Everyone loves gardens. We’re talking about flowers and trees and ornamental bushes. No matter where you travel there are always gardens to be explored and incredible gems to be discovered. It is difficult to spend time in a garden and not have your soul refreshed.
“God Almighty first planted a garden. And indeed, it is the purest of human pleasures”.
Francis Bacon
As we have traveled there have been times when the garden was actually the destination but on occasion they are unexpected surprises stumbled upon as we stroll a city. Spend a minute and let us introduce you to some of our favorite gardens.
CallowayGardens Georgia
Perhaps one of the worlds most extravagant flower shows is Amsterdam’s Keukenhof, held each Spring. The show was actually created as a commercial exhibition representing Holland’s tulip growers but is now a major evEnt attracting visitors from all over Europe and the world.
“My garden is my most beautiful masterpiece.” Claude Monet
Cradled between the Wai’anae and Ko’olau mountain ranges in central O’ahu lies Wahiawā Botanical Garden – the “tropical jewel” of the Honolulu Botanical Gardens. This 27-acre garden and forested ravine dates back to the 1930s
“Life begins the day you start a garden.” – Chinese proverb
EPCOT International Flower & Garden Festival
A popular annual event at Walt Disney World Florida, the festival showcases a bounty of exhibits, lush gardens, seasonal blossoms, inspired international flavors and gardening demonstrations. Included with an Epcot admission.
“We can complain because rose bushes have thorns, or rejoice because thorn bushes have roses.” – Abraham Lincoln
The Butchart Gardens is a 118-year-old internationally-renowned 55-acre display garden located in Brentwood Bay, British Columbia. Created by Jennie Butchart, and still privately owned and operated by the family, The Gardens was designated a National Historic Site of Canada
I was born in Washington D.C. and grew up in the suburbs. I moved away several times and ended up moving back twice – both times because of job transfers. I left for good about 45 years ago and have never thought of returning. Too expensive, political and government oriented. These images are from back in those days.
Things Are Rarely What You Believe
Indulge me as I walk down memory lane…
My dad was in the Navy and was seriously injured in WWII. My mother was a Marine stationed in Washington. I was born in Georgetown right after VJ Day and my parents moved to the Old Town section of Alexandria when I was 2. Neither address was fashionable at that time we lived there. At 5 we moved again into suburban Fairfax county.
I played some A1 football in the league featured in the movie Remember The Titans but a few years before the time portrayed in the movie. One of my best friends dads was the principle of the new school that was the focus of the movie. The problems, according to him, came more from the merging of two rival schools into the new TC Williams than it was about race. Five years before that movie era my team already had two black players and there were never any protests or problems.
Washington at that time was more a military town than a government town and it didn’t seem much like a big city. As kids we went everywhere on buses (AB&W). There were four movie theaters in Northern Virginia and I almost lived at the Smithsonian.
When Kennedy was inaugurated we got hit with a blizzard that shut things down for almost a week. The Army cleared the snow on the Mall for the inauguration ceremony.
I and two friends went into the Mall on the day of Dr. King’s march on Washington. The reason for our trip was the news reported that Bob Dylan and Joan Baez would be singing. We had all their albums and this was an opportunity. There were a lot of people there and very few of us were white. We got about half way up the north side of the Reflecting Pond but never heard anything recognizable on the Lincoln Memorial steps.
During the Cuban Missile Crisis a neighbor was a high level civilian at the Pentagon. The Army showed up and built him a helicopter pad in a field down the street and kept a helicopter sitting there for a few weeks. The neighbors were all scared.
The day that Kennedy was killed I was attending high school. The next day I went into Washington and stayed for three days. I stood in the line to walk by his coffin for probably 5 or 6 hours. The day of the funeral procession I stood at 14th Street and Pennsylvania Avenue when the funeral procession went by. I have three distinct memories;
The riderless horse was difficult to control, rearing up constantly and the handler almost lost control more than once.
The front row of dignitaries included Haile Selassie of Ethiopia in full uniform with a chest of ribbons and lucky to be over five feet tall. Next to him was Charles DeGaul of France standing about six foot six and also in full uniform. The height difference and the uniforms made the pair look oddly funny.
There were lots of people listening to “transister radios” and about the time the coffin went by word spread through the crowd near me that Lee Harvey Oswald had just been shot and killed in Dallas.
Two neighbors right across the street at the time were Col. Barns, pilot of Air Force One and Mr. Youngblood, a member of the Secret Service Presidential detail. If you look up a picture of Lyndon Johnson being sworn in on the plane you’ll see Col. Barns in the cockpit doorway. Mr. Youngblood became famous as the agent who ran and jumped over the back of Johnson’s limo and covered him when the shots were fired.
