Pages Navigation Menu

Hudson River Valley: A Dutch Treat

Posted by

It was 400 years ago that navigator Henry Hudson set sail on an expedition that took a surprising turn. He had twice sailed into Arctic waters and failed to find the Northeast Passage, a route north of Europe and Asia connecting the Atlantic and Pacific Oceans, for his native England.

Read More

Ohio’s Lake Erie Shores & Islands: Good times on a Great Lake: Wine, Waves, and White-Knuckle Fun

Posted by

Whether you are seeking soothing relaxation or ultimate thrills Ohio’s Lake Erie Shores & Islands has something for you. Little wonder it is known as the most popular vacation destination in the Midwest.

Read More

Cleveland Rocks!

Posted by

Whether you’re looking for fine arts or pop culture, history or innovation, ice wine or wax lips, the Cleveland area has it all. It’s a center of internationally renowned arts and sciences with entertainment for all ages.

Read More

Quebec City’s 400th Anniversary Celebration

Posted by

We were there for the largest celebration of military music in North America, the 10th Annual edition of the Quebec City International Festival of Military Bands. The world’s best military bands captivated the crowds in a series of special events, concerts, and a military tattoo held throughout the city.

Read More

Missouri: Gateway to the West

Posted by

When the first bridge across the Missouri River was built here in 1869, Kansas City became a railroad hub and a stockyard city that grew into one of the world’s major cattle markets.

Read More

From Normandy to Paris: a river cruise along the Seine

Posted by

The longest inland waterway in France winds in serpentine loops between the coast in Normandy and one of the most fashionable and romantic cities in the world–Paris. Named Seine from the Latin sequana, meaning snake, the 110 mile distance by air between Paris and the coast meanders by river for 240 miles.

Read More

Along France’s rivers: A taste of Burgundy and Provence

Posted by

The Rhône flows past the red roofed houses of southern France, meeting the Saône, its largest tributary, in the culinary capital of Lyon. A river cruise through this region is a journey through a fertile sun-kissed countryside scented by lavender and thyme and adorned with fields of sunflowers, vineyards, farms, orchards, and olive groves.

Read More

La Belle Epoque: Barging through the Burgundy region of France

Posted by

Burgundy — we know it as a deep red hue, the color of a wine from a country where it is named not by the grape from which it is made but by the region in which it is produced. The Burgundy region, southeast of Paris, is fruitful, prosperous and rich in history, culture, and gastronomy.

Read More

Outside Tokyo: Saitama Prefecture, Japan

Posted by

Japan is an archipelago less than 4% the size of the United States yet has the world’s third-largest economy. Tokyo, its capital since 1868, is on the island of Honshu, bordered by Chiba, Saitama, and Tokyo Bay.

Read More

Oklahoma!

Posted by

Rich in a Western heritage of tribal culture, pioneers, cowboys, oil barons, and outlaws, the Sooner State, Oklahoma, celebrated its first century of statehood in 2007. Its Capitol is the only one with an oil well on its grounds, dubbed Petunia for its location in the first Lady’s flower bed.

Read More

Kingston, the Thousand Islands, and The Rideau Canal

Posted by

Kingston and the Thousand Islands are at the head of the the Lawrence River and the foot of the Great Lakes.

Read More

Ottawa: Oh, Canada!

Posted by

It is British city with a French accent, centered on Parliament buildings replicating London’s Westminster and a turreted hotel in the style of a French chateau. An historic and now recreational waterway of pleasure boats is lined with pathways and winds through its heart.

Read More

BC Ferries: The Inside Passage

Posted by

The 240 mile Inside Passage Route between Prince Rupert and Port Hardy travels past soaring mountains, picturesque fjords, narrow channels, and remote islands.

Read More

THE SKEENA: Riding the Rails Across British Columbia

Posted by

On our two-day 725 mile daylight land cruise we sat back in our glass carriage and enjoyed the view. We experienced the enormity of mountains and vastness of the Interior Plateau and a forested wilderness from the comfort of our armchairs.

Read More

A house rental in Kissimmee: friends, dreams, and memories

Posted by

“Magic Moments” was on the nameplate on the house. A plaque in the hallway read “The best things in life come in threes… friends, dreams, and memories”. And that what we experienced.

Read More

Fantasy of Flight, Polk City, Florida

Posted by

For Kermit Weeks, planes are vehicles of freedom, a means of of pushing boundaries and reaching for the sky and stars. His private collection of vintage planes at Fantasy of Flight is the largest in the world.

Read More

Portland, Maine: The Jewel By The Sea

Posted by

Portland, the largest city in Maine, is on a small peninsula that juts into Casco Bay

Read More

Nova Scotia’s South Shore

Posted by

Nova Scotia is a peninsula bordered by the Atlantic Ocean and the Bay of Fundy, connected to New Brunswick and the mainland by an isthmus less than 15 miles wide.

Read More

Halifax, Nova Scotia

Posted by

Wherever you are in Nova Scotia, Canada’s Ocean Playground, you are never more than 35 miles from the sea.

Read More

Huntsville, Alabama: America’s Birthplace of Space

Posted by

If you are driving past the cotton fields of Northern Alabama’s fertile Tennessee Valley and a 363’ high Saturn V rocket emerges in the skyline you are approaching America’s Birthplace of Space, Huntsville, also known as Rocket City USA.

Read More

Pin It on Pinterest