Although this is not necessarily a blog about my
letterboxing experiences, it is inspired by a message thread on Atlas
Quest. Emcsquared recently posed the questions:
What do tourists do that gets under your skin?
If a tourist wants to blend in, what should they do? What should they stop doing immediately?
What do tourists do that gets under your skin?
If a tourist wants to blend in, what should they do? What should they stop doing immediately?
What followed turned into a discussion of various peeves of
local people.
We live about 45 minutes away from center city Philadelphia,
a city that I love dearly, and one of my Bucket List wishes is to walk every
street in that wonderful city. I had a
map that I was logging all of my walks but it went the way of everything else
that was on my hard drive when my computer crashed last summer so I guess I
will just have to start walking all over again.
As a walker, I see everything there is to see on each street. I do look up a lot, I do walk slowly and I
always, always, always carry a camera (these are some of Miss Moon’s tongue in
cheek pet peeves). I want to see
EVERYTHING there is to see. However, I
don’t tie a sweater around my shoulders (a MysticzGal irritation) because it is
tucked into the waistband of my precious Columbia fanny pack (a Wry Me no-no). Anyway, the point is that I
take my time, I stop into local restaurants because I am in the area and want
to experience everything. I buy local items and help to support the local
businesses. I have the time to tour
leisurely and since I drive myself there, I can come and go when I please.
The story changes when I make my once a year visit to New
York City, a town I would never have the courage to intentionally drive in
alone. At this point, I will have to mention that
I did get lost once on my way from Pennsylvania to the Pirate in Every Port
event held in Groton, CT. My GPS somehow
took me right down Broadway on a rainy Friday night. Fortunately, I was not in a hurry and didn’t
panic and eventually got to Groton safely, swearing never to drive in NYC
again. My once a year trip is on a tour
bus which my employer offers to us each spring.
Another Miss Moon peeve is “it's kind of annoying that unless they are
visiting someone who lives here they NEVER leave Manhattan.” Well, we are dropped off around Time Square
and have eight hours to do whatever we want.
I would love to visit something outside of this area but since we have
taken this trip for the past eight years and our time is so short, we have
visited almost every tourist area there is to see. We have taken the open deck tour buses and
travelled once to Brooklyn but to be honest, it was a residential area and
although lovely, there wasn’t a whole lot of reason to get off the bus to look
around. We only had eight hours. I suspect after seeing the numbers of tour
buses dropping people off constantly during the time we are there, it is the
same for a lot of people. One year we
did plan our day around NYC letterboxes and did visit a couple of wonderful
areas, thanks to Miss Moon, but then Bill grew bored and impatient with letterboxing
and we didn’t do that again.
In my experience, letterboxes are a terrific way to get to
see places that are a little non touristy.
A few years ago, we visited Virginia Beach and were guided around the
town by the boxes that I had planned.
Last September, I visited VB again and letterboxes by Casa del Sol and
BB Stacker were my main tour guides.
Bill and I made a cross country drive to South Dakota a few years ago
and picked up a couple of boxes in each state that we visited. In doing this, we got to see the gravesite of
William McKinley in Ohio and the Beulah Schoolhouse in Wyoming, we enjoyed some
delicious ice cream in Indiana as well as experiencing a whole lot of unexciting rest
areas in various states.
Now back to some of the other peeves on the message thread. According to one responder, she doesn’t like
it when people “come to our state and shop at outlet malls which sell the same
crap they could have bought without leaving home.” I do that.
I spent 37 years working in retail.
I hate to shop. My theory is that
if I can’t buy it at the grocery store, Walmart, Home Depot or Boscovs, our
local department store, all stores within a mile and a half of our home, then I
don’t need it. When my work day is done,
I come home and enjoy my family, I don’t want to shop. But when I am on vacation and most of my
family and all of my housework is back in Pennsylvania, I have the time to shop
and to buy some of the same things that I could buy in PA if I wanted to waste
my family time shopping. I figure I am
supporting the local economy here. After
all, who works in these shops? My guess
is that they are mostly local people so I will indulge in a little shopping
when I am being a tourist.
Another of the same responder’s complaints is “come to our
state and want to buy bargain homes”. We
did that. We bought a condo from an
elderly gentleman who was moving into his son’s home. We did get a good deal on it and now we come
here and support the economy in Florida as well as in Pennsylvania. There are four condos in our particular
building. The other three are sitting
empty because houses are so plentiful in Florida so I figure we actually did
someone a favor by buying their house.