Prague in the Czech Republic is probably one of the most remarkable and overlooked cities in Europe. This city has much to offer from historic Old Town, a vibrant art scene and a lively night life.
These giclée prints will soon be available in several sizes, custom printed for each order on archival paper using fade resistant inks.
Join us as we visit historic treasures, natural wonders and vibrant cities set against backdrops that are endlessly changing and visually magnificent. Celebrate a world of travel experiences with these decorating accessories that are perfect for framing.
Haven’t Joined Us Yet? We Promise To Make It Worth Your While.
Meet some birds of prey at the Audubon Birds of Prey Center near Orlando Florida. A great educational experience for all ages.
If you live near to Orlando or are visiting for several days visit the Audubon Birds of Prey Center located near city of Maitland in the small Town of Eatonville. Stop by and experience a bit of real Florida, and enjoy the opportunity to view up close and personal Bald Eagles, Ospreys, Kites, Owls and Falcons. For additional information call (407) 644-0190.
Audubon Birds of Prey Center, 1101 Audubon Way, Maitland, FL 32751
Additional bird rescue organizations in Florida include:
Angel Wings Parrot Rescue, Brevard County 2300 Hall Rd, Malabar, FL 32950
Melbourne Avian Rescue Sanctuary, Northeast Florida, Central Florida
The Last Chance Sanctuary, (BBTLCS) Northeast Florida, Central Florida
Open Wings Rescue & Sanctuary, Duval County Jacksonville, FL
Florida Raptor Center, Saint Cloud, FL
Zaksee Florida Bird Sanctuary, Hillsborough County Tampa, FL 33625
Parrot Outreach Society, Charlotte County Punta Gorda, FL 33982
Birds of Paradise Sanctuary & Rescue, Manatee County Bradenton, FL 34212
Seminole County Parrot Rescue and Sanctuary Inc., Seminole County 220 Saunders Trail, Geneva, FL 32732
Utah has a lot of amazing sights, wide open landscapes and incredible National Parks. You won’t be sorry planning a road trip across this state. Start in Salt Lake City go down and across Utah and end in Los Vegas.
Nine Mile Canyon
Petroglyphs, 9 Mile Canyon
On our trip we headed South out of Salt Lake City in the morning with Nine Mile Canyon (additional information) or first stop. We had been told about the canyon and had also read an article about the locations of petroglyph sites in the area. The canyon is actually forty-eight miles long with the first petroglyph site about twenty-seven miles in. Unfortunately we seemed to have misplaced the article, which listed the location of each site and, once into this isolated area, we realized what a mistake that was. The two-lane road had virtually no traffic (except some free roaming cattle) and there was very little in the way of signage. We passed the first marker twice without seeing it – a green sign on a post about six inches tall and ten inches long that simply said “First Site” and an arrow. If you have the time, a visit to a few of these thousand year old sites is really interesting.
Getting into Moab late in the afternoon we checked into the motel and got something to eat with a plan to start in Arches National Park early the next morning.
Arches National Park
Arches National Park
We visited Arches National Park early in the morning and realized that no photograph or description can begin to express the massive size of its’ formations or the scale of the arches and balancing rock structures. This place just has to be experienced in person. The sandstone formations are massive and the colors are fantastic. If you are a hiker, there is a large number of very walkable trails in the park, temperature permitting, along with a number of scenic drives. On the subject of weather it is very important that you carry water in your car and with you if hiking. The high temperatures and dry conditions can be punishing.
Canyonlands National Park
Canyonlands
Only about twenty-five miles from Arches is the northern entrance to Canyonlands National Park and it is a wholly different experience as you enter on high bluffs and look down into the canyons. The landscape is similar to the Grand Canyon in character and color as you stand at the rim. In the western area of the park are the best hiking trails where an extinct volcano caldera formed an interesting bowl-like valley. Between Canyonlands and Arches is a Utah State Park named Dead Horse Canyon which is well worth a visit as well. There is also an entrance to Canyonlands about sixty miles south of Moab that features the Needles District with a strikingly different look, featuring backbone formations of rows of sandstone spires.
Scenic Route 128
Just south of Arches National Park is scenic Route 128 North that runs up another canyon beside the Colorado River. As you drive the road along the river, you are surrounded by 500 to 1,000 foot sandstone cliffs with many completely vertical. On the river you see numerous rafting groups. As you drive deeper into the canyon the land opens up to dozens of spires and buttes.
