Friday, July 26, 2019

Holland of the Great Lakes

As we're gearing up for another geocaching camping adventure, I finally uploaded my pictures from the last one (darn power outage!). TaGeez and I spent an enjoyable weekend in Holland, MI.

*Note: this post doesn't contain an GC codes - no spoilers. If you REALLY want to know which caches we are at, I'm sure you can figure it out.

Coleman tent with Dark Tent Technology

Friday night we arrived just in time for a glorious sunset on Lake Michigan at Holland State Park. We viewed it from Lake-level, but we had family view it from the top of the nearby sand dunes.




Holland is very well known for Big Red.



Ah, the next morning the rest of TaGeez's family decided to do their own thing, so we headed into downtown Holland. Along the road were some fabulous statues made from old automotive and marine equipment (traffic too crazy to snap pictures). The Centennial Park contained the new Wizard of Oz exhibit plus the first stops of the Sculptured Wherigo.


Holland, Michigan is quite famous for it's annual Tulip Festival, which occurs around the beginning of May each year. Being Holland, it naturally has a functioning windmill and Dutch Village. We found this great view of the windmill across the river while doing the Sculptured wherigo. 




The Sculptured wherigo takes you to nine sculptures around downtown Holland. It was a great way to explore the areas including Hope College, Centennial Park plus the shops & restaurants around downtown. Along the way we crossed paths with the New Holland Brewing, which was fabulous! Great atmosphere, good food, and the large front windows overlooked the busy sidewalks outside.





Another sunset on Lake Michigan. Michigan is blessed with amazing views along its amazing coastline.






After packing up our campsite, we said our goodbyes and headed to Grand Rapids. With time on our hands, we decided to spend they day enjoying the new Virtuals and the Grand Rapids Adventure & Exploration Lab caches. 

I'm a little conflicted between my loyalty of the Wherigo and the new Adventure Labs. Wherigos are tougher to create and often have glitches (sometimes causing half your party unable to participate). So you'd think I'd prefer Adventure Labs (which has their own iPhone app). However, it seems like the Wherigos can be more creative and mysterious -- Although I've completed 116 Adventure Labs, I've yet to see one that made me go WOW.  So far they've just taken me to some (kinda) interesting places.

Grand Rapids Public Museum

President Gerald R Ford final resting place

Gerald R Ford Presidential Library
  
May House - Frank Lloyd Wright Prairie School House

Sundays were the right time