Thursday, December 30, 2010

Beauty Everywhere

During both of these trips I have been amazed and overwhelmed with the beauty everywhere in our country.  When we got home and I started going to work every day, as I drove over Center Minot Hill and looked at the scenery I remembered that there is just as much beauty at home.  Every morning as I came to the top of the hill, I could see Taylor Pond and the surrounding trees.  As the fall colors progressed, it got even more beautiful.  Some mornings you could see clouds of fog hovering over the water.  And when the snow came, came still another beautiful scenery.  I'm so fortunate that I can see this beauty.  I guess this is what they mean when they say "take time to smell the flowers".
 

We left on December 26 at 8:00 a.m., just ahead of a snow storm and headed South West.  We saw a few fleuries, but it didn't really start snowing until we got just beyond Albany, N.Y.  It was 2:30 and we decided to stop at a rest area.  (So did several other RV's and trucks.)


Saturday, September 25, 2010

Bruno's Trip

I've been gone with Mama and Daddy for 3 months now and I've done a lot of things, I've gone swimming, but only once.  I would have liked to go again but most places don't want dogs in the water.

I played with my best friend Casey (Dazy is still my girlfriend and sole mate).  We wrestled alot.

We'd share our water.

We'd rest together.

And sometimes we'd chase each other, but she wasn't around all the time, so I found other dogs to play with.

I found a little girl named Jenica who loved to pet me, she really wanted to be my friend.

I found another dog that looked just like me named Elly who was really fun to play with.

We would have really liked to chase each other but we had to be on a leash.  There were quite a few other dogs but Mama didn't always have the camera.  I even saw my friend Jasper from Tennessee.

Sometimes I'd meet other dogs, but didn't really like them.

So I would just go home and watch them play from there.

We never found any doggy parks, but we went for rides alot.  I loved the rides.

Especially when the windows were open and the wind would blow in my face.

But mostly I just liked to lay down on my big bed, as long as I was with Mama and Daddy I was happy.

Even though sometimes the back seat was up and I just had a small space.

Sometimes I wasn't allowed out of the car, so I would just watch our the back window.

And sometimes I couldn't go with them and had to stay home.  I didn't like that, so I would just watch out the window for them.

We had many many busy days that made me very tired.

And sometimes I liked it when Daddy would just drive most of the day, I could get really comfy and sleep.

Once I got a new toy and had to keep it with me even when I was sleeping.
We are going to be home tomorrow, I'm anxious to see my friends, my big house and big yard, but I will miss the adventure.









Wednesday, September 22, 2010

Newport, R.I.

We were at a campground in West Kingston, to get to Newport, we had to cross 2 huge bridges, the first one went to Conanicut Island.

And the second went off the island and to Newport.


This is looking down from the bridge to Newport.

There was a cruise ship in the harbor, it looks like a toy on the railing.

The first mansion we visited was The Breakers.


It was built by Cornelius Vanderbilt as a summer home.  Last March we visited Biltmore Estates in North Carolina which was built by his brother George Vanderbilt.

Can you picture the horse drawn carriages coming down the drive, going under this entrance and letting Victorian era people out?  The third floor contained 30 bedrooms for staff.  The house was lived in until 1934 when Mrs. Vanderbilt died at the age of 89.  Her daughter Gladys then leased it to the Preservation Society of Newport County.  Her daughter Sylvia ultimately sold it to the Society in 1972 but it was left that the third floor would always be private.  Some of Cornelius's great grand children still summer there.

This was the view from the back terrace.

And this is the back door that looks out to the ocean.

This was a children's play house on the property.

The next mansion was Kingscote.  As you've probably figured out by now, inside pictures were not allowed, but if you go to the links, you'll see some along with the mansion's history.

This is what used to be the carriage house and stable.

The next one was Chateau-sur-Mer, which means Castle by the Ocean.  This was one of the few used as a year round home.

All of these houses had one of these entrances for the horses and carriage to drop off guests.

This was the arch at the exit.
 

 This was another interesting mansion, but not on our tour, so we just stopped long enough to take a picture.

The next one we visited was The Elms.  This was designed to copy a chateau in France for coal baron Edward Julius Berwind. 

The era when people could afford these huge summer homes was before income taxes.  There were either rich or poor people and not much in the middle.


Look at how huge this tree was on the property.  It's a European Copper Beech.  It is 50-60' tall and has a spread of 35-45 feet.  These mansions all had rare trees and bushes.
The back gardens, gazeebos and carriage house all looked awesome.

This was from way in the back by the carriage house, you can see the house way in the center.
The gazeebos were at either end of this wall.

This is the back of the house.

I loved this bench, I can see the ladies in their long dresses getting some fresh air waiting for their drivers to get the carriage.

I love the story of Rosecliff.  An Irish immigrant, James Graham Fair, went to California during the Gold Rush.  He and his partner found the largest ever silver mine and became millioaires.  His daughter bought a wooden cottage in Newport and when she got married she decided to make it larger while she and her husband were in Europe.  She was so anxious to have her first party that even though the house wasn't finished, she covered the unfinished portions with lots of flowers and had her party.  That door on the left is through the dining room, behind which there's a billiard room. The kitchens were usually in the basement, they had pantries next to the kitchen for the butler and servers to serve from. I often felt like I was playing Clue going through these houses.


That section in the middle was totally ballroom.  It measured 40x80, the largest ballroom in any of these mansions.  Several movies were filmed here, or parts of them, the latest being "27 Dresses".

This is a view of the back, the yard goes right up to the water.

We saw several private homes from the back yard.

See the rooftop in the middle?  That's The Breakers.

I also caught this, my favorite picture.  See the dogs playing on the edge of the water?  We watched them chase each other in and out of the water, I think the light one is a golden and the black one is a lab.

This is the side.

Don found this pet gravesight.

 We didn't visit the Marble House since it was built by the same people as The Breakers and the Biltmore House.  This was owned by a third Vanderbilt brother, William.  After a while it gets a little redundant.  This one was built of 500,000 cubic feet of marble.