Category: United States

  • 2022 US Trip – Day 11 (North Carolina Museum of Natural Sciences in Raleigh – Dinosaur Conservatory)

    2022 US Trip – Day 11 (North Carolina Museum of Natural Sciences in Raleigh – Dinosaur Conservatory)

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    I’m fairly sure that the museum doesn’t call this their dinosaur conservatory, but in the absence of knowing how they define it, it doesn’t seem an inaccurate term. I don’t have much to comment on this other than it’s a striking use of the space available to the museum curators.

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    And this isn’t a T-Rex, it’s the real skull of an Acrocanthosaurus which once trampled and traipsed around what is now the United States.

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    And the skeleton of an Acrocanthosaurus, which is a dinosaur of which I hadn’t previously heard of.

  • 2022 US Trip – Day 11 (North Carolina Museum of Natural Sciences in Raleigh)

    2022 US Trip – Day 11 (North Carolina Museum of Natural Sciences in Raleigh)

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    I’ve already mentioned about the dinosaurs and the snakes at the North Carolina Museum of Natural Sciences as they were the two elements that I thought were particularly memorable to me. It was though a large museum and not only was it free of charge to enter, there was plenty to see. One of the first exhibits that visitors to the museum see is the not insubstantial collection of skeletons that were hanging from the ceiling.

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    There are also sections showing the nature and landscapes of North Carolina.

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    Some of these also have water running through them, with a selection of fish and other marine life.

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    Various types of stone from North Carolina, presented for some reason in the shape of bowling balls.

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    Looking like a furniture showroom, this is a collection of different types of wood from the state.

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    This interested me more because it was created as a display in 1873 for the World’s Fair in Vienna, Austria rather than because it’s an intriguing piece of stone.

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    An alligator glued onto a piece of wood by Herbert Hutchinson Brimley, a long time director of the museum.

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    A stuffed snake. I’m always slightly sceptical that these are genuinely stuffed and dead, just in case one has cleverly crept into a cabinet to surprise members of the public. I have trust issues with snakes.

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    And a snake in a display jar. I’m a little happier when they’re pickled like this, I’m more readily able to believe that they are actually dead.

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    This plant is 220 million years old, which I think it’s fair to say is quite something. This is also almost exactly the same time as mammals started to evolve to put that into some form of context. Incidentally, snakes have been around for 125 million years, just as even more perspective to this.

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    And it makes this 65 million year old oyster shell seem quite young.

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    And a great white shark tooth from around 4 to 6 million years ago.

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    The skull of a T-Rex to scare the children with.

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    Visitors are positively encouraged to touch this 4.5 billion year old meteorite and since I didn’t want to miss out, I did. It felt like a lump of rock. It’s relevance to North Carolina is that in 1936 it fell into a farmer’s field in the state. The earth is 4.5 billion years old as well, but more disappointingly to me, the museum doesn’t give any information as to what the farmer thought about this rock appearing on his land.

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    There are more dinosaurs at this museum than you could shake quite a robust stick at.

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    This is Willo the Marvellous Lizard, perhaps the most complete skeleton found of a thescelosaur. This very skeleton has been the cause of much controversy, some claim it’s the only dinosaur uncovered in the world which still has a heart, although others claim that it most certainly isn’t any such thing. I don’t feel that I’m qualified to comment on the whole arrangement, but there’s more on the matter at https://www.smithsonianmag.com/science-nature/willo-the-dinosaur-loses-heart-93712793/.

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    The underwater tunnel.

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    That was pretty much the end of my visit to the museum, with this walk-through butterfly arrangement currently closed to the public, although it was possible to peer in through the glass. The reviews of the museum are very high, indeed there few similar institutions in the world which are better reviewed, although a visitor called Christopher noted:

    “Nothing was fun to look at kids didn’t enjoy”

    His kids must have enormously high standards if they managed not to find anything interesting or “fun” in the museum, but each to their own. Of the few negative reviews that the museum had, most relate to their keeping of live animals (primarily snakes) although I was surprised no-one commented on how angry the snakes looked. That must have just been me thinking that I guess.

    As this was my third museum of the morning I was at this point quite ready to get food and drink at a bar I was keen to visit, but it was a popular venues with families (the museum, not the bar) and I’d merrily recommend a visit for anyone who is unsure.

  • 2022 US Trip – Day 10 (The Annoying Quality Inn & Suites Raleigh North)

    2022 US Trip – Day 10 (The Annoying Quality Inn & Suites Raleigh North)

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    Well, let’s start by stating that this hotel annoyed me.

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    The check-in process was a confused mess where their technology didn’t work, but the staff member was helpful and polite. However, to cut a long story short, they couldn’t get my card to work as it doesn’t have a number on it (Chase’s modern technology) so I used another card. I wasn’t quite sure why not having a number would make any difference, and indeed it doesn’t as it transpired they charged both cards for a deposit and despite promises they wouldn’t charge their ridiculous $4.99 local fee (which I haven’t see any other Choice Hotel outside of Las Vegas try and charge) they did anyway. And they then entirely ignored an email I sent to them asking if they could charge the card they initially tried to since they now had a choice and noting they had charged two.

