This is the Ocean Cliff Resort. Info about the property says it was a castle built in 1864; converted in 1954 to an Ocean Front "Retreat for the Elite". Now operating as a restaurant, wedding/events center, hotel/condo rentals.
Photos of the room and a little history of the castle at the end of this entry.
Friday May 5,2017
There are no direct flights on any
airlines from Phoenix to Rhode Island.
We connected through Baltimore on the flight in. We’ll connect through Chicago going home.
Our flights were right on time. Packed in like sardines on the first
flight. Plenty of space to stretch out
on the second flight.
Our bags were waiting at baggage
claim by the time we walked through the airport.
Nobody was in line at the car
rental.
Directions to the resort were
perfect.
I *DID* have plenty of sources. Google Maps, a map from the rental car place, directions from the rental car place and Glenda, my GPS (Get Patti Somewhere).
It took about an hour with rain
and a little traffic.
Once we got on the island we drove
through the adorable little town. I
think I’m going to enjoy it here.
Our condo is beautiful.
So far so good.
This is going to be a rainy vacay. Weather is predicted to be a mixed bag of
rainy, cloudy, sunny, rainy all week.
We’re prepared with plenty of rain gear so it will be fine.
After we checked in we went to the
grocery store and liquor store. I always forget that you can’t buy alcohol in
grocery stores in the east. I don’t cook
on vacation but we get coffee, beer/wine, fruit, snacks, etc.
Back to the condo to put
everything away and then we had planned on having dinner at The Safari Room, the restaurant on
the property. We walked over there and
found out they were closed for a private party.
Dang.
|
Misty Evening |
We could have stopped somewhere
while we were out. Back in the car and
back to town. We are about 10-15 minutes
to downtown. We decided to go to Buskers Irish Pub that has excellent reviews. It
was hoppin’. They have a musician who
plays guitar and sings oldies mixed in with Irish tunes. Paul had a Ruben and I had a sampler plate
with wings, mozzarella sticks, an Irish version of chicken fingers, and fried
pickles. We both brought back half. I had my obligatory Irish Coffee. I’m an Irish Coffee snob and this one was
very good.
|
I know, I look pretty wiped out after a long travel day. |
~~~
It’s Saturday morning and I’m
doing my favorite morning thing.
Sitting
on my beautiful patio and recapping yesterday.
The patio is private and huge. It’s
a little cold out, mid 50’s with a slight breeze. I’m bundled over my PJs in my light weight
down jacket, peshmina, boots and luckily I brought the gloves I bought in Linz, Austria (hi Connie). They don’t have fingertips or covered thumbs so I can
type!
Back to the view from my
patio. All the way to the left all I can
see are trees. Center left, across a big
grassy area is a large house and a sprung structure (big tent) where they
probably have some sort of events. In fact last night we could hear music
playing and we could see people dancing although its not THAT close. I should have brought binoculars! Directly across is the ocean. To my right is a big grassy area and then the
event center for this property where there is a big tent and the restaurant and
banquet rooms. They have weddings here
on the grassy area overlooking the ocean.
Weather today is supposed to be
high of 60 and foggy. A little rain is
predicted for a couple of hours this morning.
In fact right now its intermittently sprinkling a wee tad.
I think I need one more cup of
coffee before I SF&P (shower, fluff and puff) and see what the day brings.
Saturday May 6, 2017
We got a leisurely start to the
day. We left about 10:30 and headed to
Middletown to Flo’s Clam Shack. Fried
Clams are Paul’s favorite. I could usually take em or leave em and opt for
shrimp or fish and chips. I had seen it on an episode of Best Thing I Ever
Ate. Chris Cosentino featured the Clam
Roll with belly clams. Beau McMillan was on the same episode and featuring Flo’s
Fish and Chips. They bantered a little
about which was better then Chris said “when you’re at a place called the CLAM shack, you get
the clams!” They looked amazing so
When*in*Rome. Paul prefers the clam
strips so I ordered the Clam Roll and he had the Strip Platter. They were super de-lish. The belly clams were creamy on the inside and
nice and crunchy on the outside.
I have
officially reached my limit of fried foods for the week. Unless we go back to Flo’s before we leave.
:wink:
It was rainy when we left Flos’ so
what do you do on a rainy day? You go to the local aquarium which is
practically across the street from Flo’s.
