It’s time to welcome new Loopy Groupies again. (I’m trying to do this more often so that the list isn’t quite so long and intimidating!) You become an official “Loopy Groupie” when you get your sixth package from us. When I first came up with this idea, waaaay back in the beginning when we first opened our shop, I remember wondering if it was a good idea. Would people think it was silly? Would anyone want to be a Loopy Groupie? I’m so glad that the answer was yes! (And people started reaching that magic number of packages so much quicker than I anticipated. Now that I know you all a lot better, it doesn’t surprise me a bit, but back then it did.) We’re glad to have you all with us, and a big, warm welcome to those who have recently joined in:
Catherine in WI, Dana in MO, Diana in FL, Anne in TN, Susie in CA, Dani in NC, Brianne in MO, Ann in CO, Lois in FL, Laura in NC, Tamara in CO, Cecilia in CA, Liesl in MI, Courtney in OK, Carolyn in CA, Jami in NC, Hallie in Ireland, Jane in TX, Regina in NM, Margaret in NV, Catherine in CO, Tiffany in VA, Susan in IL, Michelle in MO, Nancy in NY, Laura in MD, Jean in WA, Patricia in CA, Allison in Canada, Jody in MI, Judith in MI, Edna in KY, Susan in OH, Irene in Norway, Lisa in IL, June in NY, Grace in NJ, Gail in NH, Robin in KY, Stasia in WI, Denise in MA, William in OH, Jennifer in TX, Sally in VA, Matt in NE, Lauren in TX, Randi in GA, Amanda in MD, Irene in MA, Jocelyn in NY, Beth in MD, Lizzie in GA, Carol in NJ, Desiree in PA, Olivia in FL, April in MA, Karen in MN, Barbara in ME, Jean in OH, Samantha in NY, Helen in Sweden, Linda in GA, Jessi in VA, Denise in TX, Karen in DE, Emily in WA, Sandra in CA, Rhonda in NY, Melanie in Canada, Sarah in CA, Angela in CA, Marybeth in NC, Lisa in NC, Cherie in IA, Chana in CA, Kaisa in The Philippines, Vivian in VA, Mary in NY, Leonard in D.C., Theresa in CO, Jen in CA, Sharon in Canada, Suzette in OR, Leanne in The UK, Cheryl in Canada, Kristina in IL, Tasina in IL, Conchita in CA, Leslie in AZ, Sheryl in WI, Judith in PA, Cammie in WV, Beverly in CA, Laura in PA, Katy in AZ, Hazel in The UK, Nancy in TX, Holly in MA, Janie in IL, Barbara in D.C., Dorothy in FL, Michelle in MA, Jennifer in NJ, Rani in MN, Symbra in NC, Jennifer in the Armed Forces, Amy in MN, Arlene in NY, Julie in MI, Denise in IN, Antonia in NJ, Thersa in AZ, Terri in OR, Erin in CA, Kyoko in Japan, Kate in Australia, Georgiana in NY, Whitney in KS, Sue in WA, Toria in MI, Rosemary in VA, Trish in MD, Diane in Canada, Joanne in TX, Diane in CA, Jennie in PA, Mara in Spain, Wendy in MA, Elaine in CA, Soraya in South Korea, Alison in VT, Donna in IL, Kathleen in MN, Erica in OH, Elpida in KS, Julianne in MN, Josette in ME, Amy in WA, Gita in D.C., Laura in KS, Sarah in NE, Carol in NH, Susan in NY, Siw in Norway, Lisa in WA, Mary in VA, Jennifer in CA, Deborah in CT, and Marlon in The Netherlands.
We send packages all over the world, and there are so many times that we’re wrapping something up and someone says, “You know, I would be happy to deliver this one in person!” We do the next best thing – we send Loopy out to spend the summer with you, wherever you are. I hope you’re showing him a good time and taking pictures! But if we WERE going to deliver an order to you in person, what would you want us to see in your home town while we were there? That’s the Blog Contest question this month. What would you want to show us in your hometown before we headed back home? What is on your “must do and see here” list when you have visitors in town? Leave a comment and tell us one thing (or several things) and you’ll be entered to win a special Loopy Care Package. We’ll do the lottery drawings a week from today.
