Wednesday, January 7, 2009

Bergen Norway

The Thon hotel is where we have stayed in the past. IT SUCKS!! If you visit my blog and look at the post called My Cell... you will see what I mean. That said the rooms aren't US standard in any European hotel really. Nor are the amenities the same...you'll want to take your own shampoo and conditioner.
From the Bergen airport you can get to the Harbor a couple of ways. You can take the Flybuss (airport express bus) or you can take a taxi....taxis are expensive and the flybuss is 80 NOK. The last bus stop is right in front of the Radisson hotel. If you get lucky enough to stay at the Radisson. If you have to stay at the Thon Hotel you will walk a block from the Radisson bus stop.
There are a lot of restaurants along the hotel street. The better restaurants are usual a bit more expensive. You can get pretty good food at the Harbor Cafe which is a 5 min walk back toward the city center right on the main road. There is also a nice place along the boardwalk by the hotel that has an excellent seafood salad.
There is a Dubliner Pub up near the tram (The Fløibanen)that goes to the top of the Mountain which is a must do....there is a beautiful view of the city and the harbor. http://www2.tellus.no/tellus/db.dll?icp=visitbergen/product&sp=GB&PR1_43_1
You can walk to several malls, the fish market. There are a few bookstores, Norli is the big one with English books.

Friday, August 29, 2008

So, you have a weekend in Eugene

If you have the time, you really should drive to Crater Lake. It's about a 3-hour drive from Eugene, but is totally worth it. Take drinks and snacks because stores are few and far between. For pics, see welcomeanyway.blogspot.com.

Wednesday, April 2, 2008

Albany hotels and directions

The airport is not huge, which is nice.

To get to the paper from the airport:
From the airport, follow the signs for Highway 87. You will be on Albany-Shaker Road. As you approach the underpass for 87, go under it. Stay on Albany-Shaker past the light at the underpass. Take a left after the light and just after the Times-Union building. Take another direct left into the parking lot. There is visitor parking. Mike Spain has been getting door passes for us.

To Towneplace Suites-SUNY from airport: From the airport, follow the signs for Highway 87. You will be on Albany-Shaker Road. Look for signs for I-87.
Turn right to merge onto I-87 South. Go 2.7 miles.
Take exit 1 to merge onto I-90 East toward Albany/Boston. Stay on 1.5 mile.
Take exit 2 for Washington Avenue toward UAlbany.
Take a left at Washington Avenue and go down about 1/2 mile.
Hotel is on left.

From Towneplace Suites-SUNY to Albany Times-Union:
Turn right (southeast) out of hotel onto Washington Avenue toward I-90 West.
Take fork that leads onto I-90 West.
Take exit 1N for I-87 northbound toward Montreal/Saratoga.
Stay on I-87 for 2.5 miles.
Take exit 4 for Wolf Road.
Left onto Wolf Road.
Right at light onto Albany Shaker Road.
Left into parking lot (watch for traffic).
Park in visitor spots at front.

To get to restaurants from paper:
From the light at Albany-Shaker and Wolf Road, head in the direction opposite the paper. You would turn right off Albany-Shaker onto Wolf Road (there is a light) if you were coming from the airport. There is a ton of hotels and restaurants down there, including many chains (Hampton Inn, Holiday Inn, Red Roof Inn, Olive Garden, HomeWood Suites, Red Lobster).

Hotel review
The Wingate (from airport, head toward Hwy 87; just before 87, you will see hotel on your left) has wood floors and flat screen TVs but no fridge, micro, stove or bathtub. The breakfast bar is not as good as a Residence Inn but better than basic continental. It has fruit, instant oatmeal, waffles, donuts, toast, bagels, juice, hot chocolate, and egg/sausage sandwiches ready to be microwaved.
We're hoping to find a different hotel.

