To start, I found this saved on my desktop. It's an entry that was started last trip, but never finished.
Uncle Joe is a wine buff, and drinks the good stuff. I must have spent the better part of a few
afternoons reading past issues of Wine Spectator to get caught up on all the
in-goings on of the wine world, which seems to be mostly a world where vineyard
financiers hold elaborate tasting balls for one another while flannel-shirted vintners do the actual work themselves (or, rather, oversee the work
that Mexican laborers do). So, pretty
much like everything else, basically.
Anyway, Joe had brought a case of fine wine to the shore, owning to the
fact that when Justin, Erica, and I visited him and Mary Kay in the Spring, we
clearly drank more of his wine than he was expecting. [ed. note this entry just ends here.]
Here's another entry I found, from later in the trip when we went to Molly's house in Frederick, MD. Beautiful house, by the way, and they've improved a lot on it since then, too.
State feathers!
SUPERBOSS day today..
The morning was pedestrian, but by 9am we were already on the way to
Harper’s Ferry, site of an important Civil War battle won by the Confederacy
(boo), as well as, more famously, the ending place of the radical abolitionist
John Brown’s attempt to lead a group of freed black slaves into Maryland in
1859. What’s cool, besides most of the
things in this old town (old for America, at least), is that when you
drive there from Frederick, you have to pass through a tiny sliver of
Virginia on the way to West Virginia.
Erica says that doesn’t count as a new state for James, but who cares,
she’s wrong. Anyway, we ended up driving
through that itty part 3 times over the course of the day, so it definitely counts. Congrats to having been in three states
today, James!
Harper’s Ferry is located where the Shenandoah and Potomac
rivers crotch, with the Potomac
taking the name of the newly confluenced river, before flowing
down to D.C. and out then out to the ocean.
The panoramas are great, and here’s a few samplins’.
Lovely view of West Virginia's easternmost point, AND, just at the riverbank below us, the state's lowest point in elevation! |
The ammunition depot where John Brown met his demise |
James not too sure about this war of 1812 reenactor guy |
After the ‘Ferry, we drove straight north to the
battlefields of Antietam, site of the single bloodiest battles and there milled
about for a bit.[...]
That's it. That's how I finished the report for that the trip.
In the next post, I'll catch you up on what's happened since then.
In the next post, I'll catch you up on what's happened since then.
about time u added something
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