Adventures with the Grishnys (Includes RinkUnion Info)
Grishny, on host 12.29.132.98
Thursday, August 2, 2001, at 15:17:26
Day One: Thursday, July 26
After getting off of work on time at 5:00, I headed home and we packed the car. We managed to make my departure time goal of 6:00, and we were off! The first leg of our trip was a four and a half hour drive to Plainsville, OH, where we spent the night in a rather posh resort hotel room that we got through Priceline for $40. Too bad we didn't really have time to enjoy it! The trip there was uneventful, with the notable exception of Grandpa's Cheesebarn, a roadside attraction that we happened upon by accident in Ashland, OH when we stopped there for gas. We didn't have time to investigate, and it was probably closed at that time of day anyway, but we decided to check it out on our way home. We arrived at our hotel just before 11:00, and went to bed about an hour later after barely noticing our surroundings.
Day Two: Friday, July 27
We did NOT set the alarm clock; nevertheless I somehow managed to get up around 7:00. We had a twelve-hour drive ahead of us, and I was anxious to get on the road, so naturally we went for a swim in the hotel's indoor pool before getting around to packing our stuff back into the car and checking out. We stopped at a McDonald's for breakfast, and then hit the road around 9:30.
Today's planned route was to take us on I-90 out of Ohio, through Pennsylvania, into New York where it becomes the New York State Thruway (toll roads are T3H EVIL!1), then into Massachusetts where it becomes the Mass Pike (toll roads are T3H EVIL!1). We were going to take 290 through Worcester (which is inexplicably pronounced "Woos-tuh" -- if you're going to pronounce it that way, why not spell it "Wooster" like we sensible Ohioans do?) to 495 to 93, which would take us north to our final destination in New Hampshire. We stuck to our planned route for the most part, only veering off of it later that evening to take a longcut through Vermont. But more on that later.
This route was somewhat nostalgic for us since it was the same route we took home from our honeymoon nearly three years ago. We'd been back to New Hampshire since then more than once, but had either flown or taken a different route. We were going the opposite direction, of course, but it was still neat to spot old landmarks that we'd seen before and reminisce about our previous journey.
Traveling twelve hours in one day with a 16-month old in the car is no picnic. We had to stop frequently for food, diaper checks, bathroom breaks, and sometimes just to give Jonathan a chance to get out of his car seat and run around a bit to stretch his legs. All that stopping kept him fairly happy and well-behaved for the majority of the trip, but it also turned twelve hours into fourteen and a half. Such is life on the road with a youngster. Jonathan is currently fascinated with trucks; especially semi trucks. At every single stop we made, the first thing he would do when he got out of the car was to point at the nearest semi and say his word for trucks, which sounds something like "duck cars." This is CUTE CUTE CUTE.
When we hit the Albany, NY area, we became confused by the highway signs and had to get off and look at our map. Remember, we had been this way before but going the opposite direction. I was under the impression that I-90 and the Mass Pike were one and the same, yet we saw signs for both with road going off in two different directions. We followed the signs for Mass Pike and found ourselves on I-87 South. This didn't seem right to me, so I got off at the junction of 87 and its bypass, 787 (or was it 187?) to look at the map. At this point we decided we were sick of interstate driving anyway and opted to take our longcut through Vermont. We hopped on the bypass north to Troy, NY, where we got on state route 9 east towards Vermont. This became Vermont state route 7 when we crossed the border. I might be remembering that backwards.
Cool, I thought. Vermont! I'd never been in Vermont before. We came to the quaint little touristy-antiquey town of Bennington right around dinnertime, so I started looking for a place to stop and get dinner. I discovered that fast food, or "chain" restaurants of any kind, for that matter, do not exist in Bennington, VT. We ended up eating at a nice little hole-in-the-wall type of place called Papa Paul's Diner. When we went in, it was like walking into a Norman Rockwell painting. Everyone in the rather small dining room looked up at us, and I'm sure their first collective thought was "TOURIST." Everyone there looked like regulars, and we stuck out like a sore thumb. There was a sign above the kitchen window that said "Beware: Men Cooking." For a greasy spoon, the food was quite good. I had a "Chicken Cordon Papa" sandwich; my wife had a veal parmesan sandwich, and Jonathan had a hot dog and fries that he didn't eat. I also ordered a ginger ale to drink, and there was a contest in the cap that reminded me of Faux Pas ("Sorry, Please Try Again"). When we left the establishment, we saw a Meat Shoppe across the street with a handmade sign out front advertising moose meat for sale.
