Hey y'all!
A couple of weeks ago we went to Cheaha State Park (In Alabama) for the first time! We decided instead of seeing the up high sites though (Bald Rock among them), to go to a waterfall trail and hike that. It was really lovely and we saw so many amazing shiny rocks (feldspars?) along the route, and mama geese and their babies, and the water was lovely!
We were taken a bit by surprise though, as there was a frat gathering partying it up at our waterfall destination. They were very drunk and jumping into the water from the ledges, and frankly I was really worried we would see someone die, jumping 60 feet into the water with potentially sharp rocks at the bottom. No one died (while we were there, at least) but they did get a well deserved lashing from the water when they hit it.
Anyway, it was still a lot of fun climbing around and getting in the water around the waterfalls, and I got my cool souvineer pennies to boot! Here are my pennies that took us on this lovely adventure!
Usually I write these posts while everything is fresh in my head, but I admit I didn't get a chance to write it all down immediately. Let me make it up to you with a waterfall.
Thanks as always for reading and stop by again soon to see what's new!
Monday, June 6, 2016
Thursday, June 2, 2016
Penny Presents Part 2! Birthday Edition
Hey Y'all!
Today I want to feature, from my super rad Big Bro, two awesome Birthday Pennies! One I really wanted of a Salmon in the North West Native American Art style, and the other is of the Space Needle! Cool! He also sent the best little home made birthday card (he’s always thoughtful like that). When I called to thank him we got a chance to catch up a bit on life and what we’ve been up to, and he said these penny adventures are fun for him too! Which is great! I think it’s a really fun way to travel and find new places to see, both near and far.
Check out the pennies (and card), and thanks as always for reading!
Today I want to feature, from my super rad Big Bro, two awesome Birthday Pennies! One I really wanted of a Salmon in the North West Native American Art style, and the other is of the Space Needle! Cool! He also sent the best little home made birthday card (he’s always thoughtful like that). When I called to thank him we got a chance to catch up a bit on life and what we’ve been up to, and he said these penny adventures are fun for him too! Which is great! I think it’s a really fun way to travel and find new places to see, both near and far.
Check out the pennies (and card), and thanks as always for reading!
Saturday, May 21, 2016
A Recent Adventure: Anniston, AL
A few days ago we went adventuring to Anniston, AL, to see their natural history museum. I was expecting something O.K., maybe like a tiny version of the Fernbank Science Center-- but NO, this was AMAZING. For my Georgia friends and readers, imagine the Fernbank Science Center, but times 15! It was a huge magnificent collection, with geology, fossils, stuff on energy and natural disasters and solar power (which is what runs the museum), and taxidermy from ALL OVER. Like, humongous rooms of taxidermy everything! Plus, illustrations, and then their seemingly main attraction, the two mummies. Although honestly, the mummies were nothing compared to their other natural science stuff-- mummies are cool, but I felt like they put wayyyyyy more work into the other exhibits to make them full of knowledge. There was so much information I couldn’t possibly absorb it all, and I should have bought a membership, because I will definitely be back. Thank you Anniston Museum of Natural History for an AWESOME experience!
Here are my well earned Georgia pennies (see story below)-- I thought these were great designs, even if the press itself is only ok and on the far right is my Anniston Museum mummy penny:
We also stopped by the GA Welcome Center on our way back into the state… We actually did this before going to the museum, so we drove across the border to AL, turned around, missed the GA welcome center, crossed again into AL, turned around, then got out at the GA welcome center, got the pennies, and crossed back into Alabama to get to Anniston. We did this in case the press wasn’t accessible after the center closed for the evening-- but it’s available full time! On our second drive back into GA (out of 3), we ended up stopping so my S/O could pick up some dead turkey feathers, out of a rotting turkey that was on the side of the road. True love. I was most worried my S/O would get hit by an oncoming truck, but luckily no harm came to us. What a trip. The drive was smooth and we all got what we wanted and more out of the vacation.
Thanks for reading and enjoy!
