Nashville Cats 2014

July 17, 2014

Nashville Trip (June 27 through July 2)

Heber Springs

We (all 5 of us) cruised to Heber Springs in a tricked out Chevy Suburban.  We lodged at the Red Apple Inn on Greers Ferry Lake.  Its a quaint little place and probably the best lodging in town, although it’s a couple of miles outside of town which was fine with us.

Dinner was at the Red Apple Inn Restaurant. The food was okay and we had to wait at least an hour for it so bring a book to read.

This part of the world is beautiful. Kind of place you could come back to and jus veg our.  The biggest downside for me is there is no walking trails or nature trails.  I guess they expect everyone to drive a car.  We had a hard time finding access to the lake but once we did the views were spectacular. 

Greers Ferry Lake

Greers Ferry Lake

Searcy

The next morning we headed on out to Searcy where we partook of breakfast at the local Waffle House.  Most of the group had never eaten at a Waffle House.  All were surprised at how good the breakfast tasted and the clean restrooms.  After breakfast we walked the hallowed grounds of Harding where Kara attended college for two years.  The Harding campus is quite impressive and much larger than I’d imagined.  

Memphis

We left Searcy bound for Memphis on U.S. 64 through the flatlands of Arkansas.  It’s a different and strange world in that part of the state.  Much of the land is covered with rice.  All of the land is flat.  All of the land appears to be water logged unlike Texas which is crying out for rain.

Our first stop in Memphis was the Rendezvous Barbecue (http://www.hogsfly.com/) , a basement joint reached via an alleyway behind the Peabody Hotel.  Of course since we were in Memphis the ribs were dry rub and delicious.  Definitely a must stop for anyone in Memphis.  I’ve eaten at Corky’s several times. Corky’s is darn good also but both the atmosphere and ribs are better at the Rendezvous.

Rendezvous Ribs

Rendezvous Ribs

After a great lunch we and about 10,000 other faithful toured Graceland.  The lines were long but I learned a lot about Elvis and life.  His grandmother outlived him and his parents.  And money can’t buy you everything.  Elvis dies at 42 of “heart problems” according to the tour.  I’d always heard it was drug problems that killed the King.

Graceland

Graceland

Before leaving Memphis for Nashville we watched the ducks waltz from the lobby fountain at the Peabody into the elevator for their ride to their rooftop home.  Someday I want to come back to Memphis, book a room at the Peabody, and watch the ducks from a table in the lobby while sipping on a martini.  After the duck watching we headed out for Nashville only stopping at a Subway for dinner and a wine shop to ensure a celebration toast once we reached our Nashville destination.  

During our drive to Nashville we encountered the usual 45 minute delay because of road construction.  Hint: Never drive I40 in Arkansas or Tennessee if you can avoid it.

Nashville

In Nashville we divided out time between enjoying good restaurants, taking in local attractions, and vegging out in the condo.

As you can see from the restaurant list below we placed an emphasis on breakfast.  

Most of the local attractions were country and western oriented which is not a surprise since Nashville is the C&W capitol of the World.

Restaurants

Loveless Cafe

Loveless Cafe

  • Pfunky Griddle – you cook your own breakfast place.  Food was good.  And we did cook it ourselves at a griddle in the middle of our table.
  • The Row – a causal dinner joint. I ate barbecue again
  • Pancake Pantry – World famous pancake house.  I was disappointed because I did not have to wait in line for an hour.  Otherwise lots of kinds of pancakes including my favorite , buckwheat.
  • Jack’s Barbecue – On Broadway in the midst of all the honky tonks.  Definitely good  barbecue Nashville style.  Try out their white barbecue sauce.  Apparently white barbecue sauce is a Nashville delicacy.  It’s composed of mayo, horseradish, and some other secret ingredients.
  • Loveless Cafe (http://www.lovelesscafe.com/) – Its about 40 miles outside of Nashville at the terminus of the Natchez Trace.  Well worth the drive at least for breakfast.  The place alone is a good reason the drive the Natchez Trace
  • The Pharmacy – Billed as the “wurst hamburger beer garden in Nashville.” I ate curried wurst. Go there when the weather is nice because your most likely to eat outside and even if you don’t the inside does not appear to be air conditioned.
  • Five Points Pizza (http://www.fivepointspizza.com/) – In a dumpy neighborhood NorthEast of downtown.  However, the pizza is fantastic and the craft beers are all great.  Don’t worry about getting mugged.  Apparently this is the new neighborhood in Nashville for the locals in the know.

