We were born and raised in fruit bowls.
Figuratively speaking, that is.
I’m from Yakima and Joel hails from Chelan; cities some 160 miles apart in Central Washington State. It’s a land of lush orchards, truck gardens and vineyards.
Having now lived for many years in the bustling Seattle Metropolitan area we have a greater appreciation for our ‘roots’ and often find ourselves drawn back to our hometowns when we need a deep breath of blue sky and open spaces.
Sometimes we’re so focused on our hometowns, though, that we miss some incredible places along the way.
For instance, it took an invitation from the tourism association to get us to visit Wenatchee, a charming town of just under 33,000 residents that stretches out along the banks of the Columbia River. Located only 30 minutes from Chelan, we’ve driven past it for years, never stopped.
But having spent a weekend there in July, we now know we’ve missed winery tasting rooms, charming restaurants, (the one pictured is housed in the old train depot) and one-of-a-kind dress and decorator shops scattered throughout its historic downtown. I'll get to all that in a future post. For now. . .
It is August. The harvest season. And if you find yourself in this fruit bowl you can have a taste of the area at:
1. Tiny’s Organic is a family-owned farm (and anything but 'tiny'), that participates in a CSA (community supported agriculture) program.
This farm/orchard combo delivers weekly to subscribers of its service in Seattle just-harvested veggies and fruit. And they also welcome visitors to come experience the farm and see what they raise first-hand.
For those old enough to remember it, this East Wenatchee spread, is no relation to the famous Tiny’s Fruit Stand that operated decades ago along the highway outside Cashmere.
Harvest of Lapin cherries had begun only hours before we arrived.
Walking among the pickers and the bins of harvested fruit, we were invited to pick samples right off the tree (no big deal to some of you, but I had never done that before. Yes, this photo is all that remains of these lovelies - I ate them.)
Both young and old will love the chicken coup. Suppose this could be considered ‘glamping’ in the animal world?
Tours and Tastings:
Tours are free but do require advance reservations at Tiny’s Farm, 669 S. Ward Avenue, East Wenatchee, 509-264-3973, www.tinysorganic.com
2. Snowdrift Cider Company, just down the road from Tiny’s makes award-winning hard cider. I’d heard of the beverage before but never had sampled any until this visit. I just may have a new ‘bad’ habit’!
Peter Ringsrud and his family operate this business that offers five blends (each with an alcohol content of 8 – 9%and slightly sparkling, meaning slightly bubbly), Dry Cider, Orchard Select, Cliffbreaks Blend, Semidry Cider and Perry. The beverages reminded me of a cross between an Italian Prosecco and the Portuguese Vinho Verde.
Peter led our tour and tasting, teaching us about pairing each with a particular sliced gourmet cheese and crackers. (This is the view from outside the tasting room.)
Tours and Tastings are free (but advance reservations are recommended) at Snowdrift Cider Company, 277 Ward St., East Wenatchee, 509-630-3507, www.snowdriftcider.com
3. The Farmhouse Table Foods Market, at 10 N. Mission Street, Wenatchee, operates year round. There you’ll find locally grown vegetables, fruits, meats, eggs, cheeses, honeys and baked goods here.
Food Market’s hours are May – November: Tuesday – Friday, from 10 a.m. – 6 p.m. and Saturdays from 10 a.m. – 3 p.m.. Winter hours (December – April) Thursdays and Fridays from 10 a.m. – 6 p.m. For information: 509- 888-3010.
Our stay in Wenatchee was as guests of the tourism association, but we aren't the type to make recommendations if we didn't like the place. Speaking of recommendations, where are your favorite ‘fruit and produce’ stands in Washington? What about wineries and locally made beverages? Add a comment below or email us at travelnwrite@msn.com
Saturday, August 11, 2012
Wednesday, August 8, 2012
TP Thursday: The Joy of Travel
“Ancient Egyptians believed that upon death they would be asked two questions and their answers would determine whether they could continue their journey in the afterlife.
The first question was, 'Did you bring joy?'
The second was, 'Did you find joy?' "
-- Leo Buscaglia, author and educator
Day breaks in Scottsdale, Arizona. The stillness is broken when a donkey's brays, ring out like laughter, announcing the new day.
Day’s end in Roussillone, France: Our sunset feast, a baguette, cheese, a bottle of wine.