I’ll be out of town on Friday, so I’ll be back to the blog next week – Monday or Wednesday. Don’t forget, Monday is a holiday here in the U.S. – no mail going out. (We’ll make up for it on Tuesday, I promise.) This weekend is graduation for College Guy up in Indiana. I can hardly believe it. After he graduates, he’s heading off on a 2 1/2 week backpacking trip in Europe with some friends (you know, the kind of thing you do before you have job or family responsibilities.) He’ll get home and have a little time off for the summer and then will head to FL to work for the company he interned with last summer. College Girl will come home with us this weekend and she’s going to be a Loopy Elf this summer. It will be fun to have her here!
Since we’ll be gone for the weekend and since Monday is a holiday, I’m not sure when/if we’ll do a Sneak Up. We’ll continue adding in things as they come in, though. For those of you wanting the Lorna’s Laces Wendy Knits color, we sold out of the Shepherd Sock, but we expect more in today or tomorrow. (Edit – It’s here! The gals at Lorna’s Laces are awesome.) As we were packing all of those skeins up yesterday, one of the Elves said, “I can’t believe we went through that many bags of this colorway and it all sold out. What’s the deal?” and another Elf answered, “Everyone loves Wendy!” Yes, yes we do. 🙂 We still have the colorway available in the Shepherd Sport and in the Roving.
Have a great weekend, and don’t forget to leave us the “must-sees” for your home town!
Sheri readytogetridofthisconstantheadachebroughtonbyallergies,FPS
I live in Detroit, so right know I would say that the best thing to see in the city are the Red Wings!!!!! Also Belle Isle, an island park, beautiful.
I live in the suburbs of Washington, DC so there’s plenty to see here. We’d obviously hit all the touristy spots like the Smithsonian, the monuments, the White House, and the Capitol. The one place I’d really have to take you though is Booeymonger’s – a deli/restaurant I used to frequent when I was in college at Georgetown U. When I still lived in CA and I brought my middle school class here on a field trip, I suggested that our tour group stop for lunch. Our tour guide loved it so much, he decided to use it for his future groups while in those parts of the city. There’s four locations that I know of so it’s probably close to one of the “touristy” sites we’d be visiting. Check out the fun menu: http://www.booeymonger.com/menu.html . My favorite is the “Gatsby Arrow.” Yum!
I live in a nice little town in the middle of the mountains. we have some beautiful attractions. we have a senic train that is a 4 hour ruond trip from here in town or go a town over and turn it into a 7 hour round trip through the mountains, the court house is historical and still has one of the original stained glass ceilings in a court room. we have some beautiful mountain drives and over looks, we also have BlackWater Falls about 2 hours away thats very beautiful. we have a nice little LYS here in town and even a golf course.
Here in Virginia Beach I would first take you to First Landing State Park. Yup – John Smith was here! Next I would take you to the Back Bay Wildlife Refuge to see the Atlantic at its best (at least here). Then off to Surf Rider restaurant for some great fresh seafood.
Lots to do – especially at this time of year!
I’m from a tiny fishing village called Main-a-Dieu in Cape Breton. There’s not a whole lot to do there but what there is is pretty awesome. You can swim in the freezing ocean, pick wild blueberries and walk to the lighthouse.
Please come visit us in Madison, WI! I would take you to the Farmer’s Market and the best LYS, Lakeside Fibers. Then we would go to the Memorial Union for some Babcock ice cream and fabulous lakeside people watching.
I’m in Buffalo, NY so the obvious must-see is Niagara Falls. Beyond that, I’d take visitors to Albright-Knox Art Gallery and Forest Lawn Cemetery.
Honestly, in my town, I would have to show you the view of the river. The “natives” tend to take it for granted, but the Mighty Ohio is truly beautiful this time of year with all of the beautiful greenery reflected into it. And, I’d have to take you strawberry picking too.
First of all, congratulations to College Guy. How can it be possible that he is graduating? I know it has all gone by too fast for you but Knitting Daughter will be home and that is a very good thing. I always take people to the Botanical Garden here in St Louis–it is a wonderful place to go even in the winter and then it is fun to go down on south Grand and have lunch at some of the great ethnic places and if the stamina is good, then the antique shops on Cherokee topped off by Ted Drews. Of course, if there are kids involved, the arch and the river front are a good bet but not my first choice.
I currently live in Pittsburgh, but my hometown is Fairbanks, Alaska and if you’re in Fairbanks the must see-must do for any knitter has got to be the University’s musk-ox farm. They don’t let you comb the trees for qiviut fiber, but it’s still amazing to see the huge animals.
