Category Archives: Travel

Highland Haven Creekside Inn – Evergreen, Colorado

Leave Your Mark of Love

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Okay lovers – of every age – it’s too late for Valentine’s Day 2009 but romantic getaways shouldn’t be limited to one night a  year.  I suggest escaping any time of  year to Highland Haven Creekside Inn in Evergreen, Colorado. Less than a half hour from Denver, when at Highland Haven one feels a world away from the city. Tall pines and rocky outcroppings shelter lodge and cabins; Bear Creek tumbles in front of the property.

 Sunset named the inn as a Top 10 Romantic Cottage, in a “Denver’s Best Stuff ” issue of 5280 magazine Highland Haven earned the title of Top Place to Pop the Question. Accolades abound for the unique property.

Accommodations range from guest rooms and junior suites to private cottages and luxury suites with cozy fireplaces and Jacuzzi tubs or private  hot tubs. Whichever you choose the decor reflects what innkeeper Gail Riley terms “Colorado Chic.” You and your sweetheart are sure to appreciate the attention to detail and comfort.hh-interior1

Innkeepers and staff stand ready to enhance the romance with flutes of chilled champagne, imported chocolates, flowers, music or poetry. The inn says, “Love is in the air, in the trees and on the lane!” Several years ago a standing dead tree was stripped of branches and bark, lovers added their mark with hearts, names, intials and/or dates. Gail loves to tell the tender stories of individual carvings. The Sweetheart Tree was so popular a second has been added. A local artist does the carving – contact the inn to make arrangements to leave your mark. Lovers Lane is a stepping stone walkway across the broad lawn from inn to creek. Memorialize a special date or loved one with an engraved stone along the path.

Although it’s too late for a February 14, 2009 reservation it’s not too late for a gift certificate or a copy of Gail’s book  Colorado Cravings – Recipes and Romance. Whether you’re celebrating Valentine’s Day, wedding, honeymoon, anniversary or popping the question you’ll long remember Highland Haven.

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Visiting Abraham Lincoln Sites

All Things Lincoln

 Two hundred years ago Abraham Lincoln was born in a simple Kentucky cabin. With little formal education but great vision, determination, and integrity he abolished slavery and preserved the Union of the United States. Even 144 years after his death the impact of his leadership lives on. Honor the 16th President by visiting one of the sites memorializing Lincoln.

Abraham Lincoln Birthplace National Historic Site – Hodgenville, Kentucky

Lincoln Boyhood National Memorial – Lincoln City, Indiana

lincoln-memorial2Lincoln’s New SalemState Historic Site – Petersburg, Illinois

Lincoln Log CabinState Historic Site – Lerna, Illinois

Lincoln/Douglas Debate Museum – Charleston, Illinois

Lincoln Home National Historic Site – Springfield, Illinois

Lincoln – Hendon Law Offices – Springfield, Illinois

Old State Capitol – Springfield, Illinois

Ford Theater National Historic Site – Washington D.C.

Lincoln Tomb – Oak Ridge Cemetery, Springfield, Illinois

Lincoln Memorial – Washington D.C.

*Rant* – Shame on You, State of Illinois

More Shame for the State of Illinois

There are times when I’m embarrassed to admit I’m from Illinois. My ancestors moved westward with the frontier in the early 1800s from Virginia, through Cumberland Gap, stopping in Ohio and Indiana before finally settling on the Illinois prairie. Reality is that Central Illinois was a great place for growing up and gave me a firm basis for the values I hold and who I am today. However, the shameful political history is an embarrassment and against all values learned on Illinois soil.

As if the recent governor debacle isn’t bad enough when I sat down to write about my visit to the Abraham Lincoln Presidential Library & Museum I made a new discovery. The Governor’s Office under the orders of now – thankfully -ex-governor Rod Blagojevich  has closed 25 historic sites and state parks including four designated National Historic Landmarks. Reviewing the list I see that none are in Chicago or Cook County, the great sinkhole of state funds goes untouched while places like the Carl Sandburg home, Fort Kaskaskia (Illinois’ First Capitol), Kickapoo State Park and the Vandalia Statehouse are shuttered and barricaded. Any member of the public entering the closed parks or sites will be arrested and charged with trespassing. Now, isn’t that a friendly use of taxpayer money?