Here are my well earned Georgia pennies (see story below)-- I thought these were great designs, even if the press itself is only ok and on the far right is my Anniston Museum mummy penny:
We also stopped by the GA Welcome Center on our way back into the state… We actually did this before going to the museum, so we drove across the border to AL, turned around, missed the GA welcome center, crossed again into AL, turned around, then got out at the GA welcome center, got the pennies, and crossed back into Alabama to get to Anniston. We did this in case the press wasn’t accessible after the center closed for the evening-- but it’s available full time! On our second drive back into GA (out of 3), we ended up stopping so my S/O could pick up some dead turkey feathers, out of a rotting turkey that was on the side of the road. True love. I was most worried my S/O would get hit by an oncoming truck, but luckily no harm came to us. What a trip. The drive was smooth and we all got what we wanted and more out of the vacation.
Thanks for reading and enjoy!
Monday, May 16, 2016
Penny Presents! Part 1
Hey Everyone!
Sorry for my delay in posting these past couple weeks-- we've been hard at work on all our gardening projects, which cuts out time for Penny Adventures! Never fear, we are still adventuring, I just had to delay a few trips until after we had the garden settled and ready to grow!
To avoid leaving you hanging, here is a quick post on some Penny Presents!
So far I have been gifted a few pennies over the years, and I wanted to give them their spotlight too.
This week we are featuring a penny all the way from a John Deere shop in Moline, IL. My good friend O got this penny for me. She was technically on a work trip, but she also found her way to the John Deere shop where she procured both some sweet socks and this penny! Love it, check out the detail in the deer. Pretty awesome, and I’m not even a John Deere person.
Another penny gift of mention, to the right of the John Deere Penny:
I have never been to the Houston Zoo, but this penny is from my S/O’s collection. I like the detailing in it. Maybe someday I'll make my way to Houston and actually see the zoo.
And last, but not least:
My mom brought me a penny from Glacier National Park when she visited last year, then thought she managed to lose it on the way home, but it magically re-appeared at my seat at the table when I went home to visit recently! How exciting! Apparently she put it in a safe place that was too safe, but I feel really special that she and my big bro went in on this penny together for me. A very thoughtful gift, and also before I'd really seriously started collecting pennies.
Thanks as always for reading, and check back soon for another awesome update!
Also, let me know if you have any feedback on what I can do to make this blog more interesting for you! This has become a fun personal project, but I would like for my readers to enjoy it too.
Sorry for my delay in posting these past couple weeks-- we've been hard at work on all our gardening projects, which cuts out time for Penny Adventures! Never fear, we are still adventuring, I just had to delay a few trips until after we had the garden settled and ready to grow!
To avoid leaving you hanging, here is a quick post on some Penny Presents!
So far I have been gifted a few pennies over the years, and I wanted to give them their spotlight too.
This week we are featuring a penny all the way from a John Deere shop in Moline, IL. My good friend O got this penny for me. She was technically on a work trip, but she also found her way to the John Deere shop where she procured both some sweet socks and this penny! Love it, check out the detail in the deer. Pretty awesome, and I’m not even a John Deere person.
Another penny gift of mention, to the right of the John Deere Penny:
I have never been to the Houston Zoo, but this penny is from my S/O’s collection. I like the detailing in it. Maybe someday I'll make my way to Houston and actually see the zoo.
And last, but not least:
My mom brought me a penny from Glacier National Park when she visited last year, then thought she managed to lose it on the way home, but it magically re-appeared at my seat at the table when I went home to visit recently! How exciting! Apparently she put it in a safe place that was too safe, but I feel really special that she and my big bro went in on this penny together for me. A very thoughtful gift, and also before I'd really seriously started collecting pennies.
Thanks as always for reading, and check back soon for another awesome update!
Also, let me know if you have any feedback on what I can do to make this blog more interesting for you! This has become a fun personal project, but I would like for my readers to enjoy it too.
Tuesday, April 26, 2016
Mountain Adventures! Kennesaw, Dahlonega, and Amicalola Falls
Hey Everyone!