What we did besides eat

Ryman - High Church of Country Music

Ryman – High Church of Country Music

The list of things we did that I’d recommend:

  • Ryman Auditorium – the high church of Country Music.  Interesting visit.  Apparently Gwen and I did not realize how lucky we were to watch a concert there several years ago.  I recommend the tour if you have not taken it.
  • Country Music Hall of Fame and Museum – My 2nd visit.  They trade out many of the exhibits or I am old enough to forget because much of it seemed different to me.  On a side note, I wonder where the Western Music Hall of Fame is located?
  • Grand Ole Opry – Of course if your in Nashville you’ve got to attend the Opry.  Saw lots of good acts both old and new.  My favorite was the Old Crow Medicine Show.  We liked them so much we bought tickets to their July 7th show at the House of Blues Dallas.  They have to be one of the best musical acts I’ve ever seen.
  • Broadway and 2nd area: Walked honky tonk heaven.  Went into a couple of joints and listened to the music
  • Parthenon – replica of the original in Greece.
  • Swimming in the condo pool with AG
  • Watched World Cup matches, especially the USA

Other Photos


Fall 2013 Leaves Turning Trip

October 9, 2013

We just returned from a trip with some friends to view the leaves turning in the Great Smoky Mountains and Northern Arkansas.  Lesson learned: September 27 – October 2 is way too early in the year to see the leaves turn in either location. However, it was the only dates we were all free to go and if we had waited we would have been locked out of Great Smoky Mountains National Park because of the Federal Government shutdown.  We visited the park the day before the shutdown forced the park to close.

Old Mill Restaurant

Old Mill Restaurant

Highlights:

  • Monell’s in Memphis is a great place for fast food “Southern Style”. I recommend the catfish.
  • Corky’s Ribs & BBQ in Memphis is always finger licking good!
  • Great Smoky Mountains National Park is free.  I was actually disappointed because I did not get to use my National Park Pass. Any Senior can buy the pass for $10 and it is good for the rest of your life.  One of the great bargains of our time! However, don’t go until the government sets out the Open for Business sign again.
  • Old Mill Restaurant in Pigeon Forge. They are open breakfast, lunch, and dinner. We went for lunch and every meal is the same price – $10. Assume breakfast and dinner are similar.
  • Mountain View Arkansas is a quaint little down in the Ozark Mountains of Northern Arkansas.  Mountain View bills itself as the Folk Music Capital of the World.  The town square is surrounded by quaint shops and there appears to be live music of the folk persuasion somewhere almost every night.
  • Woods Pharmacy and Old-Fashioned Fountain is a great place for a root beer float, banana split, or a phosphate.
  • I40 in Arkansas (triple negative highlight): Don’t ever travel between Little Rock and Memphis on I40. Every time I use that route I swear to never use it again. There is always road construction with long, long, long backups.

More Photos at:

http://flic.kr/s/aHsjKfZpmu

 


Family/baseball trip 2013

June 29, 2013
Gwen in Heaven

Gwen in Heaven

This June we traveled back to the Midwest to visit family and see a few baseball games.  We had a great time visiting with my family.  We also were lucky enough to watch baseball in 3 of the great parks in the Country.  This blog is a day by day record of the vacation.

(Click here for more photos)

Saturday June 01: Up at 5. Drove to St. Louis – partially through a driving rain storm which flooded Springfield Missouri. Checked in at downtown Hilton. Watched the Cardinals beat the hell out of the Giants. First time in new Busch Stadium. Great views of the game but disappointed in the concessions. Costs an arm and a leg to eat and drink there

The Gateway Arch

The Gateway Arch

 Sunday June 02: In St, Louis. Breakfast at St. Louis Bread Company (Panera). Visited Grant’s Farm. Rode the tram and saw the Clydesdales. Lunch at St. Louis Bread Company. The Mississippi bridge at Alton was closed because of flooding so we drove to Monmouth via US 61, Hannibal, Quincy, and Macomb. Freeway all the way to Macomb. Staying at Americas inn. Built where Mellings used to be. Visited Sally and George.

