Sunday, December 1, 2013

My New England Bucket List

“A man travels the world over in search of what he needs and returns home to find it.” 
It’s actually starting to feel like fall here in New Delhi. For the past month or so, the days have still been warm (probably in the 70s or so) but the nights have started to get cold enough where I've actually needed to sleep with a blanket.  I've been told that it gets pretty cold here in December and January, and with no indoor  When I woke up this morning and walked outside to head to work, I could definitely feel fall/winter in the air.

This weather reminds me so much of New England. I guess the saying’s true. You don’t know what you’ve got til it’s gone. Maybe it’s the cool weather or the Christmas season coming up, but my thoughts are definitely going back to the beautiful fall days in Vermont, drinking hot cider and walking around Stowe. To satisfy my craving (at least the best way I can here in Delhi), I decided to curl up with the Lonely Planet Best New England Trips guide and read about some of the trips they recommend people taking. I’ve realized that when I’m living somewhere, I hardly ever take advantage of the sights around me. Yet when I leave it, I always regret not being a tourist in my own state and country. Reading some of the trips in the Lonely Planet though have put me back in touch with the place I call home…New England. 

Here is my “must see and do” for New England:
  1. Eat a fresh lobster roll in Maine
  2. Swim in the cold Atlantic Ocean
  3. Get some apple cider donuts and hot cider in Stowe, VT
  4. See Waterfire in Providence, RI
  5. Walk the Freedom Trail in Boston, MA
  6. Visit Faneuil Hall in Boston, MA
  7. Go kayaking in Lake Champlain (Vermont & New York)
  8. Eat white clam chowder (not the Manhattan red-broth version)
  9. Take a picture next to the giant LL Bean boot in Freeport, ME
  10. Have a legendary Olneyville New York Systems hot dog, complete with mustard, their special meat sauce, onion, and celery salt at one of their locations in Rhode Island
  11. See a local baseball game (such as Pawtucket Red Sox (RI), Portland Sea Dogs (ME))
  12. Eat a maple crème (that’s soft serve ice cream to you non-Vermonters)
  13. Tour one of the many lighthouses in New England
  14. Go clamming
  15. Explore the Cape Cod National Sea Shore
  16. Take a weekend trip to Martha’s Vineyard and ride on the antique merry go round in Oak Bluffs
  17. Visit the mecca of ice cream, Ben & Jerry’s, in Waterbury, VT
  18. Visit Salem, MA in October
  19. Have a doughboy at a summer fair
  20. Go camping and hiking in Arcadia National Park, ME
  21. Go white water rafting in one of New England’s rapids
  22. Eat some pizza in New Haven, CT and decide who has the best pizza (Pepe’s vs. Sally’s)
  23. Go shopping on Church St. in Burlington, VT
  24. Drive around New England in the fall and take some beautiful pictures of the fall foliage
  25. Visit Plymouth Plantation and see Plymouth Rock
  26. Walk along the Cliff Walk in Newport, RI
  27. Go whale watching
  28. Watch maple syrup being made then eat some sugar on snow in March
  29. Climb Mt. Washington (the highest peak in the Northeast)
  30. See a Red Sox game and sing “Sweet Caroline”
  31. Go apple picking in September
  32. Rent some bikes on Block Island (RI) and explore the island on a weekend 

Of course this is just a snapshot of things to do. There's so many sights to see and trips to take in New England that I couldn't possibly cover everything!

3 comments:

Unknown said...

It is true that you don't really do things where you grow up. While living in New England, Caitlin and I did 10 things on your bucket list (we had our own that we were completing). But if you ask me about things to do in Oregon, I fail completely 'cause I hardly explored when I was living there.

Unknown said...

While living in New England, Caitlin and I did 10 things on your list. We were there to explore (and go to graduate school). But I haven't done many of the popular things in the northwest, even though I lived there for 20 years.

Unknown said...

So I guess we should all just recruit tourists to come to our home town/state and have them give us a tour!