One way or another…

Brutal Relax at New Smyrna Beach

… we would find a way to get in the water today. We had planned to enjoy the weekend celebrating Caleb’s birthday. Today was going to involve a trip to Blue Spring State Park. Caleb had Google’d the places to snorkel in Northeast Florida. He was deciding between Dry Tortugas, the farthest south and a nine-hour drive with a two-hour catamaran ride; Ichetucknee Springs, about two hours west; and Blue Spring, exactly two hours south. We have camped at Dry Tortugas and look forward to going back, but this was to be a day trip and Blue Spring was the final decision.

We grabbed our roommates, Jon and Amanda, after buying her some snorkel gear at Dick’s Sporting Goods, and headed south. We were full of excitement as Caleb filled us with online reviews of clear water while swimming with manatees and alligators. Upon arrival, we were met with full disappointment. There was a park ranger at the left turn and a line of vehicles ahead. She warned us that it would be at least an hour wait and that even if we attempted to walk on, the park was a first-come, first-serve type place.

Immediately Caleb said to head east until we hit water. This would bring us to the Atlantic Ocean on New Smyrna Beach. The roommates were ready with swimsuits on and skin coated in sunscreen. Me, I was not so ready. I was going to await until our arrival to the park and attempt to pull my wetsuit over dry skin in the backseat of a Toyota Echo and had not even bothered bringing one of my many mismatched swimsuits. Caleb, in trying to cheer me up, left his dry clothes on and walked into the water in search of seaweed and slime to reenact a scene from Brutal Relax. He wasn’t going for the scantily dressed tourist, but was  re-making a scene where the sea creatures come out of the water. Instead of tearing my body into pieces, he was going to cover me in sea sludge, but was letdown by the cleaning current of the tide.

The approaching weather was not a good sign of times to come for the beach that day. We took our wet hungry selves to Gilly’s Pub 44 down the street. Me and Caleb had stopped in here once on our way home from some past adventure. Too hot to sit outside and perhaps too many cigarettes, we chose a table inside. The guys ordered a pitcher of Bud Light, Amanda a coke, and I had a Corona and a lemonade. Roommates ordered nachos, Caleb a Philly cheese steak sandwich with mozzarella sticks, and I had fried pickles. After Amanda and Jon played in the water and filled their bellies, the rhythm of the shaky car (due to damaged tire in the back and then bent rim in the front…stupid maintenance guys) and the fall of the rain, put them to sleep for the ride home.

It was not without a laugh that I woke them up. Caleb gave me the idea to scream as I hit the brakes. I did so at the turn onto our street off the highway. They awoke with shock in their eyes as they exclaimed they thought we were about to hit another car; we didn’t. We arrived home safe after driving through a storm with horrible visibility; I had the yellow line on the road to guide me. One way or another…we got wet more than once today.

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Fort Sumter in a Day

Caleb is all about doing things for me. Such is the reason for this visit. In May 2009 my Dad suggested I get a Passport for National Parks. I’ve been crazy about them ever since. We woke up at 5:00am to arrive 30 minutes early for our 10:45am departure to the island. We have driven by on I-95 multiple times and even been to Charleston and the prior visit to Sullivan’s Island brought us three hours early. We were very excited to say the least. We may have been the 5th group on the ship, but the first people off, right behind the park ranger, was us, the over-anxious couple. There were plenty of children with parents who smoked and we wanted to get an unobstructed view of the ruins of the fort.

The park rangers allowed us to explore for an hour and we thought about paying one of the many boaters passing by to take us back later. We went up to the flags and down to the beach. We stood in front of the boat on the way there, but calmly let others take our place while we stood in the shade for the return trip. We had water and PBJs for lunch and gave the car some gas for the return trip. We would make it home by 5:00pm in time for more cake and ice cream.

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Birthday Breakfast

This was a late breakfast at IHOP as we had to wait for Caleb to go to work and get a piece of paper with a signature on it giving him a 4-day weekend. When he got home I went to pick up the 4-layer red velvet cake with cream cheese icing from the bakery at Publix across the street. We would later decide that vanilla bean ice cream goes best with red velvet cake. ( I did see the small fancy ice creams in a new flavor..red velvet. Will have to try that soon.) After I took this picture, Caleb slid the pancakes off the plate and into his mouth. He daintily ate the other plate’s contents with a napkin in his collar and a fork for plate to mouth transfer.