    I’m writing this nearly three weeks on and the hotel still hasn’t released the pending charge on the credit card, the last hotel from the US trip not to do so (despite my only checking out of some hotels a few days ago). Chase, who the card is with, are now cancelling the pending payment as the hotel has failed to respond. It’s annoying because it’s such a sloppy thing to annoy customers with, and their reviews show they’ve done this to others. Their greed in trying to take $4.99 fees has cost them numerous bad reviews. I also incurred a foreign currency fee with the card they did charge (only my debit cards are currency free), although the card company removed that so that’s all good.

    But, putting my annoyance to one side (although I’m not parking that issue far away if I’m being honest) I was also humoured that when I asked about breakfast the staff member said “it’s not really a breakfast I’m afraid” which suggested the level of respect the staff had for the local management. Anyway, back to the room, which was entirely adequate although the wi-fi wasn’t particularly reliable. There were no noise issues internally or externally, so that all went well.

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    The ubiquitous coffee machine that’s in US hotels and they also had tea bags available.

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    The view of the road from the hotel room.

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    I quite liked the carpet in their seemingly never-ending corridors….

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    The breakfast arrangement. Shall we just say that it was uninspiring, although I always have low expectations of breakfasts in US hotels, or at least, those at the price point that I’m booking them at. I had a yoghurt and coffee, that had to do. The woman at reception the previous evening wasn’t lying….

    I overheard a staff member say to another “we have no customers checking in today” which seemed incredible to me for a hotel of that size, but that is perhaps testament to the local difficulties that they’re facing.

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    Not a hotel that I’d stay at again, I hate locations that ignore emails. Fortunately, Choice Hotels took up the matter and forced the hotel to respond, which they did in a passive aggressive manner that I was privately quite impressed with. They didn’t bother dealing with the issue but there’s an arrogance that they’re holding deposits and not doing anything to release them as other Choice Hotels seem to manage with. I wouldn’t say that the hotel stay itself was a disappointment, but I’m not big on contempt for customers.

    Moan over ?

  • 2022 US Trip – Day 11 (Crossing the Blasted Road in Raleigh where the Car is King)

    2022 US Trip – Day 11 (Crossing the Blasted Road in Raleigh where the Car is King)

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    I had caught the free Raleigh bus the evening before to get to the hotel, so I considered myself enough of an expert to get back again into the downtown area of the city. Until I realised that the local authorities seem to have forgotten to have put pedestrian crossings to get across the bloody road. When I took this photo I had already traipsed, slightly grumpily, about half a mile down the road and the crossing wasn’t until the dip in the road ahead.

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    I had already missed my bus by the time I had got to the pedestrian crossing and I merrily pressed the button to stop the five lanes of traffic each way. And does a road need five lanes of traffic each way?

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    I had walked so far down that I had reached the next bus stop by the time I was able to cross the road.

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    This is the main road into Raleigh and this is a transportation failure in evidence, vast numbers of cars and this is after the rush hour. They’re trying to encourage public transport usage and full credit for free buses, but the pedestrian infrastructure is in such a bad state they’ll have one hell of a job to get people out of their cars. Also, I hadn’t realised this at the time, but Raleigh has more cars per person than anywhere in the United States. A failure of a policy, as the congestion means that the local economy is taking a financial and environmental hit.

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    And the delays mean that the bus, which is now visible in the photo, get caught up in the traffic. They have five lanes of traffic to play with, but none are designated as a bus lane to speed them up.

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    Boarded, ready for the twenty minute journey back into Raleigh and running only half an hour late. And this is why travelling can be tiring….

  • 2022 US Trip – Day 11 (North Carolina Museum of History – 3,000 Year Old Canoe)

    2022 US Trip – Day 11 (North Carolina Museum of History – 3,000 Year Old Canoe)

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    American museums often have a difficulty that they have nearly no exhibits to explain their history before the European settlers came over, namely because a lot of items owned by the native Americans were either transient or discarded and didn’t survive. The usage of the word “ancient” can in American terms can really be relatively recent, but this is one of the oldest exhibits that I’ve seen in an American museum that’s from the local area and isn’t a piece of stone.

    It’s a thirty foot long canoe which was used 3,000 years ago by native Americans in Lake Phelps which is off towards the east of North Carolina. Generations of people used canoes in the area and in 1986 archaeologists discovered two dozen of them sunk into silt at the bottom of the lake, although they left some there for their own protection (of the canoes, not the archaeologists). Humans only reached this area around 15,000 years ago or so, meaning in terms of human history in the region, this canoe certainly is ancient. There’s more about this canoe at https://www.qaronline.org/blog/2020-06-01/artifact-month-lake-phelps-canoes.