Sites directly connected with Abraham Lincoln are among those closed. Just in time for the 200th anniversary of Lincoln’s birth. Vandalia Statehouse was the location of most of Lincoln’s time as a member of the Illinois state legislature.

lincoln-log-cabin-2Lincoln Log Cabin State Historic Site was the location of Thomas Lincoln’s farm from 1840 until his death. While Abe never lived on the site he owned and maintained the farm for his stepmother, Sarah Bush Lincoln, after his father died in 1851. He stopped to visit Sarah in early 1861 on his way to his presidential inauguration.

Located eight miles south of Charleston, Illinois the historic site encompasses a replica of Thomas’ log cabin surrounded by a subsistence farm with heirloom crops and cattle breeds. The Stephen Sargent home, reflecting the practices of successful cash crop farming in the 1850s, is also part of the site. Nearby is the Reuben Moore Home where Lincoln and Sarah met for a final time. A living Abraham Lincoln never returned to Illinois.

The need for a replica log cabin holds quite a story. In 1893 the original cabin was disassembled and shipped to Chicago for the World’s Columbian Exposition. Somehow after the exposition the cabin was lost – perhaps used as firewood. Many photographs existed and a replica was built by the Civilian Conservation Corps in 1934.

Before the Blagojevich closing both the Lincoln and Sargent farms supported an active living history program. I’ve visited many such programs around the country and this was absolutely one of the best. The participants weren’t actors or characters, they lived life as the original families would have – growing crops with tools of the period, raising cattle, mucking out the barns, cooking over wood-burning stoves, eating with crude utensils. Authenticity went right down to the hand sewn period underwear worn by the interpreters. This was the only site in the state of Illinois to offer regular first person interpretation.

lincoln-log-cabin-kids1In 2008, volunteers gave over 13,000 hours of their time to ensure that Lincoln Log Cabin was open and accessible to visitors from all 50 states and many other countries. Volunteer support enables the Fifth Grade Live-In and Summer Youth Educational Programs.

The Lincoln-Sargent Farm Foundation is a nonprofit private group that supports the educational programming at Lincoln Log Cabin State Historic Site. Foundation board members are evaluating what potential exists for the foundation to assist the site during the forced closing. Please consider making a donation to help support the efforts of the Foundation in maintaining educational programming and the preservation of rural heritage. Click here to download a form for mailing.

I’m betting the hard working, dedicated volunteers will find a way to overcome the obstacles created by “their” state government. Plus, my check will be in tomorrow’s mail.

 

 

Abraham Lincoln Presidential Library & Museum – Springfield, Illinois

Meet Mr. Lincoln / Mr. President

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A visit to the Abraham Lincoln Presidential Library & Museum in Springfield, Illinois offers a broad perspective on our 16th president. As we celebrate his 200th birthday this facility, which opened in 2005, is the best place I’ve seen to meet Mr. Lincoln.

“Journeys,” exhibits and multi-media theaters relate Lincoln’s life and influence. Journey One takes us through the Pre-Presidential Years. Beginning with “Carving a Family Home” we visit a log cabin symbolic of his early years growing up in Indiana. “Self-Taught” take us to his teen years and the image of Lincoln reading borrowed books by firelight. “On the River, The Slave Auction, New Salem, Life in Springfield, The Permissive Parent, Campaign 1860, On to Washington” vignettes propel us to the beginning of Lincoln’s presidency.

After completing Journey One, The Union Theater presentation “Lincoln’s Eyes” offers a change of pace and more insight. The state-of-the-art theater presentation immerses the visitor into the dramas and issues facing Lincoln. We come away with a deeper understanding of his vision, courage and integrity. lincoln-museum-plaza

Journey Two spans the White House years as we move from the “White House South Portico’ to “What Are They Wearing in Washington?” and the beginning of the Civil War at “Fort Sumter.” I found “The Whispering Gallery” one of the most impactful scenes. In a twisted hallway we hear the unkind voices of critics talking about the Lincolns’ first months in Washington. Political cartoons and ugly caricatures cover the walls. We realize that history tells a different story than the views and fears of any political time.

