Category Archives: Travel Journal/Blog

Priceless Family Memories in Georgia’s Golden Isles

Imagine my surprise when I was informed that I’d won a St. Simons Getaway Contest: a package including four nights in a two-bedroom cottage on St. Simons Island compliments of the Golden Isles Convention and Visitor’s Bureau and Island Cottage Company, plus gift certificates from restaurants and activities. WOW!

The Golden Isles of Georgia
The Golden Isles of Georgia

Since I travel for my work, I don’t usually take a vacation. So, what would I do with this wonderful windfall?

I have four grown children and eight grandchildren, but needless to say, a group that size wouldn’t fit. In talking with them, my son Steve and his extended family decided to rent a house on St. Simons, concurrent with my cottage reservation. My youngest and single daughter, Laura, would share the cottage with me. So, plans were made for a multi-generational family vacation.

St. Simons Island

Stunning Avenue of Oaks, St. Simons Island, Georgia
Stunning Avenue of Oaks, St. Simons Island, Georgia

We all arrived in early June, some driving and some flying. St. Simons is the largest barrier island in the Golden Isles group, situated off the southern Georgia coast. The name comes from the warm reflection of the sun on lowland Spartina or marsh grass.

To get there, I drove about two hours before crossing the 480-foot tall Sidney Lanier Bridge and through the Lowcountry. Once on St. Simons, you pick up a peaceful, family-friendly vibe.

Much of the island is residential, the streets lined with stately old oaks dripping Spanish moss. One of the most beautiful spots, called the Avenue of Oaks, features a double row of huge trees planted in 1826. The island includes a few villages, a small airport, and lovely beaches.

Laura and I checked into the Piper Cottage, a small house full of big delights. We each had a bedroom, plus a living room, dining area, another den or lounge, two bathrooms, a full kitchen and outdoor patio. In addition, a small screened-in front porch and a fenced in yard.  What more could we want?

Piper Cottage
Piper Cottage
St. Simons Cottage
St. Simons Cottage

Michele Beveridge, the owner, came over and welcomed us. The Piper Cottage decor blends hues of blue and white in a casual, beachy style that’s totally laid-back and charming. Another bonus was high-speed WiFi. Yes — even when you’re on vacation.

The chosen week turned out to be one of the hottest weeks of the summer. Whew! The family over in Steve’s house awaken with the sun, so various adults would get out early and set up a tent for shade and the beach chairs. Sunscreen, sand toys, Boogie boards, snacks and cold water were trekked down along with the kids. Everyone splashed in the ocean, jumped the waves and built sand castles.

When the beach got too hot, we headed to the pool, an extra that came along with Steve’s big house rental. Soon, lunchtime called and the youngest needed naps.

Southern Soul BBQ
Southern Soul BBQ

Laura and I decided to use one of the gift certificates and headed off to Southern Soul BBQ for pulled pork sandwiches. This super casual restaurant, in an old gas station, has lip-smacking, tender and juicy BBQ. The meat is slow-cooked, and you choose a choice of sauces. Yummy!

Another afternoon, my son and I took the two oldest girls to the Lighthouse (four tickets were included in my package.) It stands near the village and the pier and is one of only five light towers in Georgia. The 104-foot brick structure dates back to 1872 but was overhauled in 1876. In 1953, it became fully automated.

St. Simons Lighthouse
St. Simons Lighthouse

We began by watching a terrific orientation video. Then, despite the heat, we climbed the cast iron spiral stairway with 129 steps to the top. The view of St. Simons Sound from up high is sublime.

The 1872 keeper’s dwelling is of Victorian design and restored to the period. Compared to others lighthouses I have visited, this house seemed quite grand and spacious. The girls and I enjoyed peeking into the children’s bedroom and guessing at the antique kitchen tools. The gift shop is one of the best with truly lovely items!!

Lighthouse Kitchen
Lighthouse Kitchen

Another afternoon, we visited the Maritime Center housed in the old Coast Guard Station (Tickets to the lighthouse also admit you to the Maritime Center). The station was used up until 1995 and later turned into a museum that includes some hands-on history activities and nature exhibits for children.

Jekyll Island

Jekyll Island, another of the Golden Isles, is a sleepy, secluded place of unspoiled beauty. You pay a $6 entry fee to cross the causeway. It supports the island’s natural and cultural resources.