On the other side of Vermont, we stopped for gas in the town of Brattleboro, and got to see the gas station attendant making out with his girlfriend. Then we hopped on I-81 for a brief stint to get back on 7 as it entered New Hampshire. Now we were driving through the beautiful and scenic New Hampshire State Forest which we couldn't see because it was dark. It was getting very late by this time and we just wanted to GET there. In Keene, NH, we got onto state route 101, and later switched to 101A, but I don't remember exactly where. 101A took us into Nashua, where we almost got lost but somehow made it through into Hudson, where things finally started to look somewhat familiar. 101A dumped us right onto 111, which, if you go in the right direction (west) will take you almost straight to my mother-in-law's door. We did (go in the right direction) and finally arrived a little after 11:00. Ugh.
We went to bed.
Day Three: Saturday, July 28
We went to the RinkUnion.
Day Four: Sunday, July 29
We went to the RinkUnion.
Day Five: Monday, July 30
The RinkUnion was now over, but that was only half of our vacation! Today we were headed for Niagara Falls, which was more or less on our way back to Ohio. I had the alarm clock set for 6:30, which is SUXX0R, but we were supposed to meet my father-in-law for breakfast at 8:00. We were only ten minutes late, which isn't bad. We met him at a little hole-in-the-wall place in Hudson called Kay's Diner. This is where he always eats when he goes out for breakfast once a week. The food is good, but we'd much rather go someplace like Bickfords or Bob Evans. Can't complain though, since he was buying. After breakfast, we said our goodbyes and went back to the house to load up the car, and departed at 10:30.
According to Yahoo, it's supposed to be approximately 8 and 1/2 hours from Windham, NH to Grand Island, NY. It took us 10 and 1/2 hours. I think we've determined that if one is traveling with a toddler, one should always factor in an extra two hours to whatever Yahoo says. Nothing exciting happened on the road today, just more of the same. We decided not to take the longcut this time, and discovered that it actually took us about the same amount of time to get to Albany going the "faster" way. Now I wish we'd gone through Vermont again so I could've seen the National Forest in daylight.
We arrived at our hotel, the Grand Island Holiday Inn, right around 9:00 on Monday night. I originally had been thinking about going to see the Falls that night, but we were exhausted from another long day on the road so we just got settled into our room and vegged out on the beds watching free cable. There was nothing on.
Day Six: Tuesday, July 31
We only had one full day at Niagara Falls and we wanted to make the most of it. So naturally, the first place we went to was K-Mart. Yes, that's right. K-Mart. Jonathan had lost two of his sipper cups while we were in New Hampshire, and he needed replacements before we could go to breakfast that morning. I once heard Jay Leno say on the Tonight Show that K-Mart is "The Place where Cheap Crap is Sold." It's true. At least it was true at this particular K-Mart. We bought two new sipper cups for Jonathan there, and we had to poke a fork through the rubber insert in the first one for him to be able to drink anything out of it. The second cup was completely unusable. Gah. Playtex is stupid for letting crap cups go through their quality control; K-Mar t is stupid for selling them. And I guess we were stupid for going to K-Mart in the first place.
For breakfast, or rather, brunch, since it was nearly 11:00 by the time we got there, we went to Bob Evans. I tried a new menu item, their steak tips skillet, and it was GOOD. If you live within a hundred miles of a Bob Evans, go there NOW and GET ONE. You won't regret it. My wife had a regular Sunshine Skillet, and Jonathan had a kid's breakfast meal consisting of scrambled eggs, which he ate, and toast and maple sausage links, which he did not eat. He also had milk, which he could only drink after we jimmied his stinking new crap cup from K-Mart with a fork.
