Archive for ‘travel’

October 25, 2010

Aspen: First SNOW of Winter 2010

I woke up this morning to this:

 

First Snow in Aspen

8:30am

 

… and thought, Wow! First snow of the season!

But then …

 

First Snow in Aspen 2010

10:00am

 

I thought, Wow! That’s a lot of snow!

BUT THEN …

 

11:30am

And we’re STILL going, people.

1pm snow in aspen 2010

1:00pm

And then we took the puppy out for a run on the rugby field over by Clark’s …

Snow on the rugby field in Aspen

Rugby Field

So it’s already snowed 3 inches this morning, with another 2 to 4 inches coming today, another 3 to 5 possible tonight, and another 2 inches of snow tomorrow. Winter has arrived, and I’ve never been around to see her arrival, until now. It’s crazy.

 

October 15, 2010

Aspen: Off-Season in Aspen

This is Nali visiting one of her fave people at a hotel in town. This may also be the first time she’s ever stood up on her back legs to greet a person not in my immediate family.

We were just out strolling the town last night and stopped in to chat with said person at the hotel. I LOVE living in walkable neighborhoods and being to just stroll around and stop and chat. It’s awesome!

Until you’ve lived in a seasonal place (like I never had), you don’t really get “Off-Season.” Sure, the sign outside of Bad Billy’s bar says, “The Snow is Gonna Come, It’s Off-Season, What Else You Gonna Do?” and you laugh. Because what else are you going to do but drink in a bar named Bad Billy’s? Sure, the restaurants all host crazy-good deals just to get some business through their doors. But overall the little place called Aspen is a little sleepy through October and November.

And honestly, it’s kind of cool to see. Off Season. It’s like Aspen is all mine: the parks, the streets, the grocery store … I’m in on the secret, because I’m here in the Off Season. The Secret of Aspen (actually a legit scientific theory promoted by the Aspen Institute, as well as close to the name of an ill-fated faux reality show).

Also, foliage is legit.

July 27, 2010

Austin: Top Ten Things Newbies Should Know

I did an Aspen version of this Top Ten Things Newbies Should Know post, and it was so popular that it bears building an Austin one… which, with a few adjustments for climate, is more or less the same. See? There are so many Austin / Aspen similarities!

1. There will be opportunities for free drinks any given night of the week. Do not take advantage of all of them.

2. There are two seasons: hot, and not-as-hot. There will probably only be three cold days in any given year, but those three days will be deemed “THE BIG CHILL” and covered relentlessly by the media.

3. Check the bus schedule. You won’t understand it. You have to have a PhD to understand that thing. Bike instead.

4. Don’t drink and drive. Not even a little. Cops have plenty of other things to do, but they like the drunks the best.

5. Learn the local ways and the Spanglish pronunciations of the streets. Nothing says ‘tourist’ like asking where man-chack-a is (Man-shack) or how to get to Ceasar. It’s not a salad, it’s a two-named street. Cesar Chavez. Or First Street. But not South First Street–that’s different. And what Guadalupe (don’t you dare pronounce the -eh at the end) turns into as it crosses the lake. Town Lake, not Lady Bird.

6. Austin is dog-friendly. Scoop the poop.

7. You live at 105 degrees in the summer. You might think you’ve adjusted, but then you forget to drink your water and end up in the hospital. DRINK LOTS OF WATER.

8. True: it’s mostly about who you know. In business, relationships, and getting hooked up at bars. You can also make it with a lot of pluck, luck, and networking.

9. Summer sports: pick-up sand volleyball at Zilker and Krieg every weekend morning and most evenings, Pease always on the weekends. Aussie’s (pictured) Volleybar has pickup after leagues are over, at 11pm, but are VERY competitive. Pick-up basketball almost every evening. Ultimate Frisbee on Tuesdays and Thursdays at noon … (for the love, see #7)

10. Austin is a lot like Woodstock. Don’t get lost in the freedom!

June 14, 2010

Aspen: this is life in … photos from spring in aspen

Yep, while Austinites are sweating it out because there is almost no spring in Texas, Aspenites are enjoying some cray-zay weather, going from bluebird skies and temps in the 70s to freezing rain in mere minutes. Springtime in Aspen is notoriously fickle, but the 70s days far outnumber the downpour that was yesterday, so it’s well worth it.