It’s a small aquarium but nicely done with plenty of sea creatures to
explore.
Back to the condo but first popped
into the restaurant we tried to go to last night to see if we could get in
tonight.
|
This is the daytime view of the picture I posted yesterday of the Misty Evening |
They only had 6 or 8:30 available so we picked
8:30. That’s later than we normally eat
but 6 seemed too early.
A glass of wine with some fruit on
the patio is just what the doctor ordered.
Then we went to check out the Jacuzzi. They have a solarium
with pool and Jacuzzi. The solarium was
nice and warm with lots of lounge chairs. Note to my Building Safety
friends. ADA accessible with a chair
lift for the pool that can be moved to the Jacuzzi and an ADA shower with a
transfer seat. Nice! After Jacuzzi time Paul took a nap and I read
for a while. Off to dinner. Bottom line,
the food was really good. The ambiance and service were meh.
|
I love when they bring a tool kit before your meal |
We both decided on the steamed
lobster. Hey, last night we ate bar food! He started with Clam Chowder and I had a Caesar Salad. Both were really
good. The lobster was fantastic.
|
This my friends, is my version of a Happy Meal ;~} |
There is nothing better than New
England/Maine Lobster (IMO). We were
talking about how the first trip to Cape Cod we ate lobster almost every
day. It was on every menu and typically
less expensive than steak!
~~~
This morning it is so beautiful
out. It’s only 50* right now but sunny
and clear. The view from our patio is
just amazing. There is no prediction of
rain today (fingers crossed it stays that way).
Sunday 5-7-17
Well the crossing of the fingers
worked! The entire day was crystal clear
albeit a bit chilly.
We started off going to the Castle
Hill Inn which is the castle we can see across from us. The house across the way with the sprung
structure that I mentioned we could hear music and people dancing? That is an
extension of the Inn where they have weddings and other events. We were going to have breakfast there but
they are only open for their hotel guest during breakfast. They open at 11:30 to the public for brunch
(it was only 10) and later for dinner.
We’ll go back for dinner there one night during the week.
We drove down to Bowen’s Wharf in
an effort to find a breakfast spot.
No
such luck. Practically everything opens
at 11:30 except a tiny little coffee bar with muffins. We walked around the shops for a while and
ended up eating at Aquidneck Lobster Co.
|
View from our window seat |
I had shrimp and Paul had the clam platter again, this time with belly
clams. I tried one and it was okay but
not as fantastic as the ones at Flo’s.
We
walked around the wharf and up and down the streets. We found a little breakfast place across from
the wharf that we might try one day.
More walking, walking, walking. I
went into a fancy schmancy shoe store to look at a pair of shoes that caught my
eye in the window. They were pricy. Paul said if I liked them he’d buy them for
me. Okey dokey then! Then we decided to go back to the visitor
center and take the trolley tour. We had
an hour left at our parking lot and the tour is 90 minutes so we decided to
move the car to the lot by the Visitor Center since it would have been a pretty
long walk. We drove past Historic St. Mary's.
|
Historic because that's where JFK and Jackie got married |
On to the Visitor Center where we paid the parking piper and went
inside to get tickets. No can do. The last tour left 10 minutes ago. What is it with our timing and missing tours
by 10 minutes?!? I sweet talked the
parking money-taking-man to giving us our 10 bucks back. Luckily there was an attendant rather than
the self pay lot we had been in previously.
We decided to take a drive to Portsmouth. We only went as far as Tiverton before
turning around. On the way back we saw
signs for the Greenvale Vineyards Wine Tasting Room. Detour! Some vineyards sell wine made by others in addition to their own but they make and sell all their own wine.
The vines are dormant now but he said in two
weeks they will have buds and from that point they grow pretty quickly. We
sampled seven wines (five white, two red).
He said they produce better whites there because of the climate. He was right.
The whites were much better than the reds and I typically prefer red.
Back to the resort for some
Jacuzzi time and what is turning into our typical routine. He naps, I read.
I was out on the patio and two
visitors we resting on the lawn.
All of a sudden I could hear music
from across the way from what sounded like a big orchestra (rather than a DJ). They were singing “and I think to myself,
what a wonderful world”. {feeling blessed}. Then there were loud cheers and wedding march music so the bride and groom must have arrived. There were two people walking across our lawn to the unit downstairs where someone on the patio said "they are lucky it stopped raining". The man walking said "they arrived on a boat". Nice way to make a grand entrance to your wedding reception.
