Monday, April 29, 2013
Blog Challenge Feature: New England Crafters
Nice surprise for a Monday morning . . . I received a notice from Kris at New England Crafters via Etsy that one of the photos on they Etsy site has been included in their weekly blog challenge. The topic was Earth Day with a focus on green.
Here is a link to their blog: New England Crafters
Very cool.
This is the image link to my Etsy store: Feels Like Spring Lupine Leaves with raindrops
Thanks for the feature!!
Labels:
etsy,
garden,
Maine,
New England,
photography
Sunday, March 31, 2013
Maine Travel Resources: Summer 2013 Vacation Planning
Happy Spring Everyone!
After such a long, cold, snowy winter, it's nice to see some springtime signals arriving. Crocuses are coming up in some sheltered spots. I have heard some of the warmer weather bird songs in the mornings. The best sign is that I don't find it necessary to layer on so much protective gear before leaving the house.
At this time of year, many people have already begun planning their summer vacations, whether as a mood altering exercise of cabin fever, or because their experiences have taught them that it really does behoove them to plan and reserve ahead. Though I am a fan of the spontaneous departure (in theory anyway) working in the tourism industry has taught me a few things. So, whether you'd like to begin dreaming about your summer vacation in Maine or you're in the deep planning stages, you might find some of these resources helpful.
My top 10 Maine vacation planning resources:
- Visit Maine: www.visitmaine.com - this is the site of the Maine Office of Tourism, a state agency tasked with gathering and providing tourism related information for all eight tourism regions of the state. This is a great starting point to begin planning your Maine vacation. With lodging, events, maps, dining and things to do all in one place, you can see that we've got a lot going on here. From the site, you can delve much further and find exactly what's the best route for you and your family.
- Maine Arts Commission: Live music, dance, galleries, lectures, classes, performing arts, and just about everything that can fall under the classification of an art form is here. This events calendar is a handy one to bookmark and return to.
- Maine Agricultural Fairs: I love going to the fair. Fresh squeezed lemonade, fried dough, sizzling sausages, cotton candy - can you tell I like to go for the food? Oh yeah, and the animals and the 4H contests. Rides, shows, and the midway - no matter which fair you choose to check out, you'll surely find what you expect in a fair, but will also be surprised. The Bangor State Fair is the one I am most familiar with and one of the biggest in the state. It takes place in late July - early August each year. The Fryeburg Fair is another biggie in Maine, slated for a bit later in the season, it often showcases some of the agricultural freaks of the summer growing season like the state's largest pumpkin. Both always have live music, spectacular events and not to harp on the food, but THE FOOD.
- The Maine Camping Guide at http://www.campmaine.com is the place to go to find out about camping in Maine. Whether you're the tenting type of folk or want to bring the RV this site can link you to all the campgrounds, RV resorts, and other camping resources.
- Maine Camps & Cottages - a sister site to the Maine Camping Guide, this is the place to go if you're looking to rent a cottage or go "upta camp" in Maine. Lake front, beach front, or into the woods it's got info about all types of places you can start your family traditions.
- The Maine Innkeepers Association is a fabulous resource for hotels, motels, bed & breakfasts, and inns throughout the state. Traveling on a budget or in high style, you may be surprised at the range of offerings here. Really a great site.
- Part of the Maine Restaurant Association, Feast on Maine is the ultimate Maine dining guide. Last year they introduced the app you can use while in state and on the hunt for great food. Maine is earning quite a reputation as a foodie destination, with a strong farm to table movement and the state's allure to creative and industrious types of people, it's not a surprise to me that its getting more and more recognition.
- Up for some sports? The Maine Sports Commission is a relatively new arrival on the tourism scene in Maine. Not only focused on traditional sports, this site will provide you all you need to know and where you can find out more about what's going on in sports in Maine this summer.