In a moment of sun yesterday, I went on an impromptu hike halfway up Aspen mountain with a woman I had never met. Our dogs were playing, and we ended up just hiking on up, talking and watching the dogs play. It was really neat, and I hope to run into Shirsten again. Anyway, enjoy the view from springtime in Aspen:

Looking out over the Roaring Fork Valley

Nali loves to hike Aspen Mountain!

Spring has sprung on Ajax mountain

Look at all this green! (aspen mountain)

Downtown Aspen is a people-watching mecca

May 19, 2010

Austin/Aspen: Car2Go/CarToGo

Yep, both of these fair cities have car-sharing programs, called Car2(to)Go!

Austin Car2Go is launching their program Friday May 21 with a party from 4pm-10pm at Republic Square Park with live music from The Lemurs, The Black and White Years, and more, food vendors, and test drives.

Austin city employees have been using the SmartCars since last November, but now they’ve added 200 SmartCars for the general public to use. Membership is free, and you use the Internet, iPhone app, or telephone hotline to find the nearest Smartcar (conveniently parked on streets throughout the city), unlock with your membership card, drive, and then leave the car at any public curbside parking space. You can also reserve a car.

Rates for Austin:

Per minute $0.35 plus tax
Per hour maximum $12.99 plus tax
Per day maximum $65.99 plus tax
Per mile after 150 mile per rental 45 cents, plus tax

Aspen’s CarToGo has been alive and flourishing for awhile, but they just added four new cars and a new stop earlier this month. The latest stats have over 150 people using the program.

Rates for Aspen:
Monthly administrative fee: $10
Hourly: $4
Per Mile: $0.25 – $0.35

Although Austin’s program seems a little expensive (you can get a nice rental car for less $65/day), since I’ll be car-less for a few days, maybe I’ll check out the Car2Go program and let y’all know how it goes!

February 21, 2010

Road Trip Time: San Antonio

Fabulous Liz Lambert has bought the historic Havana Riverwalk Inn on–where else?–San Antonio’s River Walk. Lambert is the creative force behind our iconic Hotel San José and our new, chichi Hotel Saint Cecilia. The woman will work her magic fast: the 22,000- square-foot hotel will have 27 rooms and is due to reopen in April 2010 as Hotel Havana.

Current hotel

The history: in 1914, the Mediterranean Revival structure was opened as an elegant residence hotel by Edward Franz Melcher, the son of a German immigrant. It is now listed in the National Register of Historic Places. “I have loved the Havana for many years, and I am excited to be a part of its long story,” said Lambert. “For those who miss the downstairs bar, know that we won’t keep it closed for long.”

February 13, 2010

This is Life in Aspen?

OMG LOL CUTE OVERLOAD.

Um, I love my pup. And I REALLY love her adventuring out in the snow for the first time! We’re in Aspen with the Vermonster, so we’re both adjusting to frolicking about in snow and cooooold weather.

Hunter boots. Fashionable, but not warm in the snow, even with hot pink wool socks. Fleece liner time?

Isn’t my pup the cutest, happiest dawg ever?!

February 4, 2010

You Might Have Noticed I Was Gone … CrossFit Cert

When I travel, I try to make it appear like I’m here for your guys anyway … only sometimes it doesn’t work, like when I book a flight Wednesday night and leave Friday morning and don’t have time to put together some preemptive posts. This past weekend I was in Golden, CO for a CrossFit Level 1 Certification. A bit sudden maybe, but you all know how much I love CrossFit and think it’s a great fitness system, so it’s not such a stretch. As a college basketball player, I often thought about coaching later on in life, so actually BEING a CrossFit trainer isn’t that far of a stretch either.

