Archive for roy barnes

Autumn Color : Why I Love Fall Best

Tuesday, November 15th, 2011

Why Autumn?

Why do I like Autumn best?

Autumn is the harvest. Of reaping what is has been sown.

It’s the mellowing, angled light of the fall sun; the long shadows in the late afternoons cast by the autumn sun hanging low in the southwestern sky.

The cycle of gentle decay, of dying leaves  that bloom with magnificent color, a beautiful farewell and promise of another spring after the hard winter ahead. A celebration of the cyclic nature of things here on this earth.

It’s just a fancy way of saying it’s the colors of autumn that make the season my favorite.

Sometimes winter gets ahead of herself, moving in with an early storm and hastening, with the chill wind, an early blanket of white snow, adding it’s own color to a wintry-autumn scene.

Winter in Autumn – photos from Cheyenne, Wyoming by Roy Barnes

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Visit a classic Fall Color photo album from 2006

When one thinks of the word “Mancation”, it’s associated with thrilling outdoors activities with the guys. In Spokane, Washington, I got to experience a few thrilling activities that helped me “man up” as a traveler, so to speak. Thanks to Spokane’s location, outdoor enthusiasts in general have a feast of activities that will connect them to Mother Nature.

A Bird’s Eye View

When Denny Reed of Backcountry Aerosports was first introduced to a trike, his reaction was quite negative.  He refused to set foot in what he deemed a “flying weedeater.”  As time passed, Reed became one of the trike’s best human friends, taking willing flyers like myself up – way up – in his $60,000 motorized and natural flying machine. A machine, by the way, that has a 7:1 glide ratio.  It reaches speeds of 40-60 mph, a 34 foot wingspan, a 10 foot fuselage and a range of 270 miles. The experimental aircraft can be transported in a pick up and put together in 40 minutes.

I’ve flown many times in airplanes, including classic biplanes, but this trike experience was quite unique for me. I felt quite vulnerable at the thought of flying in such a contraption. I began my triking from a spot roughly 25 minutes drive from downtown Spokane, on a beautiful northeast Washington evening. After watching an orientation video, I was fitted inside the passenger seat. A helmet and microphone were put on me so I could communicate with the pilot of nine-plus years, who’s logged thousands of miles.

The take off was right beside his home, where a flat airstrip is situated.  Trikes, like his Air Creation Tanarg, need 250 feet to take off and winds of 20 mph or less for passenger comfort. As the machine sped up, I closed my eyes. I’m still a fraidy cat about heights, but once air bound – wind blowing in my face – I opened my eyes and got views of deer grazing on the rolling hills. There were tree havens and farmland as far as the eye could see. We flew anywhere from six feet to 120 feet above the ground – at times so low that you could literally smell the flowers!  The feeling I had was one of amazement and wonder.          Read More→

Saxony, Germany Helps Make Christmas Memorable

Monday, December 13th, 2010

Christmas pyramid at the Erzgebirge Toy Museum in Seiffen GermanyBy Roy A. Barnes

Christmas in Germany is taken really seriously and has much historical significance.  Decorated Christmas trees originated there in the 16th century when Christians started bringing decorated fir trees into their homes (because of its triangular shape that represents the Holy Trinity).  It’s purported that Martin Luther was so impressed with a bright starry night amongst evergreen trees, that he re-created the scene for his family by putting up a tree in his house, substituting lighted candles for stars; and thus, starting the lighted Christmas tree craze. Do people really take the time to think about where Christmas gifts come from?  Well, some of Saxony’s locales are part of the answer.

To Saxony’s Capital for Stollen

The first Christmas market (Striezemarkt) originated in 1434 in the city of Dresden. And it’s here in the trendy and artsy Neustadt part of the city that I came across some really wonderful-tasting holiday season sweet bread called stollen.  Stollen can be made with a number of ingredients which include finely ground flour, yeast dough, butter (which makes up 1/3 of the recipe, including some that’s melted and then hardened), bitter and sweet almonds, raisins soaked in rum, salt, candied orange and lemon peel, sugar. When Stollen first came out in the 14th Century as a result of a contest originated by the Bishop of Nauru’burg, each loaf weighed 30-plus pounds. People would not eat the first or last pieces because they saved them in hopes of good luck.