- I'm a huge fan of North Woods Law, the Discovery Channel show that's on the lives and work of Maine Game Wardens. Just thought I'd throw that one in there as a plug for the really good guys who do their best out there. When you visit Maine, if you're coming for the fishing, hunting, and other outdoor wildlife, the website for the Maine Department of Inland Fisheries and Wildlife will provide you with the laws, seasons, and whatever else you need to know about enjoying Maine's abundant outdoor resources.
- Last on this list, but only the beginning the Maine Bureau of Parks and Lands will give you locations, hours, amenities, and various programs offered at Maine's State Parks.
So, if that's not enough to get you started, stay tuned. I will be posting more in the coming weeks as we approach the summer. If this is all too overwhelming and you don't know where to turn, simply email me at celesteATcelestecotaphotography.com. I would be happy to help you with some itinerary suggestions, personal recommendations, and additional resources to help you plan your vacation in Maine.
Thursday, February 14, 2013
Maine Destinations: Romantic places
Not to get all sappy and sweet on you here, but it’s
Valentine’s Day and being the romantic I am . . . I thought I’d share some
romantic places in Maine
to visit with your favorite other in your life. Or your other and the kids . .
. romance is all in how you spin it. I certainly love chocolates, a bouquet of
flowers, a bubble bath, and the other stuff the merchandisers want you to think
women want as gifts for Valentine’s Day, but I’m on a diet, flowers are
ridiculously expensive, and our huge tub takes hours to fill.
Give them an experience.
Give them a memory.
A string of bleeding hearts |
A weekend getaway in Maine?
Great Idea. For me, just going somewhere new is an experience I truly enjoy.
Making memories in that somewhere new just comes with the package. Going back to a familiar and memorable place
is wonderful too. Shared memories bind us as couples and as families. Reinforce
the bindings by continuously striving to create new memories and keeping the
pleasurable memories of the past alive.
These places are not just for Valentine's Day. In fact, some are best visited at other times of the year. I consider them romantic because a.) they are places to go with your spouse, partner, other half, friend with benefits . . b.) they are places to go with your family, the result of the romantic interlude.
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Cape Porpoise Harbor |
Cape Porpoise – just north of Kennebunkport,
Cape Porpoise is a working harbor. The
seafood is unbelievably fresh. You can watch the boats come in with the catch
of the morning. Have a picnic on the dock. Just stay out of the way of the
lobstermen. Have lunch at Pier 77. For an authentic Maine experience, romantic and real, this is a great little village.
the beach at Biddeford Pool |
Biddeford
Pool – I’ll write more about this place when I’m ready to expose it to the
world. This was the beach of my teen years, on a blanket with my friends,
rubbing baby oil on our skin for the deepest tan possible. Ah the days before
we learned about skin cancer or worried about wrinkles! Why it’s romantic: it’s
kind of hard to find. You have to have a pass to get to the beach. There’s a
bathhouse with an outdoor shower. It’s a huge, long, wide beautiful beach. Like
beaches in summer, people are hardly dressed, indulging in such carnal
pleasures as taking a nap under an umbrella, basking in the hot sun reading a
book (my personal favorite), the air is salty and hot and smells of the mix of
sunscreens and sandwiches, and you can walk far away from the crowd and just be
the two of you, or as many as you want, and swim and frolic all day. Bring your
own snacks and drinks, but the ice cream truck does come by every once in a
while. Rentals can be found here: Maine Seaside Rentals
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Old Orchard Beach's famous pier |
Old
Orchard Beach
– in the shoulder seasons of spring and fall, the weather is mild, the sun
shines brightly, and the summertime crowds are nonexistent. The beach here is
seven miles long and so wide at low tide you’ve got plenty of space to stroll
in the sand. Skip stones, jump the waves with your pants on (or off!), and
breathe in that salty air. Do like the summertime high school teens and sneak under
the pier to make out. Do like grownups do and get a room (great discounts in
the low seasons!). visitor info can be found here: Old Orchard Beach Info
Biking on the carriage trails at Acadia National Park |
Bar Harbor – a coastal town
that’s arguably the most requested destination in the state. There’s a good
reason. This little town’s got a lot to offer. From awesome shopping and dining
downtown, to whale watches and schooner day trips out on the sea, to bike
rentals and canoe and kayak outfitters to take you out of town, there’s really
something for just about everyone. Folks go to walk around the town dock and
see the boats and birds. Poke your head into some of the shops, have an ice
cream cone, and a lobster roll. Get yourself over to Acadia National Park, Bar Harbor’s
neighbor on the island, and enjoy Sand
Beach, drive up Cadillac Mountain
and drink in the view of the islands, or bike on the Carriage Trails. You can
find yourselves alone for remarkably long periods of time. On your way off the island, stop at Mainely Meat BBQ for sticky, finger licking barbeque. Or cross over into
Trenton and pull into Trenton Bridge Lobster Pound , one of the restaurants just off the
road whose gigantic steaming pots are perfectly primed to cook you a lobster
while you wait.