Early morning in Amsterdam when the streets were empty and the only sound was the canal boat's engine.
“Joy – the emotion evoked by well-being, success or good fortune
or by the prospect of possessing what one desires.”
Joy's Synonyms ~ happiness, gladness, delight, pleasure
Nightfall – Mascota, Mexico.
I like the concept of 'continuing the journey in the afterlife'; it's particularly comforting to those who embrace travel as a passion. As we look back on our journeys. . . Did we find joy? Most certainly. Did we bring joy? We hope so. How would you answer those questions?
Today is Travel Photo Thursday so for more photos from around the world head over to Budget Travelers Sandbox. And if this is your first visit to TravelnWrite, please come back again - soon!
Monday, August 6, 2012
Monday Meanderings: La Dolce Vita in Venice
An early morning shopping trip to the famed Rialto Market where we’ll stock up on fresh fruit and vegetables from the stalls of long-time vendors, then we’ll laze away the morning sipping cappuccino at one of its many cafes while ‘people watching’ . . .
In the evening we’ll stroll along the Zattere, the large concrete promenade that runs the length of the southern shore of Venice’s Dorsoduro District. It was originally built in 1519 to be a landing dock for the delivery of timber to build ships and buildings. Zattere, Italian for raft.
We’ll be acting just like the locals with our shopping and strolling because for six nights we’ll be ‘living’ in Venice in an apartment we rented a month ago as we planned how to fill the week following our cruise from Rome to Venice. The apartment is in the area of the red pin on the map.
We’ve found that one way to save travel dollars is to avoid the more costly hotel rooms – and Venice certainly has plenty of those. So, after having enjoyed the apartment we rented in Madrid last year, we decided to try our luck with apartment living in Italy. (Maybe it is our way of working up to a longer stay somewhere, sometime. . .)
In addition to saving money on the accommodations, we’ll also eat a couple meals a day at home and not rely on the local bar for all our Happy Hours.
Of course renting travel accommodations based on books, photos, traveler’s recommendations and advertisements is always a giant leap of faith. Joel, “The Scout” began researching our options several months ago. When we found this apartment on Vacation Rental by Owner we were on our way to . . .
. . .La dolce vita; the sweet life, in Italian.
Have you any tips for us? Have you rented an apartment? If so, what was your experience? Add a comment below or send an email to us at travelnwrite@msn.com And if this is your first visit, hope to see you back on Thursday when we look at the Joy of Travel.
In the evening we’ll stroll along the Zattere, the large concrete promenade that runs the length of the southern shore of Venice’s Dorsoduro District. It was originally built in 1519 to be a landing dock for the delivery of timber to build ships and buildings. Zattere, Italian for raft.
We’ll be acting just like the locals with our shopping and strolling because for six nights we’ll be ‘living’ in Venice in an apartment we rented a month ago as we planned how to fill the week following our cruise from Rome to Venice. The apartment is in the area of the red pin on the map.
We’ve found that one way to save travel dollars is to avoid the more costly hotel rooms – and Venice certainly has plenty of those. So, after having enjoyed the apartment we rented in Madrid last year, we decided to try our luck with apartment living in Italy. (Maybe it is our way of working up to a longer stay somewhere, sometime. . .)
In addition to saving money on the accommodations, we’ll also eat a couple meals a day at home and not rely on the local bar for all our Happy Hours.
Of course renting travel accommodations based on books, photos, traveler’s recommendations and advertisements is always a giant leap of faith. Joel, “The Scout” began researching our options several months ago. When we found this apartment on Vacation Rental by Owner we were on our way to . . .
. . .La dolce vita; the sweet life, in Italian.
Have you any tips for us? Have you rented an apartment? If so, what was your experience? Add a comment below or send an email to us at travelnwrite@msn.com And if this is your first visit, hope to see you back on Thursday when we look at the Joy of Travel.
Saturday, August 4, 2012
Washington Weekend: A Cashmere Sampler
We sampled Cashmere – home of the world-famous Aplets and Cotlets fruit candy - on a recent trip to Eastern Washington.
This visit provided a bigger slice of the hospitality and warmth found in this tiny town tucked away in the orchard lands of Central Washington than we’d had on previous stops.
As a result, we are ready to go back real soon.