The Bob Evans was located right on Niagara Falls Boulevard, so after we finished our meal, we just drove right down the street toward the Falls. This turned out to be the "scenic" route, which means that it went through the residential part of town and had about five hundred stop lights on the way. It did take us straight to the state park where the American Falls are located, and where there is no place to park. There is a parking lot there, but it was full. So we drove around until a dude in an orange vest yelled at us to go "UP TWO BLOCKS ON THE LEFT PAST DENNY'S SIX BUCKS ALL DAY!" He didn't look at all like Darien. So we parked, and then spent the next twenty minutes getting our gear together and putting on sunscreen. Some other people in the same lot were doing the same thing, only they had forgotten their sunscreen, so we shared ours. They offered my wife a tip, but she said no thanks.
I think it was at this point, or slightly before, that we realized that we had forgotten Jonathan's birth certificate, which we needed in order to visit the Canadian side of the river. At first I was just resigned to the fact that we wouldn't be able to go, but then my wife suggested having someone back home fax it to us. We made our way to the Visitor Center in the park and probably spent about half an hour on the phone attempting to arrange this. I had to call our hotel to find out what their fax number was, and then I called my mom back in Ohio to see if she could fax us the birth certificate. I told her where it was and gave her the number, and she said she would do her best to get it to us.
That done, we entered the park proper and headed straight for the Falls. Neither one of us had ever seen them in person before, so it was a momentous occasion. My only previous experience with Niagara Falls were the scenes from Superman II. We were both suitably impressed. I doubt I can adequately describe the experience. The power of all that water thundering over the edge and crashing down onto the rocks below is amazing. It was a lot louder than I expected it to be.
We visited the park's viewing area first, which sort of has you looking at the falls along the same angle that the river pours over the cliff face. It's probably the least spectacular view that Niagara Falls has to offer. After that, we walked across the bridge to Goat Island, which is in the middle of the Niagara River and splits the American Falls into two sections. Goat Island has a much better viewing of the falls, right in the spot where the river goes over the edge, so that you're standing in between the two sections of the falls.
I had been taking pictures all afternoon, using up the same roll of film that I had shot the majority of my outdoor pics of the RinkUnion on. I knew that the roll of film in the camera was only 24 exposures, so when the counter hit 30, I began to think something was wrong. When it hit 36, I knew something was wrong. I should have just stopped using that camera at that point and waited until we were back at the hotel to investigate the problem in a darkened room. Instead, I displayed my brilliant intellect and opened the back of the camera in bright sunlight. So much for my pictures of the White Mountains. For some reason the spindle had stopped pulling the film through; it looked like it was about halfway through the roll. Grrrr. I'm going to throw away that camera. I'm also going to be kicking myself for the next three weeks for ruining the shots I had taken earlier.
After we had seen all of Goat Island and purchased a $3.00 bottled water at the Cave of the Winds Snack Shop, we went back to the "mainland" and headed over to Prospect Point. Prospect Point is the location of (surprise!) Prospect Point Observation Tower, which you can experience for the minimal fee of fifty cents. It is also the departure point for the Maid of the Mist boat ride on the American side, at the base of the tower. On Tuesday, we stuck to the top half of the tower, checking out the awesome view all around the main observation deck and then riding the elevator up to the top for a view that was a wee bit higher.
By the time we came down from Prospect Point, we were hot and tired. We needed to go back to our hotel anyway to see if our fax had come in, so we decided to go back and have a swim in the hotel pool. When we arrived back at the Holiday Inn, our fax had arrived, so we knew we'd be able to go to Canada that evening. Jonathan and my wife both needed a nap, so I let them sleep while I explored the hotel. I found a game room near the pool with some classic arcade games from the eighties, including the original Gauntlet. I played those for about an hour, and then went back to our room, where my wife was up and getting ready to go to the pool. We all went, and had a good time. Jonathan loves the water, and he even went under a couple times without getting upset. No, we didn't dunk him on purpose; we're not that cruel. He was walking around in the 1 and 1/2 foot-deep kiddie pool and slipped; either mommy or daddy was always with him to make sure he didn't drown.
After our swim, we got cleaned up and dressed to go out again, this time to the Canadian side of the falls. We had been warned that it would be unwise to go to Canada without Jonathan's birth certificate. We were told that while getting into the country without it wouldn't be a problem, attempting to return to the USA could be a major hassle if we didn't have proof that he was our son. It actually seemed to be the other way around when we went, however. The Canadian customs official asked us what country we were citizens of, where we were going, and then asked for the certificate. On the way back, the US official practically waved us through. Still, we were glad to have it so we didn't have to worry.