Visitor info can be found here: http://www.barharborinfo.com/
Portland's Old Port |
Portland – with a foodie reputation that’s growing by
the moment, Portland
is a city to visit if you’re into trying anything. Gelato Fiasco on Fore Street. East End Cupcakes right across the street. TwoFat Cats bakery up on Munjoy hill. More restaurants per capita than any other
city in the nation. Beyond the belly, you can check out the Old Port
and Commercial Street,
for shopping experiences you won’t find any where else. If your blood really
gets pumping when you shop, you’ve got to go to Freeport,
just north of Portland.
Freeport is the home of L.L. Bean and loads of
outlets, as well as quite a few uniquely Maine
stores like Mexicali Blues.
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Portland Head Light |
As Maine’s largest city, Portland is chock full of culture, teaming
with museums, live music, and theater. Nearby Cape Elizabeth
is home to Portland Head Light, one of the most photographed lighthouses in the
country and located on the grounds of Fort Williams Park. Info about the
lighthouse and the park are here: Portland Head Light
![]() | |
baskets of cherry tomatoes |
Farmer’s Markets – With a very strong farm to table movement
in the state, Maine
has a lot of farmer’s markets, both in summer and in winter. For a listing,
click here: Maine Farmer’s Markets
Why it’s romantic: earth
and seed and sun came together to produce gorgeous fruit and vegetables. The
visual displays at Farmer’s Markets, as rustic as they can be, can’t help but
stimulate you . . . somewhere. The passion of the people who live to grow and
share their produce is palpable. If you and yours are shopping for items that
result in a great dinner, well, all the better.
Here’s where you can find tons of info on getaways in Maine.
If you find that your getaway has led to further romantic
entanglements and want to plan your wedding in Maine, Real Maine Weddings is loaded with
ideas for receptions, food, and guest lodging.
Thinking about summer plans? Everything you need to get you
started is here: Visit Maine
Come and fall in love in (and with) Maine.
Relax, you're in Maine. |
Sunday, January 20, 2013
Travel Tips: Things you might not think to pack
In this case, my husband’s fears are justified. With
airlines charging more and more for overweight checked baggage, my tendency to
push it to the weight limit pushes him over the edge. I’ve never been able to
travel light. My husband can leave the house for the weekend with a plastic
shopping bag’s worth of his belongings and not think once about a change in the
weather that would have him chilled and needing a sweater or a change in dinner
plans that might require a tie. His theory is that if we’re not going to a
place where he can stop into a store to buy what he needs, he doesn’t need it.
If the dinner plans now require a tie, either change the plan or go buy a tie –
but never take one with you “in case.”
Ah, it’s always the “in case” that gets me. Maybe being a
mother does that to a person. Maybe its having experienced the exhausting
search for a department store in a strange town just to find men’s socks
because he only packed one pair for the whole weekend and they got soaked in
the rain on the first day. Maybe it’s just my nature to be prepared.