Long vs Short

For his birthday, he asked to see me with short hair after knowing me for six years. We went to SuperCuts where the nice barber proceeded to cut my hairs in half. Then we spent the afternoon driving to different bicycle shops until we found him a new gray Schwinn. We relaxed at home for a bit before leaving at 7:00pm for dinner. We planned on going to, “that Indian place on Baymeadows.” The restaurant, Flavors, had moved across the street so we decided to try their competition, 5th Element, next door. The appetizer was tasty and we tried jalapeño naan bread. The rest of the meal was not as flavorful as we hoped. We had cake and ice cream when we got home.

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Trip to Ruby Falls

The motivation for this trip began with a desire to visit Ruby Falls over 400 miles from home. I knew it would not be an all day venture and couldn’t guarantee that this one place would be worth the gas money alone. Nothing like a promise of sleeping on rocks and hanging with bugs all day to get me excited for a weekend getaway; off to camping in the Great Smoky Mountains.

The first stop would be Ninety Six National Historic Site with a full cicada chorus in mid-performance upon our arrival. There were live ones, dead ones, empty exoskeletons, photo-friendly ones, and ones eaten by Piggy to ensure she wouldn’t become malnourished on this short trek over already proven battlegrounds. We would drive through North Carolina and arrive in Gatlinburg overrun with tourists making up for some bad-weather days, and stop for some Mellow Mushroom pizza to-go. We set up tent and headed into the woods. I’m looking for bears or alligators or bobcats; we find flowers, waterfalls, and sooner than we thought – darkness. The bridges we cross on foot are as wide as one dog; Piggy would appreciate her harness keeping her from taking a plunge.

cicada

We would return to camp and Caleb would succeed in building the smallest fire, with wet wood, out of the other two near us. We would roast some marshmallows and burn others. We put the remaining pizza in the car along with the rest of the sticky, sugary treats to keep them from late-night visitors and crawled into the tent. Around 2:00 am I am woken to the sound of ‘scratch, scratch, shake, shake’ and then repeat. I wake Caleb to tell him that we are possibly being robbed of the dogs food by raccoons.

The noise didn’t wake him and he would have been just fine waking up without the dog food available in the morning. He makes a bit of noise, in hopes to scare them off and not get scratched or get rabies, and stumbles in the dark until he finds the dog-food dish half-shoved in the dirt. He comes back to the tent and with the dish still intact, tosses it near our feet and goes back to sleep. The sound will still be fresh in my mind in the morning and make me wish that I had an infrared camera for such moments.

Mountain Laurel

We see plenty of trillium, mountain laurel, goslings, wild turkey, and hungry deer before lunch. There will be cyclists on steep grades, horseback riders running around hairpin turns, and a seniors day special at the visitor center with music, arts, crafts, and an ambulance – just in case. We take in the sounds and splendor and then decide it’s time for our car to take a trip down Parsons Branch Primitive road. One sign tells us the eight miles will take an hour, I’m excited. Another sign warns of limited emergency services and I worry more about the car’s undercarriage than I do the health of the eight curious eyes riding in the security of this steel cage.

Lucky for us, there are windows on this entrapment to get a better peek at the world around us. This is a one-way road with vertical embankments, sharp curves, steep climbs, a few ditches, and many potholes but only some worthy of attempting to get our car stuck until towed or send us smashing into the beautiful earth and leaving our vehicle useless. Fortunately, I am able to slam on the gas just right to get us uphill without sliding on the gravel and downhill I ride the brakes to keep us moving forward, but not too fast.

We arrive at Ruby Falls in time for the 1 o’clock tour. There are kennels available and we get a key in exchange for Caleb’s ID. An employee walked us to the area where they have four 7-foot tall chain-link metal kennels set next to each other. Three of the kennels are full and our dogs don’t get along well with others (they have both been bit) so we put them into carriers that are in the last kennel. I believe the carriers are for smaller breeds so they won’t escape. When we return our dogs will be the only ones there; and they will be out of the tight, moist box of deprivation and enjoying the shade.