Monday June 03: We traveled to West Branch Iowa and visited the Herbert Hoover Presidential Library and Museum.  After arriving at West Branch we lunched downtown at Reid’s Beans. It is a small quaint joint with no published menu. The menu changes every day and contains a  limited number of items. 6 the day we dined there.  If your ever close to West Branch and hungry I recommend them.  After lunch we paid our $3 and toured the Museum.  I learned a great heal about Herb.  He was truly one of the giants of the 20th Century. And the $3 was a great deal you can only find in Iowa.

Monday evening we had dinner with Sally and George’s family and Jerry at the Longhorn Steakhouse in Peoria.  A good time was had by all.

Tuesday June 04:  Another day visiting family in Monmouth. We all drove to Davenport North Park today and shopped. After we arrived back in Monmouth we visited the Monmouth Wine Bar – Market Alley Wine. It was a pleasant surprise and pretty busy for 4PM!  Since it was our last night in town Gwen and I dined at Cerar’s.  The meal was great as usual.  Whenever I visit Monmouth I wonder how a restaurant this good survives in a town as small as Monmouth.

Downtown Chicago

Downtown Chicago

Wednesday June 05:  We exercised and then drove to Schaumburg for 3 day stay in Chicago. Spent the afternoon chilling in the Springhill Suites. Dinner at the Rosebud. It is a Chicago Italian restaurant.  Very good but expensive.

Thursday June 06:  Raining this morning so we spent a quiet morning in the hotel washing clothes, nerding out on the computer, and exercising.

We ate lunch at Portillio’s Hot Dogs – a Chicago institution.  Hot Doug’s is supposed to be better but I’ve never been there so don’t know.  I do know Hot Doug’s is 4 blocks from where I lived from 1966 to 1968. I need to go back there and see the old neighborhood.  Hot Doug’s moved in after I left.  Was this a coincidence?

After lunch we drove downtown to the Art Institute of Chicago.  Traffic and Parking cost were terrible. If we ever do this again I will figure

Chicago Art Institute

Chicago Art Institute

out a way to take public transportation.  The Art Institute was great. Saw America Gothic. Also paintings by Sargent, Whistler, and Mary Cassatt.  Dinner at the Ram Brewery. There seem to be good micro-breweries everywhere but Texas?

Friday June 07: Spent another morning exercising and hanging around the hotel even though the Sun was shining.  At 11AM we hopped the bus to Wrigley Field for a Cub/Pirate game.  We froze to death, figuratively. The Cubs lost but we had a great time basking in the glory at one of the shrines of America’s pastime and all.  The Schaumburg bus is definitely the way to. No fighting traffic, no paying $40 for a parking spot. After arriving back in Schaumburg we went to a pre-wedding party at one of Karen’s siblings homes in Schaumburg. I can’t remember their name because I had too much to dream that night. Then we took Sara and Paxson back to their hotel and called it a night.

Chicago Pizza

Chicago Pizza

Saturday June 08: We exercised, and checked out of Springhill Suites. Had lunch with Mike, Sara, and Paxson at Giordano’s. Great pizza. Supposed to be the best in Chicago (Giordano says its true).  Spent the afternoon at the hotel doing too much of nothing (its a song title by Peter, Paul, and Mary – I’ve been trying to fit it into a blog for years and this was my chance) while waiting for the wedding to finish.  Then we had drinks with the Nuestadt family in the hotel lobby.  Later we dined at Stonewood Ale House with Dave and Gretchen.  The Stonewood appeard to be a great place to watch a sporting event.  We ate early but people were already flocking in to grab seats for the Blackhawk Stanely Cup game. All around the bar they had two rows of satellite (?) bars and a bank of large screen TVs above the bar. We watched the beginning of the hockey match with Dave and Gretchen. At 8PM we left for Indianapolis and left them to babysit Paxson in the hotel.  We arrived at the hotel there at 1:30AM.

Sunday June 09: Woke up at 10:30AM and had to check check out at 11AM. I don’t believe I had slept this late since I was a teen ager.  Wait, I never slept that late as a teenager. I had to get up at the crack of dawn to milk cows and slop the hogs.  Of course all of this was up hill in a driving snow storm.  Maybe driving late at night in an unfamiliar area when you are 66 wears the body down. Drove to Cincinnati and visited with Jim, Nancy, and Jack. That evening we went to Reds game with Jim and Jack.  They were playing St. Louis. The Reds ballpark is great.  The game went 10 innings but Cardinals finally won 11-4 by scoring 7 runs including a grand slam in the 10th.  Jack is a real baseball fan and a real tropper.  He was excited the entire game eventhough the game lasted well into the night.