Busy busy adventuring this week! We did a day trip to The Kennesaw Mountain National Battlefield Park, then the Southern Museum of Civil War and Locomotive History (to see the General, a famous train!) and THEN we drove to Dahlonega to see the Gold Museum in downtown, in the Old Lumpkin Courthouse. It was a long day, but we did it, and learned a lot along the way! Then today we went to Amicalola Falls!
I'm not much of a history buff, so I am learning a lot on these adventures about some of our more interesting history points in Georgia. Obviously there was information about the Civil War in the Kennesaw locations, but then in Dahlonega I learned more about the gold rush and how they refined the gold into coinage before the Civil War took out that whole industry. The biggest revelation I had was that BECAUSE of the discovery of gold in Dahlonega 1829, and the ensuing rush of people to the area, our government decided to enact a land lottery which gave land to people moving in to pan for gold! However, the Cherokee already lived there, and the government decided they needed to relocate the Cherokee, which is how the Trail of Tears started! So the gold rush in Georgia is responsible for the Trail of Tears!!! It was interesting going to these sites on the same day and seeing the different perspectives the museums gave on the Trail of Tears, because I'd never really connected a specific event as the catalyst for it.
In other news, The Kennesaw Mountain National Battlefield Park is free admission so you should definitely check them out. They have a sweet little museum on site and there were cool free trading cards about different areas on the site that you would see when hiking. I definitely intend to go back and hike properly the 11 miles of trails, they are so lush and green and it's very near Atlanta! Plus, the view is spectacular.
The General is a train at the Southern Museum of Civil War and Locomotive History, on site where it was originally taken by Union troops during the Civil War. Beautiful museum, it's actually part of the Smithsonian, and my favorite part was all the cool information about the foundry process for making trains! They had original wooden patterns which would be used to make the sand molds then cast the iron needed to make the train! They even had a video demonstrating the process on an industrial level (I did foundry work on a small scale in college but always wondered about the really big stuff). Quality Museum, definitely check them out!
Also, wonderful penny press of The General available in the gift shop.
Dahlonega was cool, we learned about how they refined the gold from the rock using giant crushers, and a lot of the politics behind the mint they established as a branch of the PA mint to make the gold available for circulation. We didn't arrive on time to see the video and decided not to rush the museum itself, but they seem to have a cool exhibit with original tools and examples of minted coinage.
Here are the pennies, showing the machine used to break up the rocks, a $2 1/2 gold coin, and a miner using a water cannon to break the rock face (designed by a Dahlonega artist!):
Today we went to Amicalola Falls, the tallest waterfall in Georgia (and possibly the southeast), and it was GORGEOUS. 604 steps in total and it's a pretty hike the whole way, with some beautiful plants you'll only see in undisturbed old growth forests. I'm glad we are adventuring to all these hiking sites while things are in bloom! Plus, we saw a snake sunning himself, a bunch of salamanders, and then we met a groundhog baby named Tater Tot!!! Seriously the cutest little dude and super friendly, he is becoming part of their outreach programs.
The Falls, A Fish, and a bear in a tree, all in penny form:
Also, here is Tater Tot:
Other fun facts: I learned Kennesaw is a Cherokee word for "graveyard/cemetery," that Dahlonega is a Cherokee word for "yellow money," and that Amicalola is a Cherokee word for "tumbling waters."
Thanks for reading and I hope you enjoyed! Let me know what you think and I'll update again soon!
Busy busy adventuring this week! We did a day trip to The Kennesaw Mountain National Battlefield Park, then the Southern Museum of Civil War and Locomotive History (to see the General, a famous train!) and THEN we drove to Dahlonega to see the Gold Museum in downtown, in the Old Lumpkin Courthouse. It was a long day, but we did it, and learned a lot along the way! Then today we went to Amicalola Falls!