I can tell you this: my “over packing” or “preparedness” as
I like to refer to it has allowed me to save the day on some of our travels.
Ok, perhaps the day wouldn’t have been ruined had I not thought to bring a
length of rope and some clothespins so that our swimsuits could drip dry on the
patio and be ready for an evening swim after dinner.
Here’s a list of some things I always pack for a trip away
from home:
- Small kid’s safety scissors – it just so happens that not so long ago I had a small kid and we have a few pairs of these hanging around. They’re the perfect size to fit into your toiletries bag and you’ll be happy to have them when you need to cut open that plastic encased set of earphones you had to buy because the ones your brought got left in the plane.
- Clothespins and a 3 – 4 foot length of rope – I have a zip bag in my regular suitcase with a dozen small wooden clothespins and a thin but strong rope. It’s been tied to chairs on a patio to dry our damp clothes and to lamps and a bedpost to dry travel documents that wafted into a puddle.
- Air freshener – it could be the air freshener/disinfectant combo to pull double duty but here I’m recommending anything to freshen a stale or musty hotel room and – more importantly – the smells that occur when people are traveling on vacation, staying in a small room, being thrown off their regular routines and diets, and well . . . perhaps you know where I’m going with this. Just get some – they come in travel size. If you’re concerned about your liquids for carryon, even a candle (don’t forget matches) will do.
- Zip bags – ALWAYS have zip bags. I have a handful of heavy duty zip bags in different sizes that I use over and over again. A larger one is used for my case of vitamins and medicine. (Have you ever had one of these open up in your luggage? I have.) Another holds my contact lens stuff together and there’s one I use for things that have the potential of exploding in your suitcase, like lotions and hair care products. Smaller ones hold jewelry or pens or an impromptu sewing kit. I have a small drawer that I keep my travel things in and when I return from a trip and unpack my stuff, I put the bags in there as well as the travel sized products I return with. AND I always travel with a few to spare for situations that arise. I’ve used them to protect my camera, printed passes, travel documents when at theme parks on wet rides. They’ve protected dinner leftovers and keep all my tech thingamabobs from raveling everything together into one ball of cords and plugs. They’re great to use to collect seashells and also keep souvenirs and receipts dry and in one place. I can’t possibly list all their uses when traveling. Best thing ever invented.
- Duct tape –Works to hold together a hair gel bottle that got crushed (and is now oozing) in transit. Works to identify your luggage on the airport carousel – just wrap the handle or stick it somewhere you’ll be able to see as it rounds the corner. It patches tears in clothing, shoes and bags, can be a child safety cover for the outlets in your hotel room, and can take the lint off of anything.
- Wipes (baby or not) – my mother raised four kids and then helped raise dozens more running a daycare and loving her grandchildren. The woman was always ready with a wet facecloth in a plastic bag. From wiping our faces at a barbeque to cleaning off the trays on the kids highchairs in restaurants, they served an innumerable amount of purposes. Now I rarely leave the house without some sort of wipes within reach. Disinfectant wipes to clean, well, everything. Baby wipes for the faces and hands. In the car they can save upholstery from costly stains, clean the dusty console when you’re stopped at traffic lights, and wipe sticky fingerprints or paw prints from the windows. Lysol or other disinfecting wipes are a necessity in a hotel room, from the door knobs to the remote control (yuck!) to the bathroom counters and toilet seat. Whether you’re there for a week or a day, it’s most likely that someone was there before you. I’m not a germ freak at all, and maybe I should be given the number of things that can live on for days on the surfaces we touch, but some things need wiping.
- Safety pins – as part of your travel sewing kit or not, safety pins are a multifunctional tool. Clasp the zippers of your day pack together to deter thieves; use in place of a missing button, zipper pull, or to mend other wardrobe malfunctions; tack kids' pant legs up when hiking through mucky terrain; even prevent static cling in a dress or skirt by slipping the safety pin into the seam of your slip (the metal has repelling properties). Bring a few to share. You could make someone’s day so much better by having one to offer a fellow traveler. Build up your travel karma bank.