Without further ado, let me regale you with tales of my weekend in Golden … and if you still don’t know what the bleep CrossFit is (ahem, my lovely drinks companion at Eastside Showroom last night), this may shed some light on it. Basically, they say it’s functional fitness training that makes you good at life. Sweet right? (first posted on SicFit.com)

CrossFit Cert: Drinking the CrossFit Kool-Aid

I have an extra-long femur. All my life, I have been blessed with long legs–and trust me, I know they’re a blessing, even when I can’t find pants long enough or I have to ride the boy bike to not have my knees in my nose. In the past year of CrossFit, I have been corrected a hundred different ways on my squat: get lower, get higher, get below parallel, get parallel exactly, you have long legs woman, erm, here, have a butt ball. It’s enough to make me curse my legs in that thank-god-I-have-them-to-curse way. But in Saturday’s squat breakout session, I finally found out the truth: “you have an extra-long femur. To go below parallel, a quarter could roll from your knee to hip, which is really deep with that extra-long femur.”

Holy hell Batman!

I registered for the certification course Wednesday night. Booked a flight on Priceline, which meant I had no idea what time my flights would be before I plopped the credit card on the virtual counter and handed the Priceline gods my $214. Flew out at 1pm Friday. Was picked up from the bus station by my college roommate’s boyfriend, who promptly took me to the gym. Well, ok, I guess I’ll roll out for 30+ minutes and do some light rowing. In hindsight, one of the best decisions I didn’t actually make–the rolling out alleviated a lot of my altitude adjustment and travel aches.

I spent the past weekend in Golden, Colorado, at the Level 1 CrossFit Certification. Saturday morning I pulled on my CrossFit uniform: lulu leggings, tiny affiliate tee, zip-up hoodie, and furry tennis shoe boots (yeah, I own those) and departed downtown Denver, bound for a highway called 6. It was SHUT DOWN. Never in my life have I encountered a freeway that was entirely shut down. I took a deep breath, didn’t stress, and found a new route. I almost arrived at Colorado State Patrol when I saw this sign: “Prison Area. Do Not Pick Up Hitchhikers.” Right. I park at the building bearing the address from the website. It has a paper sign taped to it: “CrossFit Cert <——-”.

Is this some sort of initiation? To get certified do I actually have to pass the getting-to-the-cert portion?

A whopping 35 minutes late, I finally reach another building, a police teaching classroom where 50 CrossFit Kool-Aid drinkers are absorbing everything a little dude on a stage is saying. Wait, is that Chris Spealler?

Despite my auspicious start, the weekend was a total blast. I, and everyone around me, tried to soak up knowledge like sponges. I observed every mannerism of our trainers as they guided us through breakout groups, warmups, move progressions, and workouts.  I took copious notes, despite the fact that they’d sent me a 107-page handout before the training. I listened to seminars on foundations, nutrition, and programming. I packed my snacks and nibbled on almonds and salmon jerky like a good little paleo, chowed on happy-beef Chipotle for lunch, and chugged water to counteract the altitude adjustment.

Of course, that did absolutely nothing to prepare me for FRAN.

Everyone talks about Fran and how brutal she is. Everyone talks about how you have to do Fran at your cert. In a year of CrossFitting, I’ve never done Fran, and I was just fine with that, thankyouverymuch. Well, there’s no escaping now: mile-high Fran was coming for ME. Nervous on the inside but CrossFit Chick on the outside with the swagger and sass we’re so known for, I OBVIOUSLY stepped up first to the bar, Rx please, and yes I can do pullups.

Ha. 7 minutes later I was panting like a dog and swearing I’d never tell anyone back home my time. Blame it on the altitude.

For me, there were two major takeaways from the weekend (besides the femur revelation, that is): first, that you HAVE TO WORK ON YOUR WEAKNESSES. Miranda had huge quads, so she loved power cleans, but hated burpees. Chris is little but strong so he loves pullups but just can’t deadlift what Matt can, because Matt weighs 50 pounds more. They joked amongst themselves about their loves and loathes, emphasized their different strengths and weaknesses, but ultimately revealed that they strive to work on everything–like it or not.

Which leads me to takeaway two, which is the constant reiteration that CrossFit’s purpose is to make you good at life. It isn’t to make you THE BEST at EVERY SINGLE movement performed across the CrossFit spectrum. It is to make you CAPABLE, if not GOOD, at ALL of the movements; you’ll be GREAT at some and just plain good at others. But that’s okay, because you’re overall better prepared to tackle anything that comes your way.

I sumo deadlift high pull my groceries onto my hip-high counter ALL. THE. TIME.