There is so much to see in Tucson, AZ I hardly know where to start. The Mountains, we have the southernmost ski resort in the US. The Sonoran Desert with its magestic Sahuaro Cactus. The knitting, spinning and weaving shops. The White Dove of the Desert, a Catholic Mission that has a mistic spirituality about it. You can escape the cold and snow of winter to the warmth of Tucson and it’s people.
Alexandria, Virginia is just across the Potomac River from Washington DC. We can walk to Old Town from my house, have a wonderful dinner on my back deck and then do a drive-by-at -night tour of all the famous monuments and buildings in downtown DC.
Here in Marin I’d suggest hiking or biking Mt. Tamalpais then taking a ferry over to SF for a great dinner at the Fisherman’s Wharf.
Let’s see here….we can go to several local llama & sheep farms, view historical sites (Parthenon, Music Row, antebellum mansions, presidential residences), we can go boating & fishing on many rivers and lakes, we can go visit our soldiers at Fort Campbell, we can dine at award winning restaraunts or have a picnic in a park, we can listen to music (country, rock, jazz, classical) at the various clubs, bars and symphony hall, we can go to the zoo or planetarium. We can see priceless art at the Frist Center. We can hike, bike, ride in a horse drawn cart. A riverboat ride on the General Jackson, a tour of Opryland Hotel and all the beautiful areas there. We can watch professional sports (Titans football training, Sounds baseball, NHL hockey, horse racing). We can visit places of higher education (Belmont and Vanderbilt), both with historical aspects. We can run into world famous movie stars and musicians (Nicole Kidman, many country and western stars), Nascar drivers (DW for example), authors, artists just going about being themselves, or we can watch Civil War re-enactments or go to the Renessance Faire. We can watch the sunrise or sunset over the hills of Middle Tennessee. We can be as rowdy or as quiet as we want. Heck, we can even plan it so you can be here for Mule Day! Pretty much whatever you want to do, we can do it here!
I’m in west-central IL, and there are a few things on my thing. In winter, the bald eagles along the Mississippi River – absolutely marvelous to see so many of them. In the summer, a few visits to local farms, for fresh eggs, pick your own berries, and more fresh veggies than most supermarkets. People in my area are trying more and more to get back to their ‘roots’ and I love it. We’ve also got some great antique and flea markets.
I would love to take you to our Farmer’s Market right on the waterfront & then maybe a ferry ride over to Seattle….super fun & the thing that most “inland” visitors want to do when they visit!
Oooh, if you were to come to town, I’d definitely take you to my favorite hangout spots: Andy’s Pizza, the Raleigh Times for some of the best bar food and beverages I’ve had, and Foundations (literally a hole in the wall). I would suppose we could also visit the (free) science museum, and check out the Sir Walter Raleigh statue.
Well, “the Postman” & i live in a very small farming town, Colton, that doesn’t have much to offer (that anyone would be “hankering” to see), but right next door – 3 miles down the road – is another small farming town called Uniontown where there is a very old (old in the western USA time frame) Catholic church. It is the lovliest church with stain glass, nice icons & is quite famous – it has gotten messages from the pope for its 100th BD, etc. People come from all over, believe it or not, to see the beautiful inside. So, other than our beautiful farmland on the Palouse, I would show visitors the church.
Since I’m not living in the US for another couple of years all the Loopy Ewes can come and visit me in Italy. I’m living in a small city named Savignano sul Rubicone near the famous beaches of Rimini. We take all our visitors to Venice – a ride on the Vaporetto is so much fun – to Verona (Juliet’s balcony awaits) up to Lake Como and, of course, to the Republic of San Marino (a quick 15 km away) for some great views and tax free shopping. Driving tours of the Chianti trail in beautiful Tuscany and some fabulous pottery all along the way. And did I mention the wine? Does Loopy prefer a great Chianti or a wonderful Sangiovese? Perhaps some white wine from Friuli? It’s all good. Florence is also a short 3 hr drive away but the summer is not a great time of the year to go there. There is so much more to do and see here than stand in line at the museum.
Buona giornata, L
the town where i make my home is san francisco and i love it. the city is always buzzing with activity and there are beaches, woods, and mountains nearby. and as a bonus, in the hottest part of the summer, it’s foggy and cool here – perfect knitting weather!
