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Showing posts with label travel writer. Show all posts
Showing posts with label travel writer. Show all posts

Wednesday, August 31, 2022

Porsche Museum in Stuttgart, Germany by Ruth Paget

Porsche Museum in Stuttgart, Germany by Ruth Paget 

Stuttgart is Germany’s richest city. Mercedes-Benz and Porsche cars are manufactured here. The city is surrounded by Riesling vineyards. The city’s cash flow is also assured as the home of reasonably priced Ritter-Sport chocolate. 

One of Stuttgart’s star attractions is the Porsche Museum. My husband Laurent and I decided to visit it and contribute to the local economy when we lived in Stuttgart for five years. 

I felt like Laurent was getting to do something he liked as one of our cultural outings. We usually visit lots of castle kitchens and monasteries with pre-Columbian vegetable gardens. I like studying medieval household management, but do recognize that cars make modern life nice, especially in the Western United States. 

We drove our GM product to the Porsche Museum, and had fun walking around the red, white, and yellow race cars in the gleaming white museum. 

Germans make great merchandise, so we headed to the gift shop to make some purchases. We bought USB ports for our computers that had model Porsche cars on their ends and looked through T-shirts, caps cups, and decks of cards with Porsche models as jacks, queens, and kings. 

I thought the T-shirts were informal surveys to see which Porsche models might sell well. 

At home, I made shrimp kebabs with shrimp I had marinated in lemon juice and crushed garlic overnight. 

We ate chic Weihenstephan yogurt as dessert. Weihenstephan is better known for its beer. The monastery brewery was founded in 1040 and has a limited number of other food products for sale in Germany. 

To finish off our meal, we drank smooth Dallmayr coffee from the department store of the same name in Munich. 

I thought the lunch was something a trim and well-off German might like. 

By Ruth Paget, author of Eating Soup with Chopsticks and Marrying France


Click for Ruth Paget's Books




Sunday, March 17, 2019

Savannah, Georgia: Tourism Textbook Town by Savvy Mom Ruth Paget

Savannah, Georgia: Tourism Textbook Town by Savvy Mom Ruth Paget

When my husband Laurent and I were visiting Atlanta one year, we made a weekend trip to the seaport city of Savannah, Georgia.

I wanted to see Savannah, because I had read John Berendt’s In the Garden of Good and Evil.  I wanted to brunch and people watch for the real-life, eccentric book characters in a town that allows you to take a cup of your favorite beverage with you down the street.

When I did some research on tourism information for Savvanah, I was surprised to find the following figures on the importance of tourism to Savannah in a WOTC.com article for 2018:

“14 million people visited Savannah in 2018 and helped employ 27,000 year-round tourism workers. 

These tourists spent 3 billion dollars in Savannah in 2018.”

The article writer featured a couple who had come back to Savannah several times, because Savannah offers a variety of activities to do and places to visit.

These are impressive figures in a city of 146,000 residents (source:  World Population Review/us-cities).

Berendt’s book discusses how Savannah’s founder James Oglethorpe (1696 – 1785) laid out the city around squares, which are one of the city’s main tourism draws for urban planning and architecture.

The Moon Savannah Handbook notes that Oglethorpe laid out the original city site as “a series of rectangular ‘wards’ each constructed around a central square at the city’s founding in 1733.  The founding of Savannah coincides with the founding of the Georgia colony, which later became the State of Georgia.

I was expecting to find a very English city when we visited, but found Haitian, Polish, and African American points of interest to visit as well Victorian architecture.

Savannah’s Haitian connection is linked to its most photogenic monument – the Saint John the Baptist Cathedral.  The Cathedral is a brick church that has been covered in stucco and painted white.  Ephraim Francis Baldwin (1837 – 1916) built the Cathedral in the French Gothic style; it glistens in the subtropical Georgia sun with its symmetrical spires.

The visually pleasing Cathedral needs palm trees to make it look like a port stop on a Caribbean cruise.  It is not the original church that was founded in the 1700s, but maintains the aesthetics of the Haitian emigrĂ©s, who arrived in Savannah after the “successful overthrow of the colonial government by a slave uprising in the 1700s” in that country according to Moon Savannah Handbook.

