23 June –
We left the forest park camp south of Washington DC and had
a surprisingly easy drive on the I-95 thru the urban area between Baltimore and
Washington to our pre-booked camp. This camp boasts as being the closest to
Washington and having great public transport links to all the sites. With
really good internet, we changed library books, booked more camp sites for
later in our trip and cleared our emails. We went to a talk on “how to see the
sites of Washington” and booked metro tickets and a ‘hop on hop off’ bus tour for
the next two days. After dinner we went for a walk around this camp which is
huge!
24 June –
We were up early (for us) and caught the bus to the metro
station and on into the centre of Washington. Coming out of the metro was quite
a sight with the beautiful limestone government buildings all around us. We
caught the “hop on hop off” bus which did the inner city loop and sat upstairs
with a commentary and did a complete lap of most of the sites. Most of the
buildings are either government departments, museums or monuments. There are
also many green areas and large manmade lakes setting the monuments off.
The most spectacular monuments are the Washington Monument, which is a huge (over 500ft high) stone tower and the Lincoln Monument which is at the far end of the mall.
The Capitol Building (on the hill) dominates the other end of the mall. We left the bus at Union Station and walked around the Capitol Building (partly covered in scaffolding) and down Constitution Ave, passed all the Smithsonian Museums, to the Washington Monument. There is a lift that goes to the top but we had been told that the tickets all go out by 7:30am! We walked up to the White House. You cannot get very close but there is an area for tourists and photos. Very crowded! Back down Pennsylvanian Ave to the Museum of American History. We went thru security for a quick look and saw Julia Child’s kitchen and Dorothy’s (Wizard of Oz) ruby slippers. Hot and tired we caught the metro back to our stop and then had to wait for over an hour for a bus back to the camp. Lots of grumpy passengers! Managed to skype the kids in the evening.
25 June –
Our bus pass is for 48 hours plus a night tour so we had an
early lunch before repeating our trip back into town. We completed our
walk
down the mall passed the great WW11 memorial and along the lake to the Lincoln
Monument. All quite spectacular! We caught the bus and crossed the Potomac River into Virginia and the Pentagon and Arlington Cemetery. Back over the river into D.C. again and another bus into the theatre, shopping and restaurant area. Tired and hungry we found a nice bar with beer and very good burgers.
Our night tour started at Union Station so we walked there and joined the huge line boarding the buses. The sunset on the monuments and the Capital Dome were worth the trip. Back on the metro and as the buses back to the camp had stopped we caught a taxi.
26 June –
Back out of the outer suburbs of Washington and a short
drive to a Maryland State Park where we checked in at the ranger station only
to be told that our site would not be ready until 3:00pm. We sat in the shade
and had lunch and then followed a trail along the river finding a track up to
the camp. The hosts fortunately said we could go onto our site at any time. It
was nice and shady and we relaxed for the first time in a couple of days.
27 June –
We bypassed Baltimore on a ring road and then took a scenic
route east and north near the Pennsylvania border and eventually across the
Maryland/Delaware border. It was nice to be off the busy roads of the last few
days and onto a narrow winding road thru farming land (wheat and corn) and
small rural towns. We went thru the university town of Newark and to a Delaware
State Park at Lums Pond. After a late lunch we rode our bikes on a 6 ½ mile
mountain bike track around the pond. It was a great ride, probably one of the
best loop tracks we have ridden. Quite tricky in some parts. Half way round we
found a boat rental place that sold ice-creams and had moose tracks flavour.
Chocolate covered peanut-butter balls. Yum! Around dinner time it started to
rain and rained off and on all night.
28 June –
Misty rain in the morning and we cleaned out the black tank
before heading south and over the Chesapeake-Delaware Canal, part of the Intracoastal
waterway. We drove thru the small state capital of Dover and on to a State Park
at Killen’s Pond. It was overcast all day and threatening rain. Our site
overlooked the lake. Our neighbours were very noisy. The country music was OK,
but then we got a lot of head-banging stuff (not OK).This is quite unusual as
most people are very quiet.
29 June –
A short drive to a Wal-Mart to stock up for the long
weekend. We had to buy our beer and wine at a separate liquor store. We are
never sure what the rule will be in a new state. We are spending the 4th July
weekend with Paul’s brother’s family at a coastal state park in Maryland. We
will meet them on Friday so we have a couple of days before then. We went into
the Delaware Beach area and had two nights at Delaware Seashore State Park.
This camp is either side of the Indian River with a huge suspension bridge
crossing it. Our camp is only a short walk to the beach. In the afternoon we
walked to the beach which was quite crowded and with a dumping surf. The water
temperature is considerably cooler than our last Atlantic swim back in South
Carolina but we a long way further north. Still very pleasant however. This
camp is very barren with no shade but there is a cool breeze.
30 June –
A typical beach day. Swimming in the morning, lunch in the
heat of the day, and back to the beach for an afternoon swim. In the evening we
walked back across the bridge to listen to a couple of old guys sing sea
shanties.
1 July –
A cloudy morning and we left it as late as possible leaving
our site. Pulled out to the beach carpark and went to the beach. We only lasted
a few minutes as the rain came and we hotfooted it back to “Ernie”. It cleared
after lunch so we walked along the beach and watched the fishermen. Around
3:00pm we got a text from Kathy and Craig to say they were set up at Assateague
State Park in Maryland. We were only 30 miles up the coast and we were joining
them and their family for a few days. Craig is Paul Seddon’s brother and
Kathy’s side of the family drive down from the Toronto area for their holidays.
We have met them all before when we were in Canada.
2 July –
A beautiful sunny day. Most went into town for breakfast but
Val and I stayed behind and went for a bike ride around the camp. This is an
island accessed by a bridge. It is unique as there are wild horses here left
behind after a shipwreck in the 1600’s. We went down to the beach which is
right behind our camp site. The water was quite chilly but very refreshing. The
breakfast mob joined us on the beach for the afternoon. There were now 15 of us
spread over 3 sites and we all joined together for dinner. One of the wild
horses broke its way into the site next door. They can be quite destructive.
3 July –
We woke to rain and it drizzled on and off most of the day.
The temperature has also dropped. Everyone split up and went in various
directions, some to the movies and some shopping. Craig, Val and I went to a
small historic town and wandered thru the antique shops. One shop specialised
in toys and had lots of electric train bits. Nothing for me however. We managed
to keep out of the rain for another family dinner outside.
4 July –
The weather had not improved, still cold and raining. We
went for a bike ride over the bridge and off the island to the visitor’s centre
where we listened to a ranger presentation on the island and the inlet. The
others went shopping and various other activities.
We made hamburgers for everyone which we cooked on David’s barbeque. The weather did not improve all day.
We made hamburgers for everyone which we cooked on David’s barbeque. The weather did not improve all day.
At last the weather cleared and we had some sunshine. We
were leaving Assateague State Park and the Burstow/Seddon clan and after lots
of hugs we headed north out of Maryland and into Delaware and a ferry trip
across the Delaware Bay and into New Jersey. It was an 85 minute trip but we
never lost the sight of land. It was just a short drive into a forest park for
the night.
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