Iceland: The Cool New ‘Hot’ Spot

MONTCLARION NEWSPAPER June 2, 2006

I RAN INTO A FRIEND the other night as I was returning from Iceland. He’d just been to China and we were both taking BART to the Rockridge station. “What a small world,” I thought as we wheeled our luggage onto the train. But it occurred to me that here in the hills, we’re constantly coming and going. A neighbor just returned from India, another from Africa, and a third couple uprooted completely and moved to Mexico. We can’t seem to stay put these days.
But Iceland? Why would one fly to this cold, forbidding place near the Arctic Circle?
Because we can, in less than nine hours with a nonstop flight out of San Francisco.
It’s a myth, of course, that Iceland is covered in ice. The climate is more temperate than my home state of Minnesota. Summers are normally mild, with almost round-the-clock daylight in June and July. Folks play golf at midnight in Iceland. Kids ride their bikes at midnight and jump on trampolines. And the capital, Reykjavik, is renowned for its nightlife, which carries on until 4 or 5 a.m. It doesn’t get dark, it gets blue, with a strange filtered light that drapes the island.
The energy fills you. In fact, that’s Iceland’s mantra — pure energy. Volcanoes erupt here, every few years. Geysers shoot water in powerful plumes. And massive glaciers dominate the landscape. Almost 95 percent of the homes run on geothermal power, making Iceland one of the cleanest places on earth. And the people tap into it, powering their homes and filling their pools with the warm, healing water. It’s a main source of recreation — swimming in Iceland’s thermal pools.
Or you could scale a waterfall covered with ice. Or take a snowmobile across miles of snow-covered lava fields, or ski down a mountain of pristine powder. The daylight is short in an Icelandic winter, but nature still calls. And on cold, clear nights you’re likely to see the sky’s most spectacular show, the Northern Lights. It’s a phenomenon so powerful that it’s as if an electrical charge traveled right through you.
But it’s not only nature that draws folks here. It’s the people. They’re savvy and educated, yet tied to their past with a language (Icelandic) that dates to the Vikings. How many countries have records dating to their earliest settlers, and have kept both their language and customs intact? Even the horses are a pure breed dating to the Vikings. And Icelanders are so self-sufficient; they grow much of their produce in geothermal greenhouses and raise cattle and sheep for meat. Their fish is fresh and abundant and prepared with an international flair that pleasantly surprises most visitors. In other words, it’s not just boiled cod and potatoes. In the week I was there, I had everything from steamed lobster to scallops so fresh they were pulled from the icy waters in nets and cleaned right in front of me.
Then there’s the other cuisine. They eat puffin in Iceland, those clown-faced birds that look like penguins and taste like liver. Reindeer often ends up in Icelandic buffets. And aged shark meat is considered a delicacy, if you can get it down. With the odor of rotting flesh, it’s cut into squares and served in shots of Brennivin. The liquor numbs your taste buds and raises your body temperature. It’s said to put hair on your chest.
Iceland is raw and spectacular. Like a moonscape in some spots, it’s lush green in others.
Waterfalls abound from the melting highlands, springs bubble from the ground, and the Atlantic Ocean kisses the coastline. It’s Mother Nature’s finest work, a masterpiece in progress as volcanoes erupt and the earth bubbles and churns deep underground. Why visit Iceland? Because we can, and because it’s the antidote to life as we know it today.

Only a Paddle Away

Tiny Brooks Island Beckons with adventure

OAKLAND MAGAZINE May 2006

Next time you’re sitting in monster traffic at the Bay Bridge toll plaza, think about this. There’s an island in San Francisco Bay with just two human inhabitants. Accessible only by boat, it’s a windswept spit of land that just beckons to be explored – and it can be, with a guided tour through the East Bay Regional Parks.

I’ve been to Brooks Island by kayak, paddling across the sheltered waters of Richmond Harbor, and by motorboat. The motorboat was cheating, but I was in a hurry and grabbed a ride with the island’s caretakers. Kayaking is the way to go; it allows you to glide quietly across the water, much like the Native Americans who lived on Brooks centuries ago.