We decided on Italian for dinner.
We went to Restaurante Lucia. Very small
restaurant, maybe a dozen tables. The
food was delicious and the service was great.
I had Pollo al Forno which is chicken with eggplant baked in tomato
sauce and topped with mozzarella. Paul
had Veal Aromatica, sautéed with wine sauce, lemon, capers and kalamata olives. We skipped the starters and dessert.
|
Opps, forgot to take a photo before I dove in |
This morning it’s a super chilly
42* with an expected high of 53* and clear. Yay! I’d rather bundle for the cold than dart in
and out of the rain. Rain is predicted
again Tuesday and Wednesday; clear again Thursday and Friday.
~~~
Since it’s going to be a nice day
we might do the Mansion Tours today.
Dunno yet but stay tuned. You
know I’ll report back!
Monday 5-8-17
We started off with breakfast at
Annie’s. It was typical Ma and Pa little
breakfast/lunch joint. It was okay. It’s rated as one of the top 10 breakfast joints in
Newport. Apparently breakfast isn’t a
big thing here!
Then off to explore some mansions.
We pulled into The Elms. We bought the 5-tour package. Even if we only tour two mansions we’ll break
even compared to paying separately. One
of the mansions is closed for renovations so they added on a topiary garden in
Portsmouth as an option. I don’t know if
we’ll bother going up there.
A little history for you
today.
|
Come on. I'm waiting for you on this lovely bench |
The Elm was the summer cottage of
the Berwinds. Mr. Berwind made his
fortune in coal. They hired an architect
in 1898 and finished construction in 1901 for a cost of 1.5 million. In the
1960’s it was slated for demolition (as a lot of old mansions were) and most of the interior items were sold at
public auction. The Preservation Society
of Newport purchased it for just over $100,000 (can you imagine?) two weeks before the wrecking ball was about to
hit. They were able to track down a lot
of the original furnishing. Some were
donated back, some they had to purchase. It became an National Historical
Landmark in 1996. I took about 100
pictures so I’m going to try to just pull out my favs of the highlights.
|
This is actually the back of the "cottage" |
|
Paul standing at the front entrance |
|
500 year old tapestry |
|
Marble columns with gold at the top |
|
Beautiful chandelier with ceiling plate (typical throughout) |
|
Mrs. B's Bedroom |
|
Mr. B's Bedroom |
They say the reason for separate bedrooms was because the lady of house often entertained her friends in her Bedroom. It would not be appropriate if Mr. B were to enter to say, change his clothes. Across from her bed was a tea table with chairs and in the center of the room was a game table with mah jongg set that looks very similar to the one my Mother-in-Law gave me years ago.
|
Bathroom (sink is across, vanity in the center) |
That little tub in the center - I thought it was possibly for bathing babies and toddlers. Nope. Its to sit in. I guess sometimes you just need to sit your hiney in a tub without the rest of your body! Who knew?
|
Kitchen |
That large white thing on the counter is a marble block and there's a giant bar bell looking thing next to it. It was their mortar and pestle for grinding fresh herbs.
Next we went to the Marble House.
*Sidebar – possibly haunted. I asked an elderly lady working at The Elm if
any of the mansions are haunted. She
said “maybe at night!” Then she said
she’s heard tour guides say they have had strange feelings in Consuelo’s room
at the Marble House. She said “check out
her room, it’s the red room upstairs.
Don’t be afraid”. :twilight zone
music:
The mansion was built in the late
1800’s by the Vanderbilts at a cost of 11 million. That would be about 300 million in today's dollar. The Vanderbilt fortune came from steamships
and railroads. He gave her the Marble House on her 39th Birthday. On her 40th Birthday she divorced him. Mrs. Vanderbilt was
actually the first women to file for divorce.
It was not proper in those days so Mr. V just wanted to separate but she didn’t want
anything to do with that. A year later she married his best friend and moved to the Beaumont cottage down the street! After he died she re-opened the Marble House
and had the Chinese Tea House built on the edge of the cliff. That’s where Mrs. Vanderbilt held rallies for
women’s right to vote. Thank you Mrs.