Tuesday, April 1, 2008

Albany sites and restaurants

Museums and Cool Sites
There's a Shaker Museum (near the airport), the NY state museum downtown in the Empire State plaza, Revolutionary War Saratoga Battlefield in Stillwater, the Bennington Battlefield (near the Vermont border), the Berkshires, Stockbridge Mass (an hour from Albany) has the Rockwell museum, Modern Art Museum in North Adams (30 mins north of Stockbridge), the Red Lion Inn (real fancy, expensive restaurants and a cool pub called the Lion's Den down in the basement), Adirondack State Park, the town of Woodstock, New World Home cooking restaurant between Woodstock and Saguerties.

Restaurants recommended by Times Union staff
Brew Pub
Firken and Fox (on Wolf down the road from the paper)
Emperor's Palace (Oriental)
Grandma's Country Pie Store on Central Avenue (great desserts)
Ron and Ted's fish fry on Central Avenue
Koto's Japanese Steak House

All downtown
(87 south to 90, 90 east to 787 south. Stay right, exit Clinton, light at end of ramp):
The Pump Station (right from light)
Nicole's Bistro
The Palace
Yono's at the Hampton Inn downtown (straight down block from off-ramp)
677 Prime (Angelo's Place) left off ramp
Lombardo's Italian
Jack's Oyster House

Approaching downtown:
Envy Lounge
McGuire's
Bayou Cafe (on Pearl Street; good beer and cocktails)

Restaurants we've tried and liked
Old Chicago pizza (on Wolf Street)

Monday, February 11, 2008

Lexington dining, sites

Murray's -- "fine" dining but you don't have to get too fancy.

Panera Bread! is always good. On Richmond Road and Nicholasville Road.

Wild Oats.

Amazing Indian food to rival Bombay House: India Garden just north of New Circle Road on Richmond Road. Set back a little from Richmond, it's close to the Chop House. Our busboy was David, who chatted with Scott and me in Spanish.

Joseph Beth books is what a bookstore should be. It's huge. It's beautiful. It's happily situated near Wild Oats, Panera Bread, and Lexington Green mall. A huge top floor opens up in the center to overlook the children's section downstairs. Signed pictures of such authors as Stephen King line the wall near the register. Chocolate bourbon balls are available.

Monday, November 19, 2007

Directions to the Lexington Herald-Leader from Residence Inn

Here are the best and easiest directions to the Herald-Leader from the Residence Inn.

Exit the hotel parking lot. At the 4 way stop turn left. Make a right on Star Shoot Pkwy. At the light (Sir Barton Way) make a left. Follow Sir Barton to Winchester Rd. Turn left onto Winchester road. Follow Winchester Rd. There will be signs for Downtown. Winchester Rd is also highway 60. At the bend right after the Smuckers/Jiff plant Winchester Rd turns into Midland Ave. Continue following Midland Ave. You will pass a stone yard on the left. Continue on.. the Newspaper will be on the left....right after the newspaper turn into the parking lot. Park in the Visitor parking. If you've gotten to the big light on Main street you've gone too far! TURN AROUND!!

If you look them up on MapQuest or Google you will get routed back to route 1425 W then onto Richmond Ave then some other place etc etc. Who can guess what route 1425W is.....the road is NOT marked as 1425 W but IS marked Man of War Blvd....in case you're wondering....
Richmond Ave. is probably the more scenic route but the Winchester Rd directions are the quickest.

Directions from LEX airport to the Residence Inn

The easiest way but not necessarily the quickest way to the Residence Inn from Lexington airport is to turn right out of the airport onto Man of War Blvd. Follow Man of War Blvd for about 6-10 miles until you come to Pink Pigeon Pkwy. At Pink Pigeon Pkwy turn left and follow around the bend to the 4 way stop. Turn left at the 4 way then right into the Residence Inn parking lot.

