Posts tagged travel
A Little 'Too Sleepy' Hollow? Haunts, Hangs, & Happenings in the Headless Horseman's Hometown

Nestled up in the Hudson Valley, only an hour or so from the hubbub of New York City, is where you’ll find the small village that author Washington Irving once described as “one of the quietest places in the whole world”, where “the occasional whistle of a quail or tapping of a woodpecker is almost the only sound that ever breaks in upon the uniform tranquillity”. Sleepy Hollow, forever immortalized in Irving’s writing, is still a quaint little place to visit these days; whether or not Ichabod Crane would recognize it in its current state is another question.

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North AmericaLogan T. Hansentravel, travel guide, travel inspiration, travelspiration, New York, Sleepy Hollow, The Legend of Sleepy Hollow, Washington Irving, Sleepy Hollow Cemetery, travel blog, travel diary, travel advice, travel recommendations, travel reviews, travel ideas, travel planning, New Jersey, LaGuardia, New York City, autumn, autumn getaway, autumn inspiration, autumn travel, Croton-on-Hudson, Halloween, fall getaway, fall travel, fall, Hudson River, Hudson Valley, NYC, Andrew Carnegie, Headless Horseman Bridge, Headless Horseman, William Rockefeller, Edgar Allan Poe, David Neilsen, Old Dutch Church, Old Dutch Burying Ground, Old Dutch Church and Burying Ground, Pocantico River, Route 9, Broadway, Philipsburg Manor, Philipsburg Manor House, Twilight Village, Twilight Village at Sleepy Hollow, Spirits of Sleepy Hollow Country, Kykuit, Rockefeller estate, Armour-Stiner Octagon House, Octagon House, Sleepy Hollow Bookshop, The Horseman's Shop, Beekman Ale House, Bridge View Tavern, Beekman Avenue, Tarrytown, D23, Disney, Sleepy Hollow Film Festival, Sleepy Hollow International Film Festival, Tarrytown Music Hall, Lonesome Ghosts, Walt Disney Archives, Walt Disney, Rebecca Cline, Mickey Mouse, Donald Duck, Goofy, Coffee Lab Roasters Inc, Set Back Inn, The Taco Project, Little B's Burger Bar, Sweet Grass Grill, Lefteris Gyro, The Great Jack O'Lantern Blaze, Van Cortlandt Manor, American Gothic, The Scream, pumpkin art, pumpkin patch, pumpkins, Gourd & Goblet Tavern, Sleepy Hollow Lighthouse, Tarrytown LightComment
One Spooky Town to Visit in Each of the 6 New England States

Sporting some of the best fall foliage anywhere in the nation, New England is kind of the place to be when you start to feel that crisp, crisp air creep back in. The color-changing parade that falls across the region like a patchwork quilt every September and October is undoubtedly one of the biggest draws for anyone looking to put a fall getaway on the books, but let’s also remember that this is spooky season, and New England is hardly wanting in the arena of things that go bump in the night. From haunted houses and hotels to ghost-riddled cemeteries and ships, you can scare your pants off properly six ways to Sunday.

