Saturday, April 18, 2009
Searles Castle Great Barrington MA
Tuesday, April 14, 2009
Great Barrington and the Towns of the Berkshires
Travel Day Trips presents Great Barrington and the Towns of the Berkshires
One of my favorite places to take a day trip is to the Berkshires in Massachusetts. There I visit three towns that are known for their treasures of ambiance and beauty - Great Barrington, Stockbridge and Lenox. I also sometimes stop in two other towns along the way, Sheffield and Lee. Together they offer the day trip traveler an interesting and busy getaway for a day with plenty to do and see.
The city of Great Barrington was settled in 1726 and encompasses 45.7 square miles nestled in the Berkshire Mountain range of East Mountain, Beartown Mountain and Monument Mountain. The downtown is made up of three and four story buildings along Route 7 and has many restaurants, shops and boutiques. Walking in this town is easy and one of the pleasures of visiting the city are their crosswalks that mandate drivers stop for pedestrians the moment the pedestrian put their foot on the road. I am from Connecticut and this mannerly respect for people is refreshing to me as Connecticut drivers usually speed up when they see a pedestrian. The shopping area is great for window shopping and I usually start my journey at Railroad Street, a short street lined with restaurants and boutiques including Karen Allens's fiber art store.
Favorite and interesting stores are:
The Gifted Child - a really interesting toy store with imaginative basic toys.
Byzanthium - Original clothes and jewelry moderately prices.
Seeds - Housewares, soaps, funny novelties.
Mistral - French Country furnishings.
Crystal Essence - New Age books, jewelry, music, soap and lotions. They also offer workshops, music venues and appearances by leading practitioners. Go to www.crystalessence.com to learn more about this wonderful place.
There are more shops up and down the Route 7 main street. Another must see store is Evergreen a craft and art cooperative featuring local American artists. If you are looking for an original gift or one of a kind item then this is the place. Items include jewelry, furniture, clothing and other unique gifts.Great Barrington boasts of many interesting and fine restaurants tailored to every taste from vegetarian at Martins to pizza at Baba Louies. A day in the Berkshires should include a stop at Great Barrington for the shopping and dining experiences. And a visit to the town starts a wonderful travel day trip and vacation getaway for the person who wants to mix art with commerce.
Tuesday, April 7, 2009
Some Travel Tips and Information for Northampton MA
I hope you have enjoyed my musings on one of my favorite cities in the Northeast US. It really is a colorful place with loads of history. Many famous people lived and taught there. Jenny Lind named Northampton "the paradise of America" and indeed the city hosts the high end art fair, Paradise City each year. Sojourner Truth made her home in the city and Lydia Maria Child wrote the famous holiday song, "Over the River and Through the Woods" there. Kurt Vonnegut taught at Smith College. And my favorite tidbit is Sylvester Graham invented, yes you guessed it, the graham cracker in Northampton.
To read about the history of the city and also explore more of what it offers, please go to http://www.northamptonma.gov/ I am sure that you will appreciate the city once you go there and I hope my travel tips about Northampton as a day vacation destination has helped you.
Travel Day Trips
Saturday, April 4, 2009
How to Get to Northampton MA
I have written on why I love the city of Northampton MA and why I often take travel day trips there. Part of my blog will be how to get to a destination and what to look out for on the way there. I like to get to Northampton from Southern Connecticut as quickly as possible in order to spend more time exploring the city. The city is off of I91N so I take the Merritt Parkway North and then pick up I91N heading for Hartford. A good pit stop on the way is just at the hand off from the Merritt. Its safe and pretty clean at least in the day time. I continue up through Hartford staying in the middle lane. There can be a delay in the right lane for the I84 exit so I try to avoid having to stop dead in the wrong lane and stay in the middle until I pass that exit. I continue on I91N to the Connecticut border and when I see the Welcome to Massachusetts sign I try to get in the far left lane to drive through Springfield MA. I find this part of the drive very stressful since a lot of fast traffic will come up from ramps on the right. After exit 12 the traffic calms down and the drive becomes pleasurable. The exit for Northampton is Exit 18. Go to the end of the ramp and take a left onto Rt 9W. Continue straight and get into the left lane before you get to the intersection because you are going to take a left onto Rt 5 which will take you into the heart of downtown Northampton. Northampton has municipal parking lots a block or two from the center and of course there is vertical parking downtown but usually that is full. I like to park over on State Street which is a right off of Rt. 5. It is metered parking and if there is no spot I usually park a couple of blocks down on State Street.
I know, details, details but I thought posting some driving tips for new travel day trip explorers would be of use. Learn from my experiences and I hope you too will come to love Northampton the way I do.
Travel Day Trips
Friday, April 3, 2009
People Watching in Northampton MA
One of the pleasures of going to Northampton is watching the people on the street. They can be neo-hippies, punk rock types, bikers, retirees. On a busy weekend you can see a variety of street musicians and performers or at least people who think they are performers. Take the motley band of neo-hippies that gathered outside the local book store and decided that it would be a good spot to set up shop. They were colorfully attired in flowing gypsy skirts with guitars slung over their shoulders. Their attitude was spot on if not their music. Good to see the memory of the 60s still alive and kicking. They made me smile as I passed them because I lived through the original hippie craze. Any other place outside of Woodstock New York would be annoying to see this but not in Northampton. Its just part of the travel day trip scene.
But the strangest people sighting I had was last year when I saw the two tallest men who were not basketball players. These two guys were at least 6 feet 8 inches tall, clad in leather jackets walking on the sidewalk, heads above the crowd. I was amazed and stood there wishing I had enough nerve to go up and say to them, "Take me to your leader." They looked jovial, just happy to be in Northampton and people watch themselves.
During warmer weather, a group gathers outside one of the local coffee bistros on the main street just hanging out. They sit on a series of steps and they reminded me of that other all time great people watching spot, the steps of the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York City. Smaller version of course but the spirit is similar in that you can buy a coffee, park yourself and watch the show that is downtown Northampton MA.
Travel Day Trips