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No balls, no brains
On 2/15/15 1:27 PM, wrote:
On Sun, 15 Feb 2015 12:39:00 -0500, Keyser Söze wrote: On 2/15/15 12:33 PM, wrote: On Sun, 15 Feb 2015 10:08:09 -0500, Abit Loco wrote: On Sun, 15 Feb 2015 02:27:53 -0500, wrote: On Sat, 14 Feb 2015 21:37:59 -0500, Abit Loco wrote: I remember being able to drive down from Annapolis in less than an hour and find a parking place on the street right at the main entrance to the Smithsonian. Must not have visited during tourist season. Your odds of winning the Powerball lottery are probably better than finding a parking spot there during the summer. Best to park at a far metro station and take that into town. If you time it so you are just getting there at 10, you can score but there will be someone waiting for you too pull out. If I couldn't find a spot, I would just go home. I was passing through anyway. I usually decided which museum I would visit by where I parked. They are strung out all along the mall there and you have plenty of choices. Most of the year parking is not that tough tho. Another cool spot is Haines Point. I caught a small mouth bass off of that seawall once on a rubber worm. I didn't really have anything to do with it so I tossed it back. Hanes Point was always a great place to take kids so they could climb and play all over 'The Awakening'. But, since they've moved the statue to National Harbor (where I won't go), the point has lost it's big attraction. http://tinyurl.com/ns89y7a http://tinyurl.com/pw5dx92 The golf course isn't bad if there's been no rain recently. It's a nice one for walking. I have some pictures of me climbing on that one. We had to jump over the fence to do it because they were getting ready to move it. I am still not sure why they had the fence there tho. Nobody was working there. It's sited nicely at National Harbor. Couple of decent restaurants there, but not much else that appeals to us. We sometimes hit one of the seafood joints if we're downtown and I've happened to drive in... I looked at the national harbor over the bridge but we didn't get down there. I remember when the whole area was a wetland. It's now a physically attractive area, good walking, plantings, hills, and vistas, with lots of high end "shoppes," and suchlike, but they actually charge to park there, which is a big NO for suburban shopping, and even my wife, a consummate shopper, said the stores were boring. I believe a casino is going to be opening there, which, of course, will be a big reason to stay away. -- Proud to be a Liberal. |
No balls, no brains
On Sun, 15 Feb 2015 13:27:48 -0500, wrote:
On Sun, 15 Feb 2015 12:39:00 -0500, Keyser Söze wrote: On 2/15/15 12:33 PM, wrote: On Sun, 15 Feb 2015 10:08:09 -0500, Abit Loco wrote: On Sun, 15 Feb 2015 02:27:53 -0500, wrote: On Sat, 14 Feb 2015 21:37:59 -0500, Abit Loco wrote: I remember being able to drive down from Annapolis in less than an hour and find a parking place on the street right at the main entrance to the Smithsonian. Must not have visited during tourist season. Your odds of winning the Powerball lottery are probably better than finding a parking spot there during the summer. Best to park at a far metro station and take that into town. If you time it so you are just getting there at 10, you can score but there will be someone waiting for you too pull out. If I couldn't find a spot, I would just go home. I was passing through anyway. I usually decided which museum I would visit by where I parked. They are strung out all along the mall there and you have plenty of choices. Most of the year parking is not that tough tho. Another cool spot is Haines Point. I caught a small mouth bass off of that seawall once on a rubber worm. I didn't really have anything to do with it so I tossed it back. Hanes Point was always a great place to take kids so they could climb and play all over 'The Awakening'. But, since they've moved the statue to National Harbor (where I won't go), the point has lost it's big attraction. http://tinyurl.com/ns89y7a http://tinyurl.com/pw5dx92 The golf course isn't bad if there's been no rain recently. It's a nice one for walking. I have some pictures of me climbing on that one. We had to jump over the fence to do it because they were getting ready to move it. I am still not sure why they had the fence there tho. Nobody was working there. It's sited nicely at National Harbor. Couple of decent restaurants there, but not much else that appeals to us. We sometimes hit one of the seafood joints if we're downtown and I've happened to drive in... I looked at the national harbor over the bridge but we didn't get down there. I remember when the whole area was a wetland. Shortly after the place opened, my wife and I decided to stop there for a cup of coffee and look around. We were on the 21' Proline at the time. If you look at a satellite map of the place, you can see if's got about a half mile of concrete pier, not counting the marina. Just about the time we got ready to dock, a young guy in a nice green sport coat comes running over asking if he can help us. I told him we were just stopping for a cup of coffee and a looksee. He replied, "Docking is $10 an hour." So we left. Went to the Starbucks in Alexandria where docking is free. I don't think I've ever seen any boats tied to the long pier. -- Guns don't cause problems. The behavior of certain gun owners causes problems. |
No balls, no brains
On 2/15/15 2:20 PM, Abit Loco wrote:
