This page was built by a travel enthusiast like you!

Make your own list and compare the results with friends
discountsatori

discountsatori


Recent entries

Texas, United States

Untitled

Most of my extended family lives in the expanse north of Dallas / Ft. Worth and south of the Oklahoma border. I’ve lived in the southeastern U.S. (Atlanta) most of my life, but Texas always has a way of seeming otherworldly to me every time I go. The flatness is at once refreshing and draining to someone who’s always known hills, but the view — the “big sky” — is amazing.

I haven’t been able to properly explore Dallas, but my family and I did go to Ft. Worth for shopping and sightseeing. We went to a steakhouse, where everyone was very accommodating to vegetarian me. Also, I got suckered into putting on cowboy duds in a gift shop, and then posing for a photo that is kindly known as my BLACKMAILPICTURE. I’d like to travel some more through the state and see San Antonio and Austin. Both of those would be major road trips from the Dallas area, though.

over 6 years ago

Lower East Side Tenement Museum, Orchard Street

Informative, though claustrophobia-inducing

My husband and I took the “Piecing It Together” tour on January 12, 2006. We stopped by the museum in the morning and bought our tickets for the 3:20 PM tour that day. In retrospect, we should have bought tickets for one of the morning tours and hung out in the Lower East Side until it began. But, well, we didn’t. We went to Brooklyn for some shopping and coffee, and then had to high-tail it back to the Lower East Side to make the tour. Long story short, we missed the first fifteen minutes. Our tour guide was not altogether pleased, but fortunately we had caught the tour just before they went inside the tenement.

Each tour is one hour, and in that time the guide shows you 2 apartments. There are currently 2 different tours — “Hard Times” and “Piecing It Together.” The latter is specifically about families who worked in the garment industry. Standing in the tenement apartment and hearing about all the various work and life activities that happened in the three very small rooms is quite humbling. There’s an amazing amount of detail in each room — you’ll want to look at everything from the old sewing machines to the layers of old wallpaper. Our guide, Nadine, was very friendly and informative. I could tell they ran on a tight schedule at the museum, though, because she didn’t seem to have time to answer a lot of questions at the end of the tour.

I started feeling a little faint in the second apartment. And then that feeling increased to “reaaallly faint.” The day was warmer than average for Manhattan in January, and I was wearing a coat and a sweater — plus, I was feeling very closed in among the tenement’s tiny rooms and low ceilings. I had to sit outside for a minute after the tour was over. Our tour guide went out of her way to show me to the staff bathroom on the first floor of the tenement.

Tips for going here: get there on time, explore the gift shop, wear proper clothing, and get enough fresh air before stepping into the tenement. If you do all that, it’ll be well worth your $15.

over 6 years ago

Osaka, Ōsaka-fu

Untitled

Hello, why didn’t I go there while I was living in Japan? I spent a number of months hearing how underwhelming Osaka would be for someone like me who was living in Tokyo. But then I started hearing how Osaka is the “artsy city” of Japan, the home to wonderful theater, and the birthplace of Japanese comedy. I was so close to it when I visited Kyoto, but I think it’ll be worth it to trek across the world again to see it.

over 6 years ago
See all entries ...



or
Login with Facebook