The park district owns the island today, but it wasn’t always that way. Its original inhabitants were Indians, who found an abundance of fish and game on the land. Their shell mounds and burial sites go back some 2500 years and are protected today. As the Europeans arrived, they saw another treasure on Brooks Island – rocks. A quarry was started and prisoners were ferried to Brooks to break up the stones and ship them back to help build San Quentin. The quarry remains evident today, as you stand on the rocky bluffs and look down to the pit below.

Contact Ginny Prior to read the full text of this article.

Answering The Call of the Wild

ALAMEDA MAGAZINE – June 2006

When Alfred Hitchcock chose Bodega Bay for his epic film The Birds, he completely overlooked one of the top five birding destinations in the country. Moss Landing would have been the perfect place for a bird tale, or almost any other wildlife story. It’s a quaint fishing village on Monterey Bay that just happens to be along the Pacific Flyway, where on any given day you can see hundreds of bird species along with otters, whales and a plethora of pinnipeds. They all share a common interest -feasting on the bugs, fish and plankton in the muddy waters of the Elkhorn Slough.

Most folks drive from Oakland to Monterey in one straight shot, never stopping to take in the sights along the way. But 15 minutes north of Steinbeck’s famous city is a little town with its own bragging rights. Moss Landing is an outdoor lover’s dream with charming shops (over 20 antique shops alone) and some of the best restaurants on the Peninsula.

Contact Ginny Prior to read the full text of this article.

Lewis and Clark Links

AAA Living Magazine, March 2006

I’m a Dakota girl who loves golf. Like so many prairie towns, the one of my birth has a golf course, a breezy nine-holer with gently rolling fairways and caramel-colored sand greens. Play is by the honor system. You put your money in the box and cart your clubs to the No. 1 tee, perched on a plateau with a sweeping view of the area. As a youth, I had never been to any of the nearby towns, but there they were, spread out before me like a patchwork quilt of silos and steeples. It was here that my love for the game was born.

Fast forward to today, and you will still find those sweet country courses with some new neighbors, as well. These sophisticated, nationally recognized courses carry North Dakota character with greens fees as friendly as the folks who live here. North Dakota golf has distinguished itself in another way: The Lewis & Clark Golf Trail lets you play 20 extraordinary courses that lie along the route Meriwether Lewis and William Clark blazed some 200 years ago. Working from east to west, you could play them all in 10 days or less–they are that strategically placed. But what’s the hurry? You might as well explore the sights along the way.

Contact Ginny Prior to read the full text of this article.

Ticket to Excitement City

Five Fun Destinations Within a Hop, Skip and a Jump of the East Bay.

Oakland Magazine – Jan/Feb 2006

Seattle is a city of moods. Broody yet exciting, she’s like a warm Cappuccino in a swirling fog. Why else would one of the city’s great attractions be the library? Not just any library, but a glass and steel masterpiece 11 stories high, with a coffee bar, auditorium and well over a million books. It’s a fitting tribute to a town where you need nothing more than a good read and a great cup of coffee to be satisfied.

Of course, staying in opulence doesn’t hurt either, and no hotel matches The Fairmont Olympic for elegance and appointments. It’s Italian Ressaissance with high tech convenience and it’s close to Seattle’s hottest restaurants and nightclubs. Places like Crush, where locals line up for the culinary creations of acclaimed local chef Jason Wilson. The Crocodile Café – the epicenter of the city’s grunge music scene. And Club Medusa, where laser lights and fog machines ignite the crowd in a pulsating techo-frenzy.

Couple the nightlife with stalwart attractions like Pikes Market and the Space Needle (now called O Deck) and there’s barely enough time to soak up the natural beauty of sparkling Puget Sound and snow-capped Mount Rainier. It could just be why coffee – is so popular here.

In the battle over star-studded nightlife, South Lake Tahoe has always overshadowed it’s neighbor to the North. Or has it? There was a time in the sixties when the North Shore was playground to celebrities, presidents – even mobsters when Sinatra owned the Cal Neva Resort at Crystal Bay. Though he was forced to sell it when the Gaming Commission caught Sam Giancana on the property, you can still stay in Frankie’s cottage, and walk through the tunnel he used to sneak guests like Giancana and Marilyn Monroe from casino to showroom. In fact, Monroe had a cottage here, too – where she overdosed one night and was flown by helicopter from the hotel’s roof to the hospital. The Sinatra showroom may be dark these days, but you can still toast the Rat Pack in the hotel’s stained-glass Circle Bar and see photos of the gang in the hallways.