I live in a place that is a popular destination for summer tourists. The Pacific Northwest is a great place to be because of it’s cooler summer temperature, and there is more than one place to point to in every direction. To the west, go to the Oregon or Washington coast and wine country, to the east, go to the Cascade Mountains or see our famous volcano, Mt. St. Helens. To the south, see the Willamette Valley with more wine country, to the north, there are lakes, alpaca ranches and Puget Sound, Seattle, and Vancouver, B.C. If a camper, the state camp grounds are wonderful.
There is lots of yarn here (Blue Moon Fiberarts, Shibui), and first ever Sock Summit is here in August (which I do believe Loopy Ewe is attending).
Oh – In Portland, Powells bookstore is where I take all my visiting family.
In the North-central area of NC there are lots of things to see and do. Our favorite thing for visitors is to pack a picnic lunch and go for a ride on the Blue Ridge Parkway, stopping at historic sites and taking short hikes to stretch our legs and enjoying a lovely view as we eat. Or taking a tour of local wineries. Or a trip to Old Salem – a restored 18th century village. Or… well, there are a lot of choices!
I would take you to the St. Lawrence Market on Saturday when they have the farmers’ market. On Sunday we could go to the Leslie Spit, officially known as Tommy Thompson park. Both places are in Toronto, Ontario, Canada where I hope Loopy will be visiting some day.
I’m from Richmond, VA and we have loads of things to see and do. We have a great river with rafting, kyaking (sp?) and just hanging out on the rocks! Thn there’s the Jefferson Hotel with its 5 star resturant. It’s my favorite place to put visitors at for overnight trips. We have a breathtaking almost 100 year old Catholic Cathedral.. The list just goes on and on for me.
I would take you on a hike up the Cascade Creek Trail – a gorgeous, quiet trail along Cascade Creek in the San Juan Mountains. We would pass waterfalls, lovely meadows full of wildflowers, an old mining cabin, and sweeping views of the Needles and San Juan Mountain Ranges. As a bonus, we’ll get to see a large population of our state flower – the Blue Columbine. The best time to see these flowers is in early to mid- July, so plan your trip to come then! We’ll have a great time…
Buffalo is a great city all year round but it is especially fun in Summer. There are eating fairs every weekend specializing in ethnic foods and the best restaurant, chicken wings, etc. around. I would pick Elmwood Avenue for food, shopping and galleries/museums. Second pick would be an archetectural tour of the EB Green, Richardson, and Frank Lloyd Wright buildings/homes. and Olmstead Parks System. Tird would be the lakefront at Erie Basin Marina.
Right outside the city is Niagara Falls, Allegeny State Park, Toronto (90 minutes away, Arts and Crafts Movement of East Aurora’s Roycroft. Come visit and I’ll put you up!
If you get over to Memphis, you have to go to Beale Street and the Gibson Museum, The National Civil Rights Museum, Stax, Sun Studios, and Graceland *because Graceland is a given in Memphis*. There are tons of shady parks and great music and food to be had all over the city and in the neighboring areas! Of course, what’s a trip to the south without going to my mom’s for the banana pudding and friend chicken this side of the Maxon Dixon?
Come visit. We make room for guests!
What’s must see for Loopy here in Radiant, VA? Well, let’s see…
1. The sunsets over the blue ridge mountains
2. Mr. Jefferson’s, Mr. Madison’s, and Mr. Monroe’s houses and gardens (you know that Loopy will LOVE the gardens).
3. Master G and HRH (my children) swimming at the pool . Loopy can even help me me on the computer during the swim meets!
4. Visiting my friend’s sheep for a sheep-to-sheep chat (we won’t bring loopy on shearing day, I promise! We wouldn’t want him to be traumatized by the event).
5. Going to northern NY to visit family and friends and see the fireworks on the 4th of July.
6. Hanging out on the front porch watching the kids play.
Loopy would love it here. We are on a gently rolling hill, 5 acres, off the main road with plenty of room to romp and play with the kids. We aren’t that far from civilization so that if Loopy had a hankerin to do some shopping or see a show, we could do that too. It’s just our little slice of heaven and we’d love to share it with loopy (and you, Sherri – we aren’t too far from Graves Mountain Lodge!) this summer.
I live in Anaheim CA. You would have to see an Angels baseball game and a Ducks hockey game. Of course, Disneyland and the beach. Fiberwise, you could go to the Yarn Lady and Velonas. There are many wonderfull things to do here.