Jekyll Island Club-
Jekyll Island Club-

Jekyll became the winter escape grounds for America’s richest during the Gilded Age. Legendary families like the Rockefellers, Morgans, and Pulitzers reveled in their luxurious “cottages.” Their homes around the Jekyll Island Club became known as the Millionaires’ Row.

One morning my family group skipped the beach and carpooled to nearby Jekyll to visit the Georgia Sea Turtle Center. This extraordinary facility functions like a top-of-the-line hospital except the patients aren’t humans; they are turtles.

The night before a giant sea turtle had been rescued and we saw him lying on the surgical table being debrided- removing barnacles that had grown on his shell. Blood was drawn and the turtle was taken to the Radiology lab for x-rays.

Examination of injured sea turtle at Georgia Sea Turtle Center.
Sea Turtle Surgery at Georgia Sea Turtle Center

Results revealed a boat propeller wound sometime in the past. The resulting crack in his shell became infected. The turtle would receive antibiotics, and his shell would be mended with a laser.

GA Sea Turtle Center Tech administers medications
GA Sea Turtle Center Tech administers medications

Every rescued turtle at the center receives a name, so much nicer than calling one XJ257. Detailed medical records and all treatments are recorded. When a turtle is ready to be released back into the sea, a tracking device is attached so their movements can be monitored.

Sea Turtle in Rehab Tank
Sea Turtle in Rehab Tank

We watched a feeding demonstration with a young turtle in a glass tank placed at children’s eye level.

Children learn inside the Georgia Sea Turtle Center
Inside the Georgia Sea Turtle Center

Earlier, the kids roamed about the museum playing with interactive displays, please touch exhibits and lots of videos. Afterward, we went out back to the Rehabilitation Pavilion, a room filled with tanks that look like small swimming pools. Adults and kids agree, the Georgia Sea Turtle Center ranks as a fun and worthwhile place to visit.

The family returned to Jekyll another day to beat the heat at Summer Waves Water Park. Although a water park seems out of character for this upscale maritime preserve, I give a thumbs up to the attraction. We had a blast slipping down a variety of water slides, hanging out on inner tubes in the lazy river and getting dunked with water in the splash zone. The little ones kept busy in the kiddie area. Summer Waves is clean and well attended by life guards.

Wet fun at Summer Waves Water Park

Summer Waves Water Park

Lastly, I took Laura over to Jekyll early one morning to let her experience Driftwood Beach, one of my favorite spots for photography. An array of petrified trees lying on their sides framed the beach, something like a tree graveyard. The place feels magical, a picturesque spot for wedding photos or family portraits. Every time I go I encounter different conditions: low tide, high tide, sunrise, wind and rain. Laura fell under its spell, too.

Driftwood Beach at Sunrise
Driftwood Beach at Sunrise Photo @ Debi Lander

Relaxation

With so many children and adults, it is easier and more relaxing to cook and dine at home. One night, I had the group to the cottage for a meal. However, dining out is always a treat, and we enjoyed a casual meal of burgers and fried fish at Brogen’s at the Pier. Fast service and reasonable prices.

We also couldn’t resist the Moo Cow ice cream shop. The employees were amazingly friendly and efficient. Hot days + cold ice cream = a perfect pair.

What We Missed

Walkway to Driftwood Beach
Walkway to Driftwood Beach

I am so sorry I missed a Tree Spirit scavenger hunt on St. Simons. In 1982, local sculptor Keith Jennings started carving faces on trees. He says the wood speaks to him, and he just has to let the tree’s soul out. There are 20 Tree Spirits on the island. Somehow I hadn’t heard about them, but guess I’ll just have to return another time.

Because the grandchildren are young, we didn’t include fishing, kayaking, dolphin tours, golf, guided nature walks and tennis, but they are certainly adventurous options. The Golden Isles provide a wealth of experiences for family vacations, getaway weekends or romantic escapes. Thank you Golden Isles for providing me with priceless family memories.

Experiencing Minorca’s Festival of St. John

The horse-centric event on one of Spain’s Balearic Islands, Minorca, begins on the Sunday preceding June 24, the day honoring St. John the Baptist and coincides with the summer solstice.