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North AmericaLogan T. Hansentravel, travel blog, travel ideas, travel inspiration, travelspiration, travel guide, travel advice, travel planning, travel recommendations, travel tips, travel itinerary, travel blogging, travel bucket list, New England, haunted, autumn travel, autumn getaway, autumn inspiration, fall travel, fall getaway, Halloween, fall, autumn, New England Inns & Resorts, New England With Love, One CrafDIY Girl, Bangor, Maine, Stephen King, Derry, It, Whitney Park Historic District, Mount Hope Cemetery, Hannibal Hamlin, Al Brady, American gangsters, paranormal, paranormal activity, ghost stories, ghost hunting, The Tarrantine, Bangor Public Library, Broadway Historic District, Thomas A. Hill House, Samuel Dale, Isaac Farrar Mansion, Bangor Opera House, Bretton Woods, New Hampshire, The Shining, The Overlook Hotel, The Overlook, Omni Mount Washington Hotel, Carolyn Foster Stickney, Delbert Grady, Jack Torrance, The Princess, The Princess Room, Joseph Stickney, Room 314, Livermore, ghost town, White Mountains, logging, logging history, logging industry, Daniel Saunders, Charles Saunders, U.S. Route 302, Stowe, Vermont, Ski Capital of the East, Mount Mansfield, Brass Lantern Inn, Green Mountain Inn, Chester A. Arthur, Gerald Ford, Boots Berry, New Orleans, Emily's Bridge, Gold Brook Covered Bridge, Fall River, Massachusetts, Rhode Island, Lizzie Borden House, Andrew Borden, Abby Durfee Gray, Abby Borden, Emma Borden, New Bedford, murder, Thrillist, Thrillist Travel, Frommer's, Zac Thompson, Oak Grove Cemetery, The Quequechan Club, Abram's Rock, Swansea, Native American, Gilded Age, White Horse Tavern, William Faulkner, Dark Shadows, Carey Mansion, Seaview Terrace, Edson Bradley, Julia Bradley, Ghost Hunters, ghost tour, Barnabas Collins, Ruggles Avenue, Rockwell, Somebody's Watching Me, White Lady, Union Cemetery, Connecticut, Easton, New York City, haunted cemetery, haunted inn, haunted house, murder house, Donna Kent, Ed Warren, Lorraine Warren, Ed and Lorraine Warren, Graveyard: True Hauntinigs from an Old New England Cemetery, Lindley Street, Bridgeport, Red Eyes, Cosmic Society, Cosmic Society of Paranormal Investigation, paranormal investigation, Earle Kellog, Route 59, demonologist, 1960s, 1960s televisionComment
Road Tripping Across Arizona, from Hoover Dam to the Grand Canyon & Beyond

I had never been to Arizona — now the 35th state I have checked off my race to all 50 — so you can imagine my excitement as I first laid eyes on the sign that read: “The Grand Canyon State Welcomes You”. My main objective was to visit that gargantuan hole in the earth that has entranced visitors for centuries. So, after finally making a stop at the damn dam and a nearby overlook of Lake Mead, I instructed the Google Maps machine to take me to the South Rim of the Grand Canyon.

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7 Tips to Help You Navigate the World as a Digital Nomad

Imagine converting the world into your office space, where your creativity isn't bound by four walls but inspired by new horizons daily. This is the essence of being a digital nomad — a lifestyle that combines work with the freedom to explore. To embark on this adventure, you need more than just a spirit of adventure; strategic planning is essential. The following are some useful strategies to help you turn the world into your office.

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Two Peas in a European Pod: One Week in Ireland & England — Day 7

London had been a trip, as had Galway and Cork and Cobh before it. But we were back in Dublin, where we began (and then ended and began again), and it was finally time to give the Irish capital a proper spin. Thus, on a wickedly windy Saturday morning, we stepped out of the Ashling Hotel and onto Benburb Street, ready to take on the city.

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Two Peas in a European Pod: One Week in Ireland & England — Day 6

You might think the experience would lose a little of its luster the second time around, at least at the margins, but waking up in perhaps the most famous city in the world for a second consecutive day was no less thrilling. The only bugaboo this time is that we didn’t have a full day in London ahead of us. It would be but a mere few hours before we needed to return to London Stansted Airport and head back to Ireland for the very final leg of our whirlwind European adventure, meaning there was no time to spare.

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Two Peas in a European Pod: One Week in Ireland & England — Day 5

Waking up in London had been an item on my travel bucket list for years — years! — and finally the day had arrived. When my alarm went off at about 8:30 a.m. Thursday, I opened my eyes and found myself in a flat — a flat! — on Longmoore Street in Westminster, with one of the most iconic cities in the world waiting just outside the door.

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The Best Beaches in Chicago to Get Your Volleyball On This Summer

We’re here to talk shop, and by that, I mean volleyball. Specifically, the kind played on the sand in the summertime, which is the best kind in my opinion, and the preferred version of the sport for Chicagoans when the warm weather washes up on the shores of Lake Michigan. Visit any of the beaches mentioned below for yourself during the summer and you'll likely come to the same conclusion.

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Two Peas in a European Pod: One Week in Ireland & England — Day 4

It wasn’t quite the crack of dawn, but Day 4 in Ireland certainly got off to an earlier start than any of its predecessors. Why, you ask? Well, because a mid-afternoon flight from Dublin to London was definitely going to sneak up on us faster than we would have liked — which meant we had but a few wee hours to see or do anything else in Galway before we had to hit the road, Jack, and not come back no more (no more, no more, no more…).

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