Vanderbilt. Marble House has been a
National Historical Landmark since 2006. The Vanderbilt's had more money than dirt so
their mansion was not at risk for demo as many of the others were. Again tons of pictures so I’ll try to pick my
favs.
|
Very Impressive Kitchen |
|
Oven and Heating Surfaces |
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Pots so heavy they have spigots |
|
The path to the Tea House |
|
The Tea House |
|
View from the Tea House |
One thing to share since
my husband is hearing impaired. The
tours have self guided narration with headphones. They didn’t work with Paul’s hearing
aids. At Elm they gave him a bound booklet with all the same info that was recorded.
You just have to ask for it. At
Marble they had tablets that you could either use the headphones and push
“play” or you could push an icon that looked like the page of a book and scroll
through to read the info room-by-room.
Your PSA of the Day.
I think that was enough mansion
tours for one day. We spent hours
wandering around just those two properties exploring. After that we went o O’Brien’s Irish Pub so I
could warm up with an Irish Coffee.
|
DayDrinkingDontJudgeImOnVacation |
O’Brien’s is not as nice as Busker’s but the Irish Coffee was good. Paul had a Guinness. Then back to the condo for our typical
mid-day R&R.
Dinner at the White Horse Tavern.
They have a dress code so I had the opportunity to wear my new shoes.
|
Waiting for my date |
Open since 1693 was once the usual
haunt for colonist, soldiers, mercenaries, sailors and pirates. PIRATES?!?!
They say it’s the birthplace of the Businessman’s Lunch. It’s nicely decorated for their period in
time. Upscale dining room with linens
and candle light. We started sharing the
Crispy Heritage Pork Belly appetizer. Amazing.
Then we split a Wedge Salad. Super delicious.
I ordered the Hanger Steak with RI
Mushrooms, he ordered the Beef Wellington.
|
Still looking for the RI Mushrooms |
|
That thing that looks like a baked potato is the puff pastry of the Wellington |
Mine was okay. His was great. He was disappointed that mine wasn’t
fantastic. Hey, it happens. It wasn’t bad, it just wasn't as good as I hoped it would be. If I had a do-over I would order something
else for my entrée but I highly recommend the pork belly and the wedge
salad. Service was also impeccable.
~~~
This morning its 42*, expecting a high of 54*. That rain
that was expected has moved to tomorrow.
YES! We’re thinking of maybe
taking the trolley tour today. Afterwards we'll have lunch on the wharf and for dinner we'll stay in and eat the leftovers that are piling up.
We’ll save another
mansion tour for either Wednesday or Thursday.
Tuesday May 9, 2017
All things subject to change, kind
of like the weather here. Grateful for
another beautiful day of chilled sunshine. Prediction of rain has moved to tomorrow. :TwoThumbsUp:
We skipped breakfast today (don’t
worry about me – I had a banana). We headed to the Visitor Center for the
trolley tour. We purchased tickets but
the next trolley wasn’t until 12:30 so we had two hours to kill. We went over to the Marriott next door and checked
out their restaurant menu to see if we might want to go there another day. Nothing special about the dinner menu. We might have breakfast there. Then I talked to the concierge to get
info about the Haunted Tour. It’s at 8
p.m. every night, rain or shine. It’s a
90 minute walking tour that starts at the hotel and walks through the streets
of Newport. She said “dress warm”. I’m not sure if we’re going to do that or
not. Paul thinks it’s going to be too
cold. I hate to admit it but I agree. We’ll
see if fits into our schedule because we’ve been eating dinner around 7 or
8.
We walked around the wharf for a
while and enjoyed the beautiful morning.
|
Finally saw a sign that this is a Kwanzan Cherry Tree.
They are in bloom everywhere and so pretty |
Back to the Visitor’s Center and *all*aboard*.
