Tuesday, August 2, 2016

Washington DC & Virginia – Aviation Museums


We spent July on the road visiting parents and all siblings except Barbara’s brother Ron. We were very close to Ron’s house in Northern Virginia, but he and his family were in Alaska. Nevertheless we stopped there to visit both of Smithsonian’s Air & Space museums and complete our aviation theme.


We parked at the Wiehle-Reston East Metro stop – the west end of the silver line.

All we had to do was stay on until we got to L’Enfant Plaza, but there was a train derailment at Falls Church. So we were bused directly from McLean two stops to Ballston (yellow stars on map) where we got back on the train. We’ll revisit that map later.

Despite the detour we made it to the Smithsonian’s Washington DC Air and Space museum before its 10am opening. The DC Smithsonian gets the most prestigious and unique planes. We saw most of the planes with more attention on the World War II planes, Bill’s particular interest.

1903 Wright Flyer



Ryan NYP Spirit of St. Louis
only remaining Macchi C.202 Folgore (Italian WWII fighter)




The derailment was not cleared when we returned midday, so we were bused from Ballston to McLean, except this time it was a two-hour ride through congested city streets with stops at East Falls Church, West Falls Church (not even on the silver line), and Tysons Corner (one stop beyond). See map above. Lots of irate passengers left the bus at Tysons Corner, but bypassing McLean meant a large additional fare, so we stayed on the bus. After a wait, we got the train at McLean and when it stopped at Tysons Corner we saw all those who jumped off early. What an adventure!

At Reston we took a bus to the Smithsonian’s Udvar-Hazy Center near Dulles Airport. This museum has a Lockheed SR-71 Blackbird, a Concorde, the Space Shuttle Discovery, and countless other planes from every era. Again, Bill spent more time in the World War II section, as they had some unique German and Japanese planes.
Air France Concorde
Space Shuttle Discovery
 We never heard of an Airphibia before – a plane that could turn into a car.


And we liked how Airstream made quarantine quarters for the returning Apollo 11 astronauts.


We also looked in the restoration hanger, where we saw a Martin B-26 Marauder in pieces. Bill’s dad had a friend that flew them.




Monday, August 1, 2016

Florida – Heathcote Botanical Garden



While in Florida visiting Barbara’s dad, we went to Heathcote Botanical Garden in Fort Pierce. It was a hot day and we weren’t sure what the blooms would be like, but we were pleasantly surprised.
We weren’t sure what this was, but it looked cool.
We saw some butterflies in the butterfly garden.
The name of this plant caught our eye!
There was a Japanese garden.
One thing this garden is known for is its collection of bonsai. This one was even blooming.
Glad we had the chance to do a little outing with Barbara’s dad.