Historic St. Charles, Missouri

1.1254678388.historic-st-charlesTravelling back home from Kansas last July, we serendipitously revisited the little village of St. Charles, Missouri.  As the sign says, it was the first Missouri state capitol.  Here is the website for the village:  http://www.stcharlescitymo.gov/?TabId=305

St. Charles, Missouri is a beautiful historic village, founded in 1765 as Les Petites Côtes and known as the third oldest city West of the Mississippi.  It sits on the Mississippi River, just north of St. Louis, full of little cafes and shops and pleasant views.  It is the scene of many festivals and activities.  It lies near the Katy Trail, a 225 mile long state park.

A quote from Wikipedia about the founding of St. Charles:

Louis Blanchette was a French Canadian who traveled to the Americas, it is said, for adventure. According to Hopewell’s Legends of the Missouri and Mississippi:

In the year 1765, a French Canadian, called Blanchette Chasseur, animated by that love of adventure which characterizes all who have lived a roving and restless life, ascended the Missouri, with a few followers, for the purpose of forming a settlement in the then remote wilderness.

According to Hopewell’s rather romantic account, Blanchette met another French Canadian (Bernard Guillet) at the site of St. Charles in 1765. Blanchette, determined to settle at the site, asked if Guillet, who had become the chief of a Dakota tribe, had chosen a name for it.

“I called the place ‘Les Petites Côtes’ ” replied Bernard, “from the sides of the hills that you see.”
“By that name shall it be called”, said Blanchette Chasseur, “for it is the echo of nature — beautiful from its simplicity.”

Blanchette settled there in 1769 under the authority of the Spanish governor of Upper Louisiana, and served as its civil and military leader until his death in 1793. During this time perhaps only a couple dozen buildings were built. Although the settlement was under Spanish jurisdiction, the settlers themselves remained primarily French Canadians.”

If you want to read more of this articel, click here:

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/St._Charles,_Missouri

As you walk the brick-lined streets and sidewalks, you can imagine what it was like in the mid-1800s with steamships & paddle boats floating down the river.  Its streets were walked by some famous personalities from history: Daniel Boone, Jean Baptiste Pointe du Sable (who founded Chicago), Mark Twain (Samuel Clements), & Abraham Lincoln just to name a few.

We visited a few of the shops and popped into one in particular,          July 3, 2013 073

July 3, 2013 075Di Olivas, which sells all kinds of olive oils and balsamic vinegars on tap.  You can sample any of them if you like (little paper cups are provided).  July 3, 2013 074
We purchased a bottle of the garlic flavored olive oil and a special tip to insert to make it easier to apply it to bread. We have enjoyed putting it on toasted baguette slices – yum!!  Here is their website: http://diolivas.com/ where you can order their products online.

Walking on down the street, there are so many lovely little shops and cafes.

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And fronting the Mississippi River, is a walkway with a viewing area complete with benches and gardens:
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We were there just after the Spring flooding and we could see little piles of sand on the streets & sidewalks where the river water had risen up into the street and deposited them.

If you are passing through St. Louis and have time, take an hour or two to visit this charming little village.  Or if you have more time, schedule it into your vacation and stay at a B & B or camp nearby.

For a list of all the specialty shops, click on this link:  http://www.greatriverroad.com/stcharles/stcharlesshop.htm

And for a list of the restaurants available, click on this link:  http://www.greatriverroad.com/stcharles/stcharleseat.htm

For a list of where to stay, hotels & bed & breakfasts:  http://www.greatriverroad.com/stcharles/stcharlesbb.htm

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Where Are Your Manners When You Are Waiting in Line?

What kind of ‘waiter in liner’ are you?  Here in the US, we call it ‘waiting in line,’ in other countries, it’s called ‘cueing.’  A trip through McDonald’s drive-thru got me thinking about this, although I’ve wondered about it in the grocery store or other shopping situations.  It’s often interesting to sit and watch how honest people are when they go through a line.  What does it reveal about a person’s character?

I’m always very careful to watch to see who is progressing ahead of me in the next lane of cars, so I don’t get in line ahead of their order.  What if they give me the wrong food order?  But, invariably, there is the one customer who insists on zooming into the line before it really is their turn.  Is it worth getting angry about?  Not really, we’ll all get fed in due time.  But what does it say about that person who does this?  Not very good, I would think.  Were they taught manners, or not, as a child?

