Not to be outdone by Times Square, Boise has its own New Years Eve Celebration, the Idaho Potato Drop. Held in the park adjacent to the State Capitol, a huge replica of a potato is dropped from a crane at the stroke of midnight. There is live entertainment all afternoon and evening. We attended the raising of the potato at 6 PM but not the midnight festivities. It was already cold at 6 PM.
Month: December 2017
The Old Idaho Penitentiary
Andy stayed with us for a couple of extra days after Christmas and we visited the Old Idaho Penitentiary. It was in use for over 100 years beginning in 1872 and it is now an historical site. It was very interesting to see how the prisoners lived. The conditions were brutal; it was not a pleasant place.
Christmas in Boise
We began the Christmas weekend with a nighttime visit to the Winter Garden aGlow at the Idaho Botanical Garden. The garden is outfitted with an amazing display of holiday lights and it is a popular winter attraction in Boise.
We spent Christmas with Tiana’s family at their ranch home outside of Boise. Everyone had a good time, including the animals!
Boise, Idaho
We headed on to Boise to spend Christmas there with Andy and with Tiana’s family. We had never been to Boise and we were very pleasantly surprised. It is a beautiful, vibrant little city. We rented an old Victorian house (built in 1903) in the Hyde Park section of Boise’s North End. The neighborhood, just north of downtown, is filled with beautiful old houses and we enjoyed long walks there.
It snowed a couple of days before Christmas and the snow stayed on the ground for the remainder of our stay in Boise. The Christmas decorations in the neighborhood were beautiful in the snow.
U.S. 50 across Nevada – The Loneliest Road in America
On our way to Idaho for Christmas we crossed Nevada on U.S. 50, the loneliest road in America. The drive is over 100 miles between Fallon and Austin and there are few traces of human activity along the way.
Austin is a tiny town in the middle of Nevada which swelled to over 10,000 people during a silver boom in the late 1800s. Now the 21st century has left it behind and it is struggling to stay afloat. There are several beautiful churches and homes in Austin, left over from the silver boom years.
Eureka is a bit more prosperous than Austin but it also has a number of shuttered old buildings.
We spent the night in Elko had had a Basque dinner at the Star Hotel, a Basque tradition for over 100 years. The restaurant was only a couple of blocks from Elko’s red light district (brothels are legal in Nevada). We couldn’t resist a photo of “Inez’s Dancing & Diddling.”
Open Studios in Berkeley
We celebrated Andy’s birthday at Open Studios in Berkeley. Local artists open their studios, located in an old bakery building, for the public to see where they create their art. They have artwork for sale, also. We ended the day with drinks at the Sierra Nevada Torpedo Room and then dinner at Rivoli.
Back in Northern California for a week
We arrived back in Northern California for a week and celebrated Andy’s birthday. We stayed at a Hilton extended stay property, Homewood Suites, in Cordelia. Just to the northwest of the hotel was a beautiful neighborhood that incorporated walking/biking trails throughout. Taking daily walks there through the chaparral was a dream!
Paso Robles, CA with dear friends
Our journey west ended in Paso Robles, CA, where we joined long-time friends for a few days. We started our visit with a lovely dinner followed by a tour of the Derby Winery the next day. Carrie was happy that the party included two friendly cats, Buff and Bama, who came to Paso Robles with their mama because Ojai, CA was evacuated due to the massive Thomas Fire.
Old Mesilla, NM
Old Mesilla is on the outskirts of Las Cruces, NM. The plaza there reminds me a lot of Santa Fe, but not as fancy. I imagine that Santa Fe used to look like this when it was first built, since the builders are the same people.
El Paso, TX
After spending the night in El Paso, we drove through UTEP’s campus, where the buildings are modeled after the architecture in Bhutan.
Before leaving El Paso, we visited the Chamizal National Memorial.
“In 1966, Congress established Chamizal National Memorial to commemorate the Chamizal Convention (treaty) of 1963. The Chamizal treaty finally ended a long-standing border dispute between the U.S. and Mexico. The 1848 Treaty of Guadalupe-Hidalgo established the Rio Grande/Río Bravo as the international boundary between the U.S. and Mexico. However, rivers naturally move over time. In this case, the river gradually, and at times abruptly, moved south, which left Mexico with less land than the 1848 treaty established. The land disputes that arose because of the river movement caused tension between the U.S. and Mexico for more than 100-years. Finally, in 1963 U.S. President John F. Kennedy and Mexican President Adolfo Lopez Mateos met to discuss the “Chamizal Issue” and through diplomatic negotiations, they solved the Chamizal Issue with the signing of the Chamizal Treaty.”