Sunday, January 19, 2014

Visiting DA BURGH--PART 2....."High Brow, Low Brow & Hofbrau"

**Long and photo/video heavy**

Sunday morning we worked our way through the motel maze(like a couple of rats, no doubt)and found the on-site restaurant, which was where they provided the free breakfast to their overnight guests.
The place was a literal clusterfuck of humanity!
I don't know if it was because of the Holiday/Winter Break/Weekend or just that everyone in the motel decided to come to breakfast at exactly the same time, but it was standing room only.
I found a seat at the restaurant's bar while Hubs navigated through the sea of people to see what the foods available were and to locate the coffee.

I didn't sit at the bar for long because it was a slanted seat and I kept sliding off!  I was hanging onto the bar for dear life rather than tumble onto the floor.  As I hung there I kept scanning the room for a vacant table, clean OR dirty, I didn't much care at the moment.

As soon as I saw people get up and start heading for the door, I started to make my way over before someone else grabbed the space.
Hubs reported in what was available and then brought me over a plate and was off again to get him some provisions.  By the time he returned I was done eating so I watched local news while he noshed away.

After we got back to the room, we got ourselves ready to leave for our son's apartment, then headed out the door.

I got a good look at his neighborhood for the first time in the daylight this time.
Here's a house decorated tastefully for the Season.......


And here is another house in his neighborhood.......sorry for the bad photo but it was raining.....
WTF?!?!
Wooden crosses in the front yard(isn't Halloween over??) and ya see that upper side window, how it's boarded up, overdramatically, like a house out of an amusement park or something?!

Here's a close-up of the sign out front......


 It says, "Trundle Manor".   And this link HERE will explain what this is.....sort of.

So not only do I find that the friends I visit are related to me but I sure do trip over "interesting" sites, do I not? lolz

And no, though having a Zombie Dinner Party there was tempting, we resisted the urge.

Moving right along.......
We picked up #1 Son and his SO and headed out to see some "hopefully" less macabre sights that day.
Since it was raining all day long, we decided to do some indoors activities.

So we went to a frickin' museum.
No really!
It WAS a FRICKin' museum.....note the name.......



Named for one of the robber barons and industrialists of the Great Steel Age, Henry Clay Frick.
Frick had been Andrew Carnegie's business partner and when Carnegie went on an extended trip to Scotland, Frick was in charge of Carnegie Steel and disastrously handled the labor union strike in 1892, which became known as the Homestead Strike, by bringing in armed Pinkerton agents to "neutralize" the striking workers by any means necessary.  He was also among the wealthy and elite members of the group responsible for causing the Johnstown Flood.  At one time he was known as the "most hated man in American".
What a guy, huh?

He also helped found what became known as US Steel and was a prolific Art Collector.
His daughter, Helen Clay Frick, followed in her father's footsteps as an art lover/collector.
When he died in 1919, she inherited 38 million dollars and became at that time, the richest woman in America.  She never married and devoted her life to defending the name and reputation of her father, performing philanthropy and collecting art.

         Helen Clay and Henry Clay Frick-father and daughter (credit Wikipedia)

In 1970 the Frick Art Museum was opened on the family's Pittsburgh estate grounds.  It contains part of both Helen's and Henry's art collections.  There is another Frick Collection in Henry's NYC mansion on 5th Ave. & 70th St. in Manhattan.

Interestingly, Henry Frick and his wife Adelaide Childs Frick had tickets to travel on the inaugural voyage of the HMS Titanic, but missed the sailing, due to Adelaide spraining her ankle and having to remain in Italy.   This was years after Frick survived an assassination attempt too.  The man had him some luck. ;-)

Anyway, since #1 Son & Hubs are history lovers and I am an art lover, we went to the Frickin' Museum.  Son's GF wasn't too thrilled to be there but she is a jolly good sport for putting up with it.
It's a good thing there were benches inside to lounge upon while she was bored.

They had an eclectic mix of periods and media and were highlighting an exhibit of War Between the States Era Newspaper Drawings and Stories(aka Yankee yellow rag journalism propaganda).  I sputtered and muttered through those galleries without assaulting anyone thankfully. 8-P

      Hubs and #1 Son in the rain posing for a FRICKin' photo.

For additional information on the Frick Museum go HERE.