Restorations and fires have changed the interior of Saint John the Baptist , especially with the addition of stained glass windows.  The newest additions to the Cathedral are an Italian marble altar and an Italian marble baptismal font.

Today Savannah’s significant Irish population worships in the Saint John the Baptist Cathedral.  The American author Flannery O’Connor lived across from the Cathedral.  Her home is open to the public, and a non-profit organization organizes readings of her works.

The Forsyth Park Square is the most famous square in Savannah, but the Monterey Square has the most impressive monument; a 55-foot Monument dedicated to the Polish Count Casimir Pulaski (1745 – 1779) who was killed while trying to retake Savannah from the British during the Revolutionary War.  The Count is remembered as one of the founders of the American cavalry in many statues throughout the U.S.

Other foreigners who fought in the American Revolutionary War have monuments in Savannah, too, such as the Haitians who have a monument in City Market.

Supreme Court Justice Clarence Thomas studied at the Carnegie Library for “black students” on Henry Street.

The First African Baptist Church is located in City Market.  The Second African Baptist Church in Green Square is where General Tecumseh Sherman (1820 – 1891) delivered his “40 acres and a Mule” speech.

All along the Georgia coast on its islands live the Gullah (South Carolina word) or Geechee (Georgia word).  These African Americans are descendants of slaves from West Africa, who maintain African culinary and cultural traditions.  You can easily buy Gullah baskets by the side of the road and sample their dishes in many restaurants.

The Georgia coast islands have always had beach homes for rent, which is a nice option for large families to consider to keep costs down on vacation.  Several islands that are set up for tourism with activities, lodging, or restaurants include:

-Tybee Island – Fort Pulaski and Water Sports

-Hilton Head – expensive as it is a golf venue, but it houses the Georgia Sea Turtle Center for a day trip.

-Jekyll Island – Former playground of the rich and famous in the early 20th century

-St. Simons Island

-Sapelo Island

-Butler Island

These islands are connected to the mainland for the most part by bridges, but you can also reach them by motorboat.  The city of Savvanah is served by Hilton Head-Savannah International Airport in addition to freeways.

As I mentioned, Savannah employs 27,000 year-round tourism employees by seeking out overnight, short-term, and long-term visitors at all income levels.  Savannah deserves a visit just to see how they are able to organize their tourism industry for $3 billion worth of tourism dollars in 2018.

By Ruth Paget, author of Eating Soup with Chopsticks and Marrying France

Click here for:  Ruth Paget's Amazon Books





Friday, February 22, 2019

Visiting Vermont and New Hampshire by Savvy Mom Ruth Paget

Visiting Vermont and New Hampshire by Savvy Mom Ruth Paget


When my husband Laurent attended the ACTFL (American Council on the Teaching of Foreign Languages) in Boston, we decided to do a weekend trip to Vermont and New Hampshire; these two states together are the size of Monterey County California where we are from.

Our ultimate destination was Middlebury College, the world famous institution for teaching foreign languages.  One of Laurent’s degrees is from the Middlebury Institute of International Studies (MATFL – Master’s of Teaching Foreign Languages) in Monterey, California.  We were paying homage to the mother ship in Vermont.

Middlebury helps its students achieve language fluency through immersion summer courses where they sign contracts to do everything in their chosen language during summer.  These effective courses have been expanded to high school age students through the K12 program according to Middlebury’s website.

To get to Middlebury College in Vermont, you have to drive through New Hampshire and leave Boston via hairpin turns on flat land.

“Are the British still coming?” I asked myself as we zigzagged out of Massachusetts into New Hampshire.

Once in New Hampshire, I noticed that all the libraries and many town halls had short Ionian columns along their porches overlooking Main Streets.

Ionian columns were created in the Ionian Island chain off the coast of western Greece.  While most of Greece was under Ottoman (Turkish) rule, the Venetians took over the Ionian Islands till the end of the mid 19th century and formed local nobility that was Italian not Greek.  I liked the scroll- topped columns on these small rural libraries.

When we arrived in hilly Middlebury (Vermont), it seemed like there were three bakeries on every block selling different kinds of cakes and cookies from around the world.  I guessed that students practiced ordering and asking what cookie ingredients were in immersion languages spoken by the different bakeries.