The other way not necessarily the easiest way is to turn left on Man of War Blvd. Make a right on Versailles Rd. Merge right onto NEW CIRCLE RD / US-60 BYP N / KY-4 N toward I-75 / I-64. Take the Winchester Rd exit. Go right on Winchester Rd. Follow Winchester Rd to Sir Barton Way. Make a right on Sir Barton Way. Go down to Star Shoot Pkway make a right. Go to Pink Pigeon Pkwy make a left you'll past a big Church, go to the 4 way stop. Residence Inn will be on the right.

Wednesday, October 31, 2007

Eugene

DINING
Bombay Palace: If you like Indian food, this place is really good. It's located near the University of Oregon campus on a little street that had several intriguing places. Try the Chicken Tikka Masala. It was excellent. Your best bet is to go with a group and order a bunch of different dishes so you can sample them all.

Howling Coyote Barbecue:
Howling Coyote is located about a block from the Courtyard Marriott where most trainers stay. They bill themselves as having "Authentic Texas Barbecue." As an authentic Texan, I'm not so sure about that claim. In fact, if anything, Howling Coyote seems to try to offer several styles of barbecue, including St. Louis ribs (dry rub seasoning), Texas-style (slathered in barbecue sauce) and Carolina-style pulled pork. I had a brisket sandwich, which was pretty good, even if it was unusually topped with cheese. I can assure you. No self-respecting Texan would put cheese on a barbecue sandwich. Howling Coyote also offers several different types of barbecue sauces, including one that has espresso in it. It was intriguing if a tad on the runny side. According to Patrick Kendall, you can find better barbecue at a place called Hole in the Wall.

Cafe Yum:
If you ask Cortney Burton, this is the only place to eat in Eugene. It's a local "vegen" chain, although you can get turkey and chicken. They specialize in what they call Yum bowls, which are basically rice bowls. Not too bad, if you like that healthy crap.

BJ's Pizza and Grill: I don't know if this is a chain. It's a microbrewery, and the salad I had was OK. Pizza looked acceptable, but nothing special.

Roaring River Pizza: I didn't pay much attention when I walked into this place and placed my order. After I sat down, though, I realized it was sort of a Chuck E. Cheese knock-off. If I hadn't paid for my pizza already, I would have bolted. In the end, though, the pizza turned out pretty good. It had sun-dried tomatoes, Feta cheese and chicken. I found out later that the real attraction of the place is dining out back where you can look out over the river and watch the Osprey soar.

OTHER ACTIVITIES
If you have time, you HAVE to make the drive from Eugene to Florence on the coast. It's about 65 miles away, but the drive through the coastal range is spectacular. The road twists and turns through beautifully forested hills. I made the trip when all the leaves were changing, and I felt like I was filming a car commercial. Oregon is not like other mountainous forest areas I've been to. Because of all the rain they receive, everything is lush and green. It seems to be teeming with life. Wild ferns grow out of the sides of hills, and don't be surprised to see tree trunks completely covered in an algae-like moss.

Toward the end of the journey, the road meets up with and follows the Siuslaw River, a beautiful river, parts of which are like glass. The river goes all the way to the ocean where it meets up with the powerful Pacific. Florence has a little area called Bay Street that features some nice shops and restaurants right on the river. Other trainers have recommended checking out Sea Lion Caves and the lighthouse just north of there.

Monday, October 22, 2007

Food Finds in Lexington

Gina Dykeman, Julie Bird and I spent a week in Lexington together. We were kindly given a list of restaurants by one of the support team members, May May. May May grew up in Lexington, and it seems like she has her finger on the pulse of the good things going on there. If you’re in Lexington looking for food of entertainment suggestions, check with May May and tell her hello for me.


Before I get into the restaurants, one quick tip: If you don’t like tap water that has a distinct flavor, stick with bottled in Lexington. It is the strongest tasting tap water I’ve ever had, which locals attribute to a drought.


SUGGINS (Food: Good/Service: Not Good) — This bar/restaurant had really good salads with dressings made on site. Both Gina and I had the chicken finger salad. We had an interesting experience at Suggins with the waitress. After I tasted the tap water, I decided I wanted bottled water. When the waitress came back to take our orders, I didn’t say anything about the water tasting bad, I just asked if they had bottled water. The waitress took great offense at my request and didn’t speak to me for the rest of the meal. I had to communicate all requests through Gina. Very interesting.