I was disappointed because I had wanted to tour CLAYTON.
Clayton is the name of the family mansion in Pittsburgh that has been restored and opened to the public on the Frick grounds.
When Henry moved his family from Pittsburgh to Manhattan in 1905(because his business concerns had shifted to that locale), they left nearly everything in the house as it had been used by the family and didn't pack it up for the move to NY. 
After Helen Frick, who had returned in the 1980's to live her days out at Clayton, died, everything remained in the house.  So the house has been restored and is furnished with the original items and furniture from the Frick family as if they have just stepped out for the day.

But alas, you have to book to tour the mansion ahead and they were filled up that day, being a holiday week and all.

The best I could do is get some shots of the outside as we left the estate.....

 "Clayton" started it's life as an 11 room Italianate style home in the 1860's by an unknown to the ages architect....


In 1882, a year after they married, Henry and Adelaide Frick bought the house for $25,000 along with the 1.43 acres it sat upon......


In 1891, Frederick J. Osterling, a local architect. was hired to enlarge the home to 23 rooms to keep up with the Frick's expanding family needs. 


The Fricks lived at "Clayton" from 1882 to 1905, 22 years, before moving permanently to New York City.  Helen, the daughter, returned to "Clayton" and lived there from 1981 until her death in 1984 at age 96.
I'll definitely be back at some point to visit my son and tour the inside of this beauty.  8-)

So off we went in search of lunch.
Since we were in the area, we stopped at one of #1 Son's haunts--D's Six Pax & Dogz.
They specialize in Beer and Hot Dogs.
Duh!
They also have other bar type foods.....pizza, wings, appetizers, etc.

Given that it was Christmas Week, here was that day's special......


A hot dog called Santa's Sausage.....
Sorry all you perverts out there but I didn't order it. ;-)

I ordered a Mason Dixon Dog(chili and coleslaw), a specialty root beer and then went and perused the Beer Cave.......
               Photo credit D's Six Pax & Dogz Website.
They have a back room with shelf upon shelf of microbrews and other hard to find adult beverages.
You can grab a bottle back there and drink it on premises or grab a few to buy and takeout.

It's a real dive type place.
And the day we were there it was FILLED, nay!....JAM PACKED with football fans watching the Steelers game.
Again Duh!

Here is a little video I shot while waiting to order our food to give you an idea of the "atmosphere" there.....



I counted 4 tvs in 2 rooms(the bar room and the dining room), all tuned to the game and every time a good or bad play was made, the rooms erupted in cheering & clapping or booing.
Yes, they take their football seriously in 'da Burgh.

Finally, lunch arrived.....


And Hubs North Carolina Dawg(pulled pork barbecue and slaw.....


After a couple a beers I got smiles out of the crew....



Afterward we took the kids back to their apartment.  On the way, I noticed that the minivan was making some really bad noises.....noises that snapped my brain back to what Sonya Ann's minivan made on the way to the Outlet Mall in August when we were visiting her and Den.  SA's noise was brake pads going and I swore our minivan was making those same dreaded noises.
Ugh.  I brought it to Hubs attention and #1 Son also noticed it.  There was no way we were driving home with out brake pads so we dropped them off and went back to the motel to forge a plan to get the van looked at/fixed and then for a nap....well Hubs napped.  I didn't drink so I just vegg-ed out for awhile and worried about the van.

There was a Firestone about 2 miles from the motel so Hubs was going to take it in when they opened tomorrow morning at 7am and have it checked out.  Immediate crisis dealt with, we picked up the kids and headed out to downtown for our evening meal here......

                       Beer Tanks on the outside of the building

The Hofbräuhaus in Pittsburgh.
It's modeled after the original Hofbräuhaus in Munich Germany founded in 1589.
Here's a photo of the tented bier garden in Munich that was in their foyer....



 
We got seated in the bier hall room and had a grand time.

      A posed pic....NOT my beer.

 
      Son & GF after a few drinks.

       Yes, I am a nut.....
      Hubs and Son bonding over alcohol....how awesome is that? lolz

I took 4 short videos at the Hofbräuhaus........see those 2 guys in the Steelers jerseys behind my son?



