Category Archives: Travel

Lakeside, Michigan

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This past week Julie and I rented a house with four other friends in Lakeside, Michigan. This was our first experience using Airbnb and it worked out really well. The house was walking distance to a private beach on Lake Michigan which is all we were really looking for. We spent the majority of our time at the beach and cooking at the house.

Bells Brewery
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Before checking in to the house we headed up to Kalamazoo to checkout Bells Brewery for lunch. I was really impressed with their huge selection of beers on tap. Julie and I each did a tasting and then I had a couple more before we hit the road. By far my favorite was the Quinannan Falls Lager. Lunch was really good as well, mostly BBQ sandwiches. I was really disappointed with their ‘No Growler’ policy. I had planned on filling three growlers for the week. We did stop at their general store but the beer selection was less than what I see at my corner store in Wrigleyville.

Three Oaks
Before dinner on our last night in town we headed over to the town of Three Oaks to check out the Journeyman Distillery and a couple of bars before dinner at Soe Cafe.

Journeymen Distillery
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Journeyman Distillery was setup much like FEW Distillery with the addition of its own bar and event space. The tour included three tastes which I believe is some kind of Federal regulation. Like other small craft distilleries, Journeyman distills Gin, White Whiskey and Rye Whiskey.

Pleasant House
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Our tour guide at Journeyman suggested we stop by the nearby Pleasant House Brewing Company which recently opened a small brewery/bar. Pleasant House is the sister location of Pleasant House Bakery in Chicago which is a small restaurant that specializes in meat pies. This location has the same food setup, basically British comfort food, with the addition of the bar and three of their own beers. I had the Dry Stout and tried the ESB, both were great.

Side Notes:
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* Beach reading: The Generals: American Military Command from World War II to Today.

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** Every grocery store we stopped in during the entire trip had a ‘Smores Section’.
*** Last year’s visit to Lakeside.

Chinatown Walking Tour and the Water Taxi

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This past Saturday Julie and I purchased a Groupon for a $10 walking tour of Chinatown from the Chicago Chinese Cultural Institute. We’ve been to Chinatown on a couple of occasions including the Chinese New Years Parade in 2012 but we were hoping for a little more in depth experience via the tour. I won’t say we were disappointed but you clearly get what you pay for. The tour started at the Nine Dragons Wall and our guide explained some of the background on how this part of Chicago became Chinatown.

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The tour lasted about an hour and consisted of the main part of Chinatown along S. Federal St., the Chinatown Square which anchors the new part of Chinatown and the Ping Tom Memorial Park. One of the main buildings in Chinatown is the Pui Tak Center which formerly housed the ‘City Hall’ and now consists of immigration services, language training and a cultural hub.

Chicago Water Taxi
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I’ve been wanting to take the Chicago Water Taxi to Chinatown for about two years now. We checked the schedule in the morning and it just seemed a lot easier to take the Water Taxi back to the Loop instead of the other way around. This worked out just as well, after our walking tour we had lunch and then walked back to Ping Tom Memorial Park and waited for the Water Taxi. It runs about every 20 minutes or so. The fare from Chinatown to Michigan Avenue was $7. Considering all of the boat tours along the Chicago River (CAF, Wendealla, etc) you get the same ride for about a third of the price if you take the Water Taxi. Granted you don’t have a guy with a bullhorn pointing out buildings to you but it’s all the same if you know the buildings.

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4th of July Trip: Galena, Potosi & Dubuque


For the 4th of July this year, Julie and I headed a couple hours west to Galena, Potosi and Dubuque. We’ve driven through Galena and had dinner in Dubuque once before but this was a our first time spending any kind of real time in either of these towns. We were just looking for a place to spend the 4th that still had rooms and was driving distance. Galena and Dubuque made the cut.

Galena, Illinois
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In Galena we stayed at the DeSoto House Hotel which dates back to 1855 when the town was a booming metropolis of 14,000 residents. The DeSoto has housed many historical figures from Abraham Lincoln to Mark Twain and even US Grant’s 1868 Presidential Campaign Headquarters. The hotel sits directly in the center of town and underwent a complete renovation about 25 years ago.

