Showing posts with label Beach. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Beach. Show all posts

Longing for summer on Flickr.



A quaint historical museum in Pin Point, Georgia, that is set to open this fall has become the target of an exhaustive ethics examination by the New York Times. Why would the Times devote almost 3,000 words to a community heritage museum? Pin Point, as it turns out, is also the birthplace of Supreme Court Justice Clarence Thomas, and it was Thomas who introduced Pin Point residents to his friend Harlan Crow, a Dallas real-estate tycoon and major conservative donor, who would ultimately fund the museum. According to some legal analysts, Thomas’s role in Crow’s decision to donate may have troubling ethical implications.

Pin Point lies along the Gullah/Geechee Cultural Heritage Corridor designated by Congress, a passage of coastal fishing towns settled by the descendants of slaves. Algernon Varn, whose father ran the fishing cannery there, long hoped to save the site from development, but it wasn’t until he bumped into Thomas, who was in town promoting his memoir, that the project began to move forward. Thomas introduced Varn to Crow, a longtime friend. Through an exhaustive paper trail review, the Times confirmed that Crow is the anonymous donor behind the $1.3 million restoration of the property and forthcoming museum project. Varn was told to keep Crow’s identity anonymous.

The question of ethics violations comes down to whether Thomas misused “the prestige of office” to persuade Crow to take on the project, said Raymond J. McKoski, a retired state judge in Illinois. (Supreme Court justices are not explicitly bound to the complex code of conduct for federal judges because it is enforced by lower ranking judges. That’s right, they are literally above the law — though the Times points to several justices who said they adhere to it regardless.) “Some of it depends on the conversations that took place,” McKoski told the Times of the ethical quandary. “Who brought up the idea? How willing was Mr. Crow to do it? What exact questions were asked by Justice Thomas?”

This isn’t the first time Crow has donated to projects directly or indirectly honoring Thomas. (According to the federal ethics code, judges are not supposed to know who makes a donation in their honor.) The Times gathers an exhaustive list of shady gifts and donations, including Mr. Crow’s financing of a Savannah library dedicated to Justice Thomas and his gift of a bible that once belonged to Frederick Douglass. Thomas also received a $15,000 bust of Abraham Lincoln from a group affiliated with Crow.

So, after all this commotion, what will the museum actually look like? The modest, almost astonishingly unglamorous-sounding Pin Point Heritage Museum will be housed in the A.S. Varn & Son Factory, a former seafood cannery that was the economic backbone of Pin Point — and where Thomas’s mother worked as a crab picker — until it closed in 1985.

Each structure on the property — including the oyster factory, can storage building, and marshfront dock — will be stabilized and restored. A patio area will host live demonstrations of crabbing, canning, and shrimp net making. Inside, 3,000 square feet of exhibition space — modest by museum standards — will house educational exhibits, live demonstrations, interactive displays, and a 30-minute documentary film, all devoted to the generations of residents in Pin Point.



Okay, it’s a hotel, but it looks pretty.

DEM LIGHTS.



Oh right, Savannah’s supposed to be haunted.

HOORAY, GHOST TOURS!



Longing for summer on Flickr.

Savannah, GA



Home…

I love living in the country…I feel very fortunate that my entire family lives in the state of Georgia and literally occupies every corner of it…

It gives me a chance to burn Georgia asphalt every which way…

Today on my way back from Athens I just couldn’t help but feel lucky to be able to drive through country farm land in my cute little farm girl dress…even when my older sister made fun of me for wearing it…

I’m embracing country life style and relishing every moment of it…



I think you’re a little late, guys.



Tybee Island, Georgia

and i’m so scared.
it’s been really hot and humid
perfect tornado weather.

but at least we’ll get rain..



Free Moral Agents @The Drunken Unicorn
April 2011

I just returned from what may be my 12th or so time in Savannah, so I figured I would take a moment to find out about the history of my favorite town as well as let the world know why that place is so awesome.

I discovered Savannah when I was a sophomore in college. There is an annual sport management conference held by Georgia Southern University (actually located in Statesboro, GA). Since then, I go any chance I am in the GA/SC/FL vicinity (Savannah is 2.5 hours from Augusta; 4 hours from Orlando; and 8 looong hours from Norfolk).

General History

Established in 1733 by General James Oglethorpe, the city of Savannah was the colonial capital of the Province of Georgia.  In 1751, Savannah and the rest of Georgia became a Royal Colony and Savannah was made the colonial capital. Today Savannah is an industrial center and an important Atlantic seaport. It is Georgia’s fourth-largest city and third-largest metropolitan area.

