Showing posts with label north carolina. Show all posts
Showing posts with label north carolina. Show all posts

Thursday, June 2, 2016

Just Riding Around - My Town!

In case you haven't noticed I enjoy doing "series" style posts.  For summer I have decided to showcase my growing town - well maybe I should say towns!  I live outside of Winston-Salem, North Carolina and really adore being very close to the Twin City.  However, I am beginning to enjoy my little map dot a bit more now that I'm finding so many new gems that are calling Davie County home.

Each week I will be showcasing (on my own, I don't get paid to do this) a place that my husband and I have visited and fell in love with.  The catch?  They are within a fifteen mile radius of where we live.  Here's a secret:  I will probably venture out and share some other places from outside this little place later in the summer.  But shhhh you don't know that yet!

Today I want to share a favorite antique spot in the northern part of Davie County.  I may be partial because of the location and history of the building they are in but you must know this isn't a relative's business!

Snoring Horses Vintage & Antique



I would have never imagined I'd find this little piece of awesome sauce had they not moved into my great grandfather's general store!  This awesome storage facility opens up a few weekends a month for those of us who love antiques and vintage style furniture, jewelry, decor, kitchenware, toys, and more.

Snoring Horses is ran by The Tift Family and they have been in this business for many, many years! A few months back they relocated their business back to Mocksville, NC. They are a very welcoming family and so much fun to chat with.



The first time I visited I began my wish list.

The second time my husband purchased me two pieces of furniture and a vintage scale.

I love this piece so much!  It was the perfect fit for our empty corner in our living room.  

This "chippy" table made it's home our family room.  


Now I am planning out my next project with items available (hopefully still!) in their warehouse!

Antiques and eccentric pieces can have high price tags but rest assured Snoring Horses is extremely affordable!  Personally, I stay away from antique stores because the prices can blow your mind but at Snoring Horses you'll be mind blown at how affordable their selection is.  Oh and they also have a store across the street in my grandparent's first house!  How sweet is that?!



Check them out on Facebook!  Like their page and tell them Amanda at A Brownie World sent you over!










Friday, May 27, 2016

This was going to be a video post...

Truth - I had planned to do a video post but um...nope didn't happen!

I didn't feel like battling my hair, make up, etc!  Just plain #truth

I have seen a lot of summer bucket list posts out lately and I've been enjoying them so much.  A lot of bloggers have things on their bucket lists that I am just daydreaming about.  I will get around to posting one - not lush and lavish - in a couple days.  As for now I'm just going to share what I'm hoping to complete this Memorial Day Weekend.  (Happy unofficial start to summer!)

1 - Chicken Coop Construction!

Neiman Marcus Chicken Coop The Heritage Hen Mini Farm comes with a $100,000 price tag and is one of the high-luxe items featured in the 86th edition of the Neiman Marcus Christmas Book. I can have extravagant dreams for "My Imaginary Chicken Farm", can't I?:
Look at this coop!  It has a pricetag of $100,000.00 and I'm not kidding you. Neiman Marcus had this bad boy for sale.  Again not kidding.

Our little chickies are now pullets.  They are in their tween years - ha all weird looking and kind of gross.  You can still see their cute chickness but really they are morphing into jr adults.  Just like for us humans it is a trying time.  We get pimples and they get bare skin as their fuzziness wears off and he features grow in.
Just like preteens outgrow their clothes weekly these birds are outgrowing their habitat.  It is time they became homeowners.
My husband has BIG plans to make their coop a mini version of our home.  Men and building, I tell ya that's a hot mess mix.
I look forward to sharing progress with you on Instagram!

2 - Date Night Weekend

Lake Norman, NC.     Can't wait to get back to the lake.:
Now who is saving this seat for me at Lake Norman?  Fun fact:  Lake Norman is the biggest man made lake in NC and my grandpa helped dig parts of!  That alone should allow me a piece of land on the water, right?

One of my most favorite date nights of the year is Memorial Day Weekend Date Night!!!  We go to our favorite Lake Norman spot and enjoy drinks and good food by the water.  It isn't anything fancy but very laid back and chill.  Luckily, summer is coming to NC this week/weekend so I can hopefully rock the new sundress I bought at Old Navy Outlet while on my bestie beach weekend!
What can I say here?  I love water, drinks, boats, and sundresses!