What the Cal Neva lacks in nightlife, they pick up across the street at another historic casino, the Biltmore. Live bands play nightly and it’s a cool place for dancing and shooting craps or playing cards. And while the food is pretty good for a casino, an exceptional meal is just a short walk through the woods to the romantic French hideaway Domain Chandone. Wrap up your stay with a massage at the new high-end Spa at the nearby Hyatt and you’ll find you’ve got “the world by a string.”

There are few places on earth that are consistently heaven for skiers. Snowbird is one of them. Deep in the Wasatch Mountains, just a half hour from Salt Lake City, Snowbird is a mother of a mountain, usually neck-high in powder, and with enough terrain to keep both skiers and boarders smiling. The place to stay, here, is the venerable Cliff Lodge, with its ski in-and-out access and world class spa (with a stunning rooftop pool). Pinned against the mountain with peaks that loom large through almost every window, the day I was there we were under avalanche lockdown until 10 am. After a hearty breakfast, we descended into a snowstorm, and were treated to drifts of champagne powder that, for a snowboarder, were like floating on clouds. It’s this incredible unleashing of nature and the feeling of weightlessness that draws people to Snowbird.

But a person can’t live on powder alone. The Cliff Lodge has exceptional food and live music for a remote ski resort and everything from skating to mountaineering on its list of activities. It makes for a great getaway to a spot where you might just decide – you never want to leave.

Sonoma County is often referred to as the “other wine country”. But while it’s not as famous as the Napa Valley, the quiet towns are part of its charm. And Healdsburg has both small town charm and a hip urban flair. Enter the gates of the Honor Mansion and you’ll be greeted by a garden pond of giant jumping Koi, lips pursed and ready to be fed. The rooms of this impeccable inn are appointed with hot tubs on private decks, sumptuous bedding and parlors that invite you to curl up on the couch with a glass of good wine and a novel. But that can come much later, after a ride through the Alexander or Dry Creek vineyards by horse-drawn carriage or bicycle – both of which can be rented in town. There are dozens of boutique wineries to explore, but save room for dinner at the popular Dry Creek Kitchen or Healdsburg’s new hot spot Cyrus, which is being compared to the French Laundry. For live Jazz, the Healdsburg Hotel is on the radar, and the buzz is that Barn diva (a big red barn in the center of town) is the hippest place to get a drink. All are within strolling distance of your hotel. Awesome food, impeccable service, and an atmosphere that’s just a little bit country. Healdsburg is hands down the best wine town around.

More than a dozen U-S cities call themselves Eureka, but it’s Northern California’s town that lives up to its name. With towering Redwoods and a spectacular coast, our forefathers had plenty to shout about besides gold. The wealth they amassed is still evident today, in the hundreds of Victorian homes, many of which are operating as elegant inns in Eureka. Four such grand ladies make up the Carter House on Humboldt Bay, where fresh flowers adorn each room and the sun streams in through oversized windows. Take your tea in the garden, where organic fruits and vegetables are grown for the hotel’s award-winning Restaurant 301. This is your spot for dinner later, but not before checking out Humboldt County’s legendary live music scene – at one of Eureka’s hip places like Rumours or Gallagher’s Pub. Wrap up your stay with a walk on a black sand beach (there are great beaches just 5 minutes from downtown) or a drive through, a giant Redwood (there are 3 drive-through trees not far from Eureka). But plan on coming back. Like the name implies – there’s a lot to discover in this town.

About Livermore Wineries

Alameda Living Magazine, 2003

It was a balmy spring night when I first fell in love. Maybe “crush” was more like it, considering the object of my affection. I raised my glass and toasted the sunset–the wine blush fresh on my cheeks as I celebrated my affair–with the lush rolling hills of the Livermore Valley Wine Country.

livermore_wineries
While most people think of Napa and Sonoma as “the wine country”, Livermore is California’s oldest wine region. In fact, it was a Livermore Valley wine that won the first Gold Medal for California at the Paris Exposition in 1889. Today, the combination of exceptional soil and an abundance of chemists from nearby Lawrence Livermore Lab has spawned a number of exceptional boutique wineries.

