Showing posts with label vacation. Show all posts
Showing posts with label vacation. Show all posts

Monday, August 2, 2010

BOTG Taking the Week Off

Dear Loyal Readers,

After some contemplation and discussion, Billy and Bob are taking a week of "mental leave" from Bottom of the Glass. We promise it will only be a week. We will return next Monday, August 8, with what promises to be eye-popping revelatory insights into all of the worlds problems and maladies.

We appreciate your eyes and time, and we hope you'll miss us terribly in our absence. Not, like, stalker miss us, but, you know.

Sincerely,
Billy and Bob
or Bob and Billy

Friday, May 21, 2010

It's Friday!!!!

(I loved this little guy outside of the Rijk's Museum in Amsterdam)

Man oh man, I am so happy that today is Friday.... I can only hope that this weekend goes by slower than whale shit moving on the bottom of the ocean! LOL!!! Excuse me, but I just had to say that.... my father used that expression a lot and it seems to have rubbed off on me, I think it's hilarious! :)

Anyway, yes, I certainly hope the weekend goes by slow because I have a lot to do... as well as a lot not to do! Hehehehe... in other words, a lot of loafing around to do so I can feel up to speed and shake this jet lag for good. Apart from loafing, I have a lot of cleaning and gardening to do... I can't wait to take pictures of all my plants so you can see how well they are doing (there are one or two that are having issues, I will share those too so you all can give me any helpful feedback on how to save them from perishing!). It's amazing how much progress you see in plants when you don't see them for a week, rather than staring at them obsessively for change each and every day. Kind of reminds me of the saying "a watched pot never boils" or however it goes... I was truly pleased when I returned from my vacation to find newly opened flowers on my succulents and clear signs of growth! Wheeee!

Also, by now I have propagated over twenty new little succulents from leaves! I am so proud of myself!! As soon as each new plants' propagation leaf starts to shrivel I transfer it into this large planter I have, I am grouping them all together as a visual reminder of the life I have helped create! yay :)

The only problem with this weekend is I'm not sure how I'm going to get all the blog posts on my trip done.... mainly because my laptop needs to go in for service because it won't turn on and my desktop stopped turning on while I was away (according to my boyfriend).... DILEMMA!! Oh well, we'll see. If it happens great, if not... more time for loafing and gardening! wheee...

Stay tuned for more pictures and posts about my trip, just as soon as I can orchestrate it all and get a working computer. In the meantime, I can't resist throwing in another few pictures from the trip for your viewing pleasure.....have a fantastic weekend!!!!

(A close up of those amazing tulips in front of Amsterdam's Schiphol Airport... they were losing their petals because tulips go out of season there around May 16th)

(Some of my favorite little mini sculpture head remains in the artifacts section... by far my favorite part of the Louvre!!! Greek, Roman and Egyptian artifacts are beautiful and enthralling!!)

(Enormous statues in front of the Opera House - Paris, France)

(Me... goofing around with my mom in the Louvre Museum - Paris, France)

Thursday, May 20, 2010

I'm back!

(tulip planters in front of Schiphol Airport in Amsterdam, The Netherlands)

Helllooooo world! This is just a quick post to let you all know that I'm back from Europe!!! Though it has almost been a week, I am still suffering from that damned jet lag, so as you can imagine blogging has been the last thing on my list of things that require time, thought and energy. :(

I am really looking forward to the weekend so I can get working on the several posts I have planned for highlighting the best parts of my trip. What a trip, believe me when I tell you that I have a lot to share with you, evidenced by the nearly 2,000 pictures that I took (*gasp* yes, I know what you must be thinking... but I could have easily taken 4,000!) ... Oh how I love the iPhone, hehe, stay tuned! I hope you're all doing well.... ;)

(windmills in the town of Volendam, The Netherlands)


(the Arc de Triomphe in Paris, France)


(in all of its glory... the Eiffel Tower on a horribly rainy cold day in Paris, France)

Monday, April 19, 2010

Amsterdam here I come! Sooner rather than later..... wheee...


Oh yes, it's true! In less than three weeks I'll be hitchin' a plane to The Netherlands for over a week of fun in Amsterdam, woohoo!! I didn't think I'd be going back to Europe again so soon, as it is I was lucky enough to go to Istanbul, Turkey in May of 2008 for business (and a few layover hours roaming Amsterdam too), yet for some reason the travel gods have shined down on me again in the form of a very loving mother!! And although I'd love for my boyfriend to enjoy this trip with me, but he can't take time off from work and this vacation just so happens to be a girls only adventure! (My aunt will be in Germany on business in the next few weeks and will be meeting my mom and I in Amsterdam on May 7th.)


Although I've been to Amsterdam four times before (albeit very briefly) and I've visited Anne Frank's house, walked through the Red Light District and strolled the Van Gogh museum, there's still so much that I want to see and do! I'm particularly excited for my mom, it has been many years since she last visited Europe and up until this point, I've done all of my world traveling with my aunt, so I'm looking forward to the added company, it's sure to be a lot of fun... Also in the realm of possibilities? A day (or two) trip to Paris.... another city that I didn't get to thoroughly explore, particularly given the Louvre was closed while I was there!

Anyway, May 6th is just around the corner, it's time to get planning and packing!! I can't wait!

Windmills and tulips and coffee shops oh my.............





Monday, April 27, 2009

Pigeon Forge

Raise the Barn - Keith Urban (with Ronnie Dunn) (mp3)
Johnny Quest/Stop That Pigeon - Reverend Horton Heat (mp3)

I spent last weekend at a family reunion outside of Pigeon Forge.

