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Post-Shutdown Travel. Eight Cool U.S. Options.

By Erica and Karen

We were both vaccinated a while ago, when the guidance of what that really meant was muddled. So we kept our masks on, and did not have lunch dates, even outside. Eventually, we concluded that outside meals with a couple of vaccinated friends was a risk worth taking, and recently we have come to believe that we can actually do just about anything—though actually doing something like eating indoors feels illicit, and we wonder when we will be brave enough to venture into a theater.

The next big thing for us is travel. We would love to go somewhere far away and experience the thrill of a totally new environment and culture. Of course there are many places we still would not think of going, because they remain in the throes of this dreadful plague. So we will likely stay in the U.S. for a while.

Luckily, there are so many places we want to see in our very own country. And some of them are almost as unknown to us as many other countries.

  • Alaska is suitably far away, so much so that it seems like another world. We’ve always wanted to cruise the Inside Passage. And taking a sightseeing train might be pretty fabulous too.

  • In another direction, there is Hawaii. Volcanos—Born of the Fire, Born of the Sea. Otherworldly flora and fauna. Gorgeous beaches. Sounds pretty perfect, especially after a Northern winter.

  • Texas is intriguing. We’ve spend some (business) time in Dallas and Houston, but never in Austin. The East Austin Hotel looks right up our alley. And since it is a start-up city, we should feel at home. (No, it is not the best city in America, New York is, but we still want to go.)

  • If we were feeling giddy—and we are, a bit—we might go to historic Las Vegas. (Yes, it has a history, and it is a strange one.) Paris in Vegas might be entertaining. Might not. But seems we should see the place at least once. And one of our friends told us to get up early and go see sunrise over the Hoover Dam, which sounds very special. We like sunrises and dams.

This country is so vast and varied. Our options seem infinite. Exciting even to think about it.

Will you go somewhere? Where?

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  1. Yes! In July we’re taking a road trip, starting at a family owned lodge on Lake Champlain in northern VT. Then across the White Mountains Nat’l Forest in NH. From there, glamping in Acadia, ME. Onto Booth Bay Harbor, ME. Finally down the east coast, stopping in Hyannis and Nantucket. Can’t wait to explore our own backyard!

  2. Just returned form my first visit to Maine. Stayed with friends at their "2nd home cottage" in East Boothbay. Lovely experience on and off the water. On my list for a return visit to explore Portland (supposedly a foodie town, always an attraction for any San Franciscan like myself), and a bit further north to Arcadia national Park. During the pandemic I visited the Grand Tetons and the Smoky Mountains on solo hiking trips. Both highly recommended! Visited both Savanah, GA and Charleston, SC last March, post vaccine. Lovely cities, but hot and humid even in March. Wait for late Fall to visit. I’ve been to Austin many times (business and family). It’s a college town through and through, but the food scene has been greatly elevated in the past few years. Love NYC and DC, can always go back, and plan to soon. San Diego is my home town, and I’m returning for a long over due visit for the 4th of July. Nashville is on my list.
    I’m a globe trotter with 102 country visits to my name. The pandemic year was a positive in only one way, I discovered multiple places in the US that were unique and fabulous in distinctively different ways.
    My postponed vacation from 2020 to the Republic of Georgia, Azerbaijan and Armenia was rescheduled for Oct. 2021. With the vaccination roll out so slow in Europe, plus new strains to worry about, I suspect that 2021 will be another year exploring the good ol’ USA. Life is too short to stay home!

  3. Chicago’s best season is summer. Added to your great list is The Art Institute which is currently showing the Obama portraits. They also have a fabulous Impressionist permanent collection along with the Marc Chagall stained glass windows! Beyond Pizza, there are some great restaurants, old and new here as well.

  4. Love this list! The architecture tours (walking or by boat) are very interesting as well, if you like that kind of thing. Love what they’ve done with the waterfront around the museum and the Bean, and you can walk along the lake and river on on an expanding path of plazas. If you go to DC, the Philips Collection is a nice museum in DuPont circle. If you’re an F.Scott Fitzgerald fan, he and Zelda spent some time in Baltimore (a quick train ride north from DC) in the Mount Vernon neighborhood. They are buried in Rockville, MD, just north of DC. If you are heading south, agree Savannah is a must do, and you’ll appreciate it more if you’ve read Midnight in the Garden of Good and Evil.