A stop in Cashmere, (population 3,100+) located along the Wenatchee River, feels like entering a Norman Rockwell painting.
Along its Cottage Avenue, we strolled past late 19th and early 20th century bungalow-Craftsman homes with flowering gardens bordered by picket fences, wide porches, arched doorways and windows. Fifty-one of them make up a historic district listed in the National Register of Historic Places.
Cashmere’s history dates back to 1860 when a Catholic Mission was established along a nearby creek to serve the Indians of the area. The town that grew up was named Mission. It continued to be called Mission until 1904 when -- and here’s where the stories differ – either a founding father went to India and came back saying this town reminded him of Kashmir or . . .
. . .as www.historylink.org explains, “Judge James Harvey Chase (1831-1928) suggested the name Cashmere from a popular and sentimental poem, “Lalla Rookh,” by Sir Thomas Moore, extolling the mountainous beauty of the Vale of Kashmir in Himalayan India. The judge had once been a teacher of elocution, famed for his public readings, and no doubt this poem was part of his repertoire.”
Mission Avenue, a block from Cottage Avenue, is home to Liberty Orchards (makers of Aplets and Cotlets) factory/store and to Mission Square, 207 Mission Avenue.
This renovated fruit packing house is home to more than 30 businesses including several winery tasting rooms, a spirit distillery, a coffee and gelato shop, tavern and in the basement we discovered the delightful workshop and showroom of a furniture-from-wine-barrel maker. (that's one of his tables is pictured here).
If You Go:
From Seattle driving time is about 2 ½ hours. Either head east over Highway 2 via Stevens Pass or over Interstate 90 and Highway 97 (Blewett Pass).
Lodging
Village Inn Motel, 229 Cottage Avenue, near the historic cottages and an easy walk to Mission Square. 21 guest rooms. 509-782-3522. www.cashmerevillageinn.com
Mission Creek Cider Mill and Guest Suites, 5420 Woodring Canyon Road. Two rooms in a renovated 1910 house overlooking an orchard, 866-459-9614, www.washingtonapplecountry.com.
Information about the area:
Cashmere Chamber of Commerce, 509-782-7404 or www.cashmerechamber.com.
Wenatchee Valley Visitors Bureau, 800-572-7753 or www.wenatcheevalley.org.
Some ideas for you:
The Cashmere Museum and Pioneer Village, 600 Cotlets Way. www.cashmeremuseum.org.
Liberty Orchards, 117 Mission Ave. Free factory tours daily. www.libertyorchards.com.
Mission Creek Cider Mill and Guest Suites, 5420 Woodring Canyon Road. Cider tastings. Snack bar. Cooking classes. www.washingtonapplecountry.com.
Mission Square: Among the businesses housed in this renovated 1937 pear packing house are:
Snapdragon Coffee Shop and Gelato – home of “Snappy Hour” a take on Happy Hour drinks but all made with juices or coffees; non-alcoholic (www.facebook.com/SnapDragonCoffeeShop)
It's Five O'Clock Somewhere (www.5oclocksomewheredistillery.com)
The Waterville Winery (www.watervillewine.com)
Crayelle Cellars (www.crayellecellars.com)
Horan Estates Winery (www.horanestateswinery.com)
Dutch John Wines (http://dutchjohnwines.com)
Devil's Gulch Drinkery (www.devilsgulchdrinkery.com)
Wine Design, custom wine barrel products, (www.winedesignllc.com)
Photos: In order: Aplets and Cotlets factory (free tours are available to the public), street scenes of Cashmere, table from a wine barrel in the entry of Mission Square, Mission Creek Cider Mill, Pioneer Village at the Museum, Mission Creek Cider bottles.
Note: We have visited Cashmere several times in the last few years. But thanks go to Marcia Janke at the Wenatchee Valley Visitors Bureau and Marcia Green of the Cashmere Cider Mill and SnapDragon Coffee for setting up the tour and tasting at Mission Square that we took in July.
This visit provided a bigger slice of the hospitality and warmth found in this tiny town tucked away in the orchard lands of Central Washington than we’d had on previous stops.
As a result, we are ready to go back real soon.
A stop in Cashmere, (population 3,100+) located along the Wenatchee River, feels like entering a Norman Rockwell painting.