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Fall Color in Switzerland

Friday, October 29th, 2010

Regular Traveler contributor Roy Barnes submits the following photos from the mountains and bogs of Switzerland to add to our 2010 Fall Color Series:

Entlebuch Switzerland Chessiloch Path
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On June 4-5, 2009, President Obama visited the eastern German city Dresden. You can follow in the president’s footsteps for free or low cost, and within a few blocks get a taste of Germany and a feel for how the leader of the free world travels while abroad.

Dresden Kempinski Hotel Taschenbergpalais Room 244 Crown Prince Suite Obama SleptThe Hotel Taschenbergpalais Kempinski
President Obama doesn’t do the Motel 6 when he’s on the road. Nope, he stayed in a group of rooms called the Crown Prince Suite (which includes four bedrooms and two salons and one kitchenette where smoking is allowed) which cost the American taxpayers 5,000 Euros that particular night of June 4. He checked out the next day. But given that the US government booked the hotel’s 200-plus rooms for that night (basic rooms go for 200 Euros a night according to my hotel guide), it was an expensive night for taxpayers.

I walked through the nicely furnished suite of rooms numbered 239-245, seeing the room President Obama slept in (Room 244). I even touched the bedspread! The hotel guide wouldn’t tell me what he ate though. Normally, the public can’t go up here (unless they book the suite), but they are allowed to enter the lobby just like President Obama did, and for free. Ask for a brochure at the counter.

Located at Taschenberg 3, 01067 Dresden, Germany. Phone +49 (0) 351 4912 812.

Inside and Outside The Historic Green Vault of The Royal Palace (Residenzschloss)
President Obama got a tour of the Das Historisches Grunes Gewolbe (The Historic Green Vault), taking in a place with some of the most lavish jewels, sculpture, and miniatures that I’ve ever seen.  What I found most interesting were the ivory crucifixes that had Christ in different positions that I haven’t normally seen him in, and I was also captivated by the intricately-made chess pieces. President Obama also talked for an hour with German Chancellor Merkel in one of the special rooms called The Coat-of-Arms Room. It’s also called the Bronze Room or Room Number 6, which is publicly accessible during a visit. Following his private discussion, a joint press conference was held just outside The Historic Green Vault under a glass roof, which is also publicly accessible.

Much of Green Vault’s collection was procured during the time of August the Strong from 1723 to 1730. One must go through a chamber before entering and leaving in order to keep the room temperature the same (President Obama did, too). There’s an air of solemnity in this place as people ponder the relics.  When you purchase a ticket, you have a 15 minute window to get inside, and can stay there until closing if you want. You’re also expected to take an audio guide with you, too, and if you don’t use it (I don’t like using audio guides), people give you funny looks.

Located on Sophienstrasse and Schlosstrsse streets. Phone for reservations to The Historic Green Vault is +49 (0)351-4914-2000.

The Frauenkirche
It is one of the most beautiful churches in Europe (first completed in 1743), and its existence today is even more remarkable when you consider that it was utterly destroyed in the firebombing raids in February of 1945. Yet with time and about 100 million Euros of donations from around the world, the church rose from the heap and was fully rebuilt in 2005. Visitors like President Obama must’ve noticed the church’s exterior, where you can see blackened stones in place like checkerboard squares: that’s because those stones were recovered from the ruins and put back in place. I took in a noontime devotions and organ music service that was heavily attended.  I was captivated by the beautifully-restored Baroque-like interior. There’s even “luxury boxes” on the second floor. President Obama lit a candle for peace while there.

Located at An der Frauenkirche 12, 01067 Dresden, Germany. Telephone: +49 (0) 351- 6560-6100. Open church visits are free, but special events and tours have admission prices.

The Zwinger
President Obama and German Chancellor Merkel visited one of the most opulent complexes in Dresden, Germany before he left the city on June 5. It was built during the early 18th century by August the Strong, and contains a large courtyard that gave me a peaceful feeling as I walked through it. Currently, the Zwinger contains a number of collections of artwork like the Old Masters Picture Gallery as well as vast porcelain collection that contains 20,000-plus pieces (in German the latter place is called called the Porzellansammlung).

Located at the corners of Sophienstrasse and Ostra-Allee in Dresden, Germany. Admission charges for entries into the museums. Courtyard walking is free.

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Roy A. Barnes attended the German National Tourist Office’s “The Making of Christmas” press trip, but he wasn’t told to write about President Obama’s visit nor how to write about it.  Also note that a Euro is currently worth about $1.20 when you see prices quoted. Barnes is a frequent contributor to The Traveler Blog and writes from southeastern Wyoming.