When I got home, everyone asked, “What was the Level 1 Cert like?” Like the early ’90s kool-aid commercials where the big red kool-aid dude poured the kool-aid into the swimming pool and then jumped off the diving board into the red waters. Where I signed myself up and poured myself into plane and train and automobile and prison, then I dove in and emerged with a big, red kool-aid smile, awash in the CrossFit glow of enthusiasm and passion.

They don’t call it drinking the CrossFit kool-aid for nothing.

Side note: On Monday I had extra time in Denver, so I hit up headquarters trainer Matt Chan (with equally awesome wife Cherie)’s BADASS gym in Denver, called CrossFit Verve. Matt might be the most patient trainer I’ve ever seen, as he takes clients and students through movement progressions better than anyone I’ve encountered. At the same time, he’s a high-energy, crazy, enthusiastic stereotypical CrossFit dude (think Zach Thiel). If you’re in Denver, I highly recommend you drop in. Of course, here in Austin, hit up CrossFit Central and come work out with me!

June 6, 2009

Guest Post: An Outsider’s Look at Austin

Natasha Minsk and myself (Red Hot Annie) were lucky enough to be asked to be part of the 2009 Texas Burlesque Fest, and we made our trip down to Austin from May 14-18. We did a number of exciting things while in the fair city of Austin, and here’s the reader’s digest version!

Red Hot Annie

We shot with Chris Ledford of http://www.bluebonnetbombshells.com/ – who does the best burlesque/pinup work in Austin. We had brought only a number of burlesque costumes as well as some of Natasha’s Cheesecake Vintage dresses.

We also snuck in and shot inside the Driskill. It’s gorgeous. Next time I come to Austin, I know where I’m staying…at $250/night, I’d have to do a lot of burlesque shakin’ to make enough to stay there! http://www.driskillhotel.com/

Around 7pm, we headed down to the bridge on Congress to see the bats! We’d heard from a number of sources about how amazingit was. We ended up getting there pretty early, and we had to wait sort of a long time before the bats came out – but when they did…Wow! We expected a minute or two of bats flying out, but they must have been coming out for 10-15 minutes in beautiful ribbons. And in our spot, down by the river, the bats were actually flying right over our heads. Frightening, but worth it!

http://www.austincityguide.com/content/congress-bridge-bats-austin.asp

One of the first vintage stores we found was along Congress Street – Lucy in Disguise. When you walk around a costume store like that, you get about a billion ideas for other costumes you could use on stage. We each walked out with a couple adorable sequined goodies for shows & photo shoots. http://www.lucyindisguise.com/

We stopped at a couple other thrift stores, including Lux Revival (where I found a celluloid Jesus!) and New Bohemia where I got a great big fushia skirt that I couldn’t resist wearing that same day! Delicious cupcakes at Hey Cupcake! I got mine with a shot of fresh whipped cream in the middle!

We also had dinner at El Soy y La Luna with the girls from Jigglewatts http://www.thejigglewattsburlesque.com/ – I have to say – those girls from Jigglewatts are super talented. We saw them perform later that night at the Texas Burlesque Fest, before they headed off to Dallas that evening for another show. Ruby Joule and Coco Lectric did amazing solos and even got together for a fan dance duet that knocked it out of the park.

We headed down to Emos to get a good look at the backstage area for the show! It’s a great outdoor venue, but some of the backstage parts were a little daunting– especially the catwalk between the stage and the dressing rooms. Little did we know – our show on Saturday sold out! Our acts went well, and the audience cheered us on like crazy. I was a little nervous about performing, which is a rarity for me these days – but being in front of a totally different audience can be a little daunting. Still, I think both of our acts went really well, and we can be proud!

After the show, we had a very early 3am breakfast at Magnolia with a couple great girls after the show, including Katherine Lashe http://www.myspace.com/veronicalashe, Renea Le Roux http://www.renealeroux.com/ (who is competing this year for Miss Exotic World), and Cha Cha Velour – http://www.myspace.com/chacha_velour! Wee!

On Sunday, we had a photo shoot with Steve Hopson today http://stevehopson.com . He shot a variety of great images of the two of us together and apart. We shot at his studio on the south side of Austin, where we pulled out some burlesque costumes, as well as some vintage swimwear from my personal collection.