The story continues through more than a dozen scenes – “The Death of Willie, Emancipation Proclamation, The Gettysburg  Gallery, Ford’s Theater,” and “The Funeral Train.” The compelling “Lying in State” is a recreation of Springfield’s Old State Capitol and the lavish trappings of Victorian-era mourning. A hushed reverence settles on visitors as they pass the closed replica casket. I feel as if I am paying my last respects.lincoln-ghost1

A second theater presents “Ghosts of the Library.” The historian/curator host of the dramatic presentation takes us magically into the Presidential Library. He explains the importance of preserving items such as a music box or quill and the history they relate. My husband is still talking about the live actor slowly dissolving into thin air. We later learn about the Holavision® technology used in the show.

Additional permanent exhibits include a Treasures Gallery of actual items that were part of Lincoln’s everyday life and Ask Mr. Lincoln, an interactive theater where you’ll get answers and advice in Lincoln’s own words. Mrs. Lincoln’s Attic is a hands-on room for kids of any age. Dress up as a Civil War soldier, rearrange the furniture in the Lincoln Home doll house or take pictures with a life-size cutout of young Abe. The Illinois Gallery houses temporary exhibits.

You’ll be amazed at the Lincoln Museum experience, this is not your grandfather’s museum of dusty relics, Disneyesque yet relating an important part of our nation’s history. I’m betting you’ll spent twice as long as you planned and that even hard-to-entertain kids will come away with a vivid history lesson they’ll remember.

Of course, there’s an extensive gift shop with more Lincoln related items and books than you can imagine. A cafe offers hot and cold sandwiches, salads, soups, deserts and beverages, daily 10am-4pm. Across the street The Presidential Library houses a repository for materials relating to Lincoln and the state of Illinois. You’re welcome to enter but facilities primarily serve scholars and researchers.

When You Go: The Museum is open daily 9am-5pm except Thanksgiving, Christmas and New Year’s days. Check the website for admission fees and visitation details.

Brown Palace Hotel – Denver, Colorado

“Affairs of the Heart” Tours

brown-palace-exteriorHistoric tours of Denver’s venerable Brown Palace Hotel focus on “Affairs of the Heart” during February. Oh, the tales Debra Faulkner, hotel historian and archivist, has to tell. After 117 years the “Brown” reveals stories of intrigue, romance, love triangles and even murder. Public tours are offered every Wednesday and Saturday at 2pm and last 45-60 minutes. Tours are free, however reservations are required.

Besides “Affairs of the Heart” and general history tours, specialized  themes include a presidential tour (Every U.S. president  since Teddy Roosevelt in 1905, with the exception of Calvin Coolidge, has visited The Brown Palace.), an architectural tour and the ever-popular ghost tour (October tours often fill to capacity). Groups of 10 or more must make arrangements for a private tour. Private tours – for a fee – can be arranged for those requiring a time outside of the normal scheduled tours.

brown-palace-lobby-teaI suggest making reservations for Afternoon Tea following your tour. Served in the eight-story atrium lobby the traditional afternoon ritual includes tea sandwiches, scones with Devonshire cream shipped directly from England and tea pastries. All accompanied by a harpist or pianist. 

Is your valentine a chocoholic? If so, make reservations at the hotel’s elegant Palace Arms restaurant for a special Valentine’s Day dinner. Thanawat Bates, executive sous chef, has created a six course decadent dinner ($150/couple + tax and gratuity) with chocolate incorporated in each course.

Extend the celebration to Sunday, February 15th, with Ellyngton’s Dom Perignon Sunday Brunch. An extensive buffet offers selections from waffles to sushi and incredible desserts. Prices start at $54.95 per person.

Affairs of the heart isn’t limited to Valentine’s Day, the Brown Palace offers specials and packages for romantics year round. Check the website to find the right one for your occasion – Cupid’s Cuddle, Royal Romance, Light Up the Night or Tranquility With a Twist. For spur of the moment getaways try On A Whim. With the fine dining options, room service and pampering at The Spa at the Brown Palace you may never what to leave.

When You Go: Brown Palace Hotel, 321 17th Street, Denver, Colorado. 

