Sunday, June 29, 2014

Exploring Neosho

In between unpacking boxes we took a few walks around town to see what we could find. Big Spring Park is walking distance from the apartment and happens to be really nice.




The spring just magically flows out of the rock. It's pretty cold water, so it's nice to walk next to on a hot day. It really cools the air down quite a bit. In fact, according to the never erring Wikipedia, "Neosho" is Osage for "clear, cold water". In typical Wikipedia fashion, I got sucked in way father than I anticipated, and learned all about Osage. The last native speaker died in 2005. Bummer dude.




Here's the same view of the little spring from the May 26, 1941 issue of Time that featured quite a lengthy story about Neosho.




We followed the water, and so does the park. It was a lot larger than is initially evident.


I think that Neosho's most famous resident must have been George Washington Carver. He went to grade school in fabulous Neosho. Lucky dog.


There are several vacant storefront on the square. Lydia and I like to imagine what sort of business we would like to open on the square. It's hard to decide my vote, but right now I'm leaning towards pool hall.


There are several outdoor murals around town. There is some sort of a walking tour I believe but we just happened to stumble upon this one.


One of our primary methods of gathering intelligence on awesome things to do is now posters in store windows. That's what we've been reduced to. We are planning on checking out the Missouri State Fair. I think that only then Lydia will truly understand the glory of the Illinois State Fair.

Saturday, June 28, 2014

Moving to Neosho

By the time the movers showed up, Lydia and I had laboriously packed up all of our junk and were pretty much ready to roll. Neither of us had used movers before, and let me tell you, it was money well spent. I also feel a little too old to guilt my friends/family into helping anymore so it worked out. Once the U-Haul was full we hit the road towards Neosho, Missouri.

Why Neosho? Well Lydia got a job teaching in Monett, MO and I am taking classes in Bentonville, AR and Neosho is about equally in the middle, giving us both about a 45 minute commute. Not terrible.


As you can see, it's about as far as you can get from St. Louis while staying in Missouri. The closest city of any size is Joplin, most famous for getting rocked by a tornado in 2011. As you can see we are now within striking distance of Arkansas, Oklahoma, Kansas, and I'd throw Texas in as well. I'm excited about the road trip possibilities!


Well luck would have it that we just happened to be moving to town on one of the biggest festival days of the year, Celebrate Neosho.


Once the second set of movers had finished unloading we hopped into the car and checked things out.


We live right on the town square, which today was hosting a classic car show.


There's one of those cool faded "ghost signs" right next to our place.


We ate lunch at a little place on the square, Mudd Puddles. The owner said they were going to be closing soon, despite it being about noon. She was going to close up shop and then sell food at the air show. Yes, there was also an airshow!






Well the airshow was how I keep describing lots of things in Neosho: small but nice.






I was excited about the homemade rootbeer guy.






There were a few vendors and little rides, but the focus of the event was clearly in the sky.


One little thing they were doing was a contest between two pilots to see who could land closest to a line on the runway. It was really a great weekend and an excellent way to start off our new Neosho adventure!

Friday, June 13, 2014

Leaving the Jungle, Going to the Beach

Well the day to vacate our jungle headquarters arrived with mixed feelings. We were pretty beat from the daily adventuring and ready for a couple of days by the ocean in Placencia, but we would definitely miss the lodge and all the friends we'd made there.


We had one final breakfast with all the other tourists. I think we might have eaten a little extra, the way you do when you're not sure what or when your next meal will be. It was funny because our room number had been sloppily scratched off of the assigned seating sign at our table. Seems like once we stopped paying them we stopped being besties!


If I had feelings I may have been sad to leave.


This is where the buses lined up to take people to amazing places. It was also where Robert the cab man we met yesterday was waiting to drive us. It was funny because he had the cab's hood popped up while waiting. Lydia and I both shared a quick "uh oh" glance before we got in the cab. We sat down and noticed there was a teenager in the front seat. The cab driver was turning this drive to the beach into a full flung family vacation, and both his wife and daughter would meet him there. The exact same thing happened to me while taking a cab a good distance to a city in Peru. Must be a thing.


We had a couple of photo opportunities. Here we are in a banana field. I had stayed up late the night before looking for cool places to stop along the way but I didn't find much. The natural wonders and the Mayan ruins are really the main draw in this country. I spotted Kropf's Bakery, run by Mennonites, but of course when we arrived it was closed. I've been outsmarted by Mennonites for the last time!


We arrived in Placencia and had Robert take us to an ATM to get some cash for him. It was sort of a more highly developed version of Hopkins where we went snorkeling. We got settled at our new hotel, Robert's Grove Placencia.


Placencia has been called the "caye you can drive to" because it is a very long, narrow peninsula that feels very much like an island.


Oh Robert's Grove, so much wasted potential. It's a beautiful place, right on the ocean. It has several nice pools, three restaurants, and the rooms were pretty solid as well. Unfortunately the staff was god awful. Especially in contrast with Ian's, the people at Robert's were really bad at their job. The desk staff insisted that we leave our bags with them and have someone bring them to us. Well, someone forgot and our bags never came, so we walked back and got them ourselves and dragged the bags to our room. We hadn't had even a whiff of internet since we arrived at Ian's, so we were really looking forward to it. Of course the connection was terrible, and dropped regularly. I believe that in the response the company left to Lydia's bad review on Trip Adviser, management blamed that on the weather. Pretty weak. The hotel was a good ways away from the town of Placencia proper, so we again went for the golf cart and got the heck out of there.