Billy’s BBQ (Food: Good/Service: Good) — Good, solid pork BBQ. The large pulled pork sandwich with two sides was the special of the day. Sounded like a lot of food to me, so I just ordered the regular sandwich with a side of slaw. Gina got the special and one of the sides she ordered was onion rings. That side order was plenty for the whole table (six of us) to share a few. By this time, I had learned my water lesson, so I had a bottle of water in my purse and just asked for a glass of ice. Definitely a good move.


MOUSE TRAP (Food: Fantastic/Service: Good) — I was in the mood for a turkey sandwich, so Gina and I headed for the Mouse Trap. This is an upscale deli and gourmet gift shop under one roof. Their bread was wonderful and the selection of meats and cheeses for sandwiches was very nice. I also had the black bean, corn and cilantro salad, which I loved.


These are just a few of the places we went, but the others were chains, and probably not worth mentioning. There was a French bakery May May took us to. I can't remember the name, but it is across the street from Billy's BBQ. They had wonderful cookies, breads and cheeses. By the way, if you’re staying at the Residence Inn, Julie and I used the fitness room a couple of times to ward off the pounds after so much good food. They have two treadmills and an elliptical as well as some weights and it’s on the second floor just around the corner from the front desk.


Enjoy Lexington!

Sunday, October 21, 2007

Watch out for that ...

When driving at night, many of us are in the habit of watching for deer to cross the road in front of us. Having grown up in the Midwest, it's amazing if I made it through life there without hitting a deer (although I've had a close call or two).

In Florida, apparently deer aren't the problem.

I'm driving back from the Gulf coast Saturday night (see my post attached to Dorsey's post about places to eat in Tallahassee) and get into Apalachicola National Forest. So I start watching for deer.

As I round a curve, something catches the corner of my eye on the passenger side of the car. A quick glance tells me it's a BEAR running in the ditch. Maybe it had been trying to cross the road and saw my car coming, so aborted his attempt. I didn't get a good look at him -- just at some bear patoooky running away from me -- but he was a pretty good size.

Can you imagine the fight you'd have with the rental car company if you hit a bear?

(In case you're wondering: "patoooky" is the approved Carol-Lyn spelling for that word.)

Tuesday, October 16, 2007

Tulsa Hilton Garden Inn, airport

Planes, trains and air conditioners: a trio of madness.

But first, let me tell you why I chose to stay at the Hilton Garden Inn at Tulsa airport. I had a very early morning flight that Friday. The hotel I'd been staying in all week, the Residence Inn, was about 20 minutes from the airport — on a good traffic day. I wanted to maximize the amount of sleep I would get. Plus, I did not want to have Lee, with whom I was DTUing, have to face the torture of waking up so early to take me to the airport. So, I booked myself into the airport hotel. I arrived early, about 6 p.m. and had a relaxing evening.

After about 9 p.m., things turned sour. On a night when I had 8 hours to allocate to sleep, I got about 3, thanks to the cacophony of swooshes, whistles and clicks provided by the culprits above. I expected the airport hotel to get a fair share of airplane noises. I did not, however, expect the drawn-out train whistles. When I turned on the A/C to mask the sounds from outside, I was treated instead to a constant click-click-clicking from the fan.

I called the front desk to ask if they sold ear plugs in the store. Nope. And I, who normally travel with these life-savers, for some reason decided not to pack any this time around. So I was stuck tossing and turning all night. I awoke about 6 a.m., dressed for breakfast and prepared my speech for the front desk clerk.

