Monthly Archive for May, 2007

Mt Washington: done

So here I was, driving through the White Mountains after my late night drive across Maine, and I see some billboards saying “Mt Washington Auto Road”. Being the curious type I thought this sounded like a tourist opportunity to spend a few dollars from the comfort of my car. At this stage I hadn’t made the connection with the stickers I’d seen in various places…

After paying my $20 I did click, since my drive pack included the sticker and a CD to listen to on the way up and down. I must have been driving slow since I ran out of CD before I ran out of mountain both ways. I was stopping every two seconds to take a photo however…

hazy cloudy view

The road is very old, and has evolved from a horse drawn cart track which took four hours, to a road with a race that takes seven minutes. There are also people who like to set records for going up in novel ways, such as walking backwards (Goons anyone?).

Unfortunately it was cloudy and very windy at the top. Visibility was something like 20 meters and it was hard to stand still to take photos of nothing. Absolutely worth the trip!

Fort Knox (Maine): done

As one might expect with such an old region of the USA (relative to NZ say, not relative to Europe. I’m talking white european too…), New England is packed with historical places. Just driving past and through towns I could see tonnes of old buildings
I didn’t get to visit…

Upon leaving Acadia, I happened past Fort Knox as the light was fading. Having heard of it I couldn’t resist a peek (today I found I’d heard of the other Fort Knox). Similar to Fort Warren, Knox has plenty of cannon placements, and a similar layout to make it defensible. It’s much smaller but still has plenty of dark corridors that were beginning to freak me out before I left.

lots of cannons!

Photos here

Acadia National Park: done

Wow. Acadia is beautiful. Complete photos here

I arrived late on Friday evening, after the visitor center had closed. I manged to find my way to the summit of Mt Cadillac on my way to the campsite. At 400 or so metres it’s the highest on Mt Desert Island and had great views of smog from Boston and New York, with some nice scenery of the surrounding countryside behind.

hazy hazy

I moved on to the “first in first served” campsite, and found a nice piece of dirt to call home for the next few days. The next day was time to conquer some of Acadias massive peaks in the west, but not before a little coastal walk around Ship Cove near my campsite. The coastline in that area is beautiful! I noticed that I was taking photos with less sky in them, the foregrounds are beautiful too!

lovely coastline

Packing bottles of water and a few sandwiches, and of course my faithful camera, I set off on a trek along the edge of Long Pond (pond = lake), and up and over the top of two of the peaks. Every man and woman and both of their dogs were there in the lower parts, not that it was crowded, every one just seems to use the national parks as big dog walking areas. This is one of the views, complete with the contrails that appear everywhere in the USA.

view from Bernard Mountain

After my four hour walk I was thoroughly wasted and smelly. Thankfully there are places to swim (some ponds are water supply so aren’t swimmable) such as Echo Lake, where I had a dip in my undies and a nap in the sun before it disappeared behind the cliffs. I took a roundabout way home, and happened past Thurston’s Lobster Pound, where they show you the crayfish and then whisk it away to be cooked. Mmmm yummy and cheaper than in Kaikoura by miles.

The next day was another hill, this time on the east side of the island, and driving around the roads there. I didn’t have a bike with me. If I had there are heaps of carriage roads just for bikes and walking, very friendly for those not able to walk up the trails. I was surprised at the trails in places, with very steep climbs and a bit of scrabbling needed, just what I like. Some of the steeper bits were fashioned into lovely granite staircases, a lot of effort to build but very easy to walk up and down…

rocky staircase

The last thing I did before leaving was to drive around some of the park roads, stopping at various ponds, streams, and other wonderful looking vistas, such as this pond…

an acadian pond

After walking and driving around a lot of roads I was feeling Acadia’d out and thought I could squeeze some more out of my quickly disappearing weekend, I headed off the island and east, in a mad dash for New Hampshire before it was too late…

Maine and New Hampshire: done

I did several different things on this trip so I’ve split it into Acadia, Fort Knox, Mt Washington, and this post about the travel in between.

I made my first trip away from Boston under my own steam at the weekend, and had an awesome time! I hired a car with the aim of having a look around Acadia National Park, which is up in Maine about six hours north of Boston. I went to the rental car place on Friday lunchtime, and picked up the “ugliest car ever”, aka Chrysler PT Cruiser. However, it did have an auxiliary jack on the stereo for my iPod, which redeemed it. It drove ok too…

ugly ugly ugly

I was rather apprehensive about driving in Boston traffic, it looks pretty scary from the pavement sometimes just walking to school each day. I managed to find my way out of town thanks to some directions from google maps, and was off on a rather hot 35 degree day

The first thing I encountered was five bucks or so of tolls. I must have stopped about four times to hand over a dollar or so. By the last I had to give the guy a $20 bill, which he cheerfully gave me $19 change for. Without exception everyone I met and talked to on the trip was nice.