As miserable as it seems the dogs might have been we were busy in the cool temperatures of the underground enjoying ourselves. I should’ve known with all the publicity that the place would be packed with tourists, but I thought they may have some restrictions for the protection of the cave. There are big welcoming TVs set in the rocks, lots of kids touching all the walls, group photos to be taken and overpriced, and signs under each formation of what someone else thought you might see. I prefer a cave of wonder that allows me to use my imagination.

Regardless, the cave has a rich history and plenty of places left unexplored. We get to see where the first explorers wrote their names and where they put dynamite to gain better access to the larger areas. There are stalactites and stalagmites that you always expect to find in a cave, but also found here are mini-landscapes, a small wishing pond, bacon and soda straws, and animals of all sizes covered in different amounts of calcite which gave the appearance of leaking milk.

When we actually arrive to the waterfall all is dark. When the guide is sure the group is caught up they give a big introduction with a musical light show. Then you are allowed to walk around the waterfall and look up into the droplets as they hit your face. After the finale it seems it is a quick left to the exit. We make a detour to one of the many spots dedicated to monuments of the Chickamauga & Chattanooga National Military Park – Lookout Mountain Battlefield where we will see a squirrel posing for photos, an Eastern Towhee, and too many ticks for comfort; a sign for us to leave.

We would spend the rest of the evening at Little River Canyon National Preserve witnessing horses farting on llamas and a caterpillar inching its way to the other side of the trail. After a day of adventure the dogs have no problem going to sleep on the soft bed in the quiet Econo Lodge Motel while Caleb and I relax. There is plenty more to see of the Canyon in the morning. We are up early for waterfalls, mushrooms, and a symbiotic relationship between a rock and a tree.

little speck is flying fish

To finish off this weekend adventure we head to Martin Luther King, Jr. National Historic Site to remind ourselves of the progress a well-spoken reverend made many years ago that some choose to respect and celebrate and that others choose to discredit by defiling areas with his namesake. Outside we stood in partial fear and amazement at the scene unfolding. It started out as any other American Robin would and then before our eyes plucked a beetle and a worm right out of the dirt to enjoy a combo of crunch and slime. Time for us to get some lunch of our own and head home.

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Trans-Siberian Orchestra

tso

Before the show, a security guy comes over to inquire about the size of my camera lens, and once assured that I’m not going to sell posters and videos of the show, talks to us for twenty minutes. We were there early which left us plenty of time to get a dry pretzel to share and a beer each to wash it down. We didn’t want to over-do-it so there would be no breaks during the three-hour show. It started around 7:15 pm and people were still coming in. The show didn’t sell out but was packed around us. The picture above was the beginning of an amazing show.

Part of the band was local and they had the volume on their amp all the way up. Sometimes the lights seemed to shine directly into my eyes. There was a narrator, people on suspended cages, soloists, and dancers. We were lucky enough to sit next to a couple that felt it necessary to drink a bottle of wine before the show and then sit down with a glass in each hand. Soon they were talking over the music and performing all the air-band instruments. The whole row in front of us took a potty break at the same time allowing the guy beside us the ability to go too.

When the guy came back to his seat he smashed glass and wine all over himself. This didn’t keep us from enjoying the show or others from taping the show with their poorly enabled cellphones which were posted to YouTube after the show. For this show, I am glad for the seats we got. There were folding chairs on the floor and the problem of having all those heads in the way. We were in stadium seating in row V which also gave us an excellent view of the soloist stage closer to us.

The intense sound and blinding light could have made me think I was at a Ozzy concert, but there was no mosh pit. I think this is the adult version of singing Santa and Jesus tunes at Grandma’s house around Christmas time in that embarrassing sweater she knitted – just for you. Caleb would like to mention that he was the lucky guy that happened to bring the one woman equipped with a Canon XSi and fully functioning flash that would be in competition of the bright lights for the entire show.

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