Pigeon Forge and Gatlinburg are the anti-New Orleans. I'm not sure one can truly love both places. It would be like loving both Betty and Veronica, or Ginger and Mary Ann. You can like one and love the other, but you can't love both and be a normal human being.

We only entered "PF proper" -- otherwise known as one long damn strip of road -- for one brief block, because the town was too busy hosting two biker rallies, one Elvis Presley Fan Club reunion, and hell, I dunno, several Southern Baptist revivals, perchance. Whatever was getting hosted, there were even more people clogging up that single road than usual.

In New Orleans, life is all about what happens after the sun sets. Where do you eat dinner? Where do you get the best drinks? Of what kind of nightlife experience would you like to partake tonight?

In Pigeon Forge, life is all about what happens at breakfast. Which of the 229 pancake restaurants shall you visit today? Does blueberry syrup or pecan syrup go better with your country ham, wherein is packed enough salt to cure leprosy or stay afloat on a small lake? Where are those dark blue socks you had planned on wearing with your plaid shorts and loafers, and where's that package of Werther's Originals you'd brought along? Which of your six pairs of black leather chaps would look best today, and does it go better with the half helmet or the three-quarters?

In Pigeon Forge, traffic is already at its peak level by 10 a.m., as bikers and motorists of all shapes and sizes pour onto the road looking for a good outlet bargain, or trying to find the perfect go cart track, or seeing if they can figure out which closed-down bungee jumping place is the one where that feller done got hisself kilt the other week.

In New Orleans, it's illegal to drive anywhere before 10 a.m. lest those hungover tourists go get themselves kilt like them idjits up in Pigeon Forge who go bungee jumping for giggles.

New Orleans is 67% African American. Whitey makes up just over one-quarter of the population. By contrast -- and I do mean contrast -- Pigeon Forge is almost 95% white.

The only thing whiter than Pigeon Forge is Ivory soap.

(EXAMPLE: I dare you to find one African-American depicted at right. Like a "Where's Waldo?" contest. Show me any other thriving business in the US that can so baldly ignore all minorities in their promotional materials -- it's not even a photo, fer Chrissakes, it's a painting! They didn't even require a real live African-American to model for it! And if you're staring really hard at that girl in the light blue tank top, thinking, "She might be black..." then you're only proving my point.)

When my family ventured briefly onto the strip so that my girls could ride GoKarts and Bumper Boats, we actually saw an African-American couple. They were riding in the bumper boats right before we did, and I could have sworn that all the other honkey boats spent most of their time trying to spray that couple.* When they got out, totally drenched, they were smiling and happy, so I kind of gave them this look of "Did you realize you're the only two black people within 10 square miles unless Darius Rucker is playing Dollywood this weekend?"

Honestly, I don't think they cared. Which is simultaneously a sign of progress for our country and also a sign of what it must be like to live in North Dakota. Except without all the pancake houses and outlet malls.

The other way Pigeon Forge is the anti-New Orleans is that the former is practically bleached of all vices. Alcohol is limited to Pabst, Bud and Franzia and ain't sold on Sundays. No strip clubs. No beads or drunk losers saying things like "Show your t*ts!!" (and that's not "tots," but thanks for playing, Napoleon). Hell, they don't even have any karaoke bars... although you can pay to go watch a group of overly made-up Tammy Faye-esque white people in glittery outfits who have been pre-arranged to sing karaoke on stage.

And, only in Pigeon Forge can you watch "The Miracle," a moving passion play musical about the Life of Jesus. You can have your soul saved for only $40 a ticket!

(Just be sure not to accidentally impale yourself on one of those angels' swords. God's Angels will be one of the next contestants on Spike's "Deadliest Warrior"!)

I mention all of this to note: what better place than Pigeon Forge for my family reunion?

While it might not have been obvious after a single year of BOTG, I am white. My family is whiter than Colonial Bread and whole milk. We spend our days and nights playing white people games like Ladder Golf and Cornhole. We spend our nights talking on porches and playing card games. Our cabin was so high on the mountain that pilots used us and our reflective skin as markers, kind of like lighthouses.

We stayed in a cabin I preferred to call a "cansion." Although the last census report doesn't contain accurate numbers, there are more than 4 million cabin/cansions with hot tubs and pool tables in Sevier County, and 3.6 million of them are located within 10 miles of Pigeon Forge. Amazingly, despite the large population of cansions, they're all "secluded" and "private." Which is true, other than all the old-timers who are annoyed at all the cansions that have razed the once-beautiful tree-topped lush hills will spend all night yodeling to one another hoping to keep people awake and annoyed. You can hear those bastards for miles!

Our cansion had three floors, two kitchens, two outdoor hot tubs, 12 bedrooms, seven baths, two large screen TVs, eight microwaves, a pool table, and one of those touch screen bar games that no one ever plays in bars unless they're drunk or got stood up by blind date.
If you have a family or a large group of people who aren't gonna go all Jack "The Shining" Nicholson on you from being cooped up in a small space for a weekend, I can't think of a more reasonably-priced and enjoyable destination.

* -- This is totally not true. It only felt true for about five minutes, and it might have been less time if the boats moved faster than about 3 mph. There were only six people in boats at the time, and it just so happened that the other four totally surrounded that couple and squirted the hell out of 'em. The odds are good that I'm the only dude who even noticed that I was living a 1950s flashback moment... except in little motorized bumper boats and without the white hoods.