It feels like all of New England is covered in trees outside the big cities. There was nothing but green of many shades all the way to Mt Desert Island, where Acadia is. One thing I noticed it that pretty much all the towns up that way have an American Flag hanging from every lamp-post. Why do I think that’s wierd, NZ’ers should be patriotic and follow the example!

Eventually I arrived at my destination, passing Fort Knox (Maine, not Kentucky) and a nice big bridge, a spiral staircase company, and many beautiful old houses. Everything is much more spaced out up there, and everyone drives a truck (American version of a truck, what I’d call a kickass big ute). More on Acadia here.
After a few days I was all Acadia’d out, and decided to drive west to see how different it looked in New Hampshire. I invented a new goal during my time in Boston: to visit a new state every month. It’s now the end of May and going to N.H. would allow me to tick Georgia, Maine, and N.H. since I arrived in March.

I left Acadia kind of late, and got distracted by Fort Knox so drove most of the way in the dark. I passed a number of lakes, and a lot of churches that all looked the same. I thought I was going in circles at first, but the highway numbers kept on corresponding to those on my map so I felt safe. Every road has a number and direction here (e.g. 22 South), and the intersections are well labelled so I found it easy to find my way across Maine, even in the dark. Along the way I achieved a goal I set for myself in Georgia, to use a drive though ATM!

I arrived at my campsite late, about 11pm and set up. I put the fly on Tiff’s very nice Mountain Hardware tent in anticipation of the rain, which bucketed down sometime during the night. As it is with camping, I slept in for ages and got up at 7am to find myself in more trees, broader leafed than most of the ones in Acadia, but a nice mix of evergreen and deciduous nonetheless.

I set off down the next valley since it looked like it would have interesting things in it. I started to see billboards for the “Mt Washington Auto Road”, which I dutifully paid my $20 for and had a look.

After the excitement of Mt Washington, all that was left was to get back to Boston by 4pm, the time my rental was due. Somewhere down the valley I hit my first traffic, from there every small town with lights would cause a 20 minute delay as everyone returning from their Memorial weekend holiday tried to squeeze through as quickly as possible. There were parts of entertainment along the way, what do you think this building holds?

it’s a bank! note the drive thru atm’s obscured by trees

I got bored of that pretty quickly and went off to another road that I thought would be better. It was and I made it back safe and sound, and more importantly in time to unload and fuel my car.

All up an awesome trip! It cost probably $500, of which $300 was car, of which half was insurance. I don’t want to piss anyone off in this litigious country…

Belated BDO pics

Man I forgot what using real film is like: take photos and then get the film developed thirteen months later when you find it lying around. The roll I just got done (under the name Grand, after taking a full minute to explain how to spell my last name I let the first go…) dates back past AFL grand final day last year to a trip out to the coast in April. It also has a bunch of Big Day Out pictures. It looks like I have a bit of a mullet hiding under my hat. Nice.

Red

I can now say I’ve arrived in Boston, having attended a Red Sox game at America’s most beloved baseball field: Fenway Park. The game itself was exciting, with yet another sold out crowd (ever since May 15 2003 would you believe). Aside from the baseball which ‘we’ won, there were other highlights such as the seventh innings stretch (literally, everyone gets up and stretches… and then sings “take me out to the ball game”). We also sang “sweet caroline” at some point too. Truly a friendly family even for all to enjoy.

fenway panorama

Sox!

Yeah you know what these are…

sox tickets!

Prudential Tower: done

One of Boston’s tallest buildings is the Prudential Tower. At over 50 floors this building provides a prime opportunity for someone to make money from the excellent view it provides. I went up there today with Halv and we got a great 360 degree view of Boston. There are a lot of trees now since spring has just sprung, so the city looks wonderful.

Prudential Tower

I live on the other side of the Charles river, which is where MIT and Harvard are. More photos here.

Local music

Something I like about a number of the bars I go to around here is live music. I’m not sure if I’m just being inspired (read dragged along) by others, or if there really are more good bands playing here.

Last night we went to a CD release gig. Sam Bigelow is a local guy who plays piano and has a band. There was a lot of slow ballad type stuff, but my favourites where the good old fashioned twelve-bar blues numbers… speaking of blues, when I was in Atlanta a few months ago we saw a good band who came from Boston.

The next bar we went to (the Toad, someone told me it’s the basis for the hypnotoad in futurama, but I’m not sure. I can’t find any evidence on the web) had another good band, with a duelling guitar/fiddle duo.

Anyway, good live music in this country…

Wordpress

So being a guy I like new toys, and in this modern age it’s possible to get new ‘toys’ without spending any money (though spending gets you better toys I think. e.g. my macbook which is still awesome).

There wasn’t really any good reason, but I’ve migrated everything into the wordpress blogging software. Doesn’t it look pretty? It also has various bells and whistles that one can add, such as the various sidebar elements etc. It also has a nice tagging system…