I'm not much of a history buff, so I am learning a lot on these adventures about some of our more interesting history points in Georgia. Obviously there was information about the Civil War in the Kennesaw locations, but then in Dahlonega I learned more about the gold rush and how they refined the gold into coinage before the Civil War took out that whole industry. The biggest revelation I had was that BECAUSE of the discovery of gold in Dahlonega 1829, and the ensuing rush of people to the area, our government decided to enact a land lottery which gave land to people moving in to pan for gold! However, the Cherokee already lived there, and the government decided they needed to relocate the Cherokee, which is how the Trail of Tears started! So the gold rush in Georgia is responsible for the Trail of Tears!!! It was interesting going to these sites on the same day and seeing the different perspectives the museums gave on the Trail of Tears, because I'd never really connected a specific event as the catalyst for it.
In other news, The Kennesaw Mountain National Battlefield Park is free admission so you should definitely check them out. They have a sweet little museum on site and there were cool free trading cards about different areas on the site that you would see when hiking. I definitely intend to go back and hike properly the 11 miles of trails, they are so lush and green and it's very near Atlanta! Plus, the view is spectacular.
The General is a train at the Southern Museum of Civil War and Locomotive History, on site where it was originally taken by Union troops during the Civil War. Beautiful museum, it's actually part of the Smithsonian, and my favorite part was all the cool information about the foundry process for making trains! They had original wooden patterns which would be used to make the sand molds then cast the iron needed to make the train! They even had a video demonstrating the process on an industrial level (I did foundry work on a small scale in college but always wondered about the really big stuff). Quality Museum, definitely check them out!
Also, wonderful penny press of The General available in the gift shop.
Dahlonega was cool, we learned about how they refined the gold from the rock using giant crushers, and a lot of the politics behind the mint they established as a branch of the PA mint to make the gold available for circulation. We didn't arrive on time to see the video and decided not to rush the museum itself, but they seem to have a cool exhibit with original tools and examples of minted coinage.
Here are the pennies, showing the machine used to break up the rocks, a $2 1/2 gold coin, and a miner using a water cannon to break the rock face (designed by a Dahlonega artist!):
Today we went to Amicalola Falls, the tallest waterfall in Georgia (and possibly the southeast), and it was GORGEOUS. 604 steps in total and it's a pretty hike the whole way, with some beautiful plants you'll only see in undisturbed old growth forests. I'm glad we are adventuring to all these hiking sites while things are in bloom! Plus, we saw a snake sunning himself, a bunch of salamanders, and then we met a groundhog baby named Tater Tot!!! Seriously the cutest little dude and super friendly, he is becoming part of their outreach programs.
The Falls, A Fish, and a bear in a tree, all in penny form:
Also, here is Tater Tot:
Other fun facts: I learned Kennesaw is a Cherokee word for "graveyard/cemetery," that Dahlonega is a Cherokee word for "yellow money," and that Amicalola is a Cherokee word for "tumbling waters."
Thanks for reading and I hope you enjoyed! Let me know what you think and I'll update again soon!
Tuesday, April 19, 2016
Second Adventure! Stone Mountain
Hey Everyone!
Today was my second Penny Press Adventure, this time to Stone Mountain in Stone Mountain, GA. I've been here more times than I can count, but not often enough in the last few years! I have a friend who hikes the summit every week, so this week I joined her and multi-tasked by gathering some pennies from the top of the Mountain, in the Skylift building. I really enjoyed the hike up and we sat peacefully at the top and chatted about life and nature while watching the birds flying around (Maybe hawks? Large brown birds of prey).
For those of you who have never made the hike up Stone Mountain, there are some landmarks worth pointing out: First, the flags of Georgia including our confederate flag, but that is to be expected seeing as we have a confederate monument inscribed on the side of the mountain. Then you will pass the infamous gum pole, where people from all over have stuck their old gum. I personally think it's gross, but at least the gum is all in a consistent spot, and it makes for a neat photograph. Then you hike for a while passing trees that are literally rooted in the granite, and veins of garnet. As you approach the top, there is a steep area (with a railing for those of us who need assistance or something to brace on, just be sure to wash you hands after), and then you make it to the top! Be sure to turn around and check out the Atlanta cityscape, and today we could see Kennesaw Mountain, another mountain I'm not familiar with, and I believe the Buckhead cityscape. Very cool bird's eye view of the Atlanta area.