Along its Cottage Avenue, we strolled past late 19th and early 20th century bungalow-Craftsman homes with flowering gardens bordered by picket fences, wide porches, arched doorways and windows. Fifty-one of them make up a historic district listed in the National Register of Historic Places.
Cashmere’s history dates back to 1860 when a Catholic Mission was established along a nearby creek to serve the Indians of the area. The town that grew up was named Mission. It continued to be called Mission until 1904 when -- and here’s where the stories differ – either a founding father went to India and came back saying this town reminded him of Kashmir or . . .
. . .as www.historylink.org explains, “Judge James Harvey Chase (1831-1928) suggested the name Cashmere from a popular and sentimental poem, “Lalla Rookh,” by Sir Thomas Moore, extolling the mountainous beauty of the Vale of Kashmir in Himalayan India. The judge had once been a teacher of elocution, famed for his public readings, and no doubt this poem was part of his repertoire.”
Mission Avenue, a block from Cottage Avenue, is home to Liberty Orchards (makers of Aplets and Cotlets) factory/store and to Mission Square, 207 Mission Avenue.
This renovated fruit packing house is home to more than 30 businesses including several winery tasting rooms, a spirit distillery, a coffee and gelato shop, tavern and in the basement we discovered the delightful workshop and showroom of a furniture-from-wine-barrel maker. (that's one of his tables is pictured here).
If You Go:
From Seattle driving time is about 2 ½ hours. Either head east over Highway 2 via Stevens Pass or over Interstate 90 and Highway 97 (Blewett Pass).
Lodging
Village Inn Motel, 229 Cottage Avenue, near the historic cottages and an easy walk to Mission Square. 21 guest rooms. 509-782-3522. www.cashmerevillageinn.com
Mission Creek Cider Mill and Guest Suites, 5420 Woodring Canyon Road. Two rooms in a renovated 1910 house overlooking an orchard, 866-459-9614, www.washingtonapplecountry.com.
Information about the area:
Cashmere Chamber of Commerce, 509-782-7404 or www.cashmerechamber.com.
Wenatchee Valley Visitors Bureau, 800-572-7753 or www.wenatcheevalley.org.
Some ideas for you:
The Cashmere Museum and Pioneer Village, 600 Cotlets Way. www.cashmeremuseum.org.
Liberty Orchards, 117 Mission Ave. Free factory tours daily. www.libertyorchards.com.
Mission Creek Cider Mill and Guest Suites, 5420 Woodring Canyon Road. Cider tastings. Snack bar. Cooking classes. www.washingtonapplecountry.com.
Mission Square: Among the businesses housed in this renovated 1937 pear packing house are:
Snapdragon Coffee Shop and Gelato – home of “Snappy Hour” a take on Happy Hour drinks but all made with juices or coffees; non-alcoholic (www.facebook.com/SnapDragonCoffeeShop)
It's Five O'Clock Somewhere (www.5oclocksomewheredistillery.com)
The Waterville Winery (www.watervillewine.com)
Crayelle Cellars (www.crayellecellars.com)
Horan Estates Winery (www.horanestateswinery.com)
Dutch John Wines (http://dutchjohnwines.com)
Devil's Gulch Drinkery (www.devilsgulchdrinkery.com)
Wine Design, custom wine barrel products, (www.winedesignllc.com)
Photos: In order: Aplets and Cotlets factory (free tours are available to the public), street scenes of Cashmere, table from a wine barrel in the entry of Mission Square, Mission Creek Cider Mill, Pioneer Village at the Museum, Mission Creek Cider bottles.
Note: We have visited Cashmere several times in the last few years. But thanks go to Marcia Janke at the Wenatchee Valley Visitors Bureau and Marcia Green of the Cashmere Cider Mill and SnapDragon Coffee for setting up the tour and tasting at Mission Square that we took in July.
Wednesday, August 1, 2012
TPThursday: ‘Un Petit Cadeau’ in Provence
Un Petit Cadeau; a small gift. That’s how we recall that night in Haute Provence. . .
Nice, France was the place we would end our road trip through Provence and from where we would set sail on a Mediterranean cruise on the Windstar’s Windsurf for Rome.
Because our trips begin from the U.S.West Coast it take a full day, or night, of travel to reach European destinations. So, we pack as much into a trip as we can – that means a land excursion either before, after or at both ends of a cruise.