Winding your way east along Interstate 580, take Vasco Road south toward the Wente Vineyards. This is the valley’s oldest continuously operated family-owned winery. The Tasting Room has a picturesque picnic spot at 5565 Tesla Road, where you can sample wines daily from 11 to 4:30. Continue southwest on vineyard laced country road and you end up a splendid estate nestled against velvety green mountains. This is the Wente Restaurant and Visitors Center. This is where true love begins. Settle into the sumptuous dining room and sip one of five hundred wines from California and beyond. Get lost in the fragrance of the flowering trees and the aroma of fresh herbs and sauces coming from the kitchen. The views of the golf course and beautifully manicured grounds are as appealing to the eye as the food is to the palate. Top dinner off with a summer concert in the vineyard (June through September) and you’ll see why the Zagat Survey lists Wente as one of America’s top restaurants.

livermore_grapesOther wineries bring their own special charm to the Livermore Valley. Tucked away in a grove of ancient pepper trees, is a little giant called Retzlaff. Not only are these boutique wines extraordinary, they are all organic–made by hand from grapes grown on site with no fertilizers, herbicides or pesticides. How do owners Bob and Gloria Retzlaff do it? Naturally. They put up a hawk house and a hawk moved in to prey on the Starlings. The built an owl roost and the owls keep the gophers and mice at bay. So do the vineyard cats and the couple’s border collie. It works beautifully, as Retzlaff has some of the tastiest wines and most charming picnic grounds in the Livermore Valley. Open to the public, they host annual events for Mothers and Fathers Day, the Fourth of July, and a homegrown celebration called the “Howl at the Moon Dinner” on September 13th. Retzlaff Vineyards is located at 1356 S. Livermore Avenue. Open for tasting Tuesday Friday from 12-2 and weekends from 12-4:30.

No trip to this region would be complete without visiting Concannon–a vineyard that goes back to Livermore’s early wine making days. While Robert Livermore planted the first commercial vines in the 1840s, pioneer winemakers C.H. Wente, Charles Wetmore and James Concannon founded the first wineries in the early 1880s. They were the first to bottle varietally labeled Chardonnay, Sauvignon Blanc and Petite Sirah. Concannon is still going strong today, producing award-winning wines at its historic site at 4590 Tesla Road. They offer tasting daily from 11-4:30.

The Livermore Valley Wine Country has over 5,000 acres of vineyards today, with over 24 wineries and a number of top notch golf courses. Laced between acres of new high end homes, you may be tempted to relocate here. As the sign says–“If you lived here, you’d be home now”. Home amongst the vineyards and some of California’s oldest and most flavorful wines. For more information, log onto www.livermorewine.com or contact the Tri-Valley Convention and Visitors Bureau at 1-888-874-9253.

Getting A Taste of the Luck of the Irish

It’s dusk in Ireland, and I’m looking out over the River Shannon. The steel gray waters that Frank McCourt called “a killer” in his heart-wrenching book “Angela’s Ashes” run clear, now, through Limerick City. There’s still a hard edge to this industrial port, but swans now float on a Shannon once strewn with garbage. Flowers cascade from boxes in the windows of the old brick row houses.

“We were plenty mad when McCourt wrote his book,” said one local as we chatted on the sidewalk in front of my room at the Jury’s Inn. “We all had that kind of childhood back then. You get over it and move on,” he said in an Irish brogue that ran thick like honey.

McCourt’s memoirs may not have helped the image of Ireland’s fourth largest city, but it is bringing tourists, eager to share in the sorrow of a town that was down on its luck for so long. It brought me here, to see the pub where McCourt’s pa drank away his government assistance, the national school where teachers regularly “knocked sense” into their young students and the dreaded River Shannon, which McCourt blamed for the Tuberculosis that killed 2 of his siblings. How times have changed, not just in Limerick, but all over Ireland. The country is shining, these days, with the glint of millions of Euros being spent by tourists and locals alike. But in order to be accurate about Ireland today, I need to go back to my arrival on these dew-kissed shores on the weekend of the 4th of July.