Remember that this was taken after a Steelers home game in Pittsburgh(and they won!). Lots of folks in the bier hall that evening celebrating the win....quite boisterously might I add. I think many of them had been at Hofbräuhaus since before the game started and were continuing the consumption of adult beverages well into the night. The entertainment guy started playing "Sweet Caroline" and those 2 guys started being all "BRO" with each other and singing and I just couldn't contain my amusement at that point.  I don't know......grown men hugging and singing lyrics like, "touching me, touching you" just make me want to wet my pants......


 
Ok, I know that Santa Claus was just a decoration but I was still tickled from the show our singing Bros gave us......



And the Entertainer did some good yodeling too.....




About this time I spotted Mrs. "It's a Great Idea for my young kids who are with me to see MOM blasted out of her mind drunk and dancing on the table".


Yah, you can have a good time without "going there". ;-)

Heck, believe it or not, I did not have a single adult beverage that whole day(or evening).

We had some very delightful German food too.....

 
 Spaetzle Mac & Cheese....with Bacon!!!

   Sauerbraten with Apple Kraut and Potato Dumpling(the dumpling was meh).


We split an Apple Strudel too.

   Outside Hofbräuhaus.  The maibaum(or may pole), a 16th Century Bavarian tradition.

While I wanted for Hubs to get the van, I walked down closer to the Monongahela and got a shot of the River Walk with the interesting awnings.....


It was still raining and too cold to go down there that night.  Maybe next time, when it isn't December. lol

We took the kids home, talked for awhile then trekked back to the motel to get some shut eye.

More fun times awaited us on Monday......

Sluggy
 

Saturday, January 18, 2014

A Rainbow of Possibilities

Here's a quiz to find your true color aura.
My result came back Purple.
Who's a thunk it?

Go take it and tell me what color you got.

Sluggy

Your Aura is Purple!
Personality: Purples hold themselves to sky high standards, and are always very graceful. Purple is envied, idolized, and copied without even realizing it. They are an icon for those who know you. While it is hard to be a perfectionist, rest assured it’s paying off! Purple is the most down to earth aura, they are the typical guy or gal next door. Purples may think they are better than others but deep inside they know they are not. Purple is very practical. Other auras take a liking into purple. Idealistic and thoughtful, they have the mind and ideas to change the world. Purple has the charisma of a great leader. Purple always seems to know what to say or do in every situation they are confronted with. They exercise good judgment daily. They don’t agonize too much about their decisions, the right answer just seems to come to them. Purples have one of the most active imaginations, but tend to be more focused on what could be potentially possible than dreaming about the impossible. Purples live a well balanced life and prefer to stay as calm as possible.Having a personality color purple or violet as your favourite color means you are sensitive and compassionate, understanding and supportive, thinking of others before yourself. You are a gentle and free spirit. Purples feelings run deep and you can be quite sensitive to hurtful comments from others, although you would never show it. People are drawn to your charismatic and alluring energy. You are usually introverted rather than extroverted and may give the impression of being shy although this is not the case. You are creative and like to be individual in most of your endeavours, including your dress and home decoration - you love the unconventional. You are idealistic, and often impractical, with a great imagination, Purples tend to look at life through rose-colored glasses. People who don't understand you sometimes think you are eccentric because you spend so much time in your fantasy world. You inspire others with your creative thinking and your ability to deal positively with adversity. Purples are very intuitive and quite psychic. You are a generous giver, asking for little in return except friendship. You can be secretive, with even your closest friends not really knowing you well. You dislike responsibility and have difficulty dealing with real day-to-day problems. You dislike being part of the crowd. You don't like to copy others and you don't like them to copy you. You are a visionary, with high ambitions, dreams and desires, and a compulsion to help humanity and to improve the planet earth. You often hold positions of power because you are visionary, but you delegate to others all the minor details that you aren't interested in. You like to have the best of everything, so you aim high. Being the free spirit you are, you love to travel to experience different cultures and meet new people. You are a good judge of character and sum others up quite quickly and accurately, although you usually see the best in everybody. Time means little to you and you are often late for everything. You trust the flow of the Universe to take care of everything. You can sometimes appear arrogant and conceited if operating from a negative perspective. You can be selfish and self-indulgent as you don't like being imposed upon by others beliefs and regulations.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Love Life:
You're very passionate but often too busy for love. You need a partner who sees your vision and adopts it as their own
Yellow: Way to immature to meet our standards!
 