3 - Planting

Double Knock Out Rose (Rosa 'Double Knock Out') at Oakland Nurseries Inc:
I was never a rose fan until this year.  It turns out that we have some knock outs from forty plus years ago growing on our property.  Unfortunately, we didn't know this and have continually mowed them.  Now we're on a mission to save what is here and move in some new ones.  I think I am in love.

Memorial Day Weekend is traditionally the time of year I plant my summer flowers.  I'm not too totally sure I will be planting as much as in the past but I have had my eye on some roses...
I will also be planting tomato plants.  So on that note I should share I will not be planting the garden I had envisioned.  Yes, I'm kind of sad about that.  I love to grow stuff and gardens are a favorite but I just don't think it will happen.  Container gardening does look promising this year though.  Yipppeeee!

4 - River Rat

Hairr, John. 2011. "The Yadkin River near Rockford in Surry County.":
This is a small piece of the Yadkin River very close to my dad's property.  I love, love, love getting in the kayak (or canoe, I do not discriminate) and taking off down the river.  I look forward to the day when our kids can enjoy this adventuring with us.  There is nothing better than paddling the water.  

Another goal I have for this weekend is to hit up the river.  When you live four hours from the ocean you settle for the river.  Of course it always helps when your dad has a place on the river <wink>.  I swear guys I'm pretty lucky - my mom has a pool and my dad has a river place.  Loving all that H2O goodness.

5 - All things summer

Everything about her was PERFECT in that movie - Jessica Chastain in The Help:
Sometimes I wonder if I was born in the wrong decade...this could be me in the summer.  You used to call me on my rotary phone......

I plan to be barefoot - a lot.  Wear my bathing suit - the whole weekend - except for runs to the store and on date night - I'm not that girl.  Make some good mixed drinks a.k.a. boat drinks.  Blare the radio.  Rock the messy bun.  Most importantly, I'm ready to kick off summer '16 in the best way possible.

#America the Beautiful:

I hope you all have an incredible weekend and celebrate all that this weekend stands for.  Even though this post has been about summery stuff I want us to remember the real reason for this holiday - the lives lost protecting our country.  For every wonderful thing we have been able to do and will be able to do we owe thanks to our soldiers who lost their lives for ours.  I personally cannot imagine the courage and bravery that those souls had to protect you, me, and all of those to come.  Respect our soldiers; the living and the deceased.

Be safe!  Be healthy!









Linked up with Katie
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Tuesday, November 10, 2015

(Birthday) Weekend Recap

Guys, I had a seriously terrific birthday.  Asheville never seems to disappoint.  Here's a recap that includes rich, white people; the best mountain town in NC; where they used to do pow-wows; and insane asylums!! :)





Blame Downton Abbey

We left on Friday morning to take off to Asheville.  Where we live is only about an hour and a half west of the "Paris of the Mountains."  Our ride up was great.  We had sunshine and seventy-five degree weather.  (Yes, it is November!)

My husband's company offers up discounted tickets to various spots around North Carolina and Tennessee - he took advantage of the Biltmore Estate tickets for this trip.  I am a lifelong NC resident so I have been to Biltmore before (hello fourth grade field trip).  Honestly, I hadn't gave Biltmore a notion since fourth grade but after watching Downton Abbey...
I hate I missed the Downton Fashion exhibit in the spring at Biltmore

There were times when I was comparing certain features to what those crazy Crawley's were doing over at the old Abbey.  Guess what?  I was not the only one!  A group of girls ahead of us were making connections to good ole Downton too ha!

Biltmore is the largest residence in the United States and it does stand alone in it its grandeur. I won't go into historical facts and figures, you can do that on your own time.  Let me share with you that my personal thoughts on the house is....I just don't care for it.  It is a bit gaudy and a hint of Gothic scary so it isn't something I think is fabulous.  With that being said, I can totally respect the craftsmanship of that castle in the mountains.  The stone and wood carvers really did a phenomenal job and their work is the true beauty of the estate.

My favorite part of the house?



The greenhouse.

Duh.



A side note:  This was the first weekend for Christmas at Biltmore.  We didn't purchase tickets for an evening/candlelit tour but I can imagine all those trees (I quit counting at 30) looked magical.



