Travel on the Level

Home
Travel on the Level Blog
About Me
Recommendations
Best Leveler destinations
Contact Me
Where are you going?
Useful Level Links

Find the latest Travel on the Level info on www.travelonthelevel.blogspot.com.


webassets/DSC00126.JPG
Hobbling around the Forbidden City
Information and advice so you can
Travel easier, climb and walk less.
 Ouch!                            
    Life and accidents happen - a bad knee, tennis elbow, arthritis, a muscle pulled hefting luggage, an ankle twisted negotiating cobblestones - but don't let them ruin your trip or keep you from traveling.
    I didn't, despite three knee surgeries including two replacements, back surgery, arthritis, plantar fasciitis and just recently, hip replacement.
    Flat is where it's at when you hurt
   I know that's bad grammar but when you hurt, grammar and grace go out the window which is why I've created this site and the blog, Travel on the Level, to help keep you on the go with tips and how-to's.
    For 12 years I've sought out easier ways to see cities, countrysides and monuments. I've taken note of how to avoid stairs or strenuous climbs, alternate sites when you can't and what's worth the effort. Accessible travel sites help all of us.
webassets/WellsMedCruise017.jpgExample: Did you know there's an elevator in the Coliseum that will take you to and from a prime viewing area?
    I ask other travel professionals about their favorite flat places to visit, make notes on which cabins on cruise ships to book so you won't walk yourself to death and which sites and ships really do accommodate us gimps of the world.
    Orthopedists and therapists tell me - and you - how to condition yourself for a safer trip and what to do to be more comfortable in case of accidents.
Example: Dr. Mark Brodersen, head of orthopedics at Mayo Clinic, Jacksonville, told me that RICE - Rest, Ice, Compression and Elevation - is the preferred method of treatment for most painful sprains, strains and twists.
    I personally test and rate travel equipment from gadgets to gear and apparel that may make travel easier.
    You can count on the information being on the level, too. No puff pieces. If you'll be huffing and puffing and disappointed after reaching a destination, I'll let you know.
Example: During a Yangtze River cruise, guides will encourage you to see the mausoleum of modern China's founder, Dr. Sun Yat Sen, in Nanjing. Don't bother to climb those 392 steps.
Fellow travelers who did described it as so-so. Much better to enjoy the idyllic park and the rather nice shops surrounding it. 
  All of this and more you will find on my blog, Travel on the Level.
   Join us. See more but walk and climb less!
   Share your tips, quips, anecdotes, antidotes and advice. Tell us about your easy-to-negotiate travel discoveries. Receive my latest updates and info automatically.
   Together we can see the world the easy way: Traveling on the Level.
 
 
 
All contents of this website and blog copyrighted © by Judy J. Wells.
 
 


New Travel on the Level Blog - Please visit and tell me what you think - it's much easier now. I sincerely hope you will subscribe and/or follow and especially contribute. Also simpler. As always, I am open to questions on any specific destination or facility. See you on the new site.

Archive Newer | Older

Monday, July 6, 2009

Sparkle plenty

Diamonds and crystals are yours for the finding in Arkansas.

Finding a diamond is a bit like winning the lottery but the world's only public diamond mine is relatively on the level so you might as well try. 

At Crater of Diamonds State Park, two miles southeast of Murfreesboro on Arkansas Hwy 301, it costs $6.50 for adults and $3.50 for children ages 6-12 to dig. Equipment rental - plastic stools, screens for sifting and buckets for collecting - costs more depending on how elaborate and serious your search will be.

The "mine" is like a roughly furrowed field into which diamonds and other rocks have been washed by rain from the volcanic vent. Periodically the park rangers turn over the dirt to facilitate fresh finds. They also give visitors free lessons on how to go about diamond finding.

There are three ways: Fill up buckets with dirt and bring it back to a water station and wash the clay from, hopefully, the stones. Take your bucket, spade, screen and stool out to a likely spot and dry sift. Walk down the furrows looking for the telltale clear opacity of a diamond (the way the biggest are found).

Heat and patience levels dictate how diligent your search will be. People - usually the most patient - do find diamonds here.

Tip: If one member of your group flags before the others do, there's a large swimming pool, a gift shop, vending machines, bathrooms and air conditioning at the nearby park headquarters.

Crystals are much easier to find and "harvest". Mount Ida is the area for these pleasers. Drive along the road toward town and pick a rock shop that appeals to you. Go inside and they can direct you to a crystal mine. The map will cost $10-$20 per adult per day, $5 to $10 for children, and will take you up a winding mountain road to the top where the owners have dumped tailings from the open pit.

Crystals and clay go together so the "digging" is dirty and messy but there's usually a good breeze and the finding is easy. Just look for the glint of sun off a crystal facet.

You can keep as many crystals as you find and want.

Of course you can eliminate the driving and dirty digging by picking out a crystal you like at the shop and buying it, but that's no way to have fun or impress your friends. 

These are neat day excursions for anyone staying in the Hot Springs area.

Tip: If the kitsch there gets you down, consider shifting your stay to a more resort-like setting. Mountain Harbor is a delightful facility with rooms, cabins and houses for nightly or weekly rental. You'll find the country's only floating Subway, an excellent restaurant, a grand spa, unfortunately with unavoidable stairs, and even horseback riding. It's on the very large Lake Ouachita and if stationary rooms are too tame, try a houseboat.

If you prefer the state park route, you can rent cabins and yurts in DeGray Lake Resort State Park or rooms at the lovely lodge. The restaurant there is good, the boating is fun and the fishing is fine. There's a pool, horseback riding, even a golf course.  In-room massages can be arranged.