Of special note, when you reach the top you'll notice round divots in the mountain all over the place-- these are actually formed when lightening strikes the mountain top, creating pot-marks in the granite-- they're SUPER COOL, and it's neat to see how nature is still re-arranging the landscape. If it has rained recently, you'll also see a lovely water pool with stepping stones that you can hop across.
Today I chose to press four of the Stone Mountain Pennies: Fireworks, the State Bird Brown Thrasher, Atlanta Cityscape, and Stone Mountain Side of the Mountain Scene. Here is a photo of those pennies below:
Thanks for reading, and stay tuned for more adventures soon!
Today was my second Penny Press Adventure, this time to Stone Mountain in Stone Mountain, GA. I've been here more times than I can count, but not often enough in the last few years! I have a friend who hikes the summit every week, so this week I joined her and multi-tasked by gathering some pennies from the top of the Mountain, in the Skylift building. I really enjoyed the hike up and we sat peacefully at the top and chatted about life and nature while watching the birds flying around (Maybe hawks? Large brown birds of prey).
For those of you who have never made the hike up Stone Mountain, there are some landmarks worth pointing out: First, the flags of Georgia including our confederate flag, but that is to be expected seeing as we have a confederate monument inscribed on the side of the mountain. Then you will pass the infamous gum pole, where people from all over have stuck their old gum. I personally think it's gross, but at least the gum is all in a consistent spot, and it makes for a neat photograph. Then you hike for a while passing trees that are literally rooted in the granite, and veins of garnet. As you approach the top, there is a steep area (with a railing for those of us who need assistance or something to brace on, just be sure to wash you hands after), and then you make it to the top! Be sure to turn around and check out the Atlanta cityscape, and today we could see Kennesaw Mountain, another mountain I'm not familiar with, and I believe the Buckhead cityscape. Very cool bird's eye view of the Atlanta area.
Of special note, when you reach the top you'll notice round divots in the mountain all over the place-- these are actually formed when lightening strikes the mountain top, creating pot-marks in the granite-- they're SUPER COOL, and it's neat to see how nature is still re-arranging the landscape. If it has rained recently, you'll also see a lovely water pool with stepping stones that you can hop across.
Today I chose to press four of the Stone Mountain Pennies: Fireworks, the State Bird Brown Thrasher, Atlanta Cityscape, and Stone Mountain Side of the Mountain Scene. Here is a photo of those pennies below:
Thanks for reading, and stay tuned for more adventures soon!
Monday, April 18, 2016
The Revelation and First Adventure!
4.18.16
I have always really enjoyed pressed pennies, but when I was little my mom told me they were a waste of money, so I only collected them when I REALLY wanted them. Although I don’t collect them as seriously as the people who hunt every single one down and press all the available pennies, I do save pre-1982 pennies and quarters in a coin purse that I take with me when I travel-- just in case.
On our drive back from Philadelphia to Atlanta, I was struck with a new way of sightseeing: Penny Press Adventures.
So here was my revelation, as we are entering Virginia-- we can use the Penny Collector Website to see if there are any upcoming penny presses on our way home! Sure enough, there was one at the Visitor Center that was less than a mile away-- we pull over and I get two pennies-- the Virginia is for Lovers and a nice scenic shot of the Blue Ridge Mountains. We search to see what else will be on our route and there is a darling press at the Virginia Department of Game and Inland Fisheries, so we stop there as well and get a penny, but also learn about what they do there and about wildlife in Virginia! It was completely unexpected and a great detour on our approximately 14 hour drive home.
Now I have decided this is something I will pursue as a serious hobby-- choosing places on the Penny Collector website to visit. Penny presses tend to be in cool places, sometimes tourist-y but overall places I would have liked to see regardless, and not always places I would know to go.