My birthday lunch was at the Stable Cafe which is at home in the original horse stables.  I was unsure about eating lunch there.  Seriously, it was my birthday I wanted something Southern Living Exclusive.



Let me just say that our lunch was out of this world.  We ordered a platter that consisted of mountain charm - a quarter of a rotisserie chicken, a rack of ribs, about a quart of pulled pork barbecue.  That's all fine and dandy but I eat more veggies than meat so you can imagine by delight over the most mouth watering turnip greens, sweet pickles, and mashed sweet potatoes.



To top it all off - a generous slice of sweet potato pie with the best meringue I have ever had (and I do not eat meringue!) - and it was FREE because it was my birthday!



After walking the trails and a stop at the winery (get their Cabernet) for some tasting we bid adieu to that little Vanderbilt shanty.  Oh and if you're thinking that winery looks like a dairy then you are correct.  They re purposed the dairy in a very lovely way....ahhh Cabernet.

Downtown not to be confused with Biltmore

Lunch was around 3 so we weren't very interested in anything meal wise until around 10 that evening.  We have visited Asheville before and therefore ready to go enjoy the Downtown area before the rains came in the next day.

If you have not visited Downtown Asheville then you should add it to your bucket list.  This girl simply adores Asheville and that is a HUGE statement.  OK, I am about to share a secret with you.  Get ready for it.

1,2,3...

I hate the mountains.

It goes back many years ago when we went up there quite a bit.  My mom worked on a degree in Boone, NC at Appalachian State and I, to this day, am not a fan of App or really spending more than two hours in Boone.  No offense teachers of the universe I just don't get high on the high country.

Asheville, well it is different.



I don't feel like I am in the mountains when I am there.  The way the town is set up you really feel you could be anywhere.  When I say anywhere I mean more like some place in Europe.  Yes, it is referred to as "The Paris of the South" so that should give you a fine idea of what this mountain town is like.

Art is everywhere.

The best food imaginable is everywhere.

It is a true laissez-faire aura over the entire city.

The sad part is that there are homeless people sleeping in corners.  So I can paint you a beautiful portrait but I have to be honest too.  As caught up as I can get in "loving" it and seeing it in rose colored glasses - there are still human issues in those enchanted streets.



So we took to Downtown Asheville around ten in the evening for our dinner snack.  When we stumbled upon The Southern Kitchen - a favorite.  The last time we were there we stopped in for drinks and I ran into a friend from high school.  Small world problems I tell ya.  This time it was less crowded and a beautiful evening for a buffalo chicken panini (myself) and chicken noodle soup (the hubby).

We sat under a cloudy night sky and ate and drank (try White Zombie beer an Asheville IPA) and did what we love the most ---- creeping.  Ha!  People watching.  A table of young college kids probably from UNC-A; a bachelorette party; a little date night off some type of Sorority formal; a table of sixty somethings; and us.

Oh and a bear of a bouncer.  The man was huge.  I can attest to his hugeness because he literally picked me up and spun me around for my birthday.

Rain is a good thing




Saturday brought a lazy girl (me) and a lazy husband.  I really adore hotel rooms.  Yes, I get excited about hotel rooms.  I also get excited for breakfast in a hotel room.  This birthday was great.

I threw on some clothes and ran down to get a cinnamon roll and coffee then popped back up to my room only to put on my pajamas again and curl up on the couch and watch television (and text my bestie.)

Around 11:30 that morning we decided to let the housekeeping staff do their job and we went back to the Downtown area.

We walked and walked and walked.



We ate the best pizza.  Barley's Taproom & Pizzeria that is all you need to know. Our slices of pizza pie were unbelievably good.  We love a good crunchy crust and we got it!  The toppings tasted fabulous as well.

We walked and walked and walked.



We devoured samples of honey.  Asheville Bee Charmer is a store you need to visit in person or online.  It is fabulous and they have a great selection of honeys and bee products (pollen granules anyone?)

We walked and walked and walked.



We drank coffee and shared a slice of red velvet cheesecake (hubby loves red velvet.)  This stop was at World Coffee, the fabulous chick at Asheville Bee Charmer suggested we check it out for good coffee.  The staff during our visit was overwhelmed and it was obvious in the service but the coffee was good and the cheesecake was pretty good (not a red velvet fan).