Upon settling, Oglethorpe became friends with the local Yamacraw Indian chief, Tomochichi. Oglethorpe and Tomochichi pledged mutual goodwill and the Yamacraw chief granted the new arrivals permission to settle Savannah on the bluff. As a result, the town flourished without warfare and accompanying hardship that burdened many of America’s early colonies.

Oglethorpe laid the city out in a series of grids that allowed for wide open streets intertwined with shady public squares and parks that served as town meeting places and centers of business. Savannah had 24 original squares; 22 squares are still in existence today.

Wars and Slavery

During the American Revolution, the British took Savannah in 1778 and held it into 1782. A land-sea force of French and Americans tried to retake the city in 1779, first by siege and then by direct assault, but failed.

After independence was secured, Savannah flourished. Soon, farmers discovered that the soil was rich and the climate favorable for cultivation of cotton and rice. Plantations and slavery became highly profitable systems for whites in the neighboring “Lowcountry” of South Carolina. So Georgia, the free colony, legalized slavery. The trans-Atlantic slave trade brought many African-Americans through the port of Savannah. Many who stayed in the area formed the unique Gullah culture of the coastal communities in Georgia and South Carolina.

During the Civil War, the city suffered from sea blockades so strict that the economy crumbled. “Impregnable” Fort Pulaski at the mouth of the Savannah River was captured by Union soldiers in 1862. The city itself did not fall until Union General William T. Sherman entered in mid-December after burning the city of Atlanta and everything else in his path on his “March to the Sea.” Upon entering Savannah, Sherman was said to be so impressed by its beauty that he could not destroy it. On December 22, 1864, he sent a famous telegram to President Abraham Lincoln, offering the city as a Christmas present.

After the end of the Civil War, the Reconstruction period began in Savannah. Food was scarce in and the economy was in ruins. Despite these hardships and the added burdens of prejudice, the freed slaves who remained in Savannah built a thriving community, with its own churches, schools and economic strength. Savannah became one of the most historically significant African-American cities in the nation.

Significant buildings that were saved and restored throughout the years include:

  • The Pirates’ House (1754), an inn mentioned in Robert Louis Stevenson’s book “Treasure Island”; the Herb House (1734), oldest building in Georgia; and the The Olde Pink House (1789), site of Georgia’s first bank.
  • The birthplace of Juliette Gordon Low (completed in 1821), now owned and operated by the Girl Scouts of the U.S.A. as a memorial to their founder.
  • The Telfair Academy of Arts and Sciences, built in 1812 as a mansion, was one of the South’s first public museums.
  • Restored churches include: The Lutheran Church of the Ascension (1741); Independent Presbyterian Church (1890) and the Cathedral of St. John the Baptist (1876), one of the largest Roman Catholic churches in the South. 
  • The First African Baptist Church was established in 1788.
  • Savannah’s Temple Mickeve Israel is the third oldest synagogue in America.

Savannah’s downtown area, which includes the Savannah Historic District (the only place I stay when in town), the Savannah Victorian Historic District and 22 parklike squares, is one of the largest National Historic Landmark Districts in the United States (designated by the U.S. government in 1966).

Each year, the city of Savannah throws a major St Patrick’s Day party. The actual parade route changes from year to year but usually travels through Savannah’s Historic Park District. The Savannah Waterfront Association has an annual celebration on Historic River Street can be compared to Mardi Gras in New Orleans.

The founder of the Girl Scouts of America was from Savannah (Juliette Gordon Low). Paula Deen and her husband call Savannah their home (hey ya’ll!). Big Boi (Outkast) and DJ Lord (Public Enemy) are also from Savannah.

Savannah was also the site for portions of the following movies: Forrest Gump (the bench that Forrest sits on throughout the entire movie), Midnight in the Garden of Good and Evil (entire movie was shot there), Forces of Nature (last 15-20 minutes), and The Last Song and The Conspirator were both filmed entirely in Savannah, just to name a few. 

Things that I personally love about Savannah-

  • The abundance of squares and benches to enjoy
  • Open container law (legally drinking in the street is always a win in my book)
  • River Street
  • The Pirate House
  • The roof top bar at the Bohemian Hotel
  • SCADdies (Savannah College for Art & Design kids that are so damn trendy and cute)
  • The Five Guys Burgers and Fries in Historic Savannah that stays open until 3am on the weekends (its the little things in life, people)
  • Shopping the consignment stores
  • Huey’s restaurant (and the only place I order steamed oysters because I get to shuck them myself)
  • Forsyth Park
  • Cathedral of St. Johns the Baptist
  • All the creepy, old cemeteries

Source: Savannah CVB, wikipedia.com

Have you ever been to Savannah? What are your favorite things to do there?