- Luggage scale – referring back to my husband’s fears of the overweight suitcase, I bought this travel luggage scale from L.L. Bean. It serves triple duty – it’s got a built in alarm clock and flashlight. I find it especially useful on the return flight when I’ve added items I’ve purchased into the suitcase and there might be some wet clothes in there to just add to the weight. For years, I weighed the bag at home (me on the scale holding bag, me on the scale not holding bag, do the math = weight of bag) and that was fine. I’d often cut it close (47 pounds when the limit is 50 is one I remember) and then sweat it out as we approach the baggage scale at the airport, crossing my fingers that our scales weren’t too far off each other. So now I bring this luggage scale along, use it before the first flight then before the flight home, and in between to wake me for whatever adventure is next.
- Small soft sided cooler – we have a half dozen coolers: the big red plastic take-to-the-lake cooler, the huge soft side dual compartment cooler, several mid sized, just-enough-for-a-beach-day cooler, and a handful of take-it-to-work-for-lunch coolers. The one I usually pack for a trip – if flying – is a soft sided cooler without the molded plastic interior. I can fold it flat in the bottom of my suitcase and it acts as a cushion against bumps and jolts, then when we arrive and unpack, we have a cooler to use for our day trips. On the return trip it has held the damp and sandy swimsuits and flip flops and the muddy hiking boots so that they don’t ruin the rest of the bag’s contents.
- As always- The Book of Joy – a flexibly bound binder that holds – in order of their necessity (and in plastic sleeves) the boarding passes, the rental car reservation information, maps or directions to the hotel or resort, hotel reservation info with check in times and any prepaid excursions, passes or tickets. Make extra copies of each to give to your traveling companion. Include a copy of your passport and driver’s license, in case they’re lost. Reverse the order of the paperwork for the return trip (hotel, rental car drop off info, flight home info). NOTE: Somewhere else on your person carry a sheet of contact numbers, account numbers, logins and passwords to your credit cards, bank accounts, and your travel miles or frequent flier info. You could put it into your phone, too, but have a backup copy printed somewhere that someone you can contact can reach in case you need to have it. Another idea on this: often, if booking online as I do most of the time, I get an email confirmation of the travel info. I forward that to one of the email accounts I have that will not be cleared off the server by your Outlook or other account. Gmail, Yahoo, etc work fine like this. That way if you lose some of your documents and your phone, you can usually access these accounts from any pc and you can then forward the info to wherever you are or print it directly from the business center at the hotel or write down the numbers you need.
So,
if you’re wondering – I’ve never gone over the weight limit of my checked
baggage either coming or going on a trip. I know that what I’ve stuffed into my
carry on is at times, heavy and cumbersome, but the peace of mind I get knowing
I’m prepared outweighs the pounds I’m carrying.
And
once in a while . . . I get to be a hero. Need scissors? Oh sure, I've got that.
Labels:
hotel room,
packing,
things to pack,
travel,
Travel Tips,
Travel with Kids
Tuesday, November 20, 2012
Maine Coon Cat Update: The Year of Puffs
It was a year ago yesterday that we lost our awesome cat,
Ocho. We believe he was a Maine Coon although having found him as a stray, we
were never sure. He had all the typical traits of the Maine Coon: the fur coat
with extra layers, the lion like ruff, his behavior more that of the family dog
than expected of a cat, greeting us in the driveway when we returned home, his
desire to hang with us, and his fondness for water; all reinforced the
belief that we had found someone special to share our home.
That day last year two things happened. We had a pellet
stove installed and my husband found our cat dead by the side of the road,
after two days of looking for him. That day we experienced our first loss as a
family. We sat together on the couch that night, feeling the heat blast from
the new stove and unable to feel the glow. We all cried.