Then there’s the person who doesn’t want to take the time to drive around the building to even get in line or cue up.  Instead, as they drive by the talk machine, they swerve right on in before the next car in line can get up to it.  Now what does one think about a person who does this?  My perception might be that they are selfish, impatient and inconsiderate.  And how do they treat people they encounter throughout their day?  A very thought provoking question.

The lesson was taught early here – wait your turn… I remember waiting in the lunch line in elementary school.  We were taught that you do not cut in line or there were consequences, the main one being you’ll go hungry for a few minutes more while you are escorted to the back of the line.  Wait your turn and you’ll be fed.  I suppose it all goes back to how you were taught about taking turns and respecting other’s presence in your line as a child.

If you weren’t taught that as a child, you may be in for a surprise when you are older.

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Upscale Pizza Dining – Dewey’s Pizza – St. Louis, MO

I recently traveled to Kansas with my daughter  to visit my son & his family.  As we passed through St. Louis, Missouri, we spent the night at La Quinta Hotel in the Hazelwood area.  Having an urge for pizza, I had my daughter research and pick out a restaurant.  She chose Dewey’s Pizza Kirkwood, located at  559 North Rd & South Rd  image (9)
(between 559 North Rd & South Rd) in what is known as University City  just off of I-170, in the vicinity of Washington University.   Their motto, as seen on their menu and on the back of the employee’s t-shirts is ‘Taking pizza to the next level.’  It was a real treat and surprise!  image (2)

We both tried the Greek salad, which had an unusual ‘rosey red pepper vinaigrette’ on beautiful multi-colored lettuces with cucumbers, red onion, and whole roasted garlic cloves.  image (3)

Then we had the Green Lantern pizza, which featured goat cheese, artichokes, mushrooms, &  sliced garlic all nestled on a tomato sauce.   image (5)All pizzas have either white sauce or red sauce and various toppings on a flat bread type of dough.  image (6)

image (7)                                                                                                                                                             For dessert, we had chocolate cream cake – smooth cream in between rich layers of chocolate cake and rich dark chocolate frosting.  image (8) Can you believe it?  We SHARED one piece!  We were so full from eating the pizza, sharing seemed the better thing to do.

So delighted were we with the delicious spread, that on our way back home, as we passed through St. Louis again, we stopped at Dewey’s Pizza and tried a different pizza, the pizza of the day which featured arugula, onions, mozzarella cheese, red onions and with added goat cheese on top.

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Weekly Photo Challenge – Nostalgic – 1958

There are places we can return to.  Places we visit when we vacation or travel for work.  Then there are places we can never return to, that evoke nostalgic memories of long ago forgotten times – and those places in those forgotten times – of tea parties and swing sets, black & white tv shows, the Wonderful Word of Disney on Sunday nights and popcorn on a warm winters Saturday night after bath time.  My place is my childhood, which was a sweet childhood with memories of grandparents who stood in as parents for us.  Grandparents who were good grandparents and I have such wonderful memories of them.   24995_1347767928736_3403905_nThey showed us a past and told us stories of a time before 1900, we were so privileged to have been around them.  But I can never return to that time.  But I can remember and pull out those photos that captured those memories.  And then, I can remember raising my own little children and of their being 4 years old, and now, they are making memories for their own children, my grandchildren and they will look back with nostalgia too.  I’m trying to pass on that sweetness, that goodness as I saw it in 1958.   2853_1136893857016_2726643_n

http://dailypost.wordpress.com/2013/07/05/nostalgic/

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Travel Theme – Motion – Bubbles

I just returned from traveling to see my son & his sweet family in Kansas.  I took a special toy to my little grandson B – a bubble blower contraption.  We spent a few hours in the front yard making some pretty incredible bubbles, which B delighted in chasing, trying to pop them.  I serendipitously captured B in full motion almost running in the air:   July 3, 2013 011a
Daddy R helped, as B had trouble getting the contraption to release long bubbles.   July 3, 2013 012aJuly 3, 2013 010a

Travel theme: Motion

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Smack Dab In The Middle of the USA

