Saturday, June 2, 2012

Mayberry AKA Mount Airy


Mount Airy is the birthplace of Andy Griffith, they like to bill themselves and the "real" Mayberry. 
The show wasn't filmed there, there is nothing "authentic" there except Andy Griffith's birth home, which you can rent out to stay in for your vacation.  (I would really like to meet people that choose to stay in Andy Griffith's house for their honeymoon, I think they would be very nice people.)  There is an Andy Griffith Museum, and a Andy Griffith playhouse.  Other than that, things are rather opportunistic. 

You have a barbershop, why not name it Floyd's?


Or build a garage the looks like Goober Pyle's...
 And while you are at it build a courthouse next door...

Then you can get some old cars and paint them up like patrol cars and give people tours. 


It was fun to drive through the town and see the sites, for us, for our kids, they only vaguely knew what we were talking about.  It makes me wonder how much longer will even this tenuous fame mean anything.

Thursday, May 17, 2012

Hunger Games District 12

As we were driving home from South Carolina, we stopped to see Henry River Mill Village in North Carolina.  It is an old abandoned Appalachian mountain town that is conveniently located off of I-40.  And it is also the filming location for The Hunger Games.
 
  

Here is the Mellark Bakery
What is cool about this town is that it is not a set, it was a real town.
 

 They offer tours, but I think we had much more fun just going around exploring on our own.




Tuesday, May 15, 2012

A Whole Other World

So we went to Darlington an old track in South Carolina for a race weekend.
51 weeks a year, Darlington is a small rural town, and its only interest in that it is the seat of Darlington County.  One week a year, the NASCAR circus comes and turns Darlington into something else.  As my son said, "Going to a race is like going to another world, but the world moves around to different places".  So here is a bit of an introduction to this fun, diverse, unique world that is a race weekend.

The Track seats 60,000 people, and that doesn't include people that camp in the infield and outside, exhibitors, officials and race teams.  Everyone converges on one town from Thursday to Sunday ready for the show.
 Allegiances in order: America, the South and NASCAR. 
These 5 semis transport the broadcast trucks for Speed TV.  They don't broadcast the race, just pre and post race programming.  Fox, who broadcasts the race, has 16. 

Before you get to the track is the midway where exhibitors have displays.  Restaurants, food companies, insurance companies, military branches, ministries, and anything else you can think of have displays with games, announcers, give aways, or just really cool displays.
After hours on the midway, it is time to go inside.  The national anthem, a prayer and 4 F-16's later
Someone yells "Drivers start your engines.  43 cars with 750 horsepower make the grandstands vibrate under your feet.
The power as the cars take the track is overwhelming, the entire crowd of over 60,000 are on their feet waiting for the green flag to drop.

Darlington is unique on the circuit.  To go fast, the cars run right up next to the outer wall.
 The cars in this shot are blurry because they run around the track around 130 miles per hour, meaning they circle the track in 30 seconds.  The closer to the wall they go, the faster they can go.  When that doesn't work the cars scrape the wall, leaving what is called the "Darlington Stripe" 


 Then the sun sets and the lights come on. Eventually the laps tick down and the race is over.
The whole show packs up onto trucks and goes on to the next track, 39 times a year.

Wednesday, February 29, 2012

I had a conversation with a man today about Egypt.  He was a troubleshooter for a multinational food company.  He had gone to Egypt because the company was having trouble getting a new pita bread factory opened.  There were problems with infrastructure and equipment and many other little things. 
While he was there, the superintendant of the factory said he wanted to show him something.  They drove just a couple of blocks and stopped on a street corner.  There a man with a huge bowl of dough was rolling out pita bread.  The two men weighed a few pieces of dough, and saw that the pieces were completely uniform.  The superintendant said, "This man works 18 hours without stopping, then rests for three days, then does it all again." 
They went back to the factory and got it running.
The troubleshooter said he was there just long enough to get the factory running, then went home. "It will break down after I am half an hour out of the country but I finally got it running". 

Monday, February 20, 2012

Guess what this is.



Looks like a stair case doesn't it?  But it is actually the interior of the Red Pyramid in Dashur.

Here is another view.

The writing on the right side of the picture is graffiti (probably candle smoke from the 1800's) on the inside.  The pyramids at Giza were amazing, but overall, I enjoyed our visit to Dashur more. The pyramid is imposing and more grand looking on the landscape, and the interior is this awesome corbled vault. It was less crowded: at Giza there were a couple hundred tourists and double that many people trying to sell us things.  Here there were a few other people and, oddly, only one person trying to sell anything, and he was asleep.  (That happened a lot during Ramadan). It was also a fun place to go, driving over the Egyptian country side and seeing the villages and farms.  The only downside was the smell, which was worse than the  NYC subway.  