On this trip, we tacked 'land time' onto the front of the cruise, beginning in Paris.
We headed to Nice with six nights to spend on the road, taking a meandering route through Provence without set direction or plan. That’s how we happened upon a magical place set high up in the mountains of Haute Provence, (High Provence): Moustiers-Sainte-Marie.
This tiny commune, that blends into the limestone cliff on which it was built, had a population of 1,955 back in 1765. In 2008 the population was 710.
Below the town stretches a valley so intensely picturesque it was almost difficult to absorb it.
The valley floor was a checkerboard of homes, fields and pastures. We drove slowly through it hoping to find ‘just the right’ place to spend a night. And we did. . .
But it was more than a place, it was our petit cadeau, “Le Clos des Iris”. Its name, The Closed Iris, seemed particularly fitting as the flowers in its many beds had closed long before our October visit. It was late afternoon and we hoped there would still be a room available in this nine-room hotel. Despite the owner’s inability to speak English and our inability to speak French, we used broken bits of both and lots of sign language and smiles, and secured a room for 65-euros a night.
Our room was small and charming. As we snuggled in between the lavender scented line-dried sheets I recall pulling them over my head, inhaling deeply and suggesting that we skip the cruise and never leave this place.
The cheery breakfast room felt more like someone’s private kitchen than a hotel restaurant. We were sorry our scheduled arrival in Nice allowed us only one night here. We left vowing to return one day.
Moustiers-Sainte-Marie is considered a gateway to the Gorges du Verdon. And leaving our charming hotel we traveled the two-lane paved highway with sharp twists and turns – not for the faint of heart - along the rim of the Gorge. There are great views along the 25-kilometer-long (15 mile) stretch into a canyon that in places reaches to a depth of 700 meters (2,296-feet). The Gorge is popular with outdoor enthusiasts – especially kayakers, hikers and rock climbers.
Have you found un petit gadeau on your travels? If so, where did you discover it?
If You Go:
Le Clos des Iris, Chemin de Quinson, 04360 Moustiers-Sainte-Marie, 04-92-74-63-46 phone; o4-92-74-63-59 fax. Nine rooms with en suite baths, located 400 meters, or a quarter mile outside town.
Click this link for information about villages and activities near The Gorges de Verdon.
It’s Travel Photo Thursday, so stop by Budget Travelers Sandbox. And if this is your first visit to TravelnWrite please come back again soon.
Nice, France was the place we would end our road trip through Provence and from where we would set sail on a Mediterranean cruise on the Windstar’s Windsurf for Rome.
Because our trips begin from the U.S.West Coast it take a full day, or night, of travel to reach European destinations. So, we pack as much into a trip as we can – that means a land excursion either before, after or at both ends of a cruise.
On this trip, we tacked 'land time' onto the front of the cruise, beginning in Paris.
We headed to Nice with six nights to spend on the road, taking a meandering route through Provence without set direction or plan. That’s how we happened upon a magical place set high up in the mountains of Haute Provence, (High Provence): Moustiers-Sainte-Marie.
This tiny commune, that blends into the limestone cliff on which it was built, had a population of 1,955 back in 1765. In 2008 the population was 710.
Below the town stretches a valley so intensely picturesque it was almost difficult to absorb it.
The valley floor was a checkerboard of homes, fields and pastures. We drove slowly through it hoping to find ‘just the right’ place to spend a night. And we did. . .
But it was more than a place, it was our petit cadeau, “Le Clos des Iris”. Its name, The Closed Iris, seemed particularly fitting as the flowers in its many beds had closed long before our October visit. It was late afternoon and we hoped there would still be a room available in this nine-room hotel. Despite the owner’s inability to speak English and our inability to speak French, we used broken bits of both and lots of sign language and smiles, and secured a room for 65-euros a night.
Our room was small and charming. As we snuggled in between the lavender scented line-dried sheets I recall pulling them over my head, inhaling deeply and suggesting that we skip the cruise and never leave this place.
The cheery breakfast room felt more like someone’s private kitchen than a hotel restaurant. We were sorry our scheduled arrival in Nice allowed us only one night here. We left vowing to return one day.