Jim & Jack at Reds game

Jim & Jack at Reds game

Monday June 10: First thing in the morning we drove to Kroger’s and bought ingredients for smoothies.  If we don’t have our smoothies we turn into Chewbaccas I have been told. Then we lounged around the Jim and Nancy’s the rest of the morning. We ate lunch at Bob Evan’s. It was very good and healthy. I had bean soup and a pot roast sandwich,  Then we drove to Covington to visit Brian, Michelle, Brian Junior, and Erin. We ate dinner with them at a Beppo Uno in Piqua, Ohio. I had the pizza. It was very good.

Downtown Cincinnati

Downtown Cincinnati

Tuesday June 11:  Our last day in Cincinnati and we toured the town with Jim as our guide. First we visited Spring Grove Cemetery. It is the largest private cemetery in the U.S. It was started in 1845.  The cemetery is huge and many of the monuments are huge as well.  Many generations of a single family are buried in the same large plot with a huge monument marking the plot.  I wonder how many cemeteries have their own web site?  Seems to me social media for the dead is a market waiting to explode.  Enough of that.  Seems Gwen and I have started a pattern of visiting Cemeterys. On our last trip to New Orleans I drug her to the Napoleon Cemetery #1 which I know we both enjoyed.

After Spring Grove, we drove downtown, ate breakfast at a really great place. I wish I could remember the name.  If your ever in dowtown Cincinnati and  hungry for breakfast call Jim.  Then we took photos from the 49th floor of a skyscraper, and across the river in Covington. On the way back to Jim’s we stopped at a really cool wine bar (Marty’s Hops & Vines) and relaxed with a couple of really good craft beers. Gwen had wine of course.

Cincinnati from Ky.

Cincinnati from Ky.

For dinner Jim and Nancy took us to Nicola’s in Cincinnati. Best meal of the trip!!

Wednesday June 12:  Drove from Cincinnati to Memphis. Very enjoyable drive.  We stopped for Lunch at Buckhead’s in Bowling Green Ky. Great lunch. The trip took about 7.5 hours.

If your in Memphis you have to eat barbeque, riight!  The problem is there are so many joints serving great barbeque.  We chose to eat dinner at Corky’s . It has been voted as best Memphis ribs for 28 years in a row. The ribs were delicious. Plus, there was a Corky’s close to the hotel.  After stuffing our selves at Corky’s we drove down to Beale Street and listened to the blues. The entire street was full of parked bikes. Apparently Wednesdays in the Summer are bike nights. They really made the night special with all the noise and 100s of characters walking up and down the street drinking beer.  We listened to several blues groups from the street and and finally settled on a group in the park at the end of the street. I did not get any group names but they were all awesome.

Thursday June 13:  The last day of our vacation and I could not wait to see home.  The 7.5 hour drive from Memphis lasted 9 hours because of road construction. Hint: Don’t ever drive I40 from Memphis to Little Rock.  Somewhere on that stretch there will be road construction and long lines of 18 wheelers.  Other interesting points:

  • Discovered the worst McDonalds near the Memphis Galleria. Day old tea, order came out  very slowly in shifts. Staff was slow and rude
  • Discovered the worst Wendy’s on IH 30 leaving Little Rock at exit 123: dirty, understaffed, slow, everyone’s order in front of us was wrong, out of baked potatoes, rest rooms filthy with no toilet paper
  • On I40 in Arkansas there was a major delay with the road down to one lame. We stopped completely for 10-15 minutes. Then we would move for a bit. Then repeat.
  • I30 at Texarkana road work was almost as bad. We simply stopped for a half hour and then drove 5 mph for 10 minutes before reaching a small group of workers patching the road.

Thursday night – home at last!!

Cardinals Ballpark

Cardinals Ballpark

Reds Ball Park

Reds Ball Park

Note: I never mention restaurants I don’t like. This time I made an exception of the two on the last day.  They are national chains and I expect to have the same quality of service and same quality of food at ever McDonalds and Wendy’s.