Pink: If outgoingness is on our “Have to have list” pinks are also one of the top choices for Purples
Green: Greens are way too shy and may be overlooked
Blue: Blue is one of the others that may meet our standards. They are deep and Sincere and is an awesome mate!
Orange: Can be just a little bit more mature than Yellow, but nawh I think we’ll pass
White: Way deep inside purples may have this strange feeling for whites 
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Perfect Color Love Match: 
Red is the perfect mate for a purple they meet every standard of ours.
Friendship Color: Blue is the perfect friend for a purple due to there introvert attitude
Color Opposite: Your color wheel opposite is Yellow. While yellow people may be wise, they lack the manners and class needed to impress you
 
Words that Describe Purple: Intuitive, Seeking, Creative, Kind, Self-Sacrificing. Growth Oriented, Strong, Very Wise, and Rare
 
Purpose of Life: Saying Truths That Other People Dare Not Say


Friday, January 17, 2014

The Great Summer Road Trip of 2013.....Day Seven

Subtitled......"Liquor, Indians but no Guns"

We hit the road early on Day Seven, leaving Nashville TN in the rear view mirror.

 
We passed this truck on the interstate later that morning and Hubs wished we had a hose so we could have tapped into that load!
 

 
We made a pit stop here, about half way to our first adventure of the day......



And later on, we made another pit stop here......Bootlegger's Liquor Store....which turned out to be an adventure in itself.
 

That liquor store was right next door to a motel....and it was an AWESOME one.  I think I have found our new "go to" motel when we are in this part of the world again.

While we were in Tennessee, Hubs "discovered" a love for whiskey.  He has had bourbon before but he was able to get his hands on TN whiskey, which is different and not widely sold outside of the state. 
All bourbon is whiskey but not all whiskey is bourbon.  Here's a Maker's Mark Bourbon info graphic HERE that explains it more fully.
Tennessee whiskey(spelled with an e)is a different animal from what most people call whisky.  It is made in smaller batches and not much available outside of the state.
At Bootlegger's Hubs discovered his special purpose in life......to be a drinker of DICKEL, George Dickel Whiskey.


They are the unknown cousin of Jack Daniel's.  Their motto is, "If you know Jack, you don't know Dickel."
Hubs stocked himself up on a bottle of each variety of George's elixir.
I also bought a bottle of something you can't get other places.....a bottle of this.....

Collier and McKeel White Dog.
Basically, white dog is the closest you can get to drinking moonshine(aka corn likker)without knowing some hillbilly making and running "shine" out of some back holler.  It's moonshine that revenoor taxes have been paid on.

White Dog is the nickname for any corn mash whiskey BEFORE it has been aged into what most people call whiskey or whisky.  It's "young whiskey" and can be quite "rough".

But enough of our whiskey lesson for today, let's move on, shall we?

More shots from the road as we got further east......

 
 
And if anyone had any doubts, KUDZU is alive and doing quite well, thank you!, in eastern Tennessee.....

Can't see the trees for the vines.....


And somewhere near Knoxville, we finally arrived at our adventure for the day......the Sequoyah Birthplace Museum.....


You can go read about Sequoyah HERE.

 
The Museum is owned and run by the Cherokee Nation(Eastern Band).



It contains Cherokee artifacts, artwork(like this carved walking stick), films and dioramas on the lands and peoples of this area through the ages and also the history of the "Principal People" as the Cherokee call themselves, along with the history of Sequoyah himself and his great Cherokee Syllabary.



Many people call Sequoyah's invention an alphabet but it isn't.  Instead of 26 characters, there are 85 and each character isn't a letter, but a symbol representing each sound of the Cherokee language.


It takes longer to memorize 85 symbols/sounds than our English 26 letter alphabet, but once mastered, the learner can begin to read and write immediately, unlike an English alphabet learner, who must then learn how to put the letters/sounds together to make words.
It's an ingenious device if you think about it!  Sequoyah worked fulltime on this Syllabary for a year.  His neighbors thought he had gone mad as he neglected his garden and his wife thought it was witchcraft and burned some of his work.


After it's development, Sequoyah spent 12 years promoting his invention among his people.  Once Sequoyah won over various bands of his Cherokee peoples, and the nation embraced his writing system as it's own, it put the myth about the uneducated, godless savage to an end once and for all.  Knowledge is power and it helped to put the Principal People on equal footing with all those European and English people who were slowly taking over their lands....at least for a little while.