Then came the rain and two lost people.  (Us)

It really sucks when the temperature is steadily dropping, it is raining, and you totally forgot where your truck is parked.

Thanks to my GPS we were back at our vehicle in a mere six minutes.

Thanks to my GPS we were then taken on a strange back road that took us to Biltmore instead of back to our hotel.

I remember this place



My husband was done with Downtown after that adventure and suggested we go support the Cherokee Nation.

I was for it, I mean why not?  It is my birthday weekend and in North Carolina when you think Native Americans you think....Harrah's.

You must know I had never been to a casino before.  As of recent I had been inquiring to a couple coworkers and friends about it but I had never really had that deep interest in a casino.  Prior to this trip my gambling history was a pretty good one.  On a cruise ship I won over $1,000 at a Black Jack table (on a whim) and on a gambling boat I won $600 on a slot machine.

My thinking:  It is my birthday, let's win some money.

Chances are the majority of you who read this blog aren't travelers to Cherokee, North Carolina.  The ride up is nauseating.  It conjured up memories of 20 years ago when I was on a trip with my father's side of the family.  We were traveling that same road and we were all "green in the gills" - NC Mountain Roads are the devil.

First off these paths are so incredibly narrow.  One side has you hugging a rock and the other side is a drop off to the pit of hell.  Perhaps you have heard the term it term:  they followed a black snake to build the road...oh you haven't?  My bad.  It means that every two seconds you are on a turn or curve that has your body screaming out STOP NOW OR I WILL SHOW YOU DIGESTION IN ACTION.

As we were traveling I kept thinking to myself:  I survived this before, I will survive this now.

After the I'm-going-to-spew-fest we were in Cherokee and the only thing you saw was....the casino.



I remember Cherokee before gambling came to town.  It was head dresses, exhibits, and tomahawks for $10.  Now it is a big, fat, piece of the Caesar's Palace franchise.

We went into the casino and I felt like I had entered a shopping mall for the elderly.  I didn't hear the winning sounds you would expect to hear in a casino.  Hell, I didn't hear the stuff I heard in a cruise ship casino.  No bells, no whistles.  Instead I heard the same music that I hear when I grocery shop and saw a bajillion internet cafe machines.  Each seat donned by a spry 80-85 year old woman, sipping coffee and smoking a Marlboro.

 I can tell you I have a good history with is this one "casino" er gambling fact:  if you are gambling you are drinking for free.

Well not in Cherokee.

Maybe it is the way the natives can get back at the non native people - charge us regular price for alcohol while we slip $5 bills into the machines of loss.  Talk about a modern day trail of tears...

I gambled a very small amount to never hear a ding, ping, ring, or see flashing lights.  I was done.



My husband did OK.

We left barely speaking to one another.  Way to divide us, Cherokee...what happened to peaceful life and all that jazz?  Oh wait Caesar's came to town, I forgot for a millisecond.

I left thinking, "how do I get a receipt for my donation to a worthy cause?"

It turns out reservation gambling casinos do not have to follow the same gaming rules and laws as those in Atlantic City and Las Vegas.

Keep that in mind when you want to blow your money.

Better yet, if you feel the need to go to Cherokee after reading this then just email me and you can send that money to me instead of pissing it away.  I will even send you pictures of all the cool stuff I was able to do with that money you were going to burn.

Celebrate your crazy WNC style




Sunday...ahhhh.

I lay in my hotel bed watching a Hallmark Christmas Movie.  That is the life and yes I just typed that.

We packed up and checked out.



Lunch was at the place near us - Stoneridge Tavern (very good burger!)  and then we slipped over to the Asheville Outlet Mall.

We did well.

A stop at Starbucks and then we hit 40 to come home.  (Not a fan of the caramel brulee latte, too sweet for me.)

On the way home we went through Black Mountain.  Here's the deal I've always heard that crazies went to Black Mountain.  When I say crazies I mean crazy people and when I say went I mean for treatment.  It turns out I was ALL wrong.