Humor aside, language house programs at Stanford and the University of Wisconsin – Madison may be been inspired by the success of Middlebury’s immersion classes.

I smiled at the laidback winter dress in town – pajamas, parkas, and expensive boots worn by students going to bakeries.

We went to a restaurant for lunch and ate fish and chips, several choices of Vermont cheese, and chocolate cake for dessert.  Snowflakes began falling during our meal, which made me feel snug inside.

We left, though, to beat the snow back to Boston.  Bells began to chime in the crisp winter air for a carillion concert as we walked up the main hill towards the church and our car.

New England embodies that meal, the snow, the music, and higher education goals for me.


By Ruth Paget, author of Eating Soup with Chopsticks and Marrying France

Click here for:  Ruth Paget's Amazon Books

Tuesday, February 19, 2019

Boston Homage Walk - Part 3 - By Savvy Mom Ruth Paget

Boston Homage Walk – Part 3 – By Savvy Mom Ruth Paget


With my books in tow, we toured Cambridge.  We took the T Red Line back to Boston and took the Freedom Trail to Paul Revere’s home.  Paul Revere (1735 – 1818) is famous for alerting the Patriots that the British were coming as war started.

Revere’s parents were French Protestants (Huguenots), who taught him to be a silversmith.  I have seen his work at the Henry Ford Village in Dearborn, Michigan.  Revere’s simple lines and curves make his works easy to hold and behold.

Revere’s home was made of wood and had shutters on the bottom floor windows and diamond-pane windows on the second floor.  Both features appeared defensive.

We could just view the exterior of the home due to the hour and walked to Faneuil Hall.

Peter Faneuil gave this hall to the City of Boston in 1742.  Peter Faneuil (1700 – 1743) also had French Huguenot parents.  He made his fortune in the Triangle Trade of rum and slaves.

We were very tired from walking by this time and went to McCormick and Schmick’s for dinner.  Laurent ate clam chowder and lobster while I tried fish chowder and a mini clam bake.

Wow! That was a good meal after a good day of hiking through Boston and Cambridge.


By Ruth Paget, author of Eating Soup with Chopsticks and Marrying France

Click here for:  Ruth Paget's Amazon Books

Boston Homage Walk - Part 2 - By Savvy Mom Ruth Paget

Boston Homage Walk – Part 2 – By Savvy Mom Ruth Paget

From Boston Latin School, we walked to the Granary Burying Ground along the red brick Freedom Trail.

The Granary Burial Ground is the final resting place of Samuel Adams.  He has a large headstone.  Pebbles were placed on his headstone.  I have always viewed him as “No more man.”

John Hancock is buried here along with Ben Franklin’s parents, who taught Franklin to be good at everything, including writing and scientific observation.

The “real” mother goose is buried here as well according to guidebooks.  I paid homage to her and thanked the writers Perrault and the Brothers Grimm for collecting mother goose tales from all over Europe.

From the Granary Burying Ground, we went to the State House that was built after the Revolution.  We visited inside and out and agreed that Massachusetts has nice architecture.  Behind the State House is Beacon Hill with its lovely homes illustrating the best in New England’s domestic architecture.

We walked to the Boston Common park and finally rested on a park bench by a gazebo with Ionic columns.  Boston Common is the oldest city park in the United States.

We were hungry and planned out how to get to the Red T Train (subway) out to Cambridge, so we could visit Harvard University.

We went to a restaurant there that allowed you to pick out your burrito ingredients.  The burrito tasted great with a Samuel Adams ale.  I think the name of the restaurant was The Thirsty Scholar, but I could be wrong.

After lunch, we visited the Harvard Quads.  In the center of the main quad stands a statue of a seated John Harvard.  The statue is bronze with shiny shoes.

The legend has it that if you touch John Harvard’s shoes, you will gain admission to Harvard one of our family friends told us.

I went to a bookstore to buy souvenirs – two books.  One was on the geometric art used in mosques and the other was on the different elements used to make color pigments for painting.

End of Part 2.

To be continued…


By Ruth Paget, author of Eating Soup with Chopsticks and Marrying France

Click here for:  Ruth Paget's Amazon Books