"Explore. Dream. Discover." - Mark Twain

"Explore. Dream. Discover." - Mark Twain
Gail and Roberto at La Libertad Beach, El Salvador, November 2008

Saturday, January 24, 2009

Destination: Greensboro


With the economy in the state it's in, it is very difficult for many of us to justify an expensive vacation to a far-off place. Although it might not be an option for everyone, let me suggest a FABULOUS (and easy) place to visit for residents of the southeastern United States: Greensboro, North Carolina!

When I moved to Greensboro about four-and-a-half years ago for a career opportunity, I had the intention of staying for my two-year contract and moving on. After all, it was what I had done in the past two cities I had lived in: Rhinelander, Wisconsin, and Thomasville, Georgia (both beautiful places, but I am a metropolitan New York-born-and-raised girl who needed my daily dose of the big city). But let me tell you, Greensboro definitely had more in store for me.

I got here in the fall of 2004 and quickly fell in love with the 70-degree weather (with enough crisp fall days thrown in to make me feel like it really was autumn), the glorious changing of the verdant landscape to striking shades of red, gold, and burnt orange (people from all over the world come to North Carolina to drive the Blue Ridge Parkway and be awed by the fall colors), and the expansive, cloudless Carolina-blue skies. My first mild winter (and every mild winter I've spent here since) was a wonderful change from the bitterly cold winters in Wisconsin, and I was overjoyed to be able to call my grandfather in New York on Easter Sunday to tell him I was sitting poolside in 80-degree weather. He laughed, and told me that until he had spoken with me he was excited about their 50-degree day.

I mentioned my need for the big city, and although Greensboro is a city of just over 250,000 as opposed to the 8-million people in New York, downtown Greensboro has undergone quite a renaissance in the past several years and offers tons of fun things to do without being overwhelming. Dozens of trendy boutiques, laid-back taverns, hip nightclubs, and a wide variety of restaurants pepper the downtown area. Greensboro's single-A baseball team, the Grasshoppers (http://www.gsohoppers.com/), boast a state-of-the art new stadium within walking distance of Elm Street, the main drag. Live music, laughter, and the peaceful rushing sound of several fountains float through the air from Center City Park (http://www.centercitypark.org/), Greensboro's 1.9-acre central gathering place in - you guessed it - the center of the city. An upscale high-rise condominium building is currently being renovated (http://www.centerpointegreensboro.com/), adding to the newfound stylishness of downtown. Add those things, along with the new Elon Law School, two theaters, a Children's Museum, the International Civil Rights Center and Museum, and many other attractions, downtown Greensboro (and the city as a whole!) has it going on for both residents and visitors! Check it out online: http://www.greensboro-nc.gov/.

Thursday, January 22, 2009

The Fun Begins!
















As I kick this blog off, I am not sitting on a white sugar-sand beach with a fruity frozen drink (complete with a mini umbrella) melting in my hand... or just getting in from an eye-opening stroll through a 3,000-year-old city (doesn't that always make you feel so small?)... or soaking in a hot tub high in the Alps after an exhausting (in a good way!) day of hitting the slopes. Nope, I'm in my freshly painted gray home office in Greensboro, North Carolina, with a Monet copy to my left and a wannabe Tiffany lamp to my right. I try to have culture in my life even when I can't leave home, but it's so much more fun to get out there and see it firsthand.
I remember the first time I saw the Coliseum in Rome. After walking through this huge, modern city for several blocks, we turned a corner and there it was... it took my breath away. This amazing structure that I'd seen in books, pictures, and movies for years was now right in front of me. I could touch it, walk through its labyrinthine grayish corridors (chips of once-vibrant paint still cling to the walls), stand in the middle of the sandy arena where men and animals once fought to the death, and later at night, see the glowing yellow eyes of hundreds of squatting stray cats peering out from the Coliseum's walls at me. It was a magical, mesmerizing place, as was all of Italy, and as is every new city and country I have the opportunity to visit.
I am most intrigued by foreign cultures, that is, any culture that is very different from my own and teaches me new things. But this blog won't only be dedicated to my travels to foreign countries. Like I said before, I am in no position financially to spend consecutive weeks globe-trotting without a job to sustain my travels. There are plenty of fantastic places to visit very close to my own home and I like to be attuned to all sorts of travel news (thanks Frommers.com, Fodors.com and Lonelyplanet.com!) so I think I'll always have plenty to post.
That being said, I want to list all of the countries I have been fortunate enough to travel to, and I will probably incorporate my experiences there into future posts:
Canada (Many, many visits! Can't count them all... beautiful country!)
Mexico (3/2001)
Italy (8/2001 and 6/2004)
Greece (8/2001)
Brazil (3/2002)
England (6/2004)
Spain (6/2004)
Portugal (6/2004)
France (6/2004)
Dominican Republic (4/2007)
Costa Rica (5/2008)
El Salvador (11/2008)
...And hopefully many more to come. There is a great big world out there and I want to see as much of it as possible.