In the canyon is a small town named Castle Valley and near the river is the Red Cliffs Lodge and the Castle Creek Winery. The winery offers tastings and features some good wines that are popular in the region’s restaurants. On the map you may notice a ghost town named Cisco and might be tempted to go take a look. Do not bother – the town is a junkyard of abandoned trailer homes and RV’s laced with obscene graffiti. Our suggestion is when you reach Dewey Bridge, turn around and drive back unless you are going on to US 70. While we didn’t visit, we were told that there is an interesting movie museum near the Castle Creek Winery and there are numerous raft operators on this stretch of the Colorado River.
Capital Reef National Park
Leaving Moab the next morning we headed north on 191 to US70 west. We exited 70 at Route 24 south and headed to Capital Reef National Park. Capital Reef is home to another collection of petroglyphs and these are well marked with easy access from the road. This is also the location of Fruita which was established by Mormons as an agricultural area in 1880. A few structures from the original settlement still remain as do their orchards.
Petroglyphs, Capital Reef
Route 24 travels right thru Capital Reef with one scenic side road inside the park featuring a number of good hiking trails. After exiting Capital Reef on 24 west we picked up Route 12 heading south towards Bryce Canyon National Park.
Utah Route 12 is a scenic and interesting trip from Capital Reef to Bryce Canyon. It crosses some spectacular country with ridges, canyons and mountains at every turn. One stretch navigates a ridge with only two narrow lanes and steep drops on both sides. It has a name – the Hogs Back. Along the way we stopped at the Anasazi State Park where we viewed an interesting museum and Anasazi village excavation.
Bryce Canyon National Park
Natural Bridge, Bryce Canyon
Bryce Canyon is a must visit. The park sits atop high country, looking down into the canyons which are packed with geological features called hoodoos. (Interconnected spires of colorful sandstone creating mazes and rising from the canyon floor.) While hoodoos are scattered throughout the parks in Utah, nowhere in the world are they as abundant as in the northern section of Bryce Canyon. Many of the hiking trails go down the canyon face and are steep and descend an average of 700 feet but there are a few walkways for those seeking less of a challenge.
There is a hotel with a restaurant inside the park but there are also a number of accommodations just a short drive away starting at Bryce Canyon City. The Park Service, in an effort to reduce traffic, operates free busses with pick-up stops in the “City”. The drive through the park is about nineteen miles to the end at Rainbow Point with an altitude of over nine-thousand feet. At the point, the morning we were there, the temperature dropped over twenty degrees from the Visitors Center and winds were howling.
Bryce Canyon
Red Canyon is between Bryce Canyon and Panguitch where our motel was located. The canyon road goes thru two short tunnels cut thru the sandstone and there are a couple of parking areas for the hiking trails. Our motel had a colony of prairie dogs right outside our door and they liked to come out and socialize around dusk. The second night we were visited by a pronghorn antelope. One cautionary note here is that Panguitch is mostly closed on Sundays and it became a challenge finding a place to eat.
Zion National Park
After two nights near Bryce Canyon in Panguitch we headed off early for Zion. We had read that Zion has a traffic problem and that by late morning parking is almost impossible to find. Like Bryce Canyon, Zion also has a free shuttle bus that picks up at stops in Springdale, the town just outside the southern entrance to the park. In season Zion Canyon Scenic Drive is only open to the parks buses, which can be picked up at the Visitors Center near the south entrance. Of the parks we visited, Zion had the largest number of hiking trails ranging from wheel chair accessible to strenuous. One of the park’s more popular hikes goes thru “the narrows” which is a narrow width passage with a stream running through it . Unfortunately this trail and a few others require a permit and there is usually a several days wait to get one.
Driving down from Panguitch we entered Zion around 9:00 am at the east entrance. There were maybe three or four cars ahead of us and we traveled down canyon walls thru numerous switchbacks and two tunnels. One tunnel was two lanes and almost a mile long with no lights, so be sure and test your headlights before entering. We got to the visitors center around 10:00 and had to search for parking. We took a couple of hikes on trails near the Visitors’ Center and by noon the line for the tour busses was thru the complex and out into the parking lot. A few hours later when we exited to Springdale the line of cars to get in was backed up over a mile through town.
We spent the night at The Red Rock Inn and it was the highlight of the trip. Located in town and a couple of miles from the park it was comfortable, beautifully decorated and clean. The owners were helpful and friendly and the room came with a voucher for breakfast at Oscars a block away. Oscars was also great, offering a full breakfast and plenty of coffee. The whole town is nestled in a canyon with towering red sandstone cliffs above it and unbelievable traffic “in season.”
The next morning we headed for Los Vegas with a couple of nights on the strip followed by our flight home. During the trip we saw snow (Panguitch averages six inches in June), windy conditions and virtually no rain. In summary, it was the trip of a lifetime offering spectacular scenery and temperatures ranging from freezing to over one hundred.
