A Few Foliage Pics

Here are a few pics from our drive up to the mountains today.

This spot is a scenic pull off on Bear Notch Road.

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These are from a pull off near Crawford Notch, as clearly denoted by the sign.

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Here are a bunch from the Willey House in Crawford Notch.

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The polarizing filter in action, first:

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Second:

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Shutter at 1/80th of a second:

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Shutter at 0.8 seconds:

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A few from outside the Mount Washington Hotel.

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My favorite stop of the day, The Balsams Resort in Dixville Notch.

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I should probably crop out the street sign.

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Geddy’s

My tiny little brain is so easily confused.

I was going to write something about how the last time I officially swapped blogging services was just before a long weekend get away my beautiful wife and I took to Bar Harbor, ME. I was going to connect it to today by saying that we need to go back to Bar Harbor for two reasons. First, I changed blogging services. Second, the t-shirt I bought at Geddy’s has a hole in the armpit and needs to be replaced. That would be a funny post, right? Ha. Funny.

Then I realized that it wasn’t the Bar Harbor trip that coincided with leaving Blogger, it was a long weekend getaway to the White Mountains in New Hampshire where we stayed in a cabin set off from the rest of the hotel and there was an outdoor hot tub and we used it even though it was December and about zero degrees out, and also drove all the way out to Dixville Notch for absolutely no reason at all.

So my coincidental t-shirt/blog service post is null and void.

I still want to go back to Geddy’s though.

The view from Cadillac Mountain in Bar Harbor, ME.

My 2012 in Pictures – Part Deux

Yeah, I did a my-year-in-pictures thing the other day. It was fun. What the hell, thought I, why not do it again? This time I’ll run fast and loose with the whole one-pic-from-each-month thing. I’m crazy like that.

We have to get our pics of the Sands Bridge in Methuen before she collapses. Or maybe I should say before she finishes collapsing. It’s already started. Also, I don’t think I found a relative in the Grove Street Cemetery, but who knows?

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In February I finally finished an RPM Challenge on time. It only took me five tries. We also got a new bed. Jen’s penguin approved.

Showdown at Canobie Lake Park

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In March, the kids and I became wilderness explorers. Hipstamatic came along for the ride. Actually, we just wandered around in the woods behind our house for a little while. It was fun.

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April in San Diego. I want to go back RIGHT NOW!

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May gave us baseball, Bar Harbor, and my first up close New England Lighthouse.

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The picture pickin’s are slim in June, but we did get a new Rush album (and it is awesome) and we got another fantastic piano recital from the kids.

And all was right with the world...

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July offers more choices after a spontaneous trip to Boston, and a week long stay in Maine that included some time in the mountains of New Hampshire.

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In August we went to the Top of the Hub for the first time in my life. The views of my city were spectacular. We also spent some twilight time on Hampton Beach.

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September had mountain waterfalls, leaf peeping, my first ever attempt at photo-walking in Tewksbury, and more Rush.

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October continues to belong to Washington, DC.

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The camera didn’t come out much in November, but I did torture the cat, and my wife, with my camera phone, and we did celebrate Turkey Day.

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December had more mountains, more mountain streams, and Christmas.

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And there we have a second view of my 2012 in pictures. Forgive the gratuitousness.

Happy New Year (again).

Dixville Notch

Yesterday the plan was to spend some time Christmas shopping in North Conway, and to spend some quality time in the hot tub.  Instead we went on yet another ridiculously huge drive.  Jen wanted to go North.  She’s always wanted to go North of the White Mountains, but it takes us around three hours to get that far, we don’t have the energy to go on for another three hours.  Since we were already in the mountains we figured what the hell, and pointed the car North.

After wandering aimlessly for a while we decided to head toward Pittsburgh.  My step kids go there with the father and step mother roughly once a year to try and see Moose.  The kids have told me many times that Pittsburgh is the largest town in New Hampshire, although only in terms of area.  In terms of population… well… not so much.  Just as we were reaching Pittsburgh we started seeing signs for Canadian Customs checkpoints and border crossings.  We also saw signs for towns in Vermont.  We actually detoured a little just so we could say that we went to Vermont, but we didn’t actually do anything there.  We never made it to Canada.  I don’t have a passport, and Jen didn’t have hers with her, so we weren’t going to be able to cross in anyway.  We got as far as a sign that said Canada was 26 miles away.

The most interesting surprise on this drive was that we passed through Dixville Notch, NH.  You have heard of that place.  In fact, it got national news coverage last month.  Dixville, NH is the first town in the United States to close its polls on election night, and therefore they are the first town to release its election results to the press.  They only have about 20 registered voters, and they all meet in a hotel at midnight on election day.  They each have a personal voting booth, and they all cast their vote and have them counted within a couple of minutes.  This is legal for them to do because they verify 100% participation.  Otherwise they would not be able to close the polls so quickly.

Anyway, we were driving through this particularly terrifying little mountain pass when we saw a gigantic hotel and a welcome to Dixville Notch sign.  I had to pull over and take a picture.  The hotel is called Balsams and it instantly overshadowed the whole election thing.  Look at these pictures and tell me that this isn’t the most haunted hotel on Earth.  The Overlook hotel from The Shining has nothing on this place.

It turns out that this is actually the place where the residents do their voting.  Can you imagine?  It must be terrifying in there!  There is no way that this place isn’t haunted.  Every Hollywood movie cliche tells me that there are at least 500 ghosts in those buildings and at least 10% of them are the ghosts of psychotic axe murderers.

Enjoy your stay, and happy voting!

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Are you ready for the worst part? The hotel is closed for renovations. There is probably a guy, a caretaker, living in that hotel right now. He’s probably writing a novel about how all work and no play make Jack a something something, and he’s probably shuffling up to the bar to talk to the bartender who hasn’t been there for 50 years.

Creepy!