Dallas, Texas if full of wonderful, friendly people and we enjoy dining with friends. If you were here, I would take you to some of my favorite restaurants. The downtown skyline is impressive and we could visit the museum, then go over to the beautiful arboretum in east Dallas. If we head north , we could see some bison ( a corporate sponsored herd) and farmland.
Sheri,
This was too easy:) Moomers for ice-cream, downtown for a Funky Monkey, and you could pop on over in July for Cherry Festival. You know, the list is already long, so when are you coming?
You would have to eat at Joe’s Italian Restaurant. It’s the best place ever! I can’t believe I’ve lived here for over a year and never went there until now. It really is the best. You just missed the Bloomin’ Festival, Fly Leaf came this year. and the Jazz Music Fest.
Not in our town but right down the road is the Original Dr Pepper factory turned Museum. My kids enjoyed that last summer.
we are known for our architecture so I would take you to see the sites and the great Chihuly glass exhibit at the visitors center. I f you came in the late summer we would have to go to the near by Scottish festival at the apple orchard that is a wonderful time…. the music, the crafts…..
I live in Broken Arrow, OK – yes the Sooner State – as my husband and I called it the Cheater State. Oklahoma is named the Sooner State because settlers jumped over the starting line to claim land in the Oklahoma territory before they were supposed to start over the line – thus cheating. What a wonderful heritage for them Sooners!! Maybe you can tell that neither of us are native Sooners, eh?
Broken Arrow is a bedroom community, situated about 15 miles southeast of downtown Tulsa. Oh, yes we have inclement weather many times of the year. We may have ice storms, tornadoes, torrential downpours, dry spells necessitating water rationing, heat until one thinks he/she cannot stand to be outdoots, humidity, and then some of the most lovely weather, too. Also, nice cool camping weather, outdoor sports weather, golfing weather, water skiing weather for skiing on our wonderful lakes.
We have some wonderful craft stores throughout the state – yarn and quilting in particular.
Come, visit, shop, and stay. And if faith is your calling, we have lots of churches – after all we are the buckle on the Bible Belt. If that’s not your thing, don’t be put off by that, just enough God’s scenery while you are here and the warm hospitality of the folks.
Susan
The sublime – head down the road and take in the view from the Golden Gate Bride and have a wonderful dinner in San Francisco
The ridiculous – the Ugly Dog Contest in Petaluma
I’d love to show you all around the Piedmont-Triad area of North Carolina, but a must-stop would be the bakery at Old Salem in Winston Salem. I dream about their sugar cake at night. Mmm….. goood…….
There is not too much I could add that most folks don’t already know about Lancaster County, PA. But I have been prone to direct folks to the old covered bridge just down the road from the Amish school house here in Rothsville, and a few miles more to Akron and the great park with a lake, fountains and you can fish there too. Plus the kiddie’s just love the large play ground with personality, pirate’s ship and all!!! There are tennis courts and frisbee areas, not to mention plenty of space, tables and all for picnicing. We are just ll miles north of downtown historic Lancaster for all the shopping you want. Not interested in going that far? Try out our Oregon Dairy. A great supermarket, Delicious food served in the yummy restaurant, an ice cream shop with a big multi layered patio, a petting zoo and a gift shop that sells almost anything a tourist would want. The supermarket has a bakery that makes you drool constantly, (you just have to have some shoo-fly pie or snickerdoodles) and fresh veggies and fruit, alot of which are home grown. I recommend a stay in a local Bed and Breakfast, but if that isn’t your cup of tea, there are plenty of hotels and motels within minutes of us. For a refreshing family visit and lots of fun, come visit Rothsville and Lititz.
there are so many great sites in the greater portland area (MAINE, that is). my favorite is riding the casco bay lines and visiting the islands on a nice sunny day like today. or having a pint on the deck of one of local pubs. or a picnic on the eastern promenade with the dogs, watching sailboats in the bay. or seeing a double A baseball game at hadlock field (we’re a red sox affiliate, appropriately enough). oh! and the restaurants…..there are some great ones here. nothing beats REALLY fresh seafood, especially when it’s cooked by someone who knows what they’re doing. i love living in maine, so i could write all day!
We have a local chocolate shop called Sweeties that has fantastic dark chocolate, and a great cup of coffee from Goshen Coffee Co!