Sunday, February 19, 2012

Somewhere I want to go - Day 5

Somewhere I have never been but would love to go: 
I Love Barbecue.  Living in the south for sometime I learned to recognize places to get good barbecue, (more about that later) and heard about the world of competitive barbecue.  Sometimes the food network has competitive barbecuers on TV and it looks like so much fun.  They have giant elaborate grills and smokers on trailers, so they can travel to different barbecue competitions around the country.  Inside the rigs are large unmarked jars of spice rubs, whose recipe they guard with zeal.  At the competition, they tend the fires with all the care of a steam train fire man, watching for hot spots and flare ups.  The smell of burning wood and slow cooking meat must be amazing.
Writing this, I looked up barbecue competitions, and there are many more than I ever imagined.  I think I will be doing this soon.

My Rules for Finding Good Barbecue:
1. If it is a chain with more than 3 locations, or if those locations are more than 200 miles apart: -50
2. If the location is in a strip mall: -20
3. If the building has an indoor seating -10
4. Add 5 points for each of the following that is missing; Public bathroom, doors, windows, floor.
5. If the location is a guy in a trailer with a picnic table outside +25
6. If the trailer is next to the interstate -5
7. If you are given a printed menu -10
8. If the menu has more than 10 things on it -10
9. If the menu has fish -10 or vegetarian dishes -50
10. If most of the signs are written in magic marker and taped somewhere +10
11. If the cook is also the person that takes your order +10
12. If the cook is related to the person that takes your order +8
13. If there are utensils -5, if they are not plastic -10
14. If the food is served on anything that has to be washed -10
15. If there are other people eating there who the cook has known for more than 20 years +15
16. Add 5 points if you are in a state that was part of the Confederacy



Saturday, February 18, 2012

Rialto Beach, Olympic National Park

Colorado is just about as land-locked as a state gets. So our trip to Washington was the first time our kids got to see the ocean or a beach.  The idea of high tide and low tide was totally new to us.  We found out the tides are more extreme at full and new moon, and we were there in between.  Still, for people totally unfamiliar the the ocean and tides at all, it was a whole new world.  We spent most of our time at Olympic on the beach, I would love to go back and hike more in the interior.

Friday, February 17, 2012

Random Picture

I have thousands of pictures, so I thought today I would select a random picture and post it, then write the story.  This is a replica of one of the ships that Columbus sailed to the Americas.  These ships were doing a tour up the east coast and we went out and saw them when they stopped in Florida.  I forget which of the ships this one is.  Something that we learned upon going to see the ship:  You see in all the movies people "swabbing the deck".  I always thought that it was becaue of the sea water and wind and stuff the deck got wet so people always had to mop it up so people didn't slip.  The truth is, the deck is designed to stay wet.  The deck is swabbed not to get the water off, but to evenly distribute the water over the whole deck so the boards stay wet. 
They are still touring, if you are interested: http://www.thenina.com/schedule.htm

Thursday, February 16, 2012

Day 2 The Pinewood Derby

Last night was the Pinewood Derby.  The car turned out great, yesterday's problem with the paint job wasn't a problem because DS already had a cool paint job planned.  He painted it like lanes on a track, complete with brown strips for the infield.  On the front the painted the word "WIN" and on the back "Start".  I loved the design.  Every boy raced four times, once in each lane.  After winning the first race by a long way, the car feel behind.  Sadly, before the last race, there were some technical issues, they were repaired, but the car lost a lot of speed.  The scouts all had a fun time.  The funnest they had was after everything was over and the boys lined up across the gym from eachother and rolled their cars back and forth between them. 

Wednesday, February 15, 2012

Just for Fun...Day 1

I was writing my menu for the next three days.  (Yes I only do three days at a time, I hate making up menus so I have to keep the job short or I don't do it.  That is why we have seven pizza boxes in our garbage right now. and a birthday party)  And I looked up the blog of someone that blogged about cooking in her crock pot once a day for a year.   And it made me wonder if I could do a blog every day for a year.  So here goes...day 1.

Today is the pinewood derby, we haven't done anything on his car until last night except shaping.  Last night we added weights and today we were painting it.  It is a really cool shiny black with gold flecks.  Except I wanted to put it outside to dry, and it was raining, so I grabbed an old aluminum pan to prop over it to keep off the rain.  Except the pan had ashes in it.  I got ashes all over the wet paint of the pinewood derby car, and today is the big day.  I'm such an idiot.

So what is on the menu?
BBQ roast beef sandwiches (potluck for derby)
Macaroni and Cheese
Tamale Pie (crock pot from the website)