Moustiers-Sainte-Marie is considered a gateway to the Gorges du Verdon. And leaving our charming hotel we traveled the two-lane paved highway with sharp twists and turns – not for the faint of heart - along the rim of the Gorge. There are great views along the 25-kilometer-long (15 mile) stretch into a canyon that in places reaches to a depth of 700 meters (2,296-feet). The Gorge is popular with outdoor enthusiasts – especially kayakers, hikers and rock climbers.
Have you found un petit gadeau on your travels? If so, where did you discover it?
If You Go:
Le Clos des Iris, Chemin de Quinson, 04360 Moustiers-Sainte-Marie, 04-92-74-63-46 phone; o4-92-74-63-59 fax. Nine rooms with en suite baths, located 400 meters, or a quarter mile outside town.
Click this link for information about villages and activities near The Gorges de Verdon.
It’s Travel Photo Thursday, so stop by Budget Travelers Sandbox. And if this is your first visit to TravelnWrite please come back again soon.
Tuesday, July 31, 2012
Travel Tip Tuesday: America the Beautiful for only $10
Smokey the Bear, that icon of the U.S. Forest Service has got one smokin’ deal for all you senior citizens out there.
Did you know that for $10 those of you who are 62 years of age and older can obtain a lifetime pass that gets you into more than 2,000 federal recreation sites?
Thanks for today’s Travel Tip goes to Larry in New Jersey and his son Aaron in Washington State, who tipped us off to this incredible deal.
Residents of the United States know that it costs to visit our national forests and federal recreation lands these days.
The annual pass price: $80.
The senior citizen lifetime pass price: $10.
What does the senior pass do?
Covers Entrance fees at national parks and national wildlife refuges as well as standard amenity fees at national forests and grasslands, and at lands managed by the Bureau of Land Management, Bureau of Reclamation and the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service.
At places with a vehicle charge it covers the pass owner and passengers in the car.
Even better, it covers the pass owner and three additional adults in the car if it is a place that charges a per-person fee.
How to get the pass?
Passes can be obtained in person at a federal recreation site or through the mail using an application form that is provided on the National Park website (click the link). For passes obtained by mail there is an additional $10 processing fee.
We recommend you check out the website listed above as it offers details about the Senior Pass and the amenities it provides as well as information on Free Annual Passes for U.S. Military members and their dependents; Free Access Passes for those with permanent disabilities and Free Volunteer Passes.
If this is your first visit to TravelnWrite please sign up to regularly receive posts in your inbox (see box on the right on our home page). We’d love to see your photo among our followers. Provence is our destination on Travel Photo Thursday – hope to see you back again then.
And don’t forget to send tips for Travel Tip Tuesday to travelnwrite@msn.com.
Did you know that for $10 those of you who are 62 years of age and older can obtain a lifetime pass that gets you into more than 2,000 federal recreation sites?
Thanks for today’s Travel Tip goes to Larry in New Jersey and his son Aaron in Washington State, who tipped us off to this incredible deal.
Residents of the United States know that it costs to visit our national forests and federal recreation lands these days.
The annual pass price: $80.
The senior citizen lifetime pass price: $10.
What does the senior pass do?
Covers Entrance fees at national parks and national wildlife refuges as well as standard amenity fees at national forests and grasslands, and at lands managed by the Bureau of Land Management, Bureau of Reclamation and the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service.
At places with a vehicle charge it covers the pass owner and passengers in the car.
Even better, it covers the pass owner and three additional adults in the car if it is a place that charges a per-person fee.
How to get the pass?
Passes can be obtained in person at a federal recreation site or through the mail using an application form that is provided on the National Park website (click the link). For passes obtained by mail there is an additional $10 processing fee.
We recommend you check out the website listed above as it offers details about the Senior Pass and the amenities it provides as well as information on Free Annual Passes for U.S. Military members and their dependents; Free Access Passes for those with permanent disabilities and Free Volunteer Passes.
If this is your first visit to TravelnWrite please sign up to regularly receive posts in your inbox (see box on the right on our home page). We’d love to see your photo among our followers. Provence is our destination on Travel Photo Thursday – hope to see you back again then.
And don’t forget to send tips for Travel Tip Tuesday to travelnwrite@msn.com.
Saturday, July 28, 2012
WAWeekend: Staying at Spokane’s ‘Living Legend’
Beginning today, our WAWednesday becomes WAWeekend. The focus will continue to be on short getaways and hidden treasurers not far from our Pacific Northwest home.
