Tag: Travel

  • Travel: Relaxation in Placencia, Belize

    IMG_7292, After Dinner Photography, Turtle Inn, Placencia, Belize
    IMG_7292, originally uploaded by [ecpark].
    We spent our first full day in Belize doing what all honeymooners should, lounging around the resort … which we referred to more elegantly as “getting our bearings.” After dinner, we went out and took some pictures of the resort at night.

    it turns out pretty much everyone here is on their honeymoon — which would have been funnier if it we hadn’t had the “oh my god, we got married on saturday too! what a coincidence” conversation twelve times before we figured it out.

  • Travel: Arrival in Placencia, Belize

    IMG_0070, Drinks at Mare Restaurant, Turtle Inn, Placencia, Belize
    IMG_0070, originally uploaded by [ecpark].
    honeymoon! we flew out of Washington’s National Airport at early, early in the morning, and arrived in Belize CIty by mid-morning.

    Once in-country, we hoped on a little puddle-jumper of a plane for the trip down to Placencia. WIthin minutes of landing, we were at the Turtle Inn, a Balinese-style report put together by Francis Ford Coppola after Placencia was ravaged by Hurricane Iris in 2001.

    We spent the afternoon biking into the villiage, and hanging around the pool. Beautiful.

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    Arrival in Placencia, Belize
  • Travel: Chicago, Illinois

    IMG_7153
    IMG_7153, originally uploaded by [ecpark].
    I love Chicago, and would move out here in a heart-beat if the winters weren’t so miserable. A great friend of mine (Chrissy, the groomsmaid) moved out here after college, and we came out for a long weekend as a kind of last hurrah before the wedding. We had such a fabulous time, and Chicago is an incredibly photogenic city.
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    Chicago, Illinois
  • Travel: Champlain Valley Exposition, Vermont

    Crowds, Champlain Valley Fair, Champlain Valley Expo Center, Essex Juntion, Vermont
    Crowds, originally uploaded by [ecpark].
    We weren’t able to make it up to Vermont this year for my brother’s birthday, so we went up a couple of weeks later for the Champlain Valley Exposition outside of Burlington. Nothing is better than a county fair for photography.
  • Photos: Tacky Light Tour, Richmond, Virginia

    IMG_5126.jpg
    Each and every year, we make one pilgramage (at least) to the best in neighborhood Christmas light displays. To spice things up, this year we change from going to a neighborhood off Todd’s Lane in Hampton, to houses participating in the Tacky Light Tour in Richmond.

    I had no idea this existed until I watched a Christmas special about it on TLC (or A&E). I’m not sure I am ready to give up Todd’s Lane, but it was great mixing it up with new material this year.

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    Tacky Light Tour, Richmond, Virginia.
  • Photos: Yorktown National Battlefield, Virginia

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    We took Jackson on his first trip to a Revolutionary War Battlefield today, mainly as a way of keeping “the guys” occupied while “the women” hit the outlets north of town.

    Not that I recommend it as an real-life exercise, but take a couple of minutes to think about how you would explain a 200 year-old war to a 4 year-old boy. As I was talking, I realized I sounded an aweful lot like George Dubya Bush explaining the Iraq war to America (evil-doers, defeding our country, protecting our families).

    It was pretty creepy.

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    Yorktown National Battlefield, Virginia
  • Photos: National Maritime Museum, Norfolk, Virginia

    IMG_5105.jpg
    Another something I haven’t done in over a decade, we took the whole family down to the National Maritime Museum (better known as Nauticus) in Norfolk, Virginia. It was great to spend quality time with my grandfather (whom I don’t see nearly enough of) and he docent-ed for us as we wandered around both the museum and the battleship parked out back.
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    National Maritime Museum, Norfolk, Virginia
  • Travel: CTSG Reunion, Las Vegas, Nevada

    I don’t have the time or the inclination or the mental fortitude to do my usual blog post per expedition this trip, so I have dumped everything into two batches of photos: the former contains the pictures I took while wandering the casinos, and the latter contains pictures of the CTSGers that showed up.

    On a personal note, I had a great time in Vegas … even ignoring the drunken debauchery. It’s nice to have post-employment validation that I worked with an exceptional group of people, and we had a pretty excellent run.

    Ah, closure.

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    CTSG Reunion, Las Vegas, Nevada

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    Inside the Casinos, Las Vegas, Nevada

  • Travel: South Strip, Las Vegas, Nevada

    There are a lot of things to call “strange” about this weekend.

    First of all, I haven’t pulled an all nighter since College. Second, I have never had any plans to go to Vegas (don’t gamble). Third, if I were to be in Vegas and were to have pulled an all-nighter, I absolutely would not get up the next morning at 9 am and wander around the south-end of the Las Vegas strip.

    Turns out I was wrong on all three counts.

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    South Strip, Las Vegas, Nevada
  • Travel: Vegas at Night, Las Vegas, Nevada

    Ah, Vegas.

    So, it’s a bit of a long story … but once upon a time, I worked for a progressive web consulting firm called the Carol | Trevelyan Strategy Group. We were a mission-driven organization, with nary a business degree among us. The type of company where people willing worked obscene hours for “the cause,” and where management was willing to go without a pay check in the lean months.

    Started in the early 1990s, CTSG created the first campaign web site (one of the California Senators) and by the end we had worked with just about every major progressive organization, cause and politician in U.S.

    Unfortunately, our luck started to run out when the non-profit technology industry started to consolidate in 2004. By the 17th of March 2005, we had been gobbled up by a soul-less, publically traded corporation called Kintera.

    Ironically, it turns out that our non-profit clients just weren’t willing to subsidize the cost of our doing business progressively … and we should all be honest that non-profits are just about the most ardent capitalists around when it comes to minimizing their budgetary spending.

    Anyway, we were in the planning stages of a company retreat when the St. Patricks Day massacre occured. For many, the purchse turned out to be little more than an excerize in pink-slip avoidance, so it was of little shock that something as expensive and touchy-feel as a staff retreat was cancelled.

    While the 2005 retreat was “lost,” a group of us are getting together in Vegas this weekend to make up for lost time and retreats. First step was meeting by the Bellagio fountains at midnight. How very “Ocean’s Eleven” of us.

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    Vegas at Night, Las Vegas, Nevada