United States
City of Asheville

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    • Day 6

      Elk ist noch lange nicht Elch🌞🦌

      March 3, 2022 in the United States ⋅ ☀️ 18 °C

      Heute verlassen wir wieder den "Great Smoky Mountains NP". Wir haben das erlebt, was wir vor Jahren wegen starken Nebels nicht sehen konnten. Tendenziell geht es jetzt immer westwärts. Gehen wir es an👍
      Doch zunächst fahren wir noch zum "Oconaluftee Visitor Center". Von hier aus starten wir eine tolle Wanderung entlang des "Oconaluftee River".
      Der Fluss weckt Erinnerungen in uns an den "Dechute River" in Oregon. (Nach wie vor eines unserer Lieblingsländer👍)
      Ein ehemaliges Dorf der Cherokee Indianer. Wir sind im Cherokee Indian Reservat.
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    • Day 57

      Week 9: North Carolina + Virginia

      June 6, 2022 in the United States ⋅ ⛅ 61 °F

      The final week is here after cutting the trip short a few weeks!

      Can’t believe I made it. You know, when you put your mind to something, and dedicate yourself to that, you can accomplish some rather crazy things.

      Planning this trip, working with resellers, setting up meetings, driving across the country, doing presentations, staying in new hotels every night - I felt like it would wear me out, but I’ve gotten in a groove. Maybe it’s the excitement of seeing the country that has kept my vibe alive. Or maybe I’m
      built to be able to handle more.

      Most of my friends can’t believe the stats behind this trip…and that I’m doing it solo. To me, this doesn’t seem that crazy. I mean, I put that I’m going to go to space on my life goals list. I wrote it 3 times. And I’m going to get there so driving around the country seems minimal.

      Anywho, this week I’ll be making some long treks in my final 3 days. North Carolina to Virginia, back to NC, and then off to our headquarters in Atlanta. That trip to Atlanta is going to be such a phenomenal feeling because I’ll know that this trip was a success, both for business and awareness of our efforts on pushing the STEM solutions we have.

      I’m so glad I made an effort to convince Boxlight to allow this journey to happen. I just knew that post pandemic, getting face to face with customers, and a demoing the product in a unique way would be beneficial. And it has. The schools/districts we met with have loved it. And it’s memorable! Sometimes these schools take a year or so to buy, but when they come around to it, I know they’ll remember me driving up to their campus, pulling out the demo experience from the sprinter, and going through the solutions and letting them try them out.

      It’s bitter sweet returning home because I am happy to have some time to recharge, but I also have a busy month and I was expecting to go through to the end of June in my head. Either way, I’ll be happy to have a weekend with friends and family.

      I did a hike this weekend in Asheville NC to one of the most amazing waterfalls I’ve ever seen. It was about an hour drive into blue ridge mountains, and when I got there it was POURING rain. I could have just waited for it to stop, or drove back, but I just said yolo and departed in the rain. 3 miles in, I ran into this waterfall and was in awe. The best part about it, I think the rain amplified the intensity of this waterfall. It was a magic moment for sure and one that showed me that you have to persevere through difficult things to see incredible wins.

      I’ve had a lot of “me” time on this trip and was able to really get in tune with myself, my focuses in life, what’s truly important to me, building life goals/yearly goals, and being grateful for all the things I do have. That was an important side win I didn’t expect. Thank you Mission to Mars Van! Let’s crush this final week :)
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    • Day 15

      Biltmore Estate

      May 14, 2016 in the United States ⋅ ☀️ 18 °C

      The camera in this phone takes good quality pictures but something about the zoom or field of view or something is too small. I could hardly get any good shots of anything in the house.

      Biltmore is "America's Largest House" (trademark.) The house is 120 (?) acres (house only), 250 rooms, 70 bathrooms, indoor bowling alley, indoor pool, Otis elevators (house had cutting edge amenities from day 1, including central heat and its own phone system.) Vanderbilt (grandson of the train baron) eventually bought 100,000 (?) acres of the surrounding land - land denuded of all trees in his time. Frederick Law Olmsted, his landscaper, was one of the first Americans to realize land needed conservation. Vanderbilt's efforts led to the creation of the US Forestry Service. The drive to the house is 3 miles through magnificent (man-made) landscape. By buggy this was 45 minutes. You were supposed to leave your cares behind. The driveway enters the grounds parallel to the house - so you can't see it till you turn the corner. The grounds are similarly laid out with genius. The compound is so big they have fly fishing lessons, Range Rover offroading lessons, etc. The house is full of Renoirs, Singer Sargents, a Ming vase or 3, Albrecht Durer engravings, etc.

      1 cantilevered giant spiral staircase
      2 where to start? roof is 5 stories up and still is monogramed. House has 50 fireplaces and 16 chimneys, hmm. House has gargoyles but high tech invention downspouts
      3 main dining hall, 3 fireplaces
      4 giant organ opposite fireplaces
      5 two stories floor to ceiling of books, spiral staircase, giant fireplace, door hidden behind 2nd story of fireplace so guests in bedrooms could get a book. Vanderbilt picked every book himself.
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    • Day 15

      Biltmore

      May 14, 2016 in the United States ⋅ ☀️ 21 °C

      1 individual changing rooms for ladies to get into their bathing suits
      2 pool. Not pictured: old-timey gym, steam bath box thing, etc
      3 one of several storerooms. House had a walk-in refrigerated room.
      4 turns out this wasn't the laundry room. The real one had industrial sized equipment
      5 this is Joan of Arc. There ain't a lot of female saints to go opposite your males. some of the grotesques were griffins, notable persons, a bear with a honeypot
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    • Day 4

      Biltmore Estate

      December 31, 2020 in the United States ⋅ 🌙 15 °C

      Marveling at the beautiful Biltmore Estate, where grandeur meets history. Did you know? It's America's largest privately-owned home, boasting 250 rooms! 🏰🌳 #BiltmoreBeauty #HistoricSplendor #FunFact #FamilyRead more

    • Day 5

      Asheville - Blue Ridge Mountains

      August 21, 2018 in the United States ⋅ ⛅ 23 °C

      Ankunftsort für die nächsten Tage (Ausflüge) = Asheville Biltmore im HolidayInn Biltmore West.