With our love of old places – the kind where the floors sometimes creak and the wood-frame windows still open - we chose The Spokane Club for our two night stay in Spokane, the second largest city in Washington State.
Like The Union Club of British Columbia, that we told you about last week, this is a private club – its origins dating back to the late 1800’s -- that has opened its guest rooms, The Inn, and athletic facility to the public.
The clubhouse, designed by Kirtland Cutter, whose name would become synonymous with Spokane’s Age of Elegance, put us within two blocks of the theatre district, Spokane Falls and its gondola ride, the River Park Square, and the city’s more famous historic hotel, The Davenport.
We paid $135 night which included various taxes, and it provided free parking at the Club’s nearby garage, in- room wireless and use of their modern-multi-storied athletic club.
We dined in the Club’s restaurant where we had some of the tastiest food of our entire road trip. Restaurant ‘regulars’ recommended the Crab Louie – they didn’t steer us wrong.
The Club’s common areas weren’t as inviting as were those at Victoria B.C.’s Union Club. But the Spokane folks were pretty proud of their recent room renovations which included new beds, so they had a bed on display in the middle of the lobby instead of seating. And their stately old library with a man-sized fireplace was under renovation one day of our stay and reserved for a private party the next. (We did sneak a peek – and that’s Joel standing inside the fireplace.)
If you go:
The Spokane Club Inn, 1002 W. Riverside Avenue, Spokane, WA, 99201, 1-866-599-6674. Two restaurants on-site, one bar, 37 guest rooms, 10 suites.
A quick check of Expedia showed a summer Mon/Tues stay rate at the Spokane Club to be $95 a night, about $50 a night less than the Davenport.
Tip: You can book travel on Expedia, by going through the Ebates.com site that provides rebates and cash back for booking through the site.
With our love of old places – the kind where the floors sometimes creak and the wood-frame windows still open - we chose The Spokane Club for our two night stay in Spokane, the second largest city in Washington State.
Like The Union Club of British Columbia, that we told you about last week, this is a private club – its origins dating back to the late 1800’s -- that has opened its guest rooms, The Inn, and athletic facility to the public.
The clubhouse, designed by Kirtland Cutter, whose name would become synonymous with Spokane’s Age of Elegance, put us within two blocks of the theatre district, Spokane Falls and its gondola ride, the River Park Square, and the city’s more famous historic hotel, The Davenport.
We paid $135 night which included various taxes, and it provided free parking at the Club’s nearby garage, in- room wireless and use of their modern-multi-storied athletic club.
We dined in the Club’s restaurant where we had some of the tastiest food of our entire road trip. Restaurant ‘regulars’ recommended the Crab Louie – they didn’t steer us wrong.
The Club’s common areas weren’t as inviting as were those at Victoria B.C.’s Union Club. But the Spokane folks were pretty proud of their recent room renovations which included new beds, so they had a bed on display in the middle of the lobby instead of seating. And their stately old library with a man-sized fireplace was under renovation one day of our stay and reserved for a private party the next. (We did sneak a peek – and that’s Joel standing inside the fireplace.)
If you go:
The Spokane Club Inn, 1002 W. Riverside Avenue, Spokane, WA, 99201, 1-866-599-6674. Two restaurants on-site, one bar, 37 guest rooms, 10 suites.
A quick check of Expedia showed a summer Mon/Tues stay rate at the Spokane Club to be $95 a night, about $50 a night less than the Davenport.
Tip: You can book travel on Expedia, by going through the Ebates.com site that provides rebates and cash back for booking through the site.
Wednesday, July 25, 2012
TPThursday: Do you ‘Capture the Colours’ or Clichés?
We’ve sometimes overlooked the ‘colors of travel’. So often, I am trying to capture the memory of a particular travel moment, that I don’t notice the colors that contributed to it.
I traveled down a number of Memory Lanes to find photos that express each of the world’s primary colors: blue, yellow, red, green, and white for today’s post. I did so after Cathy Sweeney of Traveling with Sweeney and Vi at Short Travel Tips tapped me for participation in a contest being sponsored by TravelSupermarket. (I never win contests, but this was a great exercise - you should try it.)
The contest judges don’t want photo clichés: a blue sky, a red sunset or a yellow flower (like the sunflower photo here that I took in Stehekin, WA. It’s a great memory but cliché).