Flying into Shannon on US Airways, I board the bus to Galway. One of Europe’s fastest growing cities, Galway is known for its music and vibrant nightlife. It’s perfect for me, as my flute is in tow and I hope to join in a few Irish jams (or sessions, as they call them.) But before I play one note, I need a nap. Settling into my room at the Salt Hill Hotel, I fall fast asleep till a rumbling sound shakes me from my covers. Screaming past my window over Galway Bay are dozens of military jets from Ireland, the UK and America, practicing for a huge air show the next day.

“We love Americans,” says a ruddy-faced local in the pub that night, with a seriousness that wanes with each Guinness he pours. Soon enough, I find myself playing the flute. Tommy Hayes and the boys are singing songs from our shores and someone shouts “let the lass play her music.” I sift through the musical scores of dozens of Elvis and John Denver songs and choose Green, Green Grass of Home. I play with every ounce of passion and vibrato I can muster, seeing the tears on the faces of more than a few men and women that night. When I finish, through the haze of a dozen burning cigarettes, I can see the pints lined up on my table. It’s their way of showing appreciation for a gal who had crossed the Atlantic to play her flute.

I arise the next morning to my first Irish meal – poached eggs and bacon and fresh fruit scones. There is something, too, called black and white pudding – little muffin-shaped patties that taste better when I dip them in catsup. I’m starting to see the extraordinary hospitality of the Irish, in their smiles and in what they are willing to do for my comfort. I want to see if the fish are the same way, a fairly ridiculous notion, but I have a theory. So I walk down the seaside promenade to the National Aquarium of Ireland. Sure enough, the petting pool is full of Thornback Rays who are craving a human massage. A freshly-scrubbed lad who works at the place even picks up a Bull Huss Shark and turns it on its back for a good rubdown. The shark has its eyes half closed with this look of pure bliss on its face. My suspicions are confirmed. If Ireland isn’t heaven – I am just outside the door.

Getting out of Salt Hill isn’t easy. A great crowd is starting to amass for the giant air show and the All-Irish Gaelic games which are just down the road. Some streets are blocked and bus service has stopped. Blessedly, a young man at the Salt Hill Hotel offers to drive me to the Galway bus station. I thank him profusely and buy my ticket for Dublin.

This brings me to the real purpose of my trip. To meet three women, only one of whom I know, under the old clock in the corner of the bar at the Shelbourne Hotel. We are coming thousands of miles to honor Jillian Quist, my writer friend with strong Irish roots and a milestone to celebrate. From this point on, I’ll call her Jillie and the other gals Affie and Sooze.

Arriving in Dublin, my next task is to wheel my suitcases up Grafton Street to St. Stephen’s Green. This is no easy act, navigating my way through the hoards of people who are shopping and meandering on this famous cobbled walkway. The lack of sleep and the strangeness of hearing dozens of different languages make the mile long trek so surreal. But I arrive just in time for my heralded meeting.

The energy in the air seems to crackle, as one by one, we arrive. Soon we are under the clock – the most prestigious place in the bar – drinking martinis at the Shelbourne. We are completely untethered from husband or child – as the Irish begins to come out in us. Jillian is the birthday girl, for whom turning fifty has become an event of international proportions. Having once hailed from the Emerald Isle, she has planned for us a most interesting odyssey.

“When the spirits go in, the truth comes out”. So goes the saying in Ireland, and while the Shelbourne has seen many a reunion, we seem to have made our mark. We leave with a dozen new friends and a more than a few business cards.

Squeezing into our little blue rental, we drive the hour south to the Bel Air Hotel in County Wicklow. Jilli has special memories of this place, having stayed here as a child. But nothing prepares us for the welcome we get when we arrive at the 15th century equestrian estate. “Come in and sit down, girls, and I’ll get you some drinks and grilled sandwiches,” says Fidelma Freeman, the kindly proprietor. She’s waited up for us, despite the lateness of the hour.

What happens next couldn’t be more perfect, if it were staged. Two guests of the manor, both local men, take it upon themselves to put on a show. They sing and dance and tell tall tales – all to our great amusement. I especially enjoy the kissing song, which is punctuated by two leprechaun-like pecks on my cheek. Sooze, an actress back home in St. Louis, is so caught up in the antics, she joins the men in a jig.