There were cashew trees on the hotel grounds. Each nut comes attached to this crazy bell-pepper looking fruit. I thought they were awesome so I grabbed a couple and figured we could read about how to eat them back in the room. When we got there Lydia read that they were poisonous in their current state, so I threw them away. Seems like a metaphor.


Pretty much my very first decision as golf cart Capitan was to pick up some hitchhikers. I'd been reading On the Road over the last several days, and I felt like if we wanted to have a comparable adventure that we needed to start picking up way more weirdos. The group was two younger women and a little boy. I later told Lydia that my new hitchhiker policy was to only pick up people that I'm sure I could beat up. So pretty much smaller women and children. The group ended up being Mayan, which I thought was awesome. One of the girls was very talkative so we got to hear a lot about her on the way to town. Her and the other woman were in Placencia to sell handicrafts that the people in her village had made. They were from the southern edges of Belize, which is home to a large population of Mayans. Somehow it came up that they eat lizards down there, which I thought sounded pretty cool. When it was time to let them off, they of course hit us up to buy some of there handmade crud. We had to say "no thanks" more than once. I figure giving them a ride was enough of a service that I didn't need to buy anything. At this point in my life my opinion on "crafts" is that I'd rather set my money on fire.


We poked around in Turtle Inn a bit on the way to town. It's an expensive place to stay owned by Francis Ford Coppola. It was nice but I wouldn't pay to stay there I'm afraid.


The airstrip was pretty funny. The planes were tiny, but it got worse. There was one of those parking lot arms that comes down in the middle of the road that went past the airstrip. The arm would go down when planes were landing or taking off that the planes wouldn't hit your car while flying by. This would be the airport we'd take out of town, so it was half funny and half scary. We had initially planned on renting a car and driving from Ian's to Robert's and then back to the airport in Belize city, but after seeing the condition of the roads and the lack of much to see roadside we changed our plans. I think we made a wise choice.


Some kids were racing our golf cart with their bicycle. The young diver had on a Diego Milito jersey. It seemed like a sign that I should smoke him in our race, which I promptly did.






All, my, friends, know the low rider.






Well we had very little to do but cruise around and eat and drink, all of which we did over and over. There were little booths all over selling tours and excursions. We purposely came to Belize in the off season on the cusp of the rainy season in order to get better prices and avoid all the tour-folk. Well as a result most of the tour booths were closed, and those that were open didn't seem very motivated to give tours. We tried to book a couple different ones before giving up.

We did bump into the couple that had accompanied us on the Tikal trip which was fun. Belize being such a small country definitely facilitated this. They were just wasting time like us. They had booked some sort of scuba diving excursion but the water was too choppy to go. That made me feel less stupid for not having planned something similar ahead of time. Later on in the Houston airport immigration line we bumped into another couple that we'd met at the jungle lodge. Pretty funny.

The next day we laid around and read our books a bit, swam a bit, and then gave in and rented another golf cart. I made sure we got a different one, because the one we'd had the day before was making some pretty nasty grinding sounds. Turns out someone was having a little too much fun driving over the country's many speed-bumps in a very bumpy, speedy fashion. Darn tourists.

This time we drove away from town toward Jaguar Bowling Lanes.


We had seen the place on the taxi ride to town but I had ruled it out. "Surely we'll have more exciting things to do than go bowling!", I had incredibly wrongly thought to myself.


Bowling is bowling, which is always fun. There was a World Cup game in progress on TV which was a plus. Then I noticed they had wifi! That place was like heaven. We joked that we wished we were staying at the bowling alley instead of our crummy hotel.




Back at the hotel we did get to see some pretty awesome lizards.


They move surprisingly quickly.


Hotel pool.


The hotel's breakfast went surprisingly later. Like until 11:00. I took advantage by eating it for breakfast and then again later as an early lunch. Baller.


We just so happened to be in Placencia on the first day of Lobster season, and many of the restaurants in town had lobster advertised, so we went for it.


One thing that made Placencia nice is that when a restaurant was called Omar's, Omar was standing out front grilling. This happened to us a couple of times.






I had the grilled lobster. It was nice and fresh.


The next morning was our final one. We headed to that tiny, scary little airport to face our fate.


Oh, Robert's Grove. So pretty yet so bad.


Our boarding passes were these big plastic things that they reused everyday.


The Tropic Air plane was pretty small.


We got on and sat up front. As you can see there wasn't anything separating us from the pilots. The seating reminded me a lot of a school bus, with long bench-like seats with no dividers or armrests. I had to hunch over to get in, as the plane had super low ceilings. No overhead compartments here. My carry on just had to sit in my lap the whole way to Belize City.


It was pretty scary. The plane was so small that it flew really low. The flight was pretty smooth but it was just so small a plane that every little bump was traumatizing. They were stingy with the air so the plane was really hot and stuffy. When we stopped half way in Dandriga to pick up more passengers, Lydia said she wished we could just ditch the rest of the flight and take a cab for the remainder. I was about ready to puke by the time we got to Belize City.


At least the view was nice. 


Through some quirk of airline occupancy we flew first class all the way back to St. Louis: Belize City to Houston, Houston to Washington D.C., and D.C. to St. Louis. This was my first taste of the airline high life, so I wanted to get the most out of it. Anytime they offered me anything the answer was yes. Well after flying all over North America first class won. I couldn't drink another drink, or bite another bite. They really keep you busy in first class. Hot towels, drinks, and snacks just wouldn't stop coming. By the end I just wanted to be left alone and try to take a nap. It was an awesome experience though! I can't wait until I have enough frequent flier miles to take a long flight in first class. They give you beds on those things!