Today was my first official Penny Press Adventure-- keeping it close to home, I went to the CNN Center in downtown Atlanta, GA and gathered the incredibly cool Adventure Time penny, as well as the Regular Show and Loony Tunes pennies. I also checked out their CNN specific penny press and got the obligatory scenic shot of the Atlanta skyline from the CNN building. Here is a picture of those beauties:
I could have gone to the GA Aquarium, but having been before and not been too impressed with the pennies I got, I skipped it to hang with my awesome friend Tori! She is more familiar with the downtown area, so ate lunch at Anatolia’s where we had splendid Roasted Eggplant, falafel, and some steamed veggies. We then wandered Centennial Olympic Park, watched kids play in the fountain, and met a 14 year-old who seemed to think we were pretty cool, visiting from Warner Robins. She paid me the great compliment of thinking I was only 17, and spent quite a while chatting with us about school, what we do normally, and even more philosophical subjects.
We then wandered back to Tori’s car, and she gave me a lift home after we dropped off some boxes for her friends who are moving soon. Then when I got home I mowed the lawn (which is no small feat, our yard is huge). All in all, I would say an excellent, productive day, and a great start to my Penny Press Adventure Saga!
Stay tuned for more adventures from: Stone Mountain, Amicalola Falls, and Birmingham, Alabama for the Iron Statue of Vulcan (who should be my patron god)!
Thank you so much for reading, and have a great day!
I have always really enjoyed pressed pennies, but when I was little my mom told me they were a waste of money, so I only collected them when I REALLY wanted them. Although I don’t collect them as seriously as the people who hunt every single one down and press all the available pennies, I do save pre-1982 pennies and quarters in a coin purse that I take with me when I travel-- just in case.
On our drive back from Philadelphia to Atlanta, I was struck with a new way of sightseeing: Penny Press Adventures.
So here was my revelation, as we are entering Virginia-- we can use the Penny Collector Website to see if there are any upcoming penny presses on our way home! Sure enough, there was one at the Visitor Center that was less than a mile away-- we pull over and I get two pennies-- the Virginia is for Lovers and a nice scenic shot of the Blue Ridge Mountains. We search to see what else will be on our route and there is a darling press at the Virginia Department of Game and Inland Fisheries, so we stop there as well and get a penny, but also learn about what they do there and about wildlife in Virginia! It was completely unexpected and a great detour on our approximately 14 hour drive home.
Now I have decided this is something I will pursue as a serious hobby-- choosing places on the Penny Collector website to visit. Penny presses tend to be in cool places, sometimes tourist-y but overall places I would have liked to see regardless, and not always places I would know to go.
Today was my first official Penny Press Adventure-- keeping it close to home, I went to the CNN Center in downtown Atlanta, GA and gathered the incredibly cool Adventure Time penny, as well as the Regular Show and Loony Tunes pennies. I also checked out their CNN specific penny press and got the obligatory scenic shot of the Atlanta skyline from the CNN building. Here is a picture of those beauties:
I could have gone to the GA Aquarium, but having been before and not been too impressed with the pennies I got, I skipped it to hang with my awesome friend Tori! She is more familiar with the downtown area, so ate lunch at Anatolia’s where we had splendid Roasted Eggplant, falafel, and some steamed veggies. We then wandered Centennial Olympic Park, watched kids play in the fountain, and met a 14 year-old who seemed to think we were pretty cool, visiting from Warner Robins. She paid me the great compliment of thinking I was only 17, and spent quite a while chatting with us about school, what we do normally, and even more philosophical subjects.
We then wandered back to Tori’s car, and she gave me a lift home after we dropped off some boxes for her friends who are moving soon. Then when I got home I mowed the lawn (which is no small feat, our yard is huge). All in all, I would say an excellent, productive day, and a great start to my Penny Press Adventure Saga!
Stay tuned for more adventures from: Stone Mountain, Amicalola Falls, and Birmingham, Alabama for the Iron Statue of Vulcan (who should be my patron god)!
Thank you so much for reading, and have a great day!
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