Root Beer Revelry
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To my delight and surprise, connected to the DeSoto is the Root Beer Revelry bar/shop. Revelry has three root beers on tap: Millstream, 1919 and Princess Potosa. You can order 12oz cups or get a 24oz frosted mug and of course they do floats. They also have a wide selection of bottled root beer. You can do a mix and match of six or four packs, or just buy them by the bottle. I had a 24oz frosted mug of Millstream and then did a mix and match six pack that I’m trying to slowly work through.

Galena Brewing Company
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We spent the afternoon at the Galena Brewing Company working our way through their selection. I was a fan of the seasonal Identity Crisis which is a Black IPA. We didn’t eat there but they seem to have a wide selection of food and a large dining area.

Parade
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I guess we should have known that all towns have parades on the 4th of July but it didn’t really dawn on me until we got into town. The parade basically did a loop down Main Street which was right outside our hotel and more importantly Revelry. A lot of Churches, high school bands and Moses were in the parade. Galena claims 9 Union Generals who served in the Civil War, so they had 9 reenactors in the parade. Seems legit to me.

Grant’s House
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Speaking of Civil War Generals, US Grant lived and worked in Galena just preceding the Civil War. After the war, the citizens of Galena purchased and furnished this House for Grant as a token of gratitude for saving the Union. The Grant family only lived in the house for a short period of time but maintained the house for several years and until eventually donating it to Galena.

Fireworks
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As we were walking near the river earlier in the day we started seeing people claim their spots along the river bank for the fireworks. Our hotel was selling tickets to their rooftop for a viewing party/cookout, we scored tickets and watched the fireworks from there. It was a rather extensive display but the DJ rocking out on the roof was a little too much.

VFW Club
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After the fire works we headed down to the VFW Club for a couple of drinks. I managed to commandeer the jukebox and play quite of lot of Neil Diamond. I consider this my cultural gift to Galena.

Potosi, Wisconsin
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The next day we took a detour to Dubuque and stopped by The Potosi Brewery. The brewery is setup at the site of the original Potosi brewery and it’s a sprawling complex that includes a Winery, The Brewers Museum and the current brewery. It’s also a major stop over for motorcyclists. I think the crowd was about 70% people who had rode in on a bike. The beer selection was good but I was partial to the Pilsener, it was a hot day and this was the perfect beer. We had lunch there as well; a fish sandwich and fried cheese curds. There were a lot of people stopping in for growlers to go. A father came in with his two sons and had five growlers of Princess Potosa Root Beer and then order a round of root beer while he waited. This of course inspired me to take one for the road.

Dubuque, Iowa
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In Dubuque we stayed at the recently renovated Hotel Julien Dubuque which dates back to 1914. The Hotel Julien was a much more modern space than the DeSoto, really one of the better hotels I’ve stayed in in a long time. We made dinner reservations at Mainstreet Steak & Chophouse only to discover that it is in the same building as the bar we had dinner at the last time we were in Dubuque, the German Bank.  Dinner was good and I think we should have hung out there the rest of the night instead of trying to find a decent bar.  Every place we went had a DJ mixing songs that should never be mixed, even our hotel bar.

Fenelon Place Elevator Company
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One of the places we wanted to checkout was the Fenelon Place Elevator Company’s incline. From what I could gather online the view is good and you can see three states (Illinois, Iowa and Wisconsin) and the Mississippi River. The incline was originally installed for private use but is now a tourist attraction. It takes about 3 minutes for it ride up or down. The turnstile at the top is reportedly from the 1893 World’s Columbia Expedition in Chicago.

Mississippi Riverwalk
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Saturday morning before heading back to Chicago we made our way down to the Mississippi Riverwalk to checkout the river and the site of the Old Star Brewery. Despite the heat, the river walk was really nice. I imagine the main building does some decent business for events with the overhang and the river views.

Side Notes:
* See also Grant’s Tomb.
** Previous trip to Iowa.
*** Previous trip to Wisconsin.
**** Previous rides on an incline.