  • 2022 US Trip – Day 11 (North Carolina Museum of History – An Old Jug)

    2022 US Trip – Day 11 (North Carolina Museum of History – An Old Jug)

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    At least I can’t be accused of clickbait with such a boring post name title.

    But, it’s a little more interesting that I might have suggested by calling it an old jug. It’s actually a tankard which was found in what is now Martin County, off to the east of North Carolina. It’s notable as it’s the earliest surviving European style ceramic piece found in the Americas, dating from somewhere between 1680 and 1720. I think there’s a little bit of magic in that, something which has survived for so long and which had some considerable meaning to its original owner.

    Incidentally, as some back history to all of this. Although the tankard itself isn’t connected to this, it isn’t that far (about 75 miles) from Roanoke Island, the mysterious lost colony that was founded by Sir Walter Raleigh and then disappeared from the record. And I mention this also because Raleigh is where the city name comes from, the locals named it after him.

  • 2022 US Trip – Day 11 (North Carolina Museum of History – Some Old Shells)

    2022 US Trip – Day 11 (North Carolina Museum of History – Some Old Shells)

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    Continuing on my theme of underselling the post with the title, these are Marginella shells which were used in trade by native Americans, with these ones dating from between 1711 and 1713. They can date this so accurately due to the Tuscarora War, when the Tuscarora people were thrown off their lands by European settlers and I think that these were used as grave goods. This falls into the category of museum exhibit which particularly interested me because of their heritage and how important they would have been to someone at the time. It’s also firmly in the middle of the period of when North Carolina was an English colony, which was between 1653 and 1776.

  • 2022 US Trip – Day 9 (Pulse – Free Public Transport Service in Richmond)

    2022 US Trip – Day 9 (Pulse – Free Public Transport Service in Richmond)

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    I’ve already mentioned that Richmond offers free bus travel, but they also have the rather excellent Pulse service. This is a high capacity rapid transport service which operates on a 7.5 mile route with some advanced technology to ensure it runs efficiently. It’s free until 2025, as is the rest of the city’s public transport, and is funded by two hospitals, with 14 stops and services generally running every ten to fifteen minutes.

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    I tried to board at Virginia Commonwealth University (VCU) Hospital, but it was such a busy service that I decided to wait for the next one. It was clearly popular with staff from the hospital and everything seem organised and well managed, it gave the impression of being a very useful service.

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    I only had to wait for around eight minutes for the next bus, which was nearly empty. Clean and comfortable, this is a wonderful service and a positive contribution to traffic congestion in the area.

  • 2022 US Trip – Day 9 (Econo Lodge in Richmond)

    2022 US Trip – Day 9 (Econo Lodge in Richmond)

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    Despite trying to get hotels of an acceptable, and very cheap, quality, I still wasn’t sure before arriving how good this Econo Lodge from Choice Hotels would be. The reviews were mixed and so had low expectations, but I was surprised at just how clean and comfortable it transpired to be, so it ended up being good value for money.

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    These rooms often seem quite dark as they don’t have lights on the ceiling and instead rely on table lamps and the like. But it was clean and functional, with everything as expected. There was a bath in the bathroom and the usual toiletries provided, functional and entirely acceptable. There was also a coffee machine, although this particular Econo Lodge doesn’t offer breakfasts.

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    It’s a motel type arrangement, so you can look out on your car should you so desire, although that wasn’t something I concerned myself about. The large window only has heavy curtains rather than any form of net curtain arrangement, although I’m not sure that many people walked by anyway. I didn’t have noise issues either internally from other rooms or externally, I wondered whether the mixed reviews was giving them a low occupancy.

    All things considered, I was pleased with this choice as the staff member was helpful, the room was clean and the price was affordable. I’m writing this a couple of weeks later in Birmingham (the Alabama one) and I have suspicions that I might have issues with the hotel tonight that I’ll be reporting, although I hope it transpires to be like this one that exceeded my expectations.

  • 2022 US Trip – Day 10 (Hunt for Levi’s)

    2022 US Trip – Day 10 (Hunt for Levi’s)

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    One thing that I had intended to do in the United States was to get a new pair, or indeed two pairs, of Levi’s jeans from the outlet stores that they have across the country. However, the downwards spiral of the pound meant that any price advantage in buying them in the United States was lost, so I decided to just visit Ross Dress for Less (similar to TK Maxx in the UK, or indeed TJ Maxx in the US) to see what they had. To my surprise and slight delight (I don’t really ever get delighted clothes shopping, it’s just an annoying waste of time) they had numerous end of line jeans from Levi’s for about $25, or just over £20. Well, that was marvellous, I just got one pair, but ended up paying a chunk less than I would have done from the outlet centre.

    The photo above shows the large size of the store and hints at the rather erratic state of affairs in terms of presentation. Their changing rooms were also all closed, but a helpful staff member went to open one for me, but the moral of this story is never underestimate Ross Dress for Less….