Over the weeks that followed, through the holidays, it was
clear that something was missing in our home. Feline life was needed.
Knowing that I wanted another Maine Coon Cat, I began the
research to find a breeder. My daughter and I went to meet a litter of seven
kittens bred by Coldstream Cattery in Enfield, Maine.
We went in search of a brown tabby male, like our Ocho. We found a gorgeous
litter of kittens, six weeks old when we met them, and though we had gone for
one kitten . . . we ended up getting two.
Apparently Bella thought her brother needed a bath. |
After Christmas we brought them home.
The house was again alive with paws and fur and tails.
Bella and Buzzer are here.
Bella & Buzzer snooze |
I wrote about our first few weeks in this blog post from last year. Today I felt an update was needed.
The kittens just had their first birthday. Things we’ve learned about these two
Maine Coon Cats:
1.
2 cats from the same litter can have 2 very distinct
personalities.
2.
3 cats of the same breed can have 3 very distinct
personalities.
3.
1 sweet little silver tabby girl cat can grow into a
loudmouth, pushy, demanding, hyper focused, in your face kind of cat.
Bella "the Bell" is a silver tabby - here about 12 weeks old |
4.
That same sweet little silver tabby girl cat can also
purr very loudly, be empathetic and attentive, and desperately need to be with
her people.
5.
1 shy boy cat can grow into a shy adult male cat who is
a bit skittish and hesitant, must be bribed to purr, and defaults to his sister
when its time to eat.
Buzzer "Buzzy Boy" beginning to claim his place in the house. |
6.
That shy boy can also make regular routine of jumping
on your shoulders and laying there when he’s feeling the love, curls himself
into a bowl on top of the refrigerator to nap, and plays fetch with a rubber
ball, returning it like a puppy.
Bella in the bowl; Buzz stretching out. |
So we love our little kittens. We still miss Ocho and won’t
forget him. I still sometimes look to see if he’s trotting into the driveway
when I get home. Bella and Buzz are different from him and from each other. I guess
it’s a study in nature vs. nurture of sorts.
Here are some photos of our year together:
My daughter with her new friends. |
Bella's favorite toy is a sparkly puff ball and she loves to hide them and find them. |
Like babies, sometimes the box is more fun. |
A nice spot in the sunny bay window. It includes a great view of the birdfeeders. |
One of Buzz's favorite spots is the top of the file cabinet in my office. |
Bella prefers the window box for an afternoon nap. |
I hope you've enjoyed the Coon Cat update. I'll post more photos now and then.
Labels:
cats,
Christmas,
furry,
home,
life in Maine,
Maine Coon Cat,
pets
Sunday, October 28, 2012
The Benefits of Travel for Teens
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a teen's view of the white house . . . |
What is the best age for kids to travel? It could be argued that travel is good for a
person at any age. The benefits of travel, whether within the U.S. or abroad,
are wide ranging. The opportunity to see the world beyond your comfortable
circumference opens your eyes and your mind. It increases tolerance and fosters
understanding. It doesn’t have to be a far away land, world trekking adventure
that makes a difference in your life. Travel and education are invariably
intertwined. Even a trip across town can be educational if coupled with the right
mindset.
You go. You learn. You come back home with a little more
understanding of how the world works, how it got to be the way it is, and you
lose a bit of the fear of the unknown, because after traveling to a place, its
not so unknown.
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viewing the canyons of southern California |
Traveling as a family, whether the children are toddlers or
teens, enriches us all. The time spent together, of course, is important, but
the shared experiences are what make traveling with your family something that
binds you. You create memories that serve to connect you as a family. It’s not
necessarily the big things – visiting the monuments and historic sites – that
make the journey a series of lessons.
