Showing posts with label Books. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Books. Show all posts

2/05/2012

Wayfinder's Guide to Cincinnati: Part 3 Road Trips and why it would be great to have light rail.

I have been meaning to finish this post for weeks, but got super busy at my two jobs. A big chunk of my time has been spent searching for just the right images for a rebranding project I am working on. I love doing image searches. Friday I was looking for images of “business travel" that have nice depth of field and don’t look posed and aren’t of a specific place or type of place, and… well you get the idea.

Most of the images I found that I wanted to use were of business folks traveling by train… which we don’t have…  so I couldn’t use them.

Not only did I have to keep looking, I started to think about how great it would be if we had trains. Then I could go to all of my favorite Road Trip spots more often. Don’t get me wrong, I love Road Trips, driving to cool out of the way spots & finding things I didn’t even know exist, but sometimes I just want to go to Cleveland, have dinner at LOLA, stay one night and not make a big deal about it. I would do that a lot if I could jump on a train. In Ireland, we hopped a train from Dublin to Belfast for a Black Taxi Tour and dinner at The Crown and didn't feel rushed at all. I think people would come here more too….  Just my opinion I don’t have facts to back any of this up. I said I was busy!

Todd on the train from Dublin to Belfast.

So, here are a few of my favorite places to drive for the day or weekend from Cincinnati. Some will probably never have rail options (Red River Gorge), but hopefully I can zoom down to Louisville soon... it's closer than Belfast is to Dublin.

Bloomington, Indiana: Check out the The Tibetan Mongolian Buddhist Cultural Center, "the only Tibetan Cultural Center in the United States since 1979." It has a very big and cool Kalachakra Stupa. We saw HH the Dalai Lama there in 2007. T. Norbu, Dalai Lama’s Brother lived in Bloomington until his death in 2008. Eat some Tibetan food and go to The Farm for brunch or dinner, starring Chef Daniel Orr and the most amazing Bacon & Egg Pizza!
Bloomington Stupa: photo by pravin.premkum

Columbus, Indiana is the most unlikely architectural hotspot in the country, due to Cummins Diesel co-founder J. Irwin Miller's decision to have the company pay architect's fees for public buildings as long as they were chosen from Miller's list. The list included I.M. Pei, Richard Meier and Eero Saarinen. Stop in the visitor's center to see the Dale Chihuly sculpture and get a map for a walking or driving tour.

Valantino Rossi at the Indy GP
Indianapolis, Indiana: We go to Indy every year for MotoGP. We also drive through to go to visit family. We almost always stop at the Mug n' Bun, an old school Drive-In with homemade rootbeer and huge tenderloin sandwiches (an Indiana tradition) and great onion rings! If you have a lot of $$ burning a hole in your pocket go to St. Elmos and get a shrimp cocktail.

Lynn's Paradise Cfae
 We love Louisville, Kentucky. Great food and grand hotels, including a modern version with a contemporary art museum in the lobby. Eat at breakfast at Lynn's Paradise Cafe. Eat dinner at 610 Magnolia (I think. We are going in a couple weeks for the first time & Ed Lee, the chef, is currently doing very well on Top Chef, so I am guessing it's good.). Stay at the Seelbach & drink at it's famous bourbon bar, one of the best bars in the world! Stay at the Brown and have Hot Brown where it was invented. Stay at the 21C and eat at Proof on Main, walk through the museum and be sure to stop in the bathroom. Go to a Louisville Bats game and visit the Louisville Slugger Museum. Heck, go to the Derby if you can!

Lexington, Kentucky is the horse capital of the world. I spent a lot of time there when I was working for Joseph Beth and miss it now that my bookselling days are behind me. Go to Keeneland, the prettiest place to play the ponies ever! Grab a book at Morris Book Shop and a bite Ramsey's. There's lots more, but those are the things I miss most. Oh, and check out the Horse Park if you have time. I haven't been since I was a kid, but always meant to go back.

Bourbon Trail:  I have not actually done this, but I really really want to. Kentucky is Bourbon Country. It has been for a really long time. Explore six distilleries and find out everything you ever wanted to know about “America’s Official Native Spirit.” I have been to Bardstown, which is a great town to base yourself in. You can visit museums dedicated to the Civil War & railroads as well as "sample the spirits." I have also been on the Bourbon Train, which is fun but a little... weird.