Up at the crack of noon the next day, we take our tea in the lobby of the grand old estate, where cattle graze just beyond the front door and horses prepare for the day’s ride. I bring my old Montana cowboy boots and jeans and assume I am ready. “We’ll have to take you out separately,” says the stable manager. The rest of the group, including Jilli, will be galloping wildly through the forests and meadows of Wicklow. In an English saddle, it is all I can do to hang on in a trot. But by the grace of St. Peter, I get out there and give it a go. Through the fields of Fox Glove and Clover I move to the rhythm of the steed. Up and down, clip and a clop, faster and faster I ride. I am high on a ridge overlooking green pastures and an ocean of azure and blue. I am doing what I’ve come here to do.

I am also popping Advil into the evening, nursing both a sore neck and now a sore bottom. But it does nothing to stop us from burning the midnight oil in Dublin’s famed Temple Bar district. Here, pubs like the Hairy Lemon and The Auld Dubliner play traditional Irish folk music late into the night. Fiddles and flutes and Elbow pipes stir the soul with the primal beat of the Bodhran drum. Some of the songs you will know, like “Dublin’s fair city…cockles and mussels, alive alive-oh”. But the ballad that brings us to our feet is the heartfelt ode to the beloved River Liffey. We dance round and round, arms linked and legs stepping high with strangers who feel like friends. It’s clear that the Irish love their rivers, and liken the Liffey to a beautiful woman who stirs the flames of passion.

We have good craic in Dublin that night. Craic is pronounced “crack” and is Gaelic for conversation. You’d have to be dead not to have good craic with the Irish. They love Americans and they love to talk. (Almost everyone in Ireland has a relative “in the states”. Many have been to the U-S, since it’s only a few hours by plane). Often, the stories you hear are of hardships, which were evident everywhere in Ireland until the recent economic boom. The Catholic Church is another favorite topic. Men have their stories of being “chosen” for priesthood and then falling from grace in the Seminary. “I was rescued by the lady with me tonight,” one man tells me. “She lured me from a life of celibacy,” he says with sparkling eyes. But more often than not, these days, it’s politics they’ll be talking about in the pubs of Ireland. If you engage in this topic, be prepared to stay awhile.

As prolific as the pubs, are the castles and ruins of Ireland. They’re part of the landscape, everywhere you go. On one misty day, in weather the Irish call “soft”, we explored the ruins of Glendalough, where St. Kevin built his monastery in 550 AD. From the round stone tower where the monks used to hide from invaders to the tiny cells where these early Christians lived, Glendalough is often called the cradle of religion in Ireland.

Every region has its castles, and some are open for touring and medieval meals. Malahide Castle is one of the favorites, only nine miles from Dublin with the only medieval hall in Ireland that’s preserved in its original form. It’s a picture-book palace surrounded by botanical gardens and parkland.

Steeped in Irish history is the long list of writers who’ve been born on these shores – men like Jonathan Swift, Oscar Wilde, W.B. Yeats, James Joyce, George Bernard Shaw, Samuel Beckett and Frank McCourt, to name a few. Their sayings are on many a pub wall and their books can be found in towns big and small. It was Wilde who wrote the words: “We’re all in the gutter, but some of us are looking at the stars,” a quote that seems to embody the spirit of Ireland. But to truly give life to these words, you should hear them spoken by the author, himself, or at least a good impersonator. The best place to do this is the Writer’s Museum in Dublin. Here you can see a one man show, where the actor reads passages from great Irish books, impersonating the authors and captivating the audience.

I would be remiss if I missed mentioning the gardens of Ireland. County Wicklow is renowned for its gardens and celebrates with a festival each May through July. The moist climate, tempered by the Gulf Stream and fertile, sun-kissed soil make Wicklow a lush land for greenery. Two of the county’s best gardens are Powerscourt and Mount Usher. Completely different in nature, Powerscourt is one of the great gardens of Europe, with fountains and ponds and antique sculptures, all laid out grandly in the shadow of the Sugarloaf Mountain. Mount Usher, on the other hand, is a relatively small natural garden – a more modest showing of nature along the banks of the River Vartry. It doesn’t attract the hoards of people that flock to Powerscourt and for that reason, it is truly a restorative place.