I got downtstairs and told the man behind the desk about my "horrible" night, and all he did was ask what room I was in and tell me he would write a note to maintenance. A little late for that, buddy. He did not offer any apology or even a breakfast voucher ($9.95 for breakfast at this hotel; fortunately, the check-in clerk gave me one when I asked if breakfast was included). Stunned and sleepy, I went and ate my breakfast and related the story to the friendly (and sympathetic) waitress, Pat. She was very cool and gave me a "catch me a my best" card, which she said she'd pass along to the manager. I filled it out and returned it to her, praising Pat and censuring the front-desk clerk.

I checked out and went on my not-so-merry way, knowing I would be calling the manager before long. I called Monday morning and spoke to Terri, the manager. She, like Pat, was sympathetic and kind. She told me that the kind of service I received was atypical, and that he (the front-desk clerk) "should know better than that." Terri asked what she could do to make it up to me. She offered some hotel points. I asked for a bit more. She agreed easily. Victory of sorts.

So I am happy with my points. But I am never going to stay at that hotel again.

And the irony is not lost on me. I thought I was doing myself a favor by checking in to a hotel that would save me some drive time. Guess not.

Thursday, October 11, 2007

The legend of John Irwin

So Amanda, Lee and I were driving home from dinner last night. We had just eaten with some girls from the paper (Tulsa World). During dinner, one of them told us she had a 21-year-old son. I was surprised her son was this old, as this woman seemed to be around my age. So as the three of us DT ladies were in the car discussing this, Lee dropped a bombshell: She said calmly that *she* had a 32-year-old son. Amanda and I were stunned. I started peppering Lee with questions:

Where does he live? (San Diego, California)
What's his name? (John, after his great-grandfather)
What's his last name? (Irwin)
Does he see his father? (no)
Were you married? (no)
Are you a widow? (no)
What does his father do? (I don't know)

I dropped that line of questoning.

I next asked what John looked like, if he had Lee's blue eyes (since Amanda is single, after all). That's when Lee informed us how gullible we girls were. We just had few moments of cracking up after that one.

Good one, Lee!

Thursday, October 4, 2007

Tulsa for the directionally challenged

For anyone traveling to Tulsa for the rest of the project there (display ad just going live and editorial phase just starting), a Tulsa Driving Tips document has been posted to Open Air.

It's under the Tulsa workspace, same area where you'd find agendas and audits, but in a folder titled "Miscellaneous Project Documents."

I wrote most of it, but Danielle and Lisa verified that (most of) it was correct.

[Danielle added this]
OR, find it right here:

Airport to Residence Inn

Coming up out of the rental car garage, turn left at top of ramp, get in second-from-left lane. Look for SR 11 East ... At the first traffic light you hit, and you'll turn right, pass under the freeway, then bear left (it's a weird one-lane curve with a tree growing right in front of the helpful sign) to get on highway.

After a short distance, you'll see directional signs for I-244. You'll want to select I-244 East toward Joplin, MO. Two lanes on the left veer toward Joplin. (The other choice is toward downtown, which is I-244 West, and exits to the right.)

You only stay on that freeway (I-244) a very short distance, and will exit right onto 169 south (you'll be heading toward Broken Arrow). ... This is a nice long drive, and you'll see the exits pointing to increasingly higher number street names: 31st St., 51st St., 61st St. Exit right at 71st St.

At the bottom of the ramp for 71st street exit, where there is a traffic light, two lanes turn left. If there's traffic, it's better if you're in the right lane of the two left-turning ones. If not, after the turn, get very quickly into the right-hand lane.

The second traffic light after the turn is 109th Avenue. The four corners of the intersection will sport (clockwise from the 9 o’clock position): a Fuddruckers, an Abuelos, a Chipotle Grill and an AT&T. Turn right.

You'll see Springhill Suites on your left: Behind it is the Residence Inn.


From hotel to paper

Two ways, but this is easier and shorter (although not always quicker, depending on traffic).

At high-traffic times, leave 30 minutes (by either route) to play it safe. That’s usually enough time to make the drive and get you to wherever you need to be in the building.

From hotel, turn left on 71st St., (if you start out on 109th, two lanes turn left) and get quickly in right-hand lane. A block up, you merge right onto 169 North. You'll stay on that about two miles.