Solstice Sunrise II by Child of Danu on Flickr.



Lug Descent (by Dave Shiel)



Jack’s Hole Sunset. (by Bren Cullen)



Dublin double lines are trouble - park on them and you get the boot.



Beautiful and deadly, if you’re an insect. Luckily we aren’t insects, but we do like to swarm…



And after pretty much driving quite a fair way around Ireland on some of the best roads I’ve ever seen in some of the most fun rain, tonight we get a go-kart track to play around on.

Plus, not only have the cars been amazing but all the guys are absolutely sound and so nice, just knowing I’m here thanks to my amazing boyfriend would be enough but I’m lucky enough to get all the extras. 

And just in case any of you fancy checking out Killian and Kevin’s blog whom own these two beasts check it out here.



Getting to ride in all these insanely beautiful cars, little bit of skidding involved.. and being able to watch Dan with his srs photography face on…



I am doing a charity fundraiser in aid of St Lukes Hospital Dublin.

I am doing it in memory of my boyfriends mother who recieved treatment there.

I would love if you visited the website and donated anything at all in aid of the great work they do.

Thank you.

http://www.akfund.ie

San Fransisco

New York

Ireland

London

Paris

Rome

I want to go to all these places each for different particular reasons.



Solstice Sunrise II by Child of Danu on Flickr.

When I was in Ireland in 2002, this is where the majority of my...



Barnesmore Gap, Co. Donegal

Why did I not spend every minute of this weekend studying for it?!

[Flash 10 is required to watch video.]

Dancing on the beach in Buncranna, Northern Ireland with my best friend.   (Frank Sinatra added to set the tone.)





Lady Liberty at Dublin Castle. This statue of Lady Liberty is unusual - she is not blindfolded, her sword is drawn, she seems to hold the scales with disgust, and her back is turned away from the city and toward the castle. Not a very symbolically proper depiction of Lady Liberty. Many jokes are made about this.





“Siodh-Dune” by munira_zen on Flickr.

I’m currently on the 2 hour bus ride to Dublin and normally I’d be ptfo by now but I already ended up doing that last night with an unintentional 10-hour nap. Lucky for me, this bus has free wifi! Unreal.

The Book of Kells, late 12th century.







Wicklah by andrewgrier on Flickr.



I miss green Erin. I really do.









“Tonight we can be as one.”

- Sunday Bloody Sunday, U2

The Book of Kells, late 12th century.

        I had to write a paper on the Book of Kells years ago, and cannot get over the detail in the knotwork, and images. Those Irish monks must have been surely devoted to God to produce such a beautiful book.

colorful bags on display ~ River Street Market :: Savannah, GA

Georgia's Cycle Of Violence Reflects Dysfunctional Politics - Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty © 2011

Jekyll Island.

“Farmers have complained in recent weeks that their crops are rotting in the fields and orchards because migrant workers afraid of deportation are bypassing Georgia in droves”

-

- Deal Wants Data On Immigration’s Impact On Farms.

My reaction to this was “Ah, stupid Capitalists.” But Dolan’s is better:

“Accidental unionization, inadverant strike. Incidental solidarity!”



the lake

My permanent site will be….Bolnisi! A medium sized (14,000 people) town right near the Armenia/Azerbaijani border, about an hour-ish from Tbilisi!

Come visit!



untitled by jake deshazo on Flickr.



Gumbyyy

Monday Motivation 6/13/11: Monday Motivation 6/13/11

colorful bags on display ~ River Street Market :: Savannah, GA

Irish 'fashion' people are so embarassing



Surfing the West



happy bloomsday

TapMap: Navigating Offline Store Inventory With Online Technology :

The first online shopping site, Intershop, was established in 1994, followed closely by Amazon and eBay. Since then, online shopping has expanded into the multi-billion dollarecommerce industry that exists today.


President Obama Visits Silicon Valley :

President Obama recently made a two-day visit to Silicon Valley. The aim of the trip was to promote technological development with a view to supporting and improving the US economy. At a private dinner, President Obama met with the heads of some of the leading technology companies based in Silicon Valley.


GruUpy: The Purchasing Power Of Community :

Gruupy.com is an online retail company with a difference. They sell a different electronic product every day, and that’s only if a minimum quota of people buy it. The idea is that buyers become part of a community, and their combined buying power allows Gruupy to buy these gadgets cheaper, and pass these savings on to the consumer.