Among the many changes in Ireland is the food. You can still find the traditional Irish breakfast of cured ham, poached eggs and black and white pudding. But all over the cities and towns you will see restaurants serving everything from Italian to Chinese cuisine. We had a stunningly good meal in Ashford at Restaurant O Sole Mio, where the pasta was perfect and the vegetables were crisp and flavorful, not “done to a turn” like the Ireland of old. Curry is big in Ireland, and you’ll find it served with Fish and Chips at a multitude of “take away” cafes. But don’t make the mistake we made, and wait too late to eat dinner. While the sun is up until well after ten pm in the summertime, most restaurants and pubs stop serving food at 9:30.

Just a little about the traffic in Ireland, which can be quite bad in the environs around Dublin. With the high housing prices (that rival popular U-S cities) and a booming economy, more and more people are moving to suburbs. There’s highway construction all over the area, and traffic jams are now the norm – so avoid driving during peak commute times. Also, be prepared to get lost, as some new highways simply stop with no signs marking detours. It’s part of the price being paid for prosperity. But like everything else, it’s taken in stride. For the Irish are survivors and laughter and wit will carry them through.

Escape the Whining in the Wine Country

It’s the middle of July and the sounds of the season surround me. Nature’s symphony – with the birds and bees humming a soft summer tune. Children laughing, water splashing and time passing lazily by. Suddenly, there’s a low whining. It starts softly, then builds to a pitch that can’t be ignored. It’s a bird – it’s a plane – it’s the collective call of the kids, who after 5 weeks of summer cry “We’re bored”. That’s when you make your getaway.

healdsburg_fountainSo here I am in Healdsburg, my favorite wine country town. Rolling hills laced with vineyards, the Russian River winding its way through the fertile valley and a cordial country village that’s more like Mayberry with Zin. In fact, the corner service station reflects the enthusiasm for wine in this town, with two kinds of gas – Chablis (unleaded) and Chardonnay (premium).

On a quiet corner, where stately shade trees give shelter to the streets below, is the Honor Mansion. Walk through the white picket gate with your bags and you slip back in time, to an era when hospitality was paramount. The parlor has fresh white linens and round the clock pastries and espresso. There’s food for the Koi pond outside, and the fish show their appreciation by loudly and enthusiastically kissing your hands. Couples kiss here too, for the grounds are exquisitely romantic and private – with benches in the most hidden of places. But for me, it’s the perfect place to write, with a glass of Sonoma County wine never more than an arm’s length away.

Despite my relaxed state of mind, I am getting exercise. I took a wonderful bike ride with Getaway Adventures out of Calistoga, where we rode through the countryside in the bosom of Mount Saint Helena. This is a unique way to see the wineries and cool off in the air conditioned tasting rooms. Bikers usually catch the big natural attraction here, too – the Old Faithful Geyser, which blows its top about every 20 minutes or so. The sign out front still exclaims “As featured in National Geographic”.

healdsburg_roomLunch at Healdsburg’s Costeaux Bakery is always a treat, and I’m not the only one who thinks so. When the big boys in the Bohemian Club fly in for their annual Russian River summer camp, Costeaux stocks the food for their private planes. Powerful politicians and billionaire businessmen know how to take care of themselves – and so do I. It’s like the note-card said in my suite at the Honor Mansion: “we’ve turned down your bed, anticipating you may want to indulge in an afternoon nap.” And you know what? I Don’t mind if I do.

Photos by Lee Dailey

Flame On, Olympic Fever

Flame on, Olympic fever. Just months after we shared the thrills and chills of Park City’s Winter games, San Francisco is hot to host the summer games of 2012. Pardon me if I yawn. Sure the games will be good for Bay Area business, and Oakland will get some of the spill over. But the summer games seem tame to me, compared to the teeth chattering, bone chilling fun you can have in winter. I know this first hand, having just returned from Park City and the site of the 2002 winter games.