The Red River Gorge is a canyon system on the Red River that features high sandstone cliffs, rock shelters, waterfalls, and natural bridges.. Beautiful spot for nature lovers & outdoorsy types. It's one of the best places to rock climb in the country. Go backpacking, camping, hiking & climbing. Or stay in a cabin, and check out the Natural Bridge & zipline tour.

Cleveland rocks. That's something I am not really supposed to say, being born & raised in Cincinnati and all. But I love Cleveland. They have great food, a big lake, great sports fans, RTA and the Rock N' Roll Hall of Fame. I fell in love with Paprikash at Balaton and  Chicken & Waffles at  Phil the Fire . Right now, we are planning a trip to finally go to Lola and Cuyahoga Valley National Park. Yes, Ohio has a National Park! And I cannot believe I haven't been there.

Columbus: Full discloser: I haven't been to Columbus in years. And I have family there! But, I should. They have Jeni's Splendid Ice Cream, a happening Art Scene and THE Ohio State.

Toledo, Ohio, The Glass City, has a great museum. Go to the Toledo Museum and check out the Post-Modern Glass Pavilion. The Pavilion houses a world renowned glass collection. The building itself received Travel & Leisure's 2007 design awards for "Best Museum." Tony Packos  is really famous and really good. Have a Cheese Coney in Cincinnati and a Chili Hot Dog here. Which do you like best? Then catch a MudHens game. They have a great minor league baseball stadium... and they are called the MudHens!

Ft. Ancient was one of my favorite day trips as a kid. It features "18,000 feet of earthen walls built 2,000 years ago by American Indians."  How cool is that? You can check out exhibits and prehistoric mounds. Or you can check out the great views on the many hiking trails. There are also many canoe liveries in the Little Miami River valley. I like Morgan's, but am not opposed to any.



Pyramid Hill Sculpture Park

Pyramid Hill Sculpture Park is a 265 acre outdoor art museum. There is also an indoor Ancient Sculpture Museum.

The Loveland Bike Trail consits of over 70 Miles of paved bike trails that go through cute towns and historical sites. Loveland itself has coffee shops, ice cream shops and stuff like that. It's part of a larger Rails to Trails initiative.

Yellow Springs is a village in Green County. It was intended to be a utopia and isn't far off. It was one of the last stops on the Underground Railroad and was the smallest town to prohibit discrimination due to sexual orientation in 1979. I like to do a bit of shopping, look for Dave Chappelle and grab a bite to eat in town. Then I head out to Clifton Gorge for a hike and Young's Dairy for some ice cream and a look at the cow it came from. You can ride here on the Loveland Bike Trail if you want.

Hocking Hills, or "The Hot Tub Capital of the World", is a great place for a weekend getaway. You should definitely stay in a cabin... with a  hot tub! From there you can hike, explore caves, canoe, ride a horse and of course... zipline. 

12/12/2011

Gifts for Travelers Part 1: Read, Cook, Dream

This is the first of two quick lists of travel inspired gifts. They are quick, because I thought of making them kind of late and most should be pretty easy to pick up at the last minute.

The first list (this list) is all books. I like books. I like to read about a place before, during and after I have been there. These suggestions include fiction, non-fiction, cookbooks and a few general guide book ideas. I am only including titles that Todd or I have read... and thought of quickly. I know for sure that we have read tons more Road Trip, NYC & San Francisco books, so I might update. If you have additional suggestions please comment!

Please head over to you local bookshop to see if they are in stock first. It's not only good for your community, it will be a lot quicker!