|
Yep - Viking (just like my last trip but a different type of cruisin' ) |
Our guide Joe was an older gentleman and very
knowledgeable about the area. He pointed
out some if his favorite restaurants along the way, one of them being the White
Horse Tavern we ate at last night. As we
past St. Mary’s he said the Kennedy’s had 2,000 people at their wedding
reception. He told stories about the
famous mansions (cottages) we past. I
kind of felt like I was on a Hollywood Homes Tour as he pointed out the homes
of the rich and famous. This one was
owned by the Perrins as in the Lee and Perrins Worcestershire Sauce people;
that one was owned by a famous butter family; celebrities that stay here and there
while visiting. Women ran the social
scene back in the day. Their husbands
worked during the week and were only on the island on weekends. The women stayed all summer. The 400 club was formed (the 400 richest of
the rich). If you weren’t on the list,
you weren’t invited to the cocktail parties, let along the balls. This woman had six children and lived in this
mansion, her husband lived in the mansion next door. He had an extensive art collection and didn’t
want the children touching anything. Okay, let’s just move the entire family
next door so they won’t touch my stuff! He told an interesting story about Doris
Duke. She was the stepdaughter of RJ
Reynolds. He left her 100 million
dollars when she was only 12 years old.
They called her the Cigarette Heiress.
RJ Reynolds, the tobacco man, as in Lucky Strikes.
She used her money for good.
She’s one of the founders of the Historic Preservation Society of Newport and saved 11
mansions from being destroyed. They
credit her for saving Newport when the old money left town. They have no industry to fall back on. Tourism is their financial source. Speaking of when the money left town, all was
good and frivolous until 1913 when income tax came into play. Apparently millionaires didn’t want to share
their millions to the tax man…
|
This little nugget could be yours for 17 million |
|
Eisenhower had this little cottage built right on the golf course where he liked to play |
After the tour was over we went to
Moorings, Seafood Kitchen. I had a
fantastic salad with grilled shrimp, roasted beets, wine poached pear, shaved
fennel and a blue cheese vinaigrette.
M-M-Good.
Paul had an open faced tuna melt.
When we left there we went to
Breakers, the “other” Vanderbilt Mansion.
Cornelius Vanderbilt's fortune came from steamships and later railroad
(just like his brother William of the Marble House). The original wood framed house was destroyed
in a fire. It was rebuilt out of marble
and steel. He had the kitchen built in a
separate wing due to it’s potential for fire although they did not know the
source of the original fire. Apparently fire investigation wasn't a thing in the late 1800's. Tour guide
said when the house was sold to the Historic Preservation Society there was one
stipulation. The two remaining
Vanderbilts would be allowed to stay there when visiting Newport. Those two? Gloria Vanderbilt and her son
Anderson Cooper. The upper levels of the
cottage originally housed quarters for 33 servants. He said that’s where GV and AC’s private
quarters are now. Gloria is 93 so who knows
how often she travels anymore or if she’d actually stay there. I didn’t see an Anderson Cooper
sighting although I could imagine him wandering around there!
We took the scenic drive back
along the coast line. So beautiful.
|
Hard to capture the beauty |
Out onto the patio for a glass a
wine and a coyote ran across the lawn. I
thought I left those back in Phoenix! Paul went for a Jacuzzi and a swim while I sat by the fireplace and read. Neither one of us were very hungry after our late lunch. I think I snacked on some leftovers around 9-ish.
~~~
Today we have another day of postponed rain. Its 44* with an expected high for 53* and cloudy. Mr. Sunshine is trying to break through the clouds. We haven't decided whats on the to-do list yet.
|
A little redheaded visitor this morning on Mi-Patio |
Wednesday May 10, 2017
As we left the resort to go to
breakfast, Paul stopped on the side of the road at a farm along the way so I
could take a pictures.
|
Oreo Cows lounging |
|
The Llamas headed over to checked me out while I was checking them out |
Lions and tigers and bears – well
okay, cows and llamas and horses and sheep.
We started off with breakfast at
the Corner Café. Cute little homey spot
across from the court house which I’m assuming is downtown Newport. Listed #1 on the top 10. I had bacon and eggs with the best morning
potatoes and excellent nine grain toast.
I cleaned my plate except for the eggs which were a little too under cooked for me. Paul had Eggs Benedict. Service
was great. We walked up and down the
streets around the café.
We discovered a little tiny cemetery on a back street dedicated to Dr.
John Clarke.
He was a Physician, Baptist
Minister and Statesman. In 1651 he was
arrested in MA for his Baptist Faith, jailed and tried without defense; fined for
preaching the gospel. He returned to
England where he spent 12 years laboring to obtain a Charter of the New England
Colony. We’ve come a long way baby.
Back in the car and off to Mansion
# 4, the Chateau Sur-Mer. I told Paul
they are all starting to look alike to me.
