Showing posts with label gateway arch national park. Show all posts
Showing posts with label gateway arch national park. Show all posts

Friday, August 06, 2021

Goodbye Arch

Our plan to escape from St. Louis involved driving a moving van from here all the way to Seattle, then my very kind parents driving my car over to meet us. After considering several scenarios, including towing a car behind the moving truck, we decided to just sell Lydia's car to simplify things. The pandemic has created a lot of new car supply chain issues, and so the price of used vehicles is super high right now, so it seemed like a good opportunity in that respect as well.


There are services now that you sell your car to online, and they even come by and pick up the car. Very painless.




We walked over and said goodbye to the Arch. One of my favorite parts of living downtown was that we could pop over to the country's smallest national park anytime we wanted. Often our next stop after that was to stop by the nearby Lumiere Casino and sip some of their free sodas before returning back home.




Wednesday, August 04, 2021

An STL Ice Cream Dream

We're just living our last days in St. Louis to the fullest.


We took one last spin around Dupo, Illinois and checked out the house where Lydia's grandma used to live.






We had ice cream at Ices Plain & Fancy. People often shorten the name to just "Ices" which I find very amusing because then it sounds like they are either going to get a treat or going to join terrorist organization "ISIS".




They mix up your ice cream in liquid form first then freeze it with liquid nitrogen.




Sunday, July 25, 2021

That's A Paddlin'

Something that has been on my St. Louis wish list for years has been a ride on one of the paddle boats docked on the Mississippi near the Arch. I used to very much enjoy free movies in the Before Times and I have a secret network of sources that I use to gain access to sneak previews all over town. One of the promotion companies that runs those also hosts the occasional little event in support of a movie release. This time was a river cruise advertising Disney's Jungle Cruise starring Dwayne Johnson. I even somehow conned Seago into coming with. When you're leaving possibly never to return people actually want to hang out with you. It's kind of like a crappy little shop makes so much money on their going out of business sale that they decide to stay open type of thing. This particular shop is definitely still closing but the uptick in business is appreciated.






I don't remember this clipboard dude's name but I've seen him working at so many free movies that it's kind of embarrassing. 


One is called the Tom Sawyer but today we were riding on its sister ship the Becky Thatcher. You don't get more Missourah than that.
















They has little drawings and contests and things where you could win tickets and prizes. I won nothing.


The boat had a cash bar though where everyone was a winner.


We cruised past the Anheuser-Busch brewery. I drank a lot of beer there too while I was employed there but it was all free. So free.








Seago and I then headed to what I think we both agree is the best brewery in town: Perennial. The name of this place always makes me laugh a little bit because there's also a local non-profit named Perennial that teaches people to like... craft things out of recycled materials... Anyway a friend of a friend works at the boring one, and more than once they've told me they work at "Perennial", I get all excited, they explain they mean the lame one, and then I must with my face make it clear that I am very disappointed in them. I see this person so seldomly that I've done this to them more than once because I forgot about the previous conversation. Anyway, you know a supreme court justice summed up what happened next better than I could:


"I drank beer with my friends. Almost everyone did. Sometimes I had too many beers. Sometimes others did. I liked beer. I still like beer, but I did not drink beer to the point of blacking out and I never sexually assaulted anyone."


I did however assault this hominy lager. "Hominy" is also just a very fun word to say. "Hominy".


They had some fancy bottles of aged expensive stuff that normally you have to win a lottery or wait in a long line to obtain, but I think covid might've messed up the supply lines or something. We walked out with some easily procured treasures as a result.




We were in an Uber and were headed to some restaurant. I chatted up the driver who happened to be I want to say Kurdish Iraqi, and asked him if there was Kurdish food in town. He said all the cool kids eat at Sultan Mediterranean Restaurant in the Grove so we changed course and headed there.






The Sultan Pilau was fun to eat. They described it as "basmati rice with lamb shank meat, almonds, pistachio, raisins, walnuts, and carrots served inside a filo dough pocket served with salad" but I would call it a softball full of deliciousness.


Sunday, July 04, 2021

Arch Fireworks

We did some good 4th of July celebrating today.






Our friends Steph and Neil moved out to the boonies so getting to their house for a bbq was a journey. I seem to only have taken pictures of beers I was drinking, so my priorities were intact.


This one I mostly just liked because it had references to a favorite show of mine: The Expanse.




Fireworks being back at the Arch was a sign that normalcy may be slowly returning.




Tuesday, February 23, 2021

Arch Time

A fun part of living in downtown St. Louis is that we're in walking distance of the arch. I don't know if we did it this time but after the arch my favorite move is to then stroll through the Landing to get to Lumiere Casino. It's fun to walk in there and they have free sodas. That right there is a good day my friend.


My mom sent me this article from Springfield's State Journal-Register. It dug up a memory that I had forgotten about, but when I was ten years old there were enough cases of meningitis that the local health department hosted a mass immunization drive at the state fairgrounds. The thing I remember most about it was that the shot was given not with a normal needle but with a needless air pressure injector thing. I wonder if they were on loan from the military.

There is a lot of grumbling from idiots against the covid vaccination so I think this is a fun bit of history that should reassure people that mass vaccinations are not a new thing.










You can never have too many pictures of the arch.