I don’t have a rebuttal for everything that was mentioned on
this board. In fact, I tend to agree
with Wry Me’s comment that people should wait till they leave to wear the
visors and souvenir T-shirts they purchased while visiting. However, I have to admit to wearing my
Philadelphia Phillies baseball cap the same day I bought it last spring when we
attended the preseason game in Clearwater.
And I have to agree 100% with Amanda’s wish that tourists need to read
signs. I find them invaluable, however,
in defense of some tourist areas, it takes a while to get used to how the
signage works. For instance, in some
towns, the street signs indicate the cross street and in other towns, the
street signs tell you what street you are currently on. Also, if a bus sign tells me the A line runs
through this section, I may have no idea
what the A line is. So some homework
needs to accompany the sign reading at times.
And this brings us to the next part of my discussion. Four
years ago, Bill bought a retirement home about an hour away from
Disneyworld. He is retired and has
snowbirded here the past four winters. I still work so I come to Florida
whenever the airfare is really cheap and I have a few days of vacation. Most of the time I remain in Pennsylvania
working and spending lots of time with my daughter and grandchildren and
shoveling all the snow by myself while Bill lays by a pool.
When I first started coming to Florida we did a lot of the
local touristy things. I had no desire
to visit Disney World but we did go to Down Town Disney. The walk through the town is free although
the price of the merchandise is outrageous.
We visited the Ponce Inlet Lighthouse which is only about twenty minutes
from our home and climbed to the top along with many other visitors. We took the St. John Riverboat tours and oohed
and aahed over the alligators we saw (I still ooh and aah over any alligator I
see!) We drove on the beach of Daytona Beach, something that thrills me each
time we do it. We did normal touristy
things in order to get to know the area.
Now that I have been coming to Florida for a few years, I have begun
exploring all of the nooks and crannies, much like I do when I visit
Philadelphia. This is a very historic
area consisting of many small towns and I drive up and down the streets and
back roads every chance I get. It is not
an area with many restaurants and shops so we eat at home most of the time or
we go to a chain restaurant because that is what is here and that is where the
local people work and eat. However, I
still do touristy things like stop in the local post office which is an aged
white house and ask the post mistress just why the sign says “Welcome to
Historic Enterprise” and she explained to me the history of her little
town. I have started to walk in all of
the parks even though I am VERY nervous dong this. I have had to learn about alligators and snakes
and alligators and red ants and alligators and spiders and every rustle of the
palm trees' branches convinces me that one of these is headed my way. I have learned that squirrels running through
the palm trees sound a whole lot the way I imagine an alligator would sound
doing the same thing. I tried to use
letterboxes to guide me around the area but I have been very disappointed to
discover that boxes here are not maintained and most are missing so I have
given up on even searching for them anymore.
I am currently in Florida and yesterday I learned a very
valuable lesson. Hunting laws in Florida
are not like hunting laws in Pennsylvania.
In Pennsylvania, there is no hunting on Sunday so when yesterday turned
out to be an absolutely stunning day and Bill was intent on watching the
Pittsburgh Steelers lose again, I set off for a local 9000 acre wildlife
management area that I had seen on the map.
My hopes were that I would find some fascinating spots to place some new
letterboxes that I had brought along with me.
I started off through a pine forest on a mile and a half trail and
before I was even a tenth of a mile into the trail, it turned into the normal
tropical jungle that scares me to death.
However, I decided to plod on and overcome my fear and the trail
alternated from deciduous forests and back to jungle themes for the next
mile. I soon heard voices and I
approached two men in their late twenties and a boy about eight years old all
wearing blaze orange and carrying rifles.
They were very nice guys and told me that I needed to wear my orange
whenever I am in the woods in Florida because hunting here is seven days a week
from October through March. When I asked
them what they were hunting, they told me that they were looking for wild hogs
and small bears. Oh good, two more
things to add to my list of things to fear in Florida forests. They told me to stay with them because they
were leaving and I would be safer with them since they had orange on and were
parked near me. We enjoyed a nice chat
on the way back to our cars and they told me a lot about how to hike in this
area. I had thoroughly read the entire
website which was devoted to this area and didn’t learn half of the things that
these hunters taught me. Sometimes you do just have to talk to the locals to find out the things you need to know.
One thing that I know for sure is that whether I am in Pennsylvania or Florida, the absolute best things are free and totally local. There is an eagles' nest in our condo complex and I have watched the eagle mother and father raise two young families and this visit, I am watching them prepare the nest for the new brood which will be born before I get here in the spring. And the views that we get from the lake which is about one hundred feet south of our home are unparalleled by any tourist attraction. Funny how the things that are part of nature are the best things about being a tourist or a resident!
Well said!
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