You'll have earned a bit of pampering after digging for those sparklers.

 

10:50 am est


Archive Newer | Older

Check back often and don't forget to e-mail me with any questions you might have.

All copyrighted © by Judy J. Wells 2009 

Travel on the Level blog

Steinhatchee Landing
webassets/IMG_0286.JPG
A great Florida getaway

Food Afar - My new blog!
webassets/DSC01337_2.JPG
Recipes from a Travel Writer

Easy but total escape
webassets/IMG_0076.JPG
Eagle Island can be your own private getaway

Peachy Keen
webassets/SC010.jpg
Winning recipes from 2009 Peach-Off

Moore in America, Atlanta Botanical Garden
webassets/IMG_0889.JPG
Mother and Child nestle among the orchids.

Uncle Remus Museum
webassets/IMG_0813.JPG
Brer Rabbit greets visitors.

Buckner's
webassets/IMG_0829.JPG
Gayle, Brandon and Frank Borah from Byron, GA were my tablemates.

Macon, GA
webassets/IMG_0714.JPG
The Canonball House is one of many antebellum homes in Macon.

Fitzgerald
webassets/IMG_0668.JPG
Chickens have the right-of-way - and know it.

Fitzgerald
webassets/IMG_0668.JPG
Dorminy-Massee House B&B

Gorilla Haven
webassets/IMG_1017.jpg
Oscar and his goats know treats are coming.

Around Back at Rockys Place
webassets/IMG_1140.jpg
Look for the angel.

Arkansas sparklers
webassets/DSC00069.JPG
Finding diamonds takes luck and patience.

Arkansas sparklers
webassets/DSC00069.JPG
Finding crystals is easy.

Fribourg
webassets/DSC02441.JPG
Medieval festival participants heading down as we head up to city center.

Gruyeres
webassets/DSC02441.JPG
The town of Gruyeres on the way up to the castle.

Charleston, SC
webassets/IMG_1176.JPG
Horse and wagon is a popular way to tour this hospitable city.

Traveling around Switzerland by boat
webassets/DSC02373.JPG
Typical scenery between Neuchatel and Murten.

Murten/Morat city gate
webassets/DSC02373.JPG
Own the cafe, tend the clock.

Into the Jura
webassets/DSC02324_2.JPG
From the chalet it's an easy walk to the waterfall.

Into the Jura
webassets/DSC02324_2.JPG
Watches are everywhere in La Chaux-de-Fonds.

Motiers
webassets/DSC02308.JPG
The 11th century priory is now home to Mauler cellars.

Fleurier
webassets/DSC02299.JPG
Parmigiani craftsman at work.

webassets/DSC02350_2.JPG
Esplanade du Mont-Blanc, Neuchatel

webassets/DSC02350_2.JPG
Jaquet-Droz automatons, Neuchatel

webassets/goodcrtyrd.2.jpg
Casa Marina courtyard

webassets/DSC01102_1.JPG

webassets/DSC01111.JPG
Tunnel of Nine Turns, Taroko Gorge, Taiwan

Amicalola Falls State Park
webassets/IMG_0839.JPG
Reach the falls this way...

... instead of the stairs.
webassets/IMG_0844.JPG

Groene & New Braunfels
webassets/DSC05089.JPG
Naegelin's Bakery in New Braunfels is the oldest in the state and may be the most popular.

webassets/DSC00086.JPG
Chickens roosting in the backroom of Luckenback, Texas, post office.

webassets/DSC00038.JPG
The brewery is a good place to begin a tour of downtown Federicksburg, Texas.

Click here for more info on the Kerrville and Medina area of the Texas Hill Country.

webassets/DSC05040.JPG
Five pounds of apples in a pie just out of the oven at The Apple Store in Medina, Texas.

Jekyll Island
webassets/DSC01930.JPG
Bicycles ae a favorite way to get around this flat, former millionaire's retreat.

Dixie Dude Ranch - Bandera, Texas
webassets/DSC05026.JPG
Kevin Fitzpatrick gets loopy at Dixie Dude Ranch.

webassets/IMG_0192.JPG
St. Luke's Baptist Church is in Hog Hammock on Sapelo Island

webassets/IMG_0519.JPG
Spanish reenactors shoot their cannon into Bloody Marsh.

webassets/IMG_0345.JPG
Friendly deer at St. Andrews State Recreation Area

Curacao

Capitol Reef

Kodachrome Basin State Park

CLIA

webassets/IMG_0329.JPG
Oysters are king at Boss Oyster overlooking the river at Apalachicola.

<script type="text/javascript" src="http://tcr.tynt.com/javascripts/Tracer.js?user=doOudQzW4r3Q8mab7jrHtB&s=72"></script>

Be sure to get in touch so I know you're out there!
<!--Start Sign Guest Book Code-->

<form action="http://www.fatcow.com/plugin/Guestbook.bml" method="post" TARGET='mywindow' onSubmit="window.open('about:blank','mywindow', 'toolbar=no,location=no,directories=no,status=no,menubar=no,scrollbars=yes,resizable=yes,copyhistory=no,width=500,height=350')">
    <input type='hidden' name='account' value='moo.wellser'/>
    <input type='hidden' name='mode' value='sign'/>
    <input type='submit' name='guestbook' value='Sign Guestbook'/>
</form>

<!--End Sign Guest Book Code-->

 
Travel on the Level because Flat is where it's at when you hurt!