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on the ferry to the statue of liberty, with Manhattan in the background. |
Just the process of a trip, from the
planning to the unpacking, is an educational experience. In the planning stages,
it may well be the adults that make the decisions about the where and the when,
but as a parent, you know you don’t make those choices without taking your
children into consideration, whether you ask for their opinions or not. Their
age level, abilities and interests determine so much of the logistics of
travel. Will they be able to handle being in an airport for a 3 hour layover
without having a meltdown? Can they carry their own luggage? Would an
additional day or two in a particular city allow you to visit the sites you
know they’d love?
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calling home from a pay phone in Mexico |
My friend Tom is an eighth grade history teacher. When we
asked him at what age he thought that a child would benefit most from visiting
historical sites, he quickly answered that the years between seventh and tenth
grades are best for educational travel. His answer comes from knowing that the
curriculum in those grades revolves around the history of western civilization
in broad terms. In school, kids learn about the wars and the cultures of the
ages that have determined life as we know it. They don’t always see it that
way, but a good teacher can make all the difference. A good teacher makes it
fun to learn, striving to make a connection between the student and the point
in history being taught. I’m sure that in today’s world, full of buzzing and
bells, screen time and constant stimulation, a student’s ability to grasp onto
a piece of what brought us to this point in history is diminished by the noise.
The way to get through the din is to create a connection and one of the best
ways to do that is by experiencing history on a more organic, tactical level,
through travel.
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the Gettysburg Address at the Lincoln Memorial |
Though history is well documented, augmented and argued,
it’s tough to make it stick without an association to it. It all seems so long
ago and far away. That’s where travel can have a huge impact. Take the bits of
the history that trickle through the chaos of middle and high schools, mix it
with a hands on experience with the place where history happened and you have a
bona fide connection that translates to learning, whether they realize it or
not.
And it’s not just in the case of history. There’s poetry to
be absorbed in Edgar Allen Poe’s city of Baltimore.
There’s science, meteorology, archeology to be see at Mount
St Helens. You can "feel the flutter" of the butterfly enclosure at the Smithsonian's Natural History Museum. There are Mayan ruins on the high cliffs above the
Caribbean beaches of the Yucatan in Mexico.
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Immigrant's luggage at Ellis Island |
The grade levels that my friend Tom suggested are often a
point in between the first exposure a kid has to a particular event and the
more detailed study that happens in the later grades. When my daughter was in
the fourth grade, her class did an extended project on Ellis
Island. The students were first taught about the countries that
were the homes of immigrants arriving there and had to select a character from
them. My daughter chose a girl from the French countryside. They next had to
research clothing from the time period so that they could portray their
characters and tell their stories as applied to entering the U.S. at Ellis Island.
On presentation day, families were invited to the classrooms of the fourth
graders, where each class was a different station in the process of entry.
Students, dressed in costume, told tales of their journeys and what they may
have brought from their home countries, of hardships endured and of hope for
the future.
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entry ledger at Ellis Island |
Fast forward nearly four years and to our visit this past
summer to Ellis Island. My husband, daughter
and I arrived at Ellis Island by ferry from Liberty
State Park in New Jersey. Upon entering the building, we
took advantage of the free audio tour available. First exhibit: a considerable
stack of luggage; trunks, satchels, crates and baskets served to illustrate
methods of containment for immigrant’s precious items brought to this new world
that we would see later on in the tour. We stood in the entry hall, heard
voices and sounds as they were so many years ago. Medical exams and educational
assessment, white tiled rooms that divided families and generations, stories of
so many lives that passed through there. We saw graffiti on the walls left by
people who waited there to be notified of their acceptance. The building and
the grounds were overwhelming with sounds and promise. Towards the end of the
tour, exhibits of propaganda posters and governmental advocacy highlighted the
turning of the public against free immigration, some calling out to stop the
onslaught, to essentially build a wall. It taught us all that the struggles of
Americans and of those who wish to be Americans look and sound must as they do
now, only different ports of entry and different countries of origin.
