Travelrific® Travel Journal

Picture postcards in prose.™ Check out the blogroll on the front page for official merchandise and other resources!

Holland in a Day

By Linda Tancs

You can experience over 200 years of Dutch culture at the Netherlands’ Open Air Museum, the biggest folk museum in the Netherlands. Located in a beautiful park on the outskirts of Arnhem, the property brings the past to life. Exhibits include old farmhouses, windmills, Dutch houses and plenty of craft demonstrations. Better hurry, the season ends on 28 October—unless, of course, you’d prefer to experience a winter celebration from days gone by. From 1 December 2012 to 13 January 2013 you can experience stew and green beans amidst an atmosphere of music and song. Try skating on the festively lit skating rink or whiz down the toboggan run at the Delft windmill.

Hemingway Lives On in Hotel Chain

By Linda Tancs

Writer Ernest Hemingway made his mark around the world–and not just for his writing.  He wintered in Key West, safaried in Africa and yachted in Cuba, to name just a few places.  No wonder the much-anticipated Hemingway Hotels and Resorts is looking at these and other destinations where the great raconteur left an indelible imprint for luxurious getaways.  You might not write like Hemingway, but you’ll be able to live like you do–at least on holiday.

The Barbecue Capital of Texas

By Linda Tancs

Lockhart, Texas has about 15,000 inhabitants but welcomes over 250,000 visitors each year to its four barbecue restaurants:  Blacks, Chisholm Trail, Kreuz and Smittys.  Not surprisingly, the Texas Legislature has proclaimed that Lockhart is the barbecue capital of Texas.   No doubt you’ll find barbecue nirvana.  And remember, good barbecue doesn’t need sauce.

On the Case in London

By Linda Tancs

It’s elementary, you see.  Combine a whodunit atmosphere with the swanky feel of a trendy watering hole and you get a bar/restaurant posing as a detective agency in London’s Earls Court.  Located on Earls Court Road, Evans & Peel Detective Agency has that speakeasy flair, encouraging you to “make an appointment” with Detective Peel.  Upon your visit, you’ll be discreetly guided beyond a bookshelf to a cavernous tavern where innocent-enough concoctions like Auntie May’s Marmalade Bronx will be tugging at your bootlegging soul.  Better hurry; the appointment book is filling up.

Tacos in Arizona

By Linda Tancs

Two dollar tacos, anyone?  That’s not the only draw at the Arizona Taco Festival in Scottsdale, Arizona this weekend.  Located at Salt River Fields at Talking Stick on Saturday and Sunday, you will see 30 plus teams duke it out in categories like chicken, beef, pork and seafood tacos along with sidecarts including salsa and guacamole for a prize purse of $10,000 overall.  You can expect the usual events to return, such as lucha libre wrestling, the famed tequila expo, live surf music and cooking demonstrations, along with events for the kids to round out a family fun day.

Tick Tock in Wycombe

By Linda Tancs

Church Loft is the oldest building in the high street of West Wycombe in Buckinghamshire, reputedly the sunniest county in England. Dating from the 15th century, the timber-framed building sports a turret clock of its own renown. Over 300 years old, the side-by-side birdcage mechanism resides inside the building’s tower; the clock faces and dial drum were placed to overhang the street during the reign of Queen Victoria. For over 300 years the clock was wound daily until the recent installation of two electric motors above the birdcage rendered the task unnecessary. You can view the clock movements by appointment only.

Celebrate At a Refuge Near You

By Linda Tancs

It’s National Wildlife Refuge Week, and the U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service wants you to celebrate at a refuge near you.  You’ll find an open house this week at the Hakalau Forest National Wildlife Refuge on the Big Island in Hawaii.  Take a guided bird hike or a tour of the greenhouse where native plants are being propagated.  Among the lower 48, why not join the staff at New Jersey’s Great Swamp National Wildlife Refuge for a sunset nature walk to view the migrating ducks.  As the poet William Wordsworth so aptly put it, “Come forth into the light of things, Let Nature be your teacher.”

Liquid History

By Linda Tancs

At the Lanesborough, a five-star luxury hotel in London’s Knightsbridge district overlooking Hyde Park Corner, a little libation awaits in the Library Bar.  Well, maybe not so little.  The Dom Pérignon Vintage 2003 (a trifling £240 per bottle) is served with a complimentary 10g blinis canapés of Baerii caviar from Aquitaine,   France.  Maybe you’d like their signature Bloody Mary instead.  In any event, you’ll want to sink into one of those deep leather wing chairs and take in the Regency era ambience of this room, bedecked with leather bound books, vintage cognacs (their “liquid history”), display cabinets and subdued lighting to complement a roaring fireplace.   Withdraw in style.

Aw Shucks

By Linda Tancs

Do you know how to shuck an oyster?  The folks in Wellfleet, Massachusetts would be happy to show you during the annual OysterFest.  Contestants in the shuck-off competition can open 24 oysters in a matter of minutes, but aesthetics count, too.  May the best presenter win.

Apple Scrapple in Delaware

By Linda Tancs

If there’s one thing you can count on, it’s this:  Bridgeville, Delaware’s Apple Scrapple Festival always takes place during the second weekend in October.  Of course, apples are ripe and ready for harvesting and storage in October.  But you can’t miss the smell of scrapple being processed in the summer months in this western Sussex County town.  Come celebrate their export at the festival this weekend.  The fun begins at 4:00 p.m. on Friday with the carnival, food court and street dance.  Enjoy Saturday’s full day of events, including the Little Miss Apple Scrapple pageant, the skillet toss and scrapple chunkin’, and the scrapple slingin’.  So who’ll be this year’s King of Sling?