Showing posts with label games. Show all posts
Showing posts with label games. Show all posts

Tuesday, December 17, 2024

Thanksgiving Getaway 2024

For Thanksgiving, we decided to have a little getaway. Our destination was Star Tannery, Virginia, home of an AirBnB. 

On the way, we stopped in the Centreville/Manassas area. We briefly visited the Manassas National Battlefield Park. The visitor center is not very big but does have a nice 40-minute movie and a light-up diorama in addition to some typical displays.

Visitors Center

Various cannon shells

How they moved artillery around before mechanization

The museum's memorial to fallen soldiers

The First Battle of Manassas/Bull Run was the first battle of the American Civil War. The soldiers in both armies were amateurs and the conflict was very bloody and not at all the decisive conclusion to the war that was expected. Part of the problem was the over 200 different uniforms present, often using reds, blues, and greys on both sides of the conflict. A display showed the variety and similarity of the uniforms. 

A sampling of uniforms

Outside of the museum, we only looked around briefly. The visitor center is right by Henry Hill, a location of the first battle.

View from Henry Hill

Statue of Stonewall Jackson

We popped over to Lab No.1 Asian Bistro for lunch. My wife order Tornado Omurice, a mountain of eggs and rice that looked impressive. I had Okonomiyaki, a fish pancake. 

Tornado Omurice

Okonomiyaki

Our AirBnB was out in the middle of nowhere, a fun place to be for hiking adventures (more about them in other posts). The house includes a fire pit, which we did not use, and a hot tub, which we got a lot of use out of.

Our AirBnB, seen from the car

Too much rain for the fire pit

Yay!

At our AirBnB, we enjoyed the basement game room. It had one of those 12-in-1 tables that had foosball, pool, air hockey, ping pong, shuffleboard, and a few other games. 

The favorite was foosball

Foosball in a different light

Driving around was fun, though at times spooky. The fog (or is it cloud cover?) covered the hills (or are they mountains?) in the distance.

At least it wasn't smoke

We had a fun though smaller Thanksgiving feast. 

Home-made pasta!

Setting the table

Dinner without diners

On our way in, we bought some pies at Woodbine Farm Market, a store near Star Tannery that sells baked goods along with the typical farm market stuff--produce, jams and jellies, local wines and beers, etc. We bought a lemon meringue pie and a pecan pie for our Thanksgiving dessert--yum! 

I wish this was closer to home!

On our way back from the trip, we stopped in Middletown, Virginia.

Festive display

Town playground

Town creek

The town was part of the Battle of Cedar Creek during the American Civil War. On the outskirts are Belle Grove, a plantation house that survived the war and is visitable (which we visited a while ago). Heater House is another building currently being restored by the National Parks

Battlefield

Belle Grove

Heater House

In town, Saint Thomas Chapel was built in the 1830s. During the war it was used as a hospital by the Confederates. When the Union won Cedar Creek, they gutted the building and used it as a stable! It was restored in the 1970s.

St. Thomas Chapel

We also saw the memorial to the 128th New York Regiment, one of the units that fought in the battle.

We could have seen a lot more of these

We went to Winchester, Virginia, to have lunch with my sister at Bonnie Blue Southern Market and Bakery. We arrived early so we spent some time at the extra fancy local library. The Handley Regional Library was funded by Judge John Handley. He left a quarter of a million dollars in his will to Winchester to build a library. He died in the 1895 and the library was not completed until 1913. They did an amazing job.

Library entrance

Library dome

Cool staircase

Cool sign

It was a very fun trip. More about it in subsequent posts!

Thursday, September 19, 2024

Cannstatter Volksfest Verein 2024

Just north of Philadelphia is Cannstatter Volksfest Verein, a German-American social club that hosts an amazing festival every September over the Labor Day weekend. This year (2024) was the 152nd Volksfest.

Sign over the parking lot entrance

Seal on the building

While it is not advertised as an Oktoberfest, it sure felt like it. One tent had a wheel of fortune, which we did not try. The prize was meat, which would have been tempting if we had been closer to home.