Black Mountain, NC offers the Black Mountain Neuro Medicine Treatment Center for the care and treatment of persons with mental incompetency and Alzheimer's Disease.  Not crazy people.  I wanted to put this correction out there for all of us who were raised thinking Black Mountain was for people with really bad disturbances.  It is not.

File:BroughtonPD.JPG
This is an old post card of Broughton Hospital....what do you think?



Just minutes away we were in Morganton which is home to Broughton Hospital - a state ran mental health hospital.  If you are from the Western part of the state then you know all about Broughton.  I know teachers who were trained there because they specialized in teaching children with disabilities of behavior, emotions, and physical/mental handicap in the 1970's.  You should take a second and research the history of Broughton Hospital - it is highly interesting.  The first patient was a doctor.  So for all of you who have left your doctor's office and said the doc was a quack...well there ya go.

I don't know what it is about mental hospitals but if they were built in the 1800's I am captivated by them.  Maybe it is the architecture?

All of this crazy talk is culminating to this point - between Asheville and Hickory it is like a mental health hurricane.  Various buildings with names on them had me Googling and finding out the whole area is somehow based on or related to mental health.

Put that in your pipe and smoke it.

No, don't.  You'll end up a patient there.

Anyway, who thinks it would be cool to take a tour of the Broughton?  Maybe next birthday?  A tour, not a stay....

So there's our weekend in a nut shell (bad choice of words after that last section, sorry!)

Visit NC guys.







Polka-Dotty Place














Tuesday, June 2, 2015

Thoughts & Prayers


Today I will be in a third grade classroom proctoring the North Carolina End of Grade Test.  I ask you to take a second to say a prayer or send positive energy to all the children testing.

1.  Pray for them to not worry themselves sick.
2.  Pray for them to do their best.
3.  Pray for them to not get sick during the test.
4.  Pray that teachers and proctors do not have to pee in the three hour period of testing.
5.  Pray that blood sugars don't drop.
6.  Pray that boredom doesn't take us all down after the kids are finished up and yet we have to remain silent as the dead.

Much appreciated.











All Kinds of Things

Wednesday, July 23, 2014

Getting Into The Great Outdoors: Our 1st Adventure Continued

Post 3 on our camping excursion.


I Got A Car.



Saturday greeted us with rain.

I believe it greeted me first by saying: go piss before your sheets are done for.

I threw on my jeans and grabbed my toothbrush and toothpaste.  I may be alone here but brushing my teeth makes me feel like a new person.

Happy news alert!  As I walked up the hill to the bathroom I noted that the rain had stopped!  What was hitting the camper was dripping from the trees around us and not from the actual sky.  Perhaps this 30% deal my husband had mentioned was on point...perhaps.



After breakfast (muffins of course) we took off for a daytime stroll of the park.  We were hoping to get on a trail and do a little hiking.  Sadly, the gate attendant said there were no trails to use on that piece of the campground.  He said that they had not been properly maintained and he couldn't advise us to use them.




Because of all the rain the playgrounds were mush.

I started getting aggravated.  We'll call it part mama bear part PMS-ing broad.

Once back to the camper we loaded up in the car and went to the main area of the campground.  The welcome center had some good things to offer the kids (and us).  We spent time in the museum and learned that when you retire in Florida you move to North Wilkesboro to work as a volunteer at dam & reservoir.  You also learn that Wilkesboro flooded back in the day and that is why the army moved in to build a dam.





The hubby had found a few trails to hike while in the welcome center. Our next adventure consisted of going to the trail head and taking off.  Once we got there (and out of the car) the rains started again.

Back in the car and down the road.  Or should I say....

Up the road we go!

My lovely husband drove past our entrance to the campground we were staying at.  If it was going to rain we were going to go on an adventure....somewhere.

I must say I'm pretty good at navigating and finding my way.  Its just a talent I am blessed with.  Until I met my husband I thought all people had this inborn ability to navigate with common sense.  I was wrong.  It is a blessing the man can get to and from work without a wrong turn.  Ha!  Just kidding love ya.

Up, up and away we went.  Leaving Wilkes County and entering Caldwell County.  Caldwell County was a narrow road that was winding like a black snake.  The homes were out of a bad movie based in West Virginia and we felt as if we were on the road to nowhere.