It was built in 1852 by China trade merchant William Wetmore. The largest cottage until the Vanderbilt’s
arrived.
I tried to get some pictures of
things that were different like the fireplace with tiles.
|
The wood sculpture above this one was carved from a single piece of walnut |
|
This wall hanging that looks like tapestry is woven bamboo |
It was difficult to get pictures with the way they have the lighting. I think they do it on purpose!
|
Marble Angels Dancing |
|
Marble Man Pondering |
We walked around the grounds known
for their imported trees.
|
View of the back of the cottage |
We left there and spent a couple
of hours on the Cliff Walk. We started
at a point called 42 steps,
|
Named for these steps that lead down to the rocky shoreline |
|
Your reward for walking down the steps |
|
Salve Regina University. The tents on the left are being set up for graduation |
|
Poetry Boxes along the walkway |
Open the door and read the poem. There was a little tablet and pencil inside so you could leave a note. So cute.
|
Benches along the path to sit and daydream.
Kind of reminded me of the benches on the Danube |
Then back to the resort for
wine-on-the-patio time before heading to the Jacuzzi.
|
View form my patio, nice day for sailing |
Dinner at a French restaurant,
Bouchard’s. Ah-MAZ-ing! I started with the escargot appetizer. Yes, I ate the snails! They were in a Mousseline Sauce, which is a
creamy egg based sauce with garlic and parsley. I prefer them in garlic butter but these were really good too. Super tender and delicious. Paul
had soup. For my entrée I HAD to have
lobster because it was their house specialty and I'm glad I did.
Homard et St. Jacques Cardinal Gratines.
It’s re-stuffed roasted lobster and scallops in gruyere lobster
sauce. Oh My Stars! I could see why it’s their specialty. Paul had one of their specials de jour, a Veal Chop
with demi glaze and three kinds of mushrooms.
We split a Grand Marnier Souffle
|
Not my photo. I forgot to take a pic so I snatched this one from the web. |
So light and fluffy and flavorful.
It could quite possibly be the best thing I’ve eaten on this
vacation. Definitely the best dessert.
|
Even my cappuccino was picture perfect |
After dinner we went for a nice
long walk around town before heading back to the car and back to the resort. My FitBit is quite pleased today at over
12,000 steps. Seriously, it felt more like 20k!
~~~
Morning coffee on the patio and that rain that was predicted for today has moved itself to the weekend. TYJ. We've been so lucky with the weather. Its 44* now with a high of 57* predicted for the day. Paul asked last night what my favorite meal has been this week. We've eaten soom pretty amazing food so he was shocked when I said my favorite (beside the souffle) was the belly clams at Flo's. I think I was just surprised at the burst of creamy deliciousness hidden under the crunchiness. I was expecting the texture to be a little firm, like mushroom-ish. He said if that was my favorite we'd go back again today instead of going to breakfast. Hmmmmm? Not sure what the day brings (typical). This is our last full day here. We check out Friday morning and head for the airport. We have one more mansion to choose from on our ticket. We'll have to do a little research and see which one we'd rather see. There is also a automobile museum that Paul wants to check out. Dinner tonight at the Castle Inn across the way. Its a Prix Fixe menu (translation "table of the host") so we have no idea what there will be to choose from since it changes daily. A dinner adventure...To be continued...
Thursday May 11,2017
Today was a do-over day. Dinner reservations are at 7:15 so if we want
to go back to Flo’s we need to skip breakfast and be there at 11 when they open
for an early lunch. Off to Flo’s it was. This
time I just had the belly clams ala carte.
I didn’t really care for the coleslaw and only ate a few of the fries so
let’s skip the sides and go straight for the bellies! Paul had the clam strip platter again so I
snagged two or three of his fries.
Still, just as good as the first time.
I’ve had my fill of belly clams to hold me over for about 5 years!
Off to another mansion tour. We’ve been to the Breakers, Marble House, The
Elms, Chateu-sur-Mer. They had told us
when we purchased the tickets that Rosecliff was closed for renovation so they
added the Topiary Garden in Portsmouth as an option. The others listed on the ticket were
Kingscote, Isaac Bell House and Chepstow.