Hello readers,
what I would do is take you to a garden, a special garden that brings wellbeing, set up for this purpose. Made only a few yards away from a former airplanefield. (partially used). At night you can hear the nightingale sing..
And I’d also take you to the botanical gardens in Leiden, where special species have been collected from over the whole world, since a very long time, because the University in Leiden , Holland, was founded in 1575.
See you there!
If you came here to Sheboygan, WI, you’d definitely need to come see our lakefront—on Lake Michigan, of course! It’s beautiful and we have a great walking path, so it’s a great place to get some exercise as well as enjoy seeing the lake. There’s a great marina and some very good restaurants, a waterpark resort—well, there’s lots to see and do here! Come visit~
I would dearly like for you to come on over to Bloomington, Indiana. We have a wonderful set of Museums with rare antiquities. The campus boasts many hide-a-ways to see. The county offers many diverse eateries and also a large Federal Resevoir. There is a Vi-duct that boasts about being the 3rd largest, a must see. Several Yarn Shops, spinning/weaving/knit and crochet artists abound. The best part is my home in the countryside, let your hair down, relax and play. Mother nature is in the backyard. Red Fox, deer, quail, pheasant, squirrell, turkeys too. Our 2 Scottish Fold Cats love company. Hope to see you soon!!!
Being as it is summertime, if you were coming to my town of Lancaster, Ohio, I would recommend visiting the William Sherman House in Lancaster. It’s the birthplace of General William Tecumseh Sherman, a Civil War general. It’s jam-packed with artifacts and Civil War history. There are some unique small-town restaurants on Main Street as well, where the museum is located.
Come visit Estes Park, Co! We could sit out on the patio and watch tourists get too close to the baby elk on the golf course. Mad mamas are fast and tourists with cameras are slow.
Congrats to College Guy!
If you came to Northfield, we would have to view the bullet holes left behind when Jesse James and his gang tried to rob First National Bank. The town celebrated “The Defeat of Jesse James” Days every September. The Northfield Historical Society runs tours of the old bank so you can even see the safe JJ tried to get money from. We’d probably tour St. Olaf College, where I work, and maybe Carleton College or at least Carleton’s arboretum and Japanese garden. During a winter visit, you could cross-country ski in the “arb.”
For food, though, we’d probably have to make a trip to the Twin Cities (less than an hour away). You’d have to see the Minneapolis Sculpture Garden at the Walker Art Center:
http://garden.walkerart.org/index.wac
and catch a play at the Guthrie Theatre. Maybe you’d come on a Saturday so we could hit the Mill City Farmers’ Market near the Guthrie. Dinner at Spoonriver would be a highlight, but we’d have to find time to have a meal at the Mercado Central — Manny’s Tortas are WONDERFUL, but there’s also so much other great food there! In hot weather, Sebastian Joe’s ice cream can’t be beat. Mmmmm . . . can’t . . . resist . . . Sebastian . . . Joe’s . . .
In celebration of the San Francisco Bay Area, I would take you for a walk along the Bay Trail at Berkeley, so you can feel those sea breezes coming in right through the Golden Gate. The atmosphere has been so gorgeous this week with a little mist in the air muting the colors! I feel so lucky to live here (born here, even), it’s so beautiful.
Hi Sheri! If you were to come to the actual TOWN I grew up in (and not the city we’re supposed to be amalgamated with – Sudbury, ON), there actually isn’t much in terms of sightseeing. Basically, I would want to show you places that meant a lot to me as I roamed those streets – the elementary school I went to for four years, the house I grew up in and the church we got it from (it used to be a rectory before we took it off the foundations and moved it!), the houses my parents grew up in, the street named after my dad’s family, the beach/park where I played as a child (and where I also got married), and one of my favorite places in the world – my great-grandparents’ old farm and the property that abuts it. It runs all the way back to the Vermillion River, where you can find a small rock island that isn’t ours but we named it Little Bear Island after the farm.
You would have to go Canoeing down Mad River and end with a stop at our local Dairy Corner for a hot fudge/peanut butter milk shake.
I’d have to take you up to the scenic overlook to see the spectacular view of Manhattan!
What would you want to show us in your hometown before we headed back home? The Westport River (Westport MA) The commercial fishing docks, the farms, and Cape Cod.
Chatham MA is heaven on earth. Newport Rhode Island is magnificent.