Sunday, June 2, 2013

Heading Across Kentucky (Sat.)

We are leaving the Louisville area today but we had a couple errands first.  We had planned to stop at Walmart last night but after all that shopping for cell phones (I forgot to mention that our sales guy at Best Buy, Felice, was from Arizona), we were too tired to make that stop, and we needed new windshield wiper blades for the Explorer since the one on the driver's side started pulling loose yesterday when we were driving in the rain.  Walmart didn't have the right size of wiper blades, so we had to make a second stop.  When we started our "pre-flight" routine, I had trouble getting one of the drawers to close  in the bedroom.  About the same time, Joe yelled for me to come up front.  The half of my passenger side window that I can open was completely shattered.  I had just opened the front curtains and didn't notice it but I can't believe it happened in the few minutes since I had done that, so we assume it happened sometime while we were sitting here with the front curtains pulled.  We saw no evidence of what might have hit it, so that it still a mystery.  It was still intact, but just shattered, so we finished getting ready for the road and decided to head to Lexington and see about getting it fixed.  However, once we got on the road, some of the glass started falling out, so when we stopped for lunch Joe got out the aluminum duct tape and we decided to live with it until we get to John's if it doesn't start leaking.  He assumes it will take a few days to get it fixed, by the time we get someone out to measure, then they get it ordered, then they come back out to install, so it would work better if we were sitting near John's when we have it done.  Of course, that's really going to hamper my picture-taking, so we'll see if we can live with the decision.



Driving across Kentucky is all about horses.  We passed some beautiful horse properties, with miles and miles of fencing.  Joe said the horse pastures look like golf courses.


For a long time, all the fences and old barns were painted either black or dark brown.  But some of the horse properties had beautiful homes way back off the road, and the huge horse barns looked like mansions.

We stopped in Frankfurt and had White Castles again, then fueled ($3.339 here), and took Hwy 60 to Lexington.  We took the 4 bypass around Lexington, then we took scenic Hwy 27 the rest of the way through KY and into Tennessee before finally cutting over to I-75 to get to Cove Lake State Park at Caryville, TN.  Outside of Lexington, we passed this eye-catching castle right off the highway.  I looked it up on the internet and this is what I found out.



"Nearly 18 months after opening, the castle has become a money-making venture and a source of pride for its owner, Post said. Business increased as room rates were cut from $1,000 a night to between $375 and $600. The turret suites that once cost $3,000 a night are now $1,250. The castle has 50 rooms including a library, sitting room, game room and a dining room for 40 guests. Outdoors is a 20-by-50 foot pool, tennis courts, formal garden and a large Chinese dragon fountain spouting water."

It was started in 1969 but never finished and sat empty for 30 years.  Post bought it for $1.8 million in 2003.

 We passed the turnoff for the airport in Lexington, which is named Man O' War, and has statutes of horses alongside the highway.
We finally got out of the black-fence horse properties (must have had a paint sale) and saw some white fencing.  Still passing huge horse properties, but we are also seeing some cattle ranches here.
As we get to the southern part of Kentucky, we cross the Kentucky and Cumberland Rivers, and enter the Daniel Boone National Forest, which takes us to the Tennessee State Line.  I only got a picture of the Cumberland River.  When we lived in Terre Haute, we made several trips to Cumberland Lake here, and rented cabins or houseboats.  It's a beautiful area.
As we drove through the National Forest, it began getting more hilly, and I assume we can see mountains ahead, I assume the Cumberland Mountain Range.  We drove through Cumberland Gap just before we got to the campground.

We drove in and out of rain all day but stayed ahead of the storms.  Even when we got to the campground, it was sprinkling.  This is a nice state park, right on the lake.  Lots of people camping and fishing here. There were very few open sites available, but we picked out a great one, with a view of the lake.  There are some sites right on the water, but those were all taken.  There's lots of open play areas here as well as a couple playgrounds and a volleyball pit.  I would say this state park gets heavily used, which is wonderful.  (And thank you, Mazie, for the State Park Campground Directory, we've used it a lot already).



 It rained off and on all night and all morning on Sunday.  We are taking the day off today (Sunday), catching up on our reading and watching the NASCAR race (except we keep losing the satellite signal).  Messing some with our new phones.  It looks like our patched up window has survived the rain so far.

 Unless something exciting happens (which we hope NOT), I probably won't do another blog until Monday night/Tuesday morning.  Might as well take the day off from blogging too.


Saturday, June 1, 2013

Louisville Slugger Museum and American Printing House for the Blind (Fri.)