(by stephen.edwards)



I start photography class on Monday. I can’t wait to get back into the dark room. I need it.



Bunbeg Strand Wreck on Flickr.



rocky bay, co.cork, ireland, chilly but sunny december 08 (by silyld)

Just stop.Stop. We all know you work for a tabloid newspaper and the only people who are in your magazines are fucking RTE stars and glamour models.

Early bird. Book and save Corfu Hotels http://bit.ly/cnbDab



Palazzo, Las Vegas


Wynn at Macau


Gondola rides at the Venetian


And of course luxury retail in Macau

After Hong Kong, we spent a day in Macau.  I was very curious about Macau, because I’ve heard a lot about how the city is developing and all of the new hotels that are opening up there.  However, Macau felt to me like something in between Las Vegas and Atlantic City.  The Venetian, Wynn and MGM are all in Macau, and all were somewhat similar to what you’d see in Vegas.  However, none were quite as grand as what’s in Vegas, and the area is clearly still working its way to becoming a more popular tourist destination.  We spent most of our time in Macau just walking around the casinos, and ended by watching Zaia at the Venetian.  In general, I’m glad I went because I get a sense of what’s been built to date, but definitely wouldn’t call it a must see for those of you who haven’t been.  At least not yet.


View outside of our hotel room window


View outside of our hotel room window

During our time at Hong Kong, we stayed in Kowloon at the Harbor Grand.  Most people tend to prefer staying on Hong Kong island, but we actually had a great view from our hotel room that I think made it worth the the extra effort to stay off the island.  Although it’s too foggy to see in these pictures, we could actually see the Hong Kong skyline from our room which was great.

This landmark building was built in 1904 as a private residence, and is now the 5-star G.L.(Gran Luxe) AC Palacio del Retiro Hotel. This stately mansion overlooking the Retiro Park is located just steps from the Prado, Reina Sofia, and Thyssen Bornemisza Museums in Madrid’s “Art Triangle.” The classic building boasts old world elegance, with its marble fireplaces, and hand carved walls and ceilings. For more information and photo gallery click here

Its location is just perfect; a few points of reference:

  • 5 minute walk to the Prado Museum and Thyssen-Bornemisza Museum
  • 10 to 15 minute walk to the Reina Sofia Art Center, Puerta del Sol, Plaza Mayor
  • 20 minute walk or 10 minutes by taxi or metro to the Royal Palace, Opera House, Plaza Santa Ana (known for tapas bars), Monasterio de las Descalzas Reales, Panteón de Goya (Goya’s Tomb)
  • 15 minutes by taxi to the Lázaro Galdiano Museum and Sorolla Museum
  •  Metro Station: Retiro or Banco España; a 5 minute walk

As usual, thanks for reading. Please visit International Lodging Corporation at our home page

This landmark building was built in 1904 as a private residence, and is now the 5-star G.L.(Gran Luxe) AC Palacio del Retiro Hotel. This stately mansion overlooking the Retiro Park is located just steps from the Prado, Reina Sofia, and Thyssen Bornemisza Museums in Madrid’s “Art Triangle.” The classic building boasts old world elegance, with its marble fireplaces, and hand carved walls and ceilings. For more information and photo gallery click here

Its location is just perfect; a few points of reference:

  • 5 minute walk to the Prado Museum and Thyssen-Bornemisza Museum
  • 10 to 15 minute walk to the Reina Sofia Art Center, Puerta del Sol, Plaza Mayor
  • 20 minute walk or 10 minutes by taxi or metro to the Royal Palace, Opera House, Plaza Santa Ana (known for tapas bars), Monasterio de las Descalzas Reales, Panteón de Goya (Goya’s Tomb)
  • 15 minutes by taxi to the Lázaro Galdiano Museum and Sorolla Museum
  • Metro Station: Retiro or Banco España; a 5 minute walk

As usual, thanks for reading. Please visit International Lodging Corporation at our home page

Corfu - Hotels http://bit.ly/9persJ



Sheraton - Decent room, very low price.  (pic 1)

“From a review: “Wow, They have Tempurpedic mattresses. The staff was helpful. The room was huge. The room has microwave, full-sized refrigerator, built-in stereo, 2 televisions, two bathroom sinks and a “kitchen” sink.””

- Orange Tree Golf Resort, Scottsdale - RoomStays.com

Sheraton - Great deal for a decent room! (pic 1)

Early bird. Book and save Corfu Hotels http://bit.ly/cnbDab