This is the third in a series that explores what little I’ve learned about the world wide web and my attempts to grow traffic on the internet.
Over the past four or five years I’ve read hundreds of articles and subscribed to services promising to show me how to increase traffic with SEO tips. The biggest result I’ve seen is huge increases in my incoming emails but not much I can point to regarding it improving traffic. A vast number say the same things over and over and pretend that they are offering unique insights. I’ve used an SEO plugin that evaluated every post. The plugins seemed to follow the usual set of rules as well.
Areas I intend to cover going forward include:
SEO best practices
Using social media
Issues with WordPress and other hosting options
The echo chamber
Paid traffic services
The technology con
Paid traffic and “influencers”
Traffic data reports
Who Am I
This site is my hobby TheIntentionalTraveler.com (Intend2Travel.info). I was a photographer, I’m retired, in my seventies and I live for travel. Six continents, over 80 countries and more islands than I can count and every one of the worlds oceans. I started a free WordPress site over four years ago to let friends and family see where I am and where I’ve been. It was free and had nothing to do with money. As people visited and subscribed it may have started to become about validation. Fame and money started becoming a possibility but it was still my hobby.
Today I manage two additional free websites, a paid WordPress site (I ran out of room) two online store sites (only marginally successful) and almost a dozen social media sites along with two Etsy outlets. After all that, I confess that I understand very little about how to succeed on the web and it starts to seem like an addiction…
About Hosts And Names
WordPress – The Good and The Bad
There are lots of options for hosting and building a website. I’ve used three different website builders; WordPress, Wix and Google. Since I started with WordPress (before Gutenberg) I’m most comfortable in that design environment. When I started our first eStore I used Wix and that required learning their site management and design from scratch. I did learn a number of things in the process:
Do your research before deciding
Pay attention to potential traps (more later)
Pick a design platform and stay with it
Watch for loss leaders and high cost upgrades
WordPress
There are actually two WordPress major options. WordPress.com is a for-profit hosting service operated by Automattic. WordPress.com launched in 2005, and is the largest WordPress host in the world. It is powered by WordPress, with some additional plugins and modifications added on.
WordPress.org is an open source project that has evolved in incredible ways over time. While it was developed and is supported by skilled, developers, designers, bloggers, and more, it has no organized support system. It does allow you to pick any web hosting service that allows the install with most providing 24/7 support.
WordPress.com advantages
Single source option
Free beginner plans
Good support as well as a large user community
Good templates and add-ons ($)
WordPress.com disadvantages
More expensive and smaller storage capacity
Site subscriber issues**
**Wordpress operates a subscriber plan where they keep control of blogger email addresses, preventing you from managing email campaigns yourself and making it more difficult to move with your subscribers to another platform. It also makes it very difficult to leave WordPress with your subscribers and go to another host and system.
My recommendation would be to find a host that supports WordPress implementation like BlueHost, SiteGround, GoDaddy, NameCheap and more and stay away from WordPress.com.
Domain Names
I’ve made a number of mistakes in registering domain names and have actually had to walk away from a couple because of cost and control. Because there can be issues with transferring your domain name from one plan or host to another and the process can take time, I now set up sites using two domain names. If I can, I register my own name and point it to the hosting servers (this can get complicated). That way the domain name stays under my control and I usually get a better price for renewals. The second domain name is the one I use in promoting the site and I keep control of it and just forward traffic. Most of my domains are registered with Google Domains. In the long run Google is the least expensive with an average of $12. WordPress.com starts for free with a paid plan but renewals are at Least $18 each year.
I’ve Experienced A Recent Change in Traffic
This is information from the previous articles. Just in the past six months my travel site experienced some good traffic growth. Following is a chart showing results reported by Google data along with the contributions from other search engines.
Looking at the data it raises some interesting questions:
The Google impressions show major changes in growing, peaking in May and falling off again.
The percentage of clicks per impressions also grow (from about 1% to 1.5%) with a peak in June and falling off again.
The percentage of Google clicks to all other search engines starts at about 27%, grows to almost 57% and drops back over 3 months to 27%.
What do I make of this?
First, Google clicks seem to correlate somewhat with reported total impressions but do show growth in the percentages indicating a deviation of about a half a percent (same bell shaped curve) which suggests an anomaly.
Second, various search engine contributions as a percentage of total search referrals seem to remain constant when averaged over two months of results. The only exception is the Google contribution. Google’s share starts at just under 28% of total search referrals, grows to almost 47% in May and drops gradually back to under 28% (the bell curve again). Statistically it should have stayed at under 27% in alignment with the additional 5 other search engines.