For our final professional commitment,, we got a last minute shoot in with Wylie Maercklein –in our hotel room, and walking around the streets of Austin. We’ve already gotten some of our pictures back from him, so you can see those at our respective websites! http://www.maercklein.com

It was a wonderful trip, and Austin was incredibly accommodating and pleasant. Only one day of rain, and the rest of the trip was warm and sunny and delicious – especially to Chicago girls like us! J

Love,

Red Hot Annie – http://redhotannie.com & Natasha Minsk – http://thehoneybuns.com

June 4, 2009

A Band on Tour: Achachay!

I’m excerpting (ok, stealing in its entirety), a blog post I love below. It’s from Achachay!, a band touring the US in support of lowering the drinking age and promoting their music. It happens to be my little bro’s band, but even if it wasn’t, these blog posts about mishaps and adventures on the tour are some of the most engaging, funny, and well-written accounts of life on the road I’ve ever read. Read this sample, then click to achachay.com for more–he posts almost daily!

Day 6: FLORIDA! My name is Florida!

It was 3AM by the time we had loaded up and pulled out of the Celtic’s lawn parking lot. At least seven hours from Atlantic City Florida and one broken headlight still waiting to be replaced, it would seem as if we had quite the night ahead of us. Surprisingly, the 330AM-1130AM drive passed without incident. I felt electrified the whole time until about 7 when I decided to drink a Red Bull. I felt absolutely no increase in awareness, concentration or energy. Instead after about 20 minutes I felt an intense crash and had to pull over to switch drivers. Ryan and I flopped into the aft cabin while Roni and Michael dutifully moved into the front seats. Unbeknownst to sleeping Ryan and Jordan, Michael fell immediately back asleep and left Roni driving at 730 by himself. Fortunately, and despite our best efforts to the contrary, Roni still hasn’t shaken the corporate lifestyle and remains an early riser.

img_0509

Ryan cools his head

Florida was a dream. It was so awesome catching up with JP, my friend from studying abroad in Spain who I hadn’t seen in almost three years. His band Saltwater Grass was also incredible. They’re a six piece in the vein of String Cheese Incident and Widespread Panic – but a little funkier. Great energy, great jams, I just had to dance to the music. Plus they’re all a bunch of really nice guys. In fact all of JP’s crew was really cool. From the moment we arrived rubbing sleep from our eyes they welcomed us, hung out at the beach with us, throwing frisbees, running around like fools, and guiding us to the best fish tacos I’ve ever had. Atomic Flying Fish Tacos in Atlantic Beach Florida are a must – upon mentioning them right now Ryan erupted “those were awesome!”

What could be better? Catching up with old friends, going to the beach, eating delectable food, playing music, dancing to another great live act, and going to a hilarious after-party. Yeah after the show we all headed over to a house and got rowdy. And by rowdy I mean we sat around telling ridiculous stories and making up songs about people at the party. Hoff from Indiana – we’ll never forget what you do with baseball bats.

I can only speak for myself, but hanging out with JP made me realize that I am living my dream. Not just because we’re getting to showcase our brilliant Achachay! compositions in front of new people every single night, but because I get to travel around the country catching up with old friends and meeting the people they love. From Aaron and Evan and Anna and Darren and Clory and Beth and the whole Houston crew to Julie and Lea in New Orleans, to JP in Florida and Meeker in Raleigh, and all the people in the Northeast and Midwest that I can’t wait to spend an afternoon with, this lifestyle is indeed exactly how I want to spend my time.

Two more interesting tidbits.

(1): We got in the paper!!!

(2) The Fly’s Tie specifically asked us not to mention lowering the drinking age. Crazy right? I understand that they get a lot of pressure from the local fuzz and have to be really hard on IDs and whatnot, but we’re not supporting illegal behavior. We support changing the legal rights of adults. So we kept mum about it. I mentioned that there was something we normally talk about that we couldn’t and people should check out website to find out more. Barely anyone even asks us about it. More on that soon.

Regardless we’ll definitely be back to the Fly’s Tie, and we’ll definitely be playing with Saltwater Grass again.

Funny, poignant, easy to read and love. What more could you want in a blog? Visit achachay.com for more.

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