Please use this link to read the story as published in Luxe Beat Magazine.

http://luxebeatmag.com/experiencing-minorcas-festival-saint-john/

Rising high for the crowd
Rising high for the crowd

Touring through the town
The Priest rides his horse through town.

A Visit to the Extraordinary Biltmore Estate in Asheville, NC

Downtown Asheville, NC scurries with activity like a university campus on graduation day. From fancy dress to cutoffs and tees, folks move about and dine in small eateries serving up gourmet to down-home dishes. Musicians serenade on street corners adding a rhythmic beat to the air and micro-breweries concoct the latest craft beer. Outdoor enthusiasts hustle up mountainous roads: bicycling, jogging, hiking while others practice yoga in the plaza. Asheville is a happening crossroads where visitors and locals thrive on diversity and natural delights.

Yoga in the Plaza
Yoga in the Plaza

I was attracted by the elegant and extraordinary Biltmore Estate, Asheville’s claim to fame. No wonder; it’s America’s largest home, constructed for George Vanderbilt over six years and opened on Christmas 1895. After the NYC tycoon first visited the area, he fell in love with the surrounding Blue Ridge Mountains and clean air. His decision to build in Asheville brought prosperity to the entire region.

The Biltmore Estate
The Biltmore Estate

The house sits on something like 8,000 acres and your first stop is at the welcoming center where you pick up tickets. Then, you drive to the parking lot where you pick up a shuttle bus that takes you on to the main house.

Biltmore Entrance
Biltmore Entrance

An audio guide is a must for touring the art-filled home. Vanderbilt hired architect Richard Morris Hunt and worked closely with him as they designed the blueprints. Note: a kid’s audio guide is available with Cedric, the family’s Saint Bernard, as narrator. Allow between one and a half to two hours, but don’t rush. Think of the place as a vast art museum with the personal touches of a multi-millionaire: medieval tapestries, spectacular sculpture, detailed wood prints, exquisite paintings, and fine furniture from world-class craftsmen. Plus, the house includes a library with 10,000 rare volumes, a castle-like banquet hall with a 70-foot ceiling, 65 fireplaces, and 43 bathrooms.

 

The rambling exterior incorporates stone architecture resembling the chateaux in the Loire Valley of France and carved stone figures like those found on Notre Dame. Every detail held meaning such as the intertwined initials GV on embossed copper flashing. The immense property and astonishing wealth make you shake your head in disbelief.

Biltmore stone carvings
Biltmore stone carvings

I also signed-up for the behind the scenes Rooftop Tour that’s led by a knowledgeable guide. The additional tour slips you through areas off limits to regular visitors. You climb the spiral staircase in the Observatory to venture outside. The views from this height and the wrap-around balconies provide spectacular panoramic vistas of the property and mountains. My group inspected stone grotesques and gargoyles (stone figures that act as drain pipes) up close. “Pat the buttocks of the statue without a tail for good karma, “said my guide. So, naturally I just had to give it a gentle tap! You peek into the rafters and learn how the roof was designed to prevent snow from cascading down and damaging the glass solarium. Lastly, you stop at the spot George Vanderbilt liked to take his guests for sunset. This area shows off the skills of the architects, landscapers, stone carvers and other artisans who brought the project to fruition.

Patting the Grotesque
Patting the Grotesque

I had to hurry through the colorful gardens planned by America’s foremost landscape architect, Frederick Law Olmsted. Vanderbilt was studied horticulture so his gardens and forest were important to him. One can explore 2.5 miles of paths in the manicured gardens alone or stroll along the French Broad River, if time permits.

Biltmore Gardens
Biltmore Gardens

The daily admission ticket includes wine tasting, but I just couldn’t fit in the Antler Hill Village and Winery, an activity that would be right up my alley! You need a full day to properly experience the estate, gardens and vineyards (or barn and farmland with kids). Consider advance reservation at an additional cost for outdoor extras such as the Sports Clay School, horseback riding, Segway tours, fly-fishing, biking, and kayaking. Don’t cut yourself short, but then again, like me, you’ll have many reasons to return to breathtaking Asheville.

Find information at ExploreAsheville.com or Biltmore.com.

Rooftop View
Rooftop View

An article similar to this appeared in the August 2015 issue of the Mandarin Newsline.

Panoramic View from the Rooftop of the Biltmore.
Panoramic View from the Rooftop of the Biltmore.