There are also displays in he Museum about the interaction of the "white man" with the native peoples and once you get into the 1800's the history gets quite depressing.....all that "You help me, then I stab you in the back(sometimes literally), and I push you off your land and take over".....and we all know how "things" turned out for the Native Americans.


Sequoyah was a very interesting, multifaceted man and he treasured the great honors bestowed upon him for his Syllabary invention.  He is said to have worn a silver medal awarded to him by the Cherokee Nation always, even after his death.



He was instrumental in the 1st bi-lingual newspaper in the US, the "Cherokee Phoenix", which began publishing in 1828 until 1834.


Sequoyah was a successful blacksmith too.  Here is a recreation of his shop on the Museum grounds.....

And a typical Meeting Place(without the covering over it).  It's not quite as large as they believe these actually were back in the day.  These structures were communal gathering and marketplaces for Cherokee band members and could hold about a 100 people.  (They served the purpose of our churches, theatres, community centers and shopping malls of today.)



Hubs with the Cherokee Basketwork design Bear....

After we bid adieu to Sequoyah, we had to find some place for lunch as it was already after 3pm.
We stopped at this place in Vonore that we had passed on the way to the Museum.......
 
You know it's a good BBQ joint when they have a roll of paper towels on the table! 

There was a nice view out the back windows but THIS is the view I wanted to see........


I got brisket, pork, coleslaw and pintos.  I used my grilled toast & coleslaw to make a barbecued pulled pork sammie.

After getting "cue happy" we hit the road again.
We had, what turned out to be a 5 hour drive up I-81 from Knoxville, TN to Wytheville, VA.
We hit rush hour somewhere, stopped at another liquor store before leaving TN and a potty break somewhere in there too.
It was dark once we got to Wytheville and tried to exit the Interstate to our motel for the night.
I said "tried" to exit the Interstate because this exit was temporarily closed in both directions going south or north.
VA DOT was going some highway repairs that evening and had closed the exits we needed to get off of until morning.
So we drove up to the next exit, straight up into the mountains about 10 miles....into the middle of nowhere.  No civilization, no lights and spotty cell phone reception.
Hubs parked off the exit and tried to call the motel to get directions to get there without using the interstate.

In between the dead spots, standing outside the car with your right arm up in the air and holding the phone in your left hand, while balancing on your left leg, the motel clerk actually told Hubs that she didn't know how to give him directions from anywhere but from the Interstate to that particular exit.

Really?!?
Another low point and milestone in civilization has been reached.
People can longer function without GPSs.
No one can has a sense of direction and can navigate in their heads.
Note to motel owners--Do not hire idiots who can't read a map or have no clue about the area in which they live!
You KNOW this moron lives in this town or nearby if they have a JOB there, and you KNOW they have to DRIVE ON THE ROADS to get to said job, but they have no CLUE about the names of the roads and how said roads hook up into each other?!
Really!!???

So we found a road heading south....which was the general direction we needed to be heading.....and we drove, and drove, and drove some more down a long windy, foggy(in the mountains at night, remember?)2 lane country road with no signs or markings except for a.....

 

Or a....

Ever so often.
We finally saw a light, the sign for a convenience store, so we pulled in, got some directions from the clerk....FINALLY!, someone who actually KNEW the names of the roads and where they led!!
Praise the Lord!

We found the motel shortly thereafter and rolled in about 9:30 at night.
We were both hungry but not starving since lunch had been so late.
And it's a good thing since the little town here rolls up the sidewalks at night evidently, as everything was closed except that convenience store we found.

Luckily, I still had a bag of food Sonya Ann had sent us off with on Friday....summer sausage slices, cheese, celery and cherry tomatoes.  I think there were crackers too.

So here's my dinner.....


Ok, I had some cheese too.
And I washed it down with this.....


Cinerator Cinnamon Whiskey.
Same guys as Evan Williams.....you hear that JAY?! ;-)

I fell(literally, I got dizzy after 2 shots of this stuff!)into bed to sleep the evening away.
Thus ends Day 7 of the Great Summer Road Trip of 2013.

Next time, Day 8..... wherein we eat local, dig some more roots, go back in time, up a mountain, and hit another of my "pleasure centers".

Sluggy