Waiting for more contestants

In addition to the bands playing polkas and German folk music, occasional performances like the one below entertained the crowd. They were trying to convince the old lady to go down the slide. It seemed like a comedy but the kids wanted to move on so we never found out what the final resolution was.

Seems like some very specific architecture--what's it used for the rest of the year?

Carnival rides were available. The older kids joined me on the tilt-a-whirl, then the youngest took a spin on the swings.

Slides and swings

Teacup ride

Was the tilt-a-whirl the right choice?

Caged

Caged and slanted

Swinging

Happy 

Excited

We had dinner there with plenty of German items available. My wife wanted to try the maultaschen, a meat-filled dumpling. We were late, though, and it had sold out! Among the items we bought and shared were potato pancakes (with sour cream and apple sauce), soft pretzels, bratwurst, and wiener schnitzel. 

Some of the food items

I had a Bavarian hefeweizen which was delicious.

Not a traditional Oktoberfest cup, sadly

Cotton-candy dessert

They had bands playing music but we never managed to dance. The people on the dance floor looked like they were having fun. A lot of them were dancing with beers in hand!

The festival also featured a fruit column, which was a small tower made of (or just decorated with?) fruit. We didn't get the story on it. I suppose it is a celebration of the harvest.

Fruit column

Hopefully we can convince the kids to go again next year!

Monday, May 29, 2023

Random Bits of Montreal 2023

Here's some stuff from the visit to Montreal that did not make their own blog post...

Near our rental house is Eglise catholique Nativite-de-la-Sainte-Vierge, a fine-looking church that was not open when we went nearby.

We really wanted to go inside

We visited in early April, which apparently was not late enough for all the snow to melt. One dead-end street was really a snow-end street!

You shall not pass!

Also nearby was a playground with a fun climbing web.

Making his way to the top

We went to Mont Royal, the mountain (though maybe it is technically a hill) to do a hike, not realizing the previous months' weather was against us.

Hiking trails?

Now they tell us

Another tool to use in the snow

We did make it to one overlook, Belvedere Kondiaronk lookout. The Chalet du Mont-Royal is right behind the lookout.

Chalet du Mont-Royal

View of the city

Some more view

Even more view

With my son

A bit from one of Montreal's founders

A view from the other side of the mountain

We drove around the Plateau Mont-Royal neighborhood and found a bakery for a snack. Patisserie Au Kouign Amann is a small shop with a lot of great stuff. The signature item is Kouign Amann, a butter and sugar cake with a crusty outside (think caramelized sugar), that was fabulous.

Best apple tart ever

House special 

We visited the Google office in Montreal, which had all the usual fun amenities.

Cool sign

Hot fireplace

Free breakfast

Play room

Foosballers

We stopped by the Basilique Notre-Dame de Montreal but did not go in. We were in a time crunch and the kids were a little burned out on churches. Also, they charge a bit to get in! The church has some sort of laser/light show in the evenings that guide books recommend but we were divided over it.

Basilique Notre-Dame de Montreal

Photo from a geocache

The Basilique neighborhood is full of official and official-looking buildings.

Ministry of Finance, I think

A monument to Lord Nelson is right in between the government buildings and the old port. It's all in English, I guess there's no French pride in Nelson.

Nelson Monument

The base

The other side of the base

The weather wasn't warm enough for this fountain to be going, but the statue of Jean Vauquelin stands guard nonetheless. He was a French naval officer who fought the British on the St. Lawrence River during the Seven Years' War

A dry fountain

Vauquelin

View of the city from Vauquelin's statue

City Hall

We tried to find lunch in Chinatown, but we couldn't agree on any of the restaurants that were open.

Chinatown

Old port neighborhood

Typical building (and a nice couple)

We saw a sculpture called Les Chuchoteuses on a random corner. 

Random street art

Another touch of England was the Wolf and Workman pub, with a typical sign above.

Wait, what?

Another cool-looking building

Charming street with a flag in case the fire hydrant gets buried in snow

Bank on a narrow street

Another random art display

We used a fancy metro entrance to make our way back to our lodgings.

Definitely French-looking