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Liberty has her flame; my daughter her phone |
My daughter moved on ahead of us in the tour, anxious for
the next chapter. It was hard to keep up with her. When eighth grade began this
fall, she was excited to tell me that they will be studying Ellis
Island in her social studies class and that she stopped by the
teacher’s desk on her way out of class that first day to tell him that she had
been there. Yesterday she told me how much she likes her social studies class
this year, which thrilled me since it’s been a subject she’s struggled with in
the past.
It is expected when visiting historic sites that some
education seeps in. One would hope that would happen.
But there’s more to travel that educates on a whole
different level.
The exposure to people, places, food, methods of transport,
cultural expectations, and societal differences whether two states removed from
home or half way around the world has an impact on the way a kid views life
from there on in. If it removes even one layer of fear travel is worthwhile.
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Learning patience at the airport - both parties here needed the education. |
There are lessons along the way that as adults we might glaze over. Reading
maps and road signs, maneuvering through an airport, checking into a hotel,
riding a subway, hailing a cab, skyscrapers and projects, backyards of chickens
and goats and donkeys that roam freely, landscapes that surprise in their
variation, there are so many nuances of living on this planet that are a little
less intimidating when you’ve experienced them yourself. You might be surprised
at the things that kids notice on a journey. You might also learn something
yourself.
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a little fun with distortion . . Liberty perched high above. |
In my travel experiences with my family, we’ve found that
the memories and experience gained far outweigh any concerns about the costs.
We all look at the Statue of Liberty a bit differently now that we’ve been
there and stood at her feet as she gazes out over the harbor. We laugh about
the outburst of a fellow passenger on the small ferry we took from Manhattan to New
Jersey. The three of us reminisce about the awesome
handmade tacos we had at the tiny restaurant in the jungle when we visited an
attraction nearby. When we see the Hollywood sign on the hills above Los Angeles, we remember
that twisty narrow road we took to get up as close to it as you can drive and
the haze that hung over the city in the heat that day. We’ve often seen a
location in a movie or on TV that we visited in the canyons of California where
directors use the unusually shaped boulders as backdrop for scenes that range
from the Flintstones to Armageddon.
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Is it Bedrock or an alien planet? This canyon has been both. |
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at Madame Tusseau's she got to meet Will Smith . . sort of |
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Hollywood behind her, the future is bright |
The point is that travel changes you for the better. It
educates, illuminates, and connects us to one another. It diminishes fears and
increases confidence and understanding. With such focus in the coming months on
giving, it could be an opportunity to give an experience rather than a thing.
No you can’t hold an adventure in your hands and squirrel it away for safe
keeping. You can end up possessing much more and having a deeper understanding
and connection to the world around us and to your family.
![]() |
Civil rights lesson at the Smithsonian |
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Mr. Moose and Bunny Rabbit were certainly part of MY history. |
![]() |
Earlier entertainment |
That’s a gift too big to wrap. Travel is the only thing we
can buy that makes us richer.
![]() |
On Ellis Island |
Just a few of the things teens can learn from travelling:
- Exchanging money – the US dollar vs the world’s currencies.
- Overcoming or adapting to language barriers by necessity; i.e. having to ask where the bathroom is or ordering food in a restaurant.
- Differences and similarities in foods, dress styles, architecture, and transportation.
- That the landscapes and terrain may be worlds apart in a different part of the country or the world but a smile is universal.
![]() |
holding up the Washington Monument |
My daughter has been invited to participate in a student
ambassador program next summer that will include her in a group of teens from
the area traveling to the United
Kingdom. The group will visit England, Scotland,
Wales, and both Northern Ireland and Ireland. They will participate in
educational activities, confidence and team building exercises, some community
service, a home stay with a local family, and even get a tour of Parliament in London by a member of
Parliament. The program is run through People to People. Students who
participate are responsible to raise the funds needed. Therefore she and I have
been exploring fundraising initiatives, such as bake sales. Follow her progress
at www.follownolasjourney.blogspot.com.
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