Eventually we stumbled on a place called Fort Defiance.  Now, I'm not a military buff or into the Revolutionary War, 1812 War, Civil War, or anything like that. My husband is equipped with testosterone so his interest was a bit peaked.  He pulled in and I was just hoping they sold snacks.  {This sudden road trip was done with zero diapers and zero snacks.  You can imagine how hungry we were having only eaten a few blueberry muffins four hours earlier.}



We pull up to this Ft. Defiance place and there is an old home and a primitive building beside it.  The hubs and daughter get out.  Since the baby was asleep I hung out in the car begging my cell phone to find some miraculous service.

Guess what I learned when they returned to the car?

There is no fort at Fort Defiance.

What?

No Fort.

It is just some old dead white man's house who was all about killing some British Loyalists during the Revolution.  He named his damned house Fort Defiance.

I bet his neighbors made the crazy sign when his name was mentioned back in the day.  I bet it was complete with rolling eyes and coo coo being mouthed silently.

Next we stumbled upon a place called The Patterson School.  I had never heard of this place before and lets be honest I only live like three counties away.  Of course good ole Wikipedia was down so I couldn't quite figure out this place.  We didn't stop either but now I was wondering just what this school was.  It looked very old and very shut down.

It turns out this school was founded in 1909 as an agriculture school for mountain boys.  I kid you not.  It started with roughly 19 boys enrolled and grew to having 200 boys enrolled.  It is no longer a school but more of a learning center for students in Caldwell and neighboring counties.  Check out their website for more information....its kinda nifty ya'll. The Patterson School Foundation


Our mission was now to go eat.  Screw sandwiches back at the campsite.  It was raining, it was cold, and we were going to eat something good.

You just read "it was cold" - yes it was.  On July 19th it was 60 degrees at 1:00 PM.  I was wearing jeans, a tee shirt, and a fleece jacket.  I'm built for 88 degree summers not 60-degree-no-sun-in-site summers.  I am from North Carolina not North Dakota.

Our vehicle is not the best on gas.  The next adventure would be getting gas for said vehicle.  I noticed our elevation was quite high at this point and figured we were headed to Boone.  I knew where the highway we were on would lead us to - south was Hickory and north was Blowing Rock/Boone.  Since we were going north I wasn't in shock that the high country was slowly greeting us.  We'd need gas for the trek.

What took us by surprise was that this one station we found {or came to first} had gas cheaper than anywhere else we had been.  Since petro is extremely expensive these days you know how excited you get when you see it for a cheaper than average price, right?!?!

We pulled in.  The place advertised breakfast biscuits, lunch sandwiches, and dinner pizzas.  The gas pumps were your typical 1980 somethings.  In the land of 2014 were weren't sure if we could even pay for gas with a debit card at this place.  I sat in the car with the kids while the hubby went in.

This is crazy.

Those retro pumps were ran off of an iPad.


How the hell can you make the old school, basic gas pump run off a damn iPad?  The whole store practically ran off an iPad!  My husband prepaid inside, the girl accepted his payment via iPad {nothing new} and then set up the pump via the iPad.  Are you kidding me?

We were seven miles from Blowing Rock.  When he asked the attendant where we were she couldn't answer him...just said we were 7 miles from Blowing Rock.  Cool.

The rain gently fell and the fog was out of this world....that's how you know you're in the Northern Mountains of North Carolina.  When it rains its foggy and gross.  When it does it in summer its extra gross.  Like always, the roads of the mountains are always getting expanded and repaired.  We crept along the narrow byway to get into Blowing Rock.  Finally there we decided against any local fare and to just settle for some good ole Outback.


A Blooming Onion has never tasted so wonderful.

I began making mental notes of a weekend trip, no kids, for the hubby and I.  In my mind we are staying at Green Mountain Inn and shopping at the Tanger Outlets and finding some water to canoe.  At night we're downing good drinks at an adult establishment that does not offer a kid's menu.

After a yummy lunch we headed to Boone and then to 421 for a quicker trip back to the camper.

----

When we arrived back it was still nasty and wet and more rain on the way.



Screw it all.  We packed everything up and our daughter cried the entire time.

Our neighbors did the same.

See, after our arrival back to the camper from our adventure our bedding was wet.

Un-freakin'-cool.

So yes....we unpopped the pop up and hitched her up and came home.