Wednesday, October 27, 2010

Another Wildernest outing.

The ladies from Morgans Mercy Mansion ministry in Winnsboro were here yesterday and enjoyed pizza on the deck and then an afternoon of zipline riding. The weather was absolutely perfect!

What buzzards do on sunny mornings after a cold night


We saw this guy sunning himself as we left for our walk on the trail this morning. He was nice enough to sit there while I went back to the house, got the camera, changed lenses, and walked back across the meadow.

BTW - for family and friends and for future reference - we've renamed the long part of the "Orange Trail" to the "Red Trail" so there won't be any more discussions about the "Long Orange Trail" and the "Short Orange Trail".

Sunday, October 24, 2010

More Autumn Trails in Winnsboro - Antique car rally







The sign says - "This mess is a place!"








She was dancing to street music on Market Street.


I could really post 60-80 shots of very neat old cars and these are just a few - along with a few pictures to give the feel of the crowd and the happenings. We watched the parade, had lunch at A&E, and then walked over to Main Street where all of the older cars were lined up so you could get up close and personal. A fun day!

Saturday, October 16, 2010

Autumn Trails in Winnsboro this Weekend




We missed seeing the trail ride but did see a few of the folks on their way home - as we were on our way home. Their hayride trailer was pulled by a big Farmall tractor and the elder riders were sitting in lawn chairs! And the modified automobile made the most unique cart I've ever seen!

Monday, October 11, 2010

2010 - Vacation - Gettysburg


One of our last stops on our vacation was Gettysburg. Beverly drove down the evening before and joined us at the hotel. The next morning we went to the Gettysburg Battlefield - beginning with the visitors center. But first - I'm one of those people that thinks every American should visit this place. It's unique in the history of our country and this battle determined what our country would be like. Not that the result had an immediate impact - but it did determine the direction.

Gettysburg was a small town then and still is. The town was surrounded by the battlefield then and is surrounded by the park now. Over the years more and more land has been acquired by the park service. A tour of the battlefield takes you down the streets of the town and it's sometimes hard to tell where one ends and the other begins. Because this was such an important battle, it and the aftermath were photographed extensively. There were also reunions where the men who fought there, returned there. A lot is known about just exactly how things were at the time and the park service is doing an incredible job of keeping it as it was. There are fences now where fences were then. If trees get to tall they are cut down and replaced. So when you visit and you do see it, it's very much as those that fought there saw it. So I think all Americans should visit here. They should first learn about what happened and when they visit they can see where and why it happened that way. Start with Lincoln's "Gettysburg Address".

The visit begins at the "Gettysburg National Military Park Museum and Visitors Center" and you can meet Abe Lincoln just before you walk in.



Your ticket includes admission to the museum and to the Cyclorama. I only took a couple pictures in the museum. This one is from the section on Lincoln but the other part has a different look and has very much to say about the time and place.


There is a short movie about the battle and then you take the escalator up to the Cyclorama. You really don't know what to expect here. This is a giant painting done in 1884 - in the round. It is 27 feet tall and 359 feet long - longer than a football field. You stand in the middle and it's all around you. The foregrounds are landscaped and it gives a three dimensional appearance. In reading about this I expected it to be a little "hokey". But when I saw it and heard and saw the presentation, it was very moving. Because it's round and the area is darkened you can't really photograph it - but here's an effort to show a small part of it.


We looked at our options for seeing the battlefield. You can do it on your own, ride tour buses, etc. But we quickly determined that the best (and for three people or more, the least expensive - a rare combination) was to hire one of the private guides. They drive your car and give you a two hour private tour of the battle field. So we signed up and then went to lunch where we tried some food that the soldiers ate then - hard tack and peanut soup. The hard tack is also know as sea biscuit. (Sounds like a horse.)

Then, of course, there's the gift shop - Lincoln, Lincoln, nothing (almost) but Lincoln.

And then the time came when the guide walked up and called for the Willis party. The picture below was taken a little later in the tour but this is our guide - a very friendly guy that enjoys doing this. He spends six weeks a year in Gettysburg. All of these guys are certified and they know the answers. In the 25 square miles of the park, he took us to the small Texas monument.


Major-General John Reynolds of the Union Army killed
on the first day of battle. The monument was built in 1878.

The map below shows the town of Gettysburg and the battlefields and is marked with the events of the three days - day one in the upper left, day two towards the bottom of the map, and day three towards the center of the map. That's the route that the guide took us - beginning with the fighting of the first day.

We then went by the Confederates positions of the third day as that was between the day one and the day two sites. Monuments have been placed throughout the battlefield beginning very early on after the battle. Some are for the officers, some are for particular regiments, brigades, etc. The one below is a detail of the monument for the State of North Carolina and is placed on the field in their position on day two.

Below - This is the James Longstreet memorial - Lee's second in command

Below- Little Round Top and Big Round Top as seen
from Seminary Ridge


Our guide said not to put too much into the names at Gettysburg. Cemetery Ridge (like Cemetery Hill) is where the cemetery was. Seminary Ridge is where the seminary was, etc.

He pointed out this monument for Georgia and read the words. It's still a powerful message to him.


I'd have to add one that I saw in the museum. It refers to the killed and wounded there and was published in the Gettysburg Compiler just a few days after the battle:

"Every name is like a lightening stroke to some heart, and breaks like thunder over some home, and falls a long black shadow over some hearthstone"


Little Round Top - We stopped there and walked out where we could see the valley and he pointed out the places of the fighting on the second day. I took the picture below of Devil's Den from there.

The picture below doesn't look like much but the guide says that it still effects him every time he comes there and I was already having difficult time with my composure when he said that. This was taken from Cemetery Ridge from the spot that was the focus of Pickett's Charge. You can see the futility of that move - the last ever of the Napoleon like charges where the only chance of success is to advance more men than the enemy can kill. Thousands of men died in that field between where the picture was taken and the trees in the distance.

And this is where our tour ended.

2010 - Vacation - NYC Harbor Cruise

I'd about decided not to do a post on the harbor tour but started checking the pictures and decided that I really needed to do one. You see a lot of things - and from a different perspective - in the 45 minutes or so. In the post about the bus tours I mentioned that the ticket included a harbor cruise - this is it!

The turnaround point of the cruise it the
Statue of Liberty.
I like my photo from the boat too!


Several different vessels doing what they do.



The Battleship Intrepid is anchored at the pier adjoining the harbor cruise boat pier.

The darker building in center is Tower One at the World Trade Center

We saw two cruise ships leaving the harbor during our
45 minute ride and there was still another at the pier.



There are three bridges in the picture. The closest is the Brooklyn Bridge, than the Manhatten Bridge, then the Washington Bridge. I can tell you that because the cruise director told us to remember BMW!

This is the Staten Island Ferry!

Ellis Island

Another view showing the World Trade Center construction.
You can see it on both sides of the picture.

Just an interesting shot.