Today was another full day of sightseeing in Louisville.  Our first stop was the Louisville Slugger Museum and Factory tour.  They turn out between 2000 and 5000 wooden bats here each day for professional and recreational ball players, plus an additional 4000-5000 mini bats.  The bats are made from white ash and maple trees.  Ideal trees for bats are at least 80 years old.  They start with a "billet," which is French for "trunk of tree."  We got a tour through the factory and got to watch some of the processes, and our tour guide passed several different bats through the group for us to hold.  We were not allowed to take photos during the factory tour, but as we left the building I got the third picture through the window, which overlooks the street.  The first bat was made here in 1884. 


The museum has lots of bats from famous players.  John and Bridgette recently attended a Tampa Bay game, so I took a picture for them.




My favorite section was the "Big Red Machine," the bats of Pete Rose, Johnny Bench and Joe Morgan from the championship days of the Cincinncati Reds, which we followed back in the mid-70s.  Pete Rose was always my favorite baseball player.



We watched a short film (made me want to go out to watch a baseball game) and then walked through an area designed like a locker room, and then Joe sat on the bench in the dugout.
In addition to the museum, a temporary exhibit called "Big Leagues Little Bricks" is here until September.  This exhibit is baseball stadiums, bats and players all made out of legos.  It was amazing!





This next one is Wrigley Field, which used 57,960 legos.

Outside this building, at the entrance is a HUGE baseball bat, and embedded in the next building is a baseball.  We each got a mini bat for taking the tour, so Shooter will now have his first bat.
It was raining when we came out of this museum, and we headed to the car to drive around a little in the old downtown area, then we headed out to drive along the river.  Joe was determined to find the River Drive, and he did.  They have a beautiful walking bridge here call "Big 4 Bridge," and every time we've passed it we've seen people walking and biking across it, even in the rain.  We just admired it from afar.


We passed some nice parks on this drive, two marinas, some very nice real estate, and soccer fields that had irrigation pivots on them.  We thought that might be a good idea for Arizona.

We came upon a historic water tower that caught our eye, so we drove back to it.

We finally turned around and headed to our next destination, the American Printing House for the Blind      (APH).  This was an amazing place, and made us realize some of the obstacles the blind encounter.  This is the world's largest publisher of books for the visually impaired, and they do both Braille and enlarged print, two totally different concepts for the blind. This company was started in 1858, and it took them 6 years to complete their first book, due to the civil war.  That first production had a print run of 400 copies.   In 1959, APH completed a 142-volume edition of the World Book Encyclopedia, the largest Braille project ever undertaken.



Our tour guide gave us some history of APH and showed us quite a collection of tools for the blind.  Then we got to walk through the actual "factory."  There were not too many people working today, but we saw a few running some machinery, and some proofreaders working.  For proofreading, the blind person actually reads to the sighted person.  The Kentucky School for the Blind is right next door, and it looked like a pretty big campus.  The APH building is huge.  I think she said it had been added on to 14 times.

They had several different globes, all topographical so the kids could "feel" the mountains.  I thought this one was really nice.


Also on display was the piano Stevie Wonder (Steveland Morris) used when he attended the Michigan School for the Blind.


Our timing here was very fortunate.  Unbeknownst to us, they only give tours at 10:00 a.m. and 2:00 p.m., and we got here at 1:55.  The tour lasted about 1 1/2 hours, then we wandered through their museum which held a lot of equipment from their early days.  At the end of the tour, we got to type our names on a Braille machine.  Braille is really just a set of raised dots, and their position determines what letter the dots represent.  I typed "Wilma," but Joe had to go all out and typed "David Froeschke," so he got to use up most of the alphabet!




This was a very interesting place and we learned a lot.  They had some goggles fixed up with different eye conditions so you could "see" what someone with that condition (glaucoma, macular degeneration [MD], etc.) sees, so we looked through the MD ones to get an idea of what Lucille deals with all the time. 

We left here about 4:30, tired and hungry.  We headed back across the river and found a Mexican restaurant, Senor Iguana, for dinner.  It was delicious; in fact Joe thought it was one of the best pork burritos he had ever eaten. 

But we were not done for the day yet.  We have been looking for a new cell phone for me, and we had passed a Verizon store in our search for dinner, so we went over there and talked to them.  Then called Eric for his thoughts on smart phones.  Then we went across the street to Best Buy, and ended up with 2 new smart phones, one for each of us.  We still are pretty sure we are not smart enough for smart phones, but we are going to try them.  We had excellent help there, and Felice Tempo, are sales guy who set us up with the new phones, was really great.  I'm sure we tried his patience almost to the breaking point.  Either that, or he's our new best friend.

We were there almost 2 hours, and by the time we drug ourselves home, we were both exhausted.  I went straight to bed because I knew it would be aggravating to try to figure out the new phones and I was too tired to even think about it, but Joe messed with his for a while.  So if no one hears from us for a few days, it will be because we don't know how to make a call.  We hope we can figure out how to answer it if it rings.