*Deals* – Grand Canyon Nt. Park – Arizona

Spring Breakaway at Grand Canyon National Park

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A Spring Breakaway Package at two South Rim lodges has been announced by Xanterra, the operator of lodges, resturants and activities in Grand Canyon National Park.

For $139 per night, guests receive accommodations in a Maswik Lodge North room or a Yavapai Lodge East room, one breakfast for two and a Harvey Car motorcoach tour to Hermits Rest or a Sunrise tour for two. The package is available Feb. 9 – March 5, 2009 at Maswik Lodge and March 6 – 26, 2009 at Yavapai Lodge. Room rates for overnight accommodations only are normally priced $153 -$170 per night. Rates do not include taxes.

In addition the package also includes a coupon for 10 percent off purchases between $50 and $150 and 20 percent off purchases of more than $150 in Xanterra gift shops. A welcome stimulus to souvenir shoppers.

Visitors can book their Spring Breakaway online by entering the promotional code SPRING or by calling toll-free 1-888-297-2757 or 1-303-297-2757 from outside the United States.

Note from Nancy: Spring is our favorite time to visit Grand Canyon National Park. One may encounter snow on the rim but hike just a few hundred feet below the rim and you’ll want to be in shirt sleeves. It can be quite warm at the bottom even in March. Easter sunrise over the canyon inspires. Plan your “Breakaway” now.

Denver Art Museum – Denver, Colorado

Free First Saturdays

art-museum1The doors to the Denver Art Museum open the first Saturday of every month at no cost to Colorado residents. Sponsored by Target with support from the Scientific and Cultural Facilities District, free days make great family outings. The museum staff and volunteers roll out lots of hands-on activities in addition to the Family Backpacks, Art Tubes and Hotspots always of interest to younger visitors.

When You Go: Denver Art Museum open 10am – 5pm on Saturdays, check the website for other days/hours information. Located in the Civic Center Cultural Complex, 13th Avenue between Broadway and Bannock Streets.

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National Wildlife Refuge – Rocky Mountain Arsenal – Denver, Colorado

From Weapons to Wildlife

rma-guys-daySuburbia, sports parks and traffic surround the 17,000 acres of Rocky Mountain Arsenal National Wildlife Refuge. The land has been transformed several times in the last 150 years. The short grass prairie inhabited by Plains Indians became family farms for Western settlers at the end of the nineteenth century. With the coming of World War II the farms were purchased by the government for a chemical weapons manufacturing facility. Post war, Shell Chemical Company produced pesticides and herbicides. Production halted in 1982 with environment cleanup starting five years later.

In 1986 a  communal roost of bald eagles was discovered. Public interest triggered a successful grassroots effort to have the Arsenal declared a National Wildlife Refuge in 1992.  A large prairie restoration project is returning the land to a more natural state. Prairie, woodlands and wetlands support habitat a wide array of wildlife – birds, mammals, reptiles and amphibians. Bald eagles and American Bison have a protector home on the plains within sight of downtown Denver.

rma-bus“Wild Rides” provide the best opportunity to view and learn about the refuge inhabitants. Led by sharp-eyed and knowledgeable volunteer guides visitors ride a bus to areas normally not open to the public. We joined a tour led by Dennis aboard the brand new, heated and air conditioned bus. Returning visitors will especially appreciate the comfortable padded seats in lieu of the wooden ones on the trolley. I can’t imagine touring the refuge without seeing prairie dogs, a large number of black tailed prairie dogs scurry from burrow to burrow in colonies scattered throughout the grounds.

Ascending the dam at Lake Ladora we watch as hundreds of Canada geese coast in for a water landing. A male and female mallard waddle off an ice island for a swim. Literally thousands of geese are on the lake, ice and bank this morning. The driver spots the rack of a mule deer and stops to that we can focus our binoculars. Just above the blue grama prairie grass we watch a Northern Harrier (hawk) hunt for prey. His flight is beauty in motion. Hawks drift on currents about bare-limbed cottonwoods.