Then, watch for SR51West. Don't confuse this state highway with 51st St., which is two exits before what you'll need. Exits you’ll see will be 51st St., then SR51 East, and then your exit: SR 51 West. (There will be a University of Phoenix building visible on your right, and you’ll see it almost in front of you as you curve from 169 to access SR51 West). Then settle down for the long part of the drive.

About 10 or so miles later, look for the Denver Avenue/Cheyenne Avenue exit (no exit numbers). (There will be a Blue Cross-Blue Shield building directly above you just before you exit. The highway sits below street level.)

Exit upward and curve right at the top (sharp curve, no stop sign).

At the end of the block, there will be a stop sign. You want to continue across the first intersection to the second stop sign. That will be Boulder Avenue, the street the paper is on. Turn left onto Boulder.

At the first light, Boulder becomes a one-way street/four lanes. Continue through four more traffic lights. You should see, up ahead on the right, the Tulsa World building and its old-style vertical sign.

In the block before the Tulsa World building, there is a parking garage. It's not where you'll park, but it does tie up the right lane of traffic (with cars turning into the garage), so stay in the second-to-right lane until you pass that garage. Then quickly get to the right. You'll see a Domino's sign above you on the right side.

Cross the intersection(Fourth and Boulder). Use extreme caution. The traffic light is out, and there is a four-way stop (signs are in the middle of the intersection, which people keep missing/ignoring.)

Immediately after crossing the intersection, turn right into the Tulsa World's small guest parking lot (not covered). It has security-controlled arms, but there is a box with a call button into the lobby. You just have to say you're with DTI, and they'll buzz you into the lot. Speak loudly and clearly (since there likely will be traffic and construction noise around you).

In the lobby, sign in, tell the pleasant security man that you'll be there all week. He'll probably give you a pass, so you don't have to sign in every morning.


From work back to the hotel

You can't really retrace your steps, since Boulder is one-way, plus SR51 back toward the hotel is always heavy with traffic (and a rough road, to boot). The following directions take you the long way, but it doesn't take any more time.

Turn right out of the Tulsa World parking lot (no choice, since it’s a one-way street). Go to the second intersection (the first will be a 4-way stop sign with construction: the second has a working traffic light).

Turn right again, and follow that straight until you come to a three-directional split involving four lanes of traffic. You’ll want to be in either of the middle lanes, which curve right, then left and merge onto I-244 East. (Yes, the same one you took from the airport.) You will stay on it until you hit the Highway 169 South exit (get over to the right early during rush hour, it's a fight for the one-lane exit).

Take 169 South to 71st St. (More detailed directions in the "airport to hotel" section above.)


Alternate: Hotel from work

Turn right out of the Tulsa World parking lot. Go to the end of the block and turn right again. When you get to Cincinnati Street, turn right again. Get in the second from left lane on Cincinnati. This street will feed you onto SR51 East. (This is the highway you likely took to work.)

Follow SR51 East until you reach highway 169 South. There is construction on the exit, and even when there wasn't, it was a fight for position into the exit lane. Plan on getting into the lane at least a mile early (watch for traffic backing up as a clue to the congestion ahead).

Or you can weasel your way into the lane at the last minute. (Good luck with that, because local drivers are possessive about the road real estate: Lisa can attest to the struggle through traffic and honking horns!)

Stay on 169 South to 71st St. … and you know the way from there.


Hotel to airport

Tulsa’s airport is pretty small, and on it’s website it suggests being there an hour early (as opposed to many airports that suggest two hours). Unless you’re traveling at peak traffic times, I’d say 90 minutes from hotel door to flight departure is adequate.

Of the several times of day and on different days I’ve flown out, the TSA line was only long on a Friday morning. American Airlines also had a small gathering on Friday morning, too, but I rarely check luggage, so don’t know if that’s common.

