted Titmouse*
White-Breasted Nuthatch*

Sunflowers
Brown-Headed Cowbird
California Towhee
Chipping Sparrow
Dark-eyed Junco
Eastern Sparrow
Eastern Towhee
Eurasian Collared-Dove
Horned Lark
House Sparrow
Indigo Bunting
Mourning dove
Mourning Dove 
Red-breasted Nuthatch
Red-winged blackbird
Song Sparrow
Spotted towhee
Tree Sparrow
White-breasted Nuthatch
White-throated sparrow

Humming Bird
Humming Bird has her own special food

2025 Oct 11-19, NCL Getaway Cruise 7-Day Canada and New England Round Trip New York, Bar Harbor & Halifax Part 2

Bay of Fundy, New Brunswick    Day 5, October 16, Thursday, Beautiful Bay of Fundy   We will be docking around 9 A.M. The time changed from ...