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Majestically watching the scene from a treetop the white head of a bald eagle turns. Lower in the same tree sits a white-speckled immature eagle. Dennis relates that the white head feathers don’t appear until the eagle is about 5-year-old and ready to mate. Further along we see the massive nest of the one resident nesting pair at the refuge. They stay year-round will the others will leave in a few weeks to head north to their breeding grounds. Eagles mate for life and return to the same nest yearly. Nests lined with twigs, mosses, grasses and feathers can reach as much as 2,000 pounds as they are enlarged each year.

Two raccoons dart along a canal bank. Ahead, mule deer stand across the road and on both sides carefully watching the bus. The eight males move off  a short distance to a meadow . We learn that the bounding motion of mule deer is called stotting. Miles away a  herd of females rest in a ticket of New Mexico locust trees. It seems today is guys day out.

Our last stop is near the bison enclosure. A herd of eighteen from the National Bison Range in Montana where reintroduced to the refuge in  2006 along with a pair from North Dakota. Successful reproduction has increased the herd yearly.

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Tours are not up-close and personal with the wildlife; after all we are only observers in this natural refuge. Back at the Visitor Center artfully displayed exhibits gives us the opportunity to observe details. In the Discovery Room visitors watch workers in the Bee Tree. It’s a warm day out so the hive is active. I’m fascinated by observing how the bees stay to the right as they travel through the plastic tube from hive to out-of-doors. We can only wish humans were so well trained.

We need to return to the refuge in each season since many species are migratory. For instance in summer whie pelicans will dot the lake populated with geese today. Rocky Mountain Arsenal National Wildlife Refuge has become a home for deer, bison and eagles to stay and play.

When You Go: Rocky Mountain Arsenal National Wildlife Refuge is open from 7 am – 5 pm, Tuesdays, Wednesdays, Saturdays and Sundays. Visitor Center open form 7:30am – 4 pm. Two-hour “Wild Ride” tours begin a 10am, Wednesdays, Saturdays and Sundays. Tours are free but reservations are required. For more information or reservations call 303-289-0930. Free nature programs (some specially for children) are presented throughout the year; space is limited and reservations required.

The public is welcome to hike the 8.7-mile trail system when the refuge is open. Catch and release fishing in season from April 15 – October 13, 2009 with Colorado fishing license and a $3/day recreational fishing fee. Check the website for announcements and details of special events.

Hotel Monaco – Denver, Colorado

“Travel + Leisure’s Top 500 Hotels List”

Denver’s Hotel Monaco

hotel-monaco-lobby2One of eight Colorado hotels named to Travel + Leisure magazine’s “Top 500 Hotels.” This is the fourth award Denver’s Hotel Monaco has received in the magazine in six years. “This honor speaks to Hotel Monaco Denver’s ability to create a stylish and sophisticated hotel stay, brimming with warmth and uniqueness,” said Von de Luna, general manager at Hotel Monaco Denver.

Inclusion on the Top 500 hotel list is determined by reporters, editors, readers and survey results from around the country conducted by Travel + Leisure magazine.  The hotels included have been evaluated based on criteria such as differentiating characteristics, the best rooms to book and specialty services, amenities and perks offered.

Ten reasons to stay at Hotel Monaco Denver, a Kimpton boutique hotel:

  • Hosted evening wine reception, a chance to relax and unwind after a busy day with complimentary chair massages by the Renaissance Aveda Spa & Salon and appetizers by Panzano
  • Panzano Restaurant, featuring contemporary Northern Italian Cuisine
  • Full-service on-site Renaissance Aveda Spa and Salon
  • Unique bath menu, to personalize your bath experience.
  • “Mind, Body, Spa” in-room wellness program, with the Yoga Channel on every TV and complimentary yoga accessories to use during your stay
  • hotel-monaco-suite4Bring your pet with you –  a pet friendly hotel
  • Complimentary pet goldfish delivered to your guestroom upon request
  • “Tall rooms” available, featuring extra-long beds and heightened showerheads
  • Themed Suites: “Imagine” – the John Lennon Suite,  “Seven Steps to Heaven” – the Miles Davis Suite, “Rock” – the 60’s Classic Artists Suite, “Step into Wonderland” – the Grace slick Suite
  • Outstanding, personalized service

When You Go: Hotel Monaco, 1717 Champa Street, Denver.