On Sun, 15 Feb 2015 13:27:48 -0500, wrote: On Sun, 15 Feb 2015 12:39:00 -0500, Keyser Söze wrote: On 2/15/15 12:33 PM, wrote: On Sun, 15 Feb 2015 10:08:09 -0500, Abit Loco wrote: On Sun, 15 Feb 2015 02:27:53 -0500, wrote: On Sat, 14 Feb 2015 21:37:59 -0500, Abit Loco wrote: I remember being able to drive down from Annapolis in less than an hour and find a parking place on the street right at the main entrance to the Smithsonian. Must not have visited during tourist season. Your odds of winning the Powerball lottery are probably better than finding a parking spot there during the summer. Best to park at a far metro station and take that into town. If you time it so you are just getting there at 10, you can score but there will be someone waiting for you too pull out. If I couldn't find a spot, I would just go home. I was passing through anyway. I usually decided which museum I would visit by where I parked. They are strung out all along the mall there and you have plenty of choices. Most of the year parking is not that tough tho. Another cool spot is Haines Point. I caught a small mouth bass off of that seawall once on a rubber worm. I didn't really have anything to do with it so I tossed it back. Hanes Point was always a great place to take kids so they could climb and play all over 'The Awakening'. But, since they've moved the statue to National Harbor (where I won't go), the point has lost it's big attraction. http://tinyurl.com/ns89y7a http://tinyurl.com/pw5dx92 The golf course isn't bad if there's been no rain recently. It's a nice one for walking. I have some pictures of me climbing on that one. We had to jump over the fence to do it because they were getting ready to move it. I am still not sure why they had the fence there tho. Nobody was working there. It's sited nicely at National Harbor. Couple of decent restaurants there, but not much else that appeals to us. We sometimes hit one of the seafood joints if we're downtown and I've happened to drive in... I looked at the national harbor over the bridge but we didn't get down there. I remember when the whole area was a wetland. Shortly after the place opened, my wife and I decided to stop there for a cup of coffee and look around. We were on the 21' Proline at the time. If you look at a satellite map of the place, you can see if's got about a half mile of concrete pier, not counting the marina. Just about the time we got ready to dock, a young guy in a nice green sport coat comes running over asking if he can help us. I told him we were just stopping for a cup of coffee and a looksee. He replied, "Docking is $10 an hour." So we left. Went to the Starbucks in Alexandria where docking is free. I don't think I've ever seen any boats tied to the long pier. Parking a car isn't free, either. -- Proud to be a Liberal. |
No balls, no brains
On Sun, 15 Feb 2015 14:24:40 -0500, Keyser Söze wrote:
On 2/15/15 2:20 PM, Abit Loco wrote: On Sun, 15 Feb 2015 13:27:48 -0500, wrote: On Sun, 15 Feb 2015 12:39:00 -0500, Keyser Söze wrote: On 2/15/15 12:33 PM, wrote: On Sun, 15 Feb 2015 10:08:09 -0500, Abit Loco wrote: On Sun, 15 Feb 2015 02:27:53 -0500, wrote: On Sat, 14 Feb 2015 21:37:59 -0500, Abit Loco wrote: I remember being able to drive down from Annapolis in less than an hour and find a parking place on the street right at the main entrance to the Smithsonian. Must not have visited during tourist season. Your odds of winning the Powerball lottery are probably better than finding a parking spot there during the summer. Best to park at a far metro station and take that into town. If you time it so you are just getting there at 10, you can score but there will be someone waiting for you too pull out. If I couldn't find a spot, I would just go home. I was passing through anyway. I usually decided which museum I would visit by where I parked. They are strung out all along the mall there and you have plenty of choices. Most of the year parking is not that tough tho. Another cool spot is Haines Point. I caught a small mouth bass off of that seawall once on a rubber worm. I didn't really have anything to do with it so I tossed it back. Hanes Point was always a great place to take kids so they could climb and play all over 'The Awakening'. But, since they've moved the statue to National Harbor (where I won't go), the point has lost it's big attraction. http://tinyurl.com/ns89y7a http://tinyurl.com/pw5dx92 The golf course isn't bad if there's been no rain recently. It's a nice one for walking. I have some pictures of me climbing on that one. We had to jump over the fence to do it because they were getting ready to move it. I am still not sure why they had the fence there tho. Nobody was working there. It's sited nicely at National Harbor. Couple of decent restaurants there, but not much else that appeals to us. We sometimes hit one of the seafood joints if we're downtown and I've happened to drive in... I looked at the national harbor over the bridge but we didn't get down there. I remember when the whole area was a wetland. Shortly after the place opened, my wife and I decided to stop there for a cup of coffee and look around. We were on the 21' Proline at the time. If you look at a satellite map of the place, you can see if's got about a half mile of concrete pier, not counting the marina. Just about the time we got ready to dock, a young guy in a nice green sport coat comes running over asking if he can help us. I told him we were just stopping for a cup of coffee and a looksee. He replied, "Docking is $10 an hour." So we left. Went to the Starbucks in Alexandria where docking is free. I don't think I've ever seen any boats tied to the long pier. Parking a car isn't free, either. It's ridiculous. -- Guns don't cause problems. The behavior of certain gun owners causes problems. |
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