They want color in photos that give a sense of place, perhaps even ‘a splash’ of color. Something that ‘captures a place so well that even if I’ve been there before, I think to myself, ‘Wow, I have to go there', ” says one judge.
With that in mind, here’s the travel palette of colors I chose:
White:
It was simply, a fairy tale. One of the most stunning road trips we’ve ever taken was high up into Spain’s Andalucian hillsides. We lost track of the number of small hamlets – the famous White Towns – as we followed the winding road on that magical journey.
Red:
Sometimes the ambiance and charm are so intense that a place seems unreal, almost as if it were a movie set; one in which we are lucky enough to be among the cast members. That was Gibraltar. This pair of street musicians provided the movie’s soundtrack. Their melodies followed us for blocks in this little bit of England on the Iberian Peninsula.
Yellow:
Greek ferries. They come in every size, shape and color creating a rainbow in the harbor at Piraeus, the port city serving Athens. If I were recommending travel experiences you must have before you die; sailing a Greek ferry from this harbor is at the top of the list.
Green:
I called it the Emerald Empire in an earlier post; The Palouse, that agricultural land that makes up the Eastern part of Washington State.
Blue:
My take on blue is probably as cliché as it gets, but after years of dreaming about visiting Greece and then finally getting there, I couldn’t believe it was as picture perfect as we found it. And this time I did notice the colors because it made the travel moment unforgettable.
Have you been capturing the color or clichés? On your next trip keep those primary colors in mind when you take aim with the camera – I will.
That’s it for this week’s Travel Photo Thursday. Hope you’ll head over to Budget Travelers Sandbox for more photos.
I’d also like to tap the following fellow bloggers to join in the Capture the Colour contest:
Dick’s Travel Tales from the Road
Keryn’s Walking on Travels
Heather’s Lost in Arles
Andi’s The Particular Traveler
Five American guys’ Travel Philosophy
I traveled down a number of Memory Lanes to find photos that express each of the world’s primary colors: blue, yellow, red, green, and white for today’s post. I did so after Cathy Sweeney of Traveling with Sweeney and Vi at Short Travel Tips tapped me for participation in a contest being sponsored by TravelSupermarket. (I never win contests, but this was a great exercise - you should try it.)
The contest judges don’t want photo clichés: a blue sky, a red sunset or a yellow flower (like the sunflower photo here that I took in Stehekin, WA. It’s a great memory but cliché).
They want color in photos that give a sense of place, perhaps even ‘a splash’ of color. Something that ‘captures a place so well that even if I’ve been there before, I think to myself, ‘Wow, I have to go there', ” says one judge.
With that in mind, here’s the travel palette of colors I chose:
White:
It was simply, a fairy tale. One of the most stunning road trips we’ve ever taken was high up into Spain’s Andalucian hillsides. We lost track of the number of small hamlets – the famous White Towns – as we followed the winding road on that magical journey.
Red:
Sometimes the ambiance and charm are so intense that a place seems unreal, almost as if it were a movie set; one in which we are lucky enough to be among the cast members. That was Gibraltar. This pair of street musicians provided the movie’s soundtrack. Their melodies followed us for blocks in this little bit of England on the Iberian Peninsula.
Yellow:
Greek ferries. They come in every size, shape and color creating a rainbow in the harbor at Piraeus, the port city serving Athens. If I were recommending travel experiences you must have before you die; sailing a Greek ferry from this harbor is at the top of the list.
Green:
I called it the Emerald Empire in an earlier post; The Palouse, that agricultural land that makes up the Eastern part of Washington State.
Blue:
My take on blue is probably as cliché as it gets, but after years of dreaming about visiting Greece and then finally getting there, I couldn’t believe it was as picture perfect as we found it. And this time I did notice the colors because it made the travel moment unforgettable.
Have you been capturing the color or clichés? On your next trip keep those primary colors in mind when you take aim with the camera – I will.
That’s it for this week’s Travel Photo Thursday. Hope you’ll head over to Budget Travelers Sandbox for more photos.
I’d also like to tap the following fellow bloggers to join in the Capture the Colour contest:
Dick’s Travel Tales from the Road
Keryn’s Walking on Travels
Heather’s Lost in Arles
Andi’s The Particular Traveler
Five American guys’ Travel Philosophy
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