      Viele Stunden und Meilen später (ca. 550 Meilen = knapp 900 km) sind wir an einem Ort & Hotel angekommen, welcher für morgen Ausgangspunkt einer Wanderung sein soll (gebucht via App von unterwegs). Kontrastprogramm zum Städte-Sightseeing ⛰😀.

      Sehr schön gelegen - mitten in den Mountains - super Hotel mit sehr schönen Zimmern und einer tollen Ausstattung (Indoor und Outdoor Pool 🏊🏻‍♀️ 🏊🏻 ).
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    • Day 6

      Asheville II: Games and Books

      September 12 in the United States ⋅ ☁️ 18 °C

      We spent the day in Ashville again, most of the day spent at Well Played Board Game Cafe where we played Viticulture and Bees along with eating lunch there. Then a stop over to Battery Park Book Exchange and Champagne Bar where we had wine and appetizers amongst the bookshelves. Finished off the day back at Well Played for Lost Ruins of Arnak, which we both are intrigued by!Read more

    • Asheville

      April 24, 2018 in the United States ⋅ 🌧 13 °C

      24.04.2018 - 26.04.2018

      Am 25.04.2018 sind wir entlang des schönen Blue Ridge Parkways zu unserem Wanderspot „Graveyard Fields“ gefahren. Dort haben wir eine schöne Tour gemacht. Danach sind wir zum Biltmore Estate gefahren. Haben uns aber dafür entschieden dieses nicht zu besuchen, da der Eintritt bei 60$ lag.Read more

    • Day 6

      Charlotte to Asheville

      October 18, 2017 in the United States ⋅ ☀️ 13 °C

      As predicted, we didn't sleep as well as we'd hoped, mainly because the hotel was right near a highway. Even ear plugs weren't that effective! I ended up setting the alarm so we wouldn't miss breakfast, and it was quite reasonable (any place that serves waffles gets a gold star from me). On the way we stopped at a LIDL supermarket to pick up some snacks. Whilst there an elderly lady tapped me on the shoulder and asked if she could hug me as she's "always wanted to hug Superman" (I was wearing my Warner Bros Superman T-shirt). I mean, how could you say no to that? :-)

      On the way to Asheville we stopped to look at Lake Lure before continuing onto Chimney Rock National Park. I really loved it there. When we arrived, the lady working at the gate realised we weren't Americans and said "I'd just like to apologise for Donald Trump" which wasn't something we were expecting. Chimney Rock was amazing. The walk up wasn't too difficult, and the view over the valley was worth the effort. What was also good was being able to sit in a deckchair and just look at the valley. Which is exactly what we did whilst having our lunch.

      The weather in North Carolina is significantly cooler than California, which I don't mind. After leaving Chimney Rock, we continued onto Asheville, which was listed as one of the top 25 cities in the USA to visit according to Trip Advisor. Once we arrived at our hotel we headed out to explore. To be honest, maybe we missed something. Asheville is nice, but it wasn't quite as amazing as we'd expected. It was even more interesting to see a guy walking around with a snake around his shoulders. The town had a sort of grungy appeal I suppose.

      For dinner, we went to a local Japanese restaurant which was a good choice for dinner. Tomorrow we are headed to nearby Biltmore Estate which I think might be the reason why Asheville rates so highly.
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    • Day 10

      Take me to the other side

      May 12, 2007 in the United States ⋅ ⛅ 20 °C

      De ochtend vroeg begonnen en vanuit Linville verder de bergen in gereden richting Asheville. Asheville is de andere kant van de USA: vegetarische restaurants, Hippies, tattooshops, alternatieve bioscoop (deze week met black book van Paul Verhoeven), vrijende lesbo-paartjes in het restaurant, “questioning the war”-stickers, straten vol terrasjes, alternatieve kapsalons, Indiaase prullaria, Yoga-centra, alternatieve platenwinkels, muziekcafe’s, koffiewinkeltjes, skate-winkels en een lekkere laidback funky punky atmosphere. En dat midden in een omgeving waar de Amish en de Mormonen wonen. Daar hebben we dus een goed deel van de middag rondgeslenterd en een heerlijke enorme pizza gegeten in een met rommel vol gehangen paars geschilderde alto-tent (al het bedienende personeel was vergeven van de tattoos, afgezakte baggy trousers, gympen, paars haar, korte rockjes, t-shirts met protesten tegen de Irak-war) genaamd “Mellow Mushroom”.

      Vanmiddag hebben we rondgesjouwd op een enorme Farmers-markt. Hier brengen allerlei lokale producenten en boeren hun fruit, groente, plantjes, honing, kazen, brood en ander waar heen om onder grote overkappingen te verkopen. Daar een echt bruin brood gehaald (de eerste deze vakantie) en lekker kaasjes en deze lekker in de buitenlucht opgepeuzeld (met een kopje “Dora”-kippensoep).

      En morgen naar de indianen
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