Travel News
Are you seeing the right sights on holiday? PDF Print E-mail
Written by Chantal Cooke   
Friday, 30 March 2012 10:48

 

Are you seeing the right sights on holiday?

By Chantal Cooke

Sometimes I wonder if we really know what’s worth seeing while on holiday. 

Travelling across South Dakota do I stop in the famous town of Deadwood, where Calamity Jane shocked the locals with her bawdy ways, which included cracking a whip, chewing tobacco and cussing? 

Do I stop at Saloon Number 10 where Wild Bill Hickok was shot on August 2, 1876 by the drifter John McCall leaving behind the legacy of the Deadman’s Hand http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dead_mans_hand ?

Do I climb the small hill to Mount Moriah Cemetery    http://www.deadwood.org/OfficialGuide/AttractionsTours/MountMoriahCemetery/Index.cfm  where Hickok’s body now rests?

Do I stop at the saloons lining the main street and try my hand at the tables or on the slots?

Do I soak up the Disney-like atmosphere of a town that was once on the frontier of the Wild West – where gun fights were the norm and hunting Indians was considered a good job to do?

Or do I drive on North towards Spearfish Canyon taking a little detour to Terry Peak? 

Do I stand atop terry Peak and gaze out across South Dakota, Wyoming and Montana – 100 miles in each direction?

Do I breathe in the cold mountain air whisking through the pines and silver birch trees?

Do I watch the tiny chipmunks hunt for food and the Black Cap Chickadees flit between the trees?

Do I drive down between the canyon’s ruddy brown spires of water polished rock stopping to gawp at millions of H2O molecules tobogganing down the cliffs?

Do I watch American Dippers skimming the creek water as it rushes on its long journey to the Mississippi?

Do I stop to photograph a brightly coloured Tanager bird sitting in the trees by the road?

Do I stare open-mouthed at each corner as new views open up before me or mountains, trees and foamy water?

I guess it depends what you want from a holiday. And there’s nothing wrong with wanting both. Let’s just hope the Disney of Deadwood never spoils the stimulating scenery of Spearfish.

 

Travel Notes:

A great place to stop after soaking up Spearfish Canyon is the Green Bean fair-trade and organic cafe in Spearfish town centre.   http://www.facebook.com/pages/The-Green-Bean-Coffeehouse/48974241498  

 

Last Updated on Friday, 30 March 2012 10:59
 
Life and Death on the Masai Mara PDF Print E-mail
Written by Chantal Cooke   
Thursday, 16 February 2012 12:51

Masai Mara 

Dozens of bodies float down the river, forming huge islands of death as they get caught on the rocks and other debris.

Crocodiles, fat from gorging on the rotting flesh, sit back and watch as Marabou Storks and Vultures peck away at the meat. There’s enough for everyone and no need to fight for your supper.

This is the Masai Mara during the migration season, when 1.8 million wildebeest make the annual circuit from the Serengeti to the Mara in search of food. 250,000 of them won’t survive. Instead they will end up as food for hungry predators and scavengers.

 

Last Updated on Friday, 30 March 2012 10:07
 
No Pocahontas here! PDF Print E-mail
Written by Chantal Cooke   
Tuesday, 06 December 2011 13:02

No Pocahontas here! 

Pine Ridge Indian reservation in South Dakota is everything you wish an Indian reservation wasn’t.

There are no beautiful Pocahontas look-a-likes in moccasins and beaded clothes, no strong Indian chiefs dispensing wise words and encouraging us to live in tune with nature.

Instead, as you enter the reservation, the unspoilt landscape morphs into one covered by the detritus of human existence.

Old plastic bags flap in the wind, caught on the barbed wire fences, tatty mobile homes appear randomly plonked on the prairie grass - their surrounds covered in rusting cars and old tyres.

Pine Ridge, the second largest reservation in the US, is home to about 40,000 people. The media income is $2,600 with over 85% unemployment. Infant mortality is 300% higher than the US national average, cervical cancer is 500% and tuberculosis 800% higher. It has the shortest life expectancy (45 years) of any community in the Western hemisphere outside of Haiti.

Last Updated on Friday, 30 December 2011 13:52
 
Champagne and Sabres PDF Print E-mail
Written by Chantal Cooke   
Tuesday, 08 November 2011 12:41

Champagne and Sabre Bearfoot Bistro 

I am standing in a cellar surrounded by over 20,000 bottles of carefully chosen wine. I have a bottle of Moet et Chandon Imperial in my left hand and a large knife in my right hand.

Slowly I run the blade up and down the neck of the bottle listening to the sound of metal against glass.

Then with a quick flick of the wrist the blade slices off the top of the bottle – cork and glass together – and Moet spurts forth foaming to the floor.

I have sabred my first bottle of champagne.

Last Updated on Tuesday, 08 November 2011 14:32
 
Inspiration in Wisconsin PDF Print E-mail
Written by Chantal Cook   
Saturday, 01 October 2011 12:09

Wisconsin  Tiffany print

Alex Jordan - you've inspired me. I am fed up with modern decor and the magnolia fad. Fed up with sensible and fed up with the need to explain why.

Alex Jordan ignored all these modern mores. His house is a tribute to the beauty of just doing what you want for no other reason than you fancy doing it.

The House on the Rock in Wisconsin, USA is an elaborate labyrinth of rooms and extensions housing an eclectic mix of items, chosen for no other reason than Alex liked them.

There are music machines, Chinese ivory carvings, reproduction Tiffany lamps, doors carved from Indian Rosewood, china dolls, model aeroplanes, an entire early 1900's street, and an infinity room; all carefully built around an outcropping of rock towering over the Wisconsin plains.

The infinity room juts around 160 feet out from the side of the house over the gorge below, and with a large glass panel in the floor you can look down at the tree tops and deer below you.

 

Infinity Room   Tiffany Lamp

 

Alex modeled his house on his fantasies and dreams. Everything from a marine world with a giant sea monster munching a ship to the world's largest indoor carousel with mythical creatures constantly spinning round under the sparkling fairy lights.

Alex’s house is a house full of oddities that shouts his name from every wall. A house that other's may not like but nevertheless a house that you can’t help but be inspired by, and a house that deserves to be on the “visit list” for any trip to Wisconsin.

 

Fact Box

The House on the Rock - http://www.thehouseontherock.com/

The video for 10,000 Maniac’s cover of “More Than This” was shot at the House on the Rock - http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PePl0e0YCRc&ob=av2e

Last Updated on Tuesday, 04 October 2011 09:13
 
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