From hotel, turn left on 71st St., (if you start out on 109th, two lanes turn left) and get quickly in right-hand lane. About a block up, you get on 169 North.

Stay on 169 North for several miles, and watch for I-244. The 1-244 West and East roads exit together, but then you’ll veer toward the left, taking I-244 West toward Oklahoma City.

You only stay on I-244 a short distance: You get on the freeway, and take the very next exit (Exit 12B), which is highway 11: it’s clearly marked as heading toward the airport.

Stay on Highway 11 for another brief drive. When you exit, you’ll exit right, curve left, and then turn right at the traffic light toward the terminal. Signage outside the airport is good; inside, not that great.

If you’re turning in a rental car before business hours, you’ll have to drop the keys, etc. at the counter inside, not at the kiosks in the garage.

If you’re also checking luggage, here’s your path: take escalator out of garage up to terminal. It actually dumps you out near baggage claim.

You have to go through baggage claim, past the car rental counters (drop your keys), then down the escalator to ticketing to check bags. Then back up the same escalator (going other direction) to access TSA security (one screening area for all airlines).

Coming out of TSA, gates for American and Delta airlines are both on the concourse to the right (Southwest to the left). Good signage here, if you look high enough, above the arch to the concourses.


From newspaper to airport

Quick and easy. Even in 5 o’clock traffic, 90 minutes from leaving paper to flight departure time is adequate.

Turn right out of the Tulsa World parking. Go to the second street (the first will be a 4-way stop sign with construction: the second has a working traffic light).

Turn right again, and follow that straight until you come to a three-directional split involving four lanes of traffic. You’ll want to be in either of the middle lanes, which curve left, then right and merge onto I-244 East.

Stay on I-244, until you see signs for highway 11 East (Exit 13B: It’s a LEFT exit).

Drive a short way on Highway 11, and watch for airport exit. You exit right, then curve left, and then turn right at the traffic light to get to terminal and rental car parking garage.

Random information

There are lots of great restaurants scattered around town:
• Cherry Street (which is actually 15th Street between Utica and Peoria streets) has lots of quaint spots (JazMoZs [complete with gravelly voiced piano player], Camille’s, Doe’s Eat Place, the Palace, Kilkenny’s, Chimi’s, and many more, including a Jason’s Deli). Several feature outdoor dining options;
• Utica Square (just south of SR 51 on Utica Street) also has several options,
including the Wild Fork (see Danielle’s review in the blog mentioned below).
• There also is a neighborhood known as Brookside, which is along Peoria Street south of about 31st St. Elmer’s Barbeque is in this area, and there’s an old movie theater that’s been converted into an eatery (watch for the movie marquee, and vertical sign saying “Brook”.) Also many more options in that neighborhood.
• Downtown also offers an assortment of lunch choices.

Read more about Tulsa’s dining choices on http://trainerstravelingtips.blogspot.com

Near the hotel, there also are a lot of options (dining, shopping and some entertainment).
•There is a Target across 71st Street from the hotel, a movie theater across 109th, and a park/lake with walking/running track across 73rd Street (which runs along the right side of the hotel … well, right if you’re standing and looking at the hotel entrance). Go down 73rd a half block to Garnett and turn right: the park is about a half-block down, just past apartment complex. Further down 71st is a Bonefish Grill and a Pei Wei.
• The other direction on 71st (like you’re headed to the paper, but don’t get on Highway 169) is Woodland Hills Mall, and a few shopping plazas and multitude of restaurants (assorted independents, such as Zio’s Italian Kitchen – I think it’s a local chain – to all the standard chains, ranging from McDonald’s to Mimi’s to Cheesecake Factory).

Thursday, September 20, 2007

Monday, September 17, 2007

When will the hurting stop?

Was it Carol Burnett or Bill Cosby who described giving birth as pulling your lower lip over your head? In any case. I haven't given birth. But I am in labor of sorts. I am trying to pass a kidney stone. It'll be my third since 2001.

Want to read more? whereintheworldisdanielle.blogspot.com