I’ve been gone for a few weeks because I made a trip out to Kansas with my daughter, Miss M to see my son & his family (grand babies!).  If you’ve never been to Kansas, you’ve missed seeing rolling prairie for as far as the eye can see with limestone fossil outcroppings.  July 3, 2013 065

My son mentioned to me that we were very near the center point of the USA – smack dab in the middle of it, actually.  July 3, 2013 062

Last year the land there was scorched and brown because of the drought.  But this year it was a beautiful green and farmers were harvesting the winter wheat, the amber waves of grain.  It was exactly as the song depicts it.  July 3, 2013 067 This is a scenic view lookout point located south of Manhattan, Kansas (yes, it’s named after Manhattan, New York) on State Road 177. It gives a view of the Great Tallgrass Prairie in the Kansas Flint Hills.  As the plaque says, “It is the largest contiguous area of tall grass prairie in North America.”  The photos do not do it justice, you have to be there to really take it in.   July 3, 2013 058                                        Traveling across Kansas is not for the faint of heart, as it is a long state, width-wise, to travel across. I remember driving across Kansas with my husband, before children, and the speed limit was 55 mph. It seemed to take forever to get to Colorado and on to Utah. Now, on the Kansas toll road, the speed limit is 75 mph and all other parts of the interstate are 70 mph. We really zipped along to our destination!

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Daily Italian Doses | Rick Steves and the Food Police

This is great, lol. Watch out for the parmesan police!

onceinalifetimetravel's avatarOnce in a Lifetime Travel

This is pretty funny, especially being a Rick Steves follower for over 20 years.  While it may seem all fun and games, don’t ever try to ask for parmesan in Italy.  Things could get ugly.  For more from the Food Police click HERE to visit their blog.

I’m obsessed with feedback, let me know what you think.

Love it??  Pass it on!

Copyright 2013   Andi Brown,  Once in a Lifetime Travel

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Jake’s Sunday Post Weekly Competition: Bridge – Time Machine

My bridge, or rather two bridges, provide a link from one time to the next, in our historical minds, a literal historic time machine.

Bridge One:  private 052 Was built long ago, as a replacement for Davis Ferry over the Wabash River in Tippecanoe County, Indiana. The Ferry was used by Indians and Pioneers for years, sometimes providing hazardous crossings during springtime floods. The bridge made it less risky trying to get home. It is now a walking bridge, a pathway to the Wabash Heritage Trail and a pleasant one at that.

Enter time machine, stand on Bridge One, looking West, turn to look East:

Bridge Two: private 060 See a modern bridge just a few feet to the East, autos zipping along on their daily quests, in the sunrise, most not realizing the historic importance here.  A beautiful peaceful morning view, not to be witnessed in quite this way while standing on Bridge 2.

http://jakesprinters.wordpress.com

 

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Radishes! On This Longest Day of the Year

I managed to slip outside before I left for work to pick my first batch of radishes and they didn’t disappoint me!  About every 10th radish is a different variety and I guess the seed packet wasn’t a pure mixture, but hey, that’s ok, I like both kinds.  The morning was cool and dewy and sunny.  June 21, 2013 Radishes 002
As this longest day of the year has progressed, I slipped out to buy some lunch and discovered that not only was it the longest day, it’s the hottest day of the year so far! I’m sure the swimming pools are full and the sprinklers are running. Will write more & update this weekend when I get a chance. Enjoy the pools if you are able to get to one, me – I’ll have to resort to a sprinkler by my garden. 😉

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Babies

I’ve been finding all kinds of babies in my garden and as of last February, a new baby grandson in my family.

Baby rosebushes, aka ‘the Fairy’ – I brought the mother rose bush with me when I moved here several years ago and last year, she had two baby bushes that I transplanted out.  June 15, 2013 021

Baby hollyhocks – I’ve finally got them established, blooming and thriving!  June 15, 2013 025

Baby kiwi plant – I read from several other blogs, about growing kiwis from seed after eating them.  So, after several failed attempts, I took a sort of rotty mushy kiwi, broke it open and stuffed into the soil in a pot and promptly forgot about it until yesterday morning.  Lo, and behold …. it grew!  June 15, 2013 018

Baby doves, ahem, again …..  Yes, there she is again – Mrs. Dove has returned to raise a second round of youngsters.  So far, they haven’t hatched.  Stay tuned ….  June 15, 2013 027

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