Our first order of business in Canada was to find a place to park. We circled around and found a lot that was only $5.00. I have no idea what part of Canada the attendant was originally from, but he had an accent that I'd never encountered before. We asked him whether that was US or Canadian dollars, and he said it didn't matter. "You can pay with Yankee money," he said. "By the end 'o the day I've got about half and half anyway." After parking, we wandered down the street by the river looking for a place to have dinner. We discovered a restaurant called The Secret Garden, based on the book, that had a carefully maintained garden all around it, with the hedges trimmed into all kinds of cool shapes and patterns. But after looking at the menu, we decided that it was a bit pricey for our budget. We took a shortcut through the garden up to the next street from the river, and didn't find anything there either. We made our way out to what appeared to be the main drag, full of lights and noises and lots of fast food places that we didn't want anything to do with. Why come all the way to Niagara Falls, Canada, and then eat at Arbys or Wendys? We ended up going to the Rainforest Café, a really neat place that I'd heard about often but never had a chance to go to before.
If you want to know what the Rainforest Café is like, go to their website at http://www.rainforestcafe.com. There was a huge line and a long wait to get in, so we meandered about the incredibly overcrowded gift shop for about 45 minutes before our "safari" was called. Jonathan liked most of the animatronics, although the crocodile frightened him. He was absolutely mesmerized by the shark tank. It had about five or six small sharks swimming in it, as well as some fish.
Once we were seated, I ordered a chicken Caesar salad, Mrs. Grishny ordered barbequed ribs, and we ordered a grilled cheese sandwich for Jonathan that he didn't eat. We also ordered him a milk and discovered that the second cup from Krap-Mart was defective. The holes in the plastic lid that the liquid is supposed to flow through weren't holes, but only indentations in the plastic. The café staff tried to fix the cup for us, but without success. Fortunately, Jonathan can drink through a straw if he has help.
It was going on 10:30 when we decided to take what was left (most) of our meals and go see the Falls from the Canadian side before going back to our hotel. The view of the American side of the falls is much better from Canada. With the water lit up in multiple colors on a clear, moonlit night, it was absolutely beautiful. We spent about fifteen minutes watching the lights change color against the waterfall before leaving, and I could have watched it even longer if it hadn't been so late by then.
Then we went back to our hotel and went to bed.
Day Seven: Wednesday, August 1
My goal for today was to be on the road for home by noon, and we wanted to go back to the falls and ride on the Maid of the Mist boat before going, so we were up fairly early. I think we were checked out by 10:00 or so. It would have been sooner, if the can of Moxie I was carrying in my briefcase hadn't exploded. MOXIE IS DA EVIL. (I know, I know, don't ask me why I had it in my briefcase; it's just another example of my brilliant intellect at work.) My two paperbacks I had brought along were drenched in Moxie, including my brand new, not-even-read-yet copy of Red Mars (sob). Our AAA tourbook was ruined. The bottom of my briefcase was soaked. I cleaned up the mess as best I could with a hotel towel (sorry, Holiday Inn) and threw everything in the back window of the car to (hopefully) dry out in the sun.
We made it to the bottom of Prospect Point just in time to watch the 11:00 boat that we were shooting for leave without us. Gah. However, we were pleased to learn that the boats leave every fifteen minutes and not every half hour as we thought, and we got to be the FIRST ones aboard the next boat, which RULED because we got the best spot at the front of the upper deck. The Maid of the Mist was fun. We went right by the FALLS and got really WET.
Then we got in our car and drove a really long long long long way for a really long long long long time until we got home. This time we managed to do a little bit better and squeeze the 6 and 1/2 hour trip into nine hours. Hooray for us! We did stop at Grandpa's Cheesebarn in Ashland, OH on the way back, and it ruled because there was lots of CHEESE and they even had some cheesey music playing! We bought a hunk of bleu cheese for my mom (she loves the stuff) and some young cheese curds that taste kind of like mozzerella for ourselves. Yum.
Day Eight: Thursday, August 2
Okay, so today wasn't technically part of our trip, but I think it should count, because I spent ALL STINKIN DAY typing up this Adventures Post. HA!!!
Gri"tell Sam I think that Niagara Falls would be a R0XX0R place for a future RinkUnion"shny
|