Just a 90 minute Southwest Airlines flight from Oakland, Salt Lake City is a breeze to get to. Hop on a shuttle and 45 minutes later you’re in the Wasatch Mountain Range and surrounded by 7 of the west’s most popular ski resorts.

skiing_photoOlympic Park should be your first stop. For 7 dollars a person (kids and seniors are less) you can tour the site of last winter’s Olympic bobsled, luge and skeleton competitions. You can watch world class Nordic ski jumpers train year round. You can even try jumping yourself, with camps that range in price from 75 dollars (1-day) to 300 dollars (6-day). You start off doing flips on a trampoline, and then graduate to flips off a little ski ramp and into a big pool of bubbling water. The bubbles break the fall, providing a cushion for jumpers who hit the water, arms flailing and skis akimbo. That would be me.

In an era where Americans keep pushing themselves to try new experiences, ski jumping is not all that extreme. But what about bobsledding? For 80 dollars, you can go down the Olympic bobsled run. This is not for the faint of heart. It is the most violent, jaw-dropping, bone knocking ride you can imagine. And at speeds of up to 70 mph, it’s a blast. Totally unrealistic, though, if you’re thinking of someday competing in this event. Bobsled training starts early – in those formative years when kids are fearless. Not appropriate for an aging boomer. For us – the Skeleton is a better choice. This is an event you can actually learn in one inexpensive training session at Olympic Park. Really! They outfit you with a special suit, a heavy duty helmet and sled – just like the “big dogs” use. Block out the fact that your face is an inch from the ground as you fly on your belly around hair pin curves. That’s what the chin strap is for.

If all this is too extreme for you – there are other options. I took the most gentle hot air balloon ride on my visit to Park City. We glided gracefully on pockets of air, over rolling fields of alfalfa. It’s a breathtaking way to see the mountains and valleys around Salt Lake City.

If mountain biking appeals to you, but you’re a little apprehensive about it – try Deer Valley. Unlike other resorts, they offer a 3 hour clinic that teaches you those subtle little nuances of the sport, like how to use your brakes so you don’t fly over the handlebars. They rate their trails here, and by the end of your clinic you should be ready to load your bike on the chair lift and traverse down an intermediate ski hill. Only the mad bombers go straight down – and they’re covered in padding from head to toe.

Then there’s the Alpine Slide at nearby Park City Mountain Resort. Much like a bobsled run with built up sides and straightaway, you take your sled up the chairlift and put it down on a specially designed track. You control the speed and fly around the corners as fast or as slow as you dare. At 9 dollars a pop, this is a wild ride that adults and kids can enjoy on the ski hill in summer.

The 2002 Winter Olympics have forever changed Park City and its surrounding area. They have world class training facilities now, which American athletes will use for decades to come. We can use them too – making Utah one of the best family vacation destinations in any season.

Greetings from Sequoia National Park

Greetings from Sequoia National Park. With opening lines like that, I should be writing postcards. But then, I’d have no room to pontificate about the most peaceful place I’ve seen in years.

Sequoia is California’s oldest National Park – and yet, the land management ideas here are revolutionary. The belief that a national treasure can be “loved to death” has been taken to heart, and some major changes have been made in the last few years.

Gone are the 282 buildings that were choking the world’s largest and oldest Sequoia trees. These decaying structures were torn down and the Giant Forest is being restored to its natural beauty with a wonderful interactive museum now on the site.

A year ago, President Bush visited this park. He was the first sitting president to come here and he stayed where I am staying this week – in the new Wuksachi Village. Four hours from Oakland and just 45 minutes from the Highway 180 entrance to the park, Wuksachi has 102 guest rooms and a warm, inviting lodge with exceptional food and drink. From here, you’re close to waterfall trails, the Crystal Caves, and of course, Mount Whitney – the highest point in the contiguous United States. It’s the beauty of Yosemite without the crowds.

Then there’s something so awesome, you need to see it to believe it. A seedling when cavemen roamed the earth, The General Sherman Sequoia is the world’s largest living tree. It was a giant when Christ was born and it could live in this national park another 1300 years if we don’t mess things up. In the words of John Muir: “We, as stewards, have an awesome responsibility. Imagine what will be here for our children if we fail.”

After this week’s visit, I feel certain the caretakers of Sequoia National Park are on the right track.