Books About Places:
Mostly fiction w/some non-fiction thrown in

 
Afghanistan: A Thousand Splendid Suns by Khaled Hosseini
American Road Trips: On the Road by Jack Kerouac, Zen and the art of Motorcycle Maintenance by Robert M. Pirsig, Travels with Charley by John Steinbeck
Australia: In a Sunburned Country by Bill Bryson
Bangkok: Bangkok 8 series by John Burdett
Caribbean: Embarrassment of Mangoes by Ann Vanderhoof
Chicago: Devil in the White City by Erik Larson
Eastern Europe: The Historian by Elizabet Kostova
France: A Moveable Feast by Ernest Hemingway
Florida: Orchid Thief by Susan Orlean, Miami Blues by Charles Willeford, Darkly Dreaming Dexter by Jeff Lindsay
Ireland: How the Irish Saved Civilization by Thomas Cahill, Dublin Noir edited by Pat Mullan, Around Ireland with a Fridge by Tony Hawks
Italy: Talented Mr. Ripely by Patricia Highsmith, Death at La Fenice by Donna Leon, Under The Tuscan Sun by Frances Mayes, Brunelleschi's Dome by Ross King
Japan: The Wind-Up Bird Chronicle by Haruki Murakami
Las Vegas: Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas by Hunter S. Thompson
L.A.: anything by Raymond Carver, Raymond Chandler or James Ellroy
Memphis: Last Train to Memphis: The Rise of Elvis Presley by Peter Guralnick
NYC: The Great Gatsby by F. Scott Fitzgerald, The Catcher in the Rye by JD Salinger, Bright Lights, Big City by Jay McInerney, The Chelsea Girl Murder series by Sparkle Hayter,  pretty much any Beat writer
New Orleans: Interview With a Vampire by Ann Rice, Zeitoun by Dave Eggers, Confederacy of Dunces by John Kennedy Toole
Ozarks: anything by Daniel Woodrell
Puerto Rico: Rum Diaries by Hunter S. Thompson
San Francisco: Maltese Falcom by Dashiell Hammett, Joy Luck Club by Amy Tan, The Wild Parrots of Telegraph Hill by Mark Bittner, pretty much any Beat writer
Savannah: Midnight in the Garden of Good and Evil by John Berendt
South America: The Motorcycle Diaries by Che Guevara
Sweden: The Girl With the Dragon Tattoo series by Stieg Larsson
Texas: Lonesome Dove by Larry McMurty
Utah: Desert Solitaire by Edward Abbey, Under the Banner of Heaven by Jon Krakauer

General: The Innocents Abroad by Mark Twain, A Cook's Tour by Anthony Bourdain

Note: We obviously like noir and will eventually read all of the "Noir" series (including Chicago Noir, San Francisco Noir, Havana Noir...) so you might as well take a look at those too!



Cookbooks
Cajun Country: Louisiana Real and Rustic by Emeril Lagasse, Real Cajun by Donald Link
France: Mastering the Art of French Cooking by Julia Child, Bistros Brasseries & Wine Bars of Paris by Daniel Young
Ireland: The Country Cooking of Ireland by Coleman Andrews
Italy: The Splendid Table by Lynne Rossetto Kasper, Culineria Italy by Claudia Piras, The Country Cooking of Italy by Coleman Andrews
Mexico: Authentic Mexican by Rick Bayless
Middle East: The Arab Table by May S. Bsisu
SE Asia: Hot Sour Salty Sweet by Jeffrey Alford and Naomi Duguid
Texas: Legends of Texas Barbeque by Robb Walsh



Guides
1,000 Places to Visit Before You Die by Patricia Schultz
Roadfood by Jane and Michael Stern
Bird Guides such as Peterson Guides

Note: Regular Old-fashioned Travel Guides are always good, but I think people usually buy these themselves, unless they are in addition to an amazing trip some where... say a trip to Paris along with the Rough Guide!


Homemade!
Make custom PDF guides that can be printed or used on an iPad or smart phone. 


I make these for myself. I basically take my itinerary, maps and all of the information I find useful from guide books, friends, the web, etc.. and put them all into PDF form. I upload them to my iPad and leave the heavy print books at home. That way I get to take an extra fiction or non-fiction book about the place!
If you know someone is traveling to a destination that you know well, or just have your favorite spot, put all of your insider info together, add some photos and put a bird... I mean a bow on it.


Note: This would be an ideal gift for me!


Here's an example of one I made for myself. It was for personal use, so there are no bells & whistles, just the facts. It's not pretty, but it will give you the general idea: Venice Pub Crawl

Oh, and there are always magazine subscriptions, great for planning and dreaming! Travel & Leisure & Conde Nast Traveler are my personal favorites
.