We decided on Kingscote but when we drove up it was closed until May 20th. Then we went to Chepstow. Closed until May 20th. Final stop Isaac Bell House. You guessed it. Closed until when? May 20th. Apparently that’s when the “season”
opens. Funny she told us the Rosecliff was closed for reno but didn't tell us the others weren't open yet. Oh well. We didn’t want to drive to
Portsmouth for the Topiary Garden (although the ticket lady said its worth the
drive). He's more into the history and the architecture of the buildings so wouldn't really appreciate the art of turning plants and trees into objects but would have gone if I wanted to. I can live with out it. He wanted to go back to the
Marble House because there was so much to see there that you can’t possibly see
everything the first time around. We
wandered around there for awhile.
Back down to the main street to
Newport Jerky Company. I had bought a package of beef jerky the first time we were down there and it was really good so I wanted
to buy another. Must use my $5 off
coupon! I really haven’t done much
shopping and the little shopping I’ve done has produced nothing. Haven’t even
found souvenir t-shirts that I wanted to bring home. I went into a little store
and bought the most adorable tea towel.
Then we went across the street to
Busker’s for an Irish Coffee (me) and a brewsky (him). The bar tender was kind of cranky. Boo.
We left there and went to another
entrance of the Cliff Walk and had a nice long walk.
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Plaque says the Cliff Walk was wiped out by Hurricane Sandy and rebuilt 2013/2014 |
On the way back I saw a woman overlooking the path and taking
pictures. She approached us and said
she’s a photographer for the Newport Daily News and had taken a picture of us
on the path and asked permission to use it.
Sure, why not. She took down our
name and where we were from and what we doing there. Who knows.
We may just be in the local paper.
Big news headline “Patti and Paul, vacationing here from Phoenix, AZ,
walkin’ the walk.” Slow news day!
ETA - OMG - we're in the paper! Too funny.
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Don't know why it says 2014. It was taken 5-11-17. |
Back to the resort. I went to the office and the nice lady
printed our boarding passes. Ugg. I
strongly dislike Southwest’s boarding ticket system. I doubt I'll ever fly SW again unless it's an emergency situation with no other options.
Lovely afternoon on the patio
enjoying my last glass of vacay wine here.
Ha, look.
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A tug boat actually tugging boats! |
Always a different view from the patio. A little Jacuzzi and reading time before getting ready for dinner.
Dinner at Castle Hill Inn was phenomenal. We arrived a little early and walked around
the beautiful property before going in.
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Lovely view from our table.
If you look into the sun you'll see a sailboat passing by |
They offer a three course, a four course, or the chef’s tasting which is
seven. We both had the three which is a
first course (appetizer), second course (entree), and the third course (dessert). If you order the four course
menu you get two first courses. The chef’s
tasting would be food overload (IMO) with two first, double entrees and dessert (all chef's choice) and lots of
amusements before, during and after.
I started with
the soup.
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Spring Dug Parsnip Bisque (with peas, mint and burdock root) |
Paul had the Queen’s Greens.
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Spring Greens with red pepper, ricotta and fennel |
For my main course
I ordered the Wild Stripped Bass.
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Pan seared and finished in the oven with fiddle heads, radish and salsa verde |
Paul ordered the Crusted Halibut.
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Served with ramps, cured ham and horseradish-buttermilk vinaigrette |
For dessert:
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Apricot Souffle with vanilla creme anglaise for me |
Tart Aux Rhubarb with vanilla Bavarian, soft meringue
and rhubarb for him (sorry, no photo). Everything was fantastic
and the service was superb. Definitely a
5-star-plus experience.
~~~
Another beautiful day in the neighborhood. 44* now with a high of 57*. Did I mention how lucky we've been with the weather?! They had predicted rain for four of the days while we were here and we only had rain the first day. It wasn't even bad, mostly a light rain mixed with a little steady medium rain, which cleared up in the afternoon. Not the 100 year storm we were surprised with in Hilton Head, SC last year.
3 comments:
I was wondering when you would get a chance to use those gloves again! Glad they have already come in handy (and the hat and jacket too. I assume you are wearing your red jacket).
This is the first time I've worn them since our trip. I still love them!
Yes - red jacket. I pretty much brought the same clothes I took on our trip because those are my only cold weather clothes! It's already in the 100's at home.
Sounds like you guys are having a great time. Love reading your travel blog. We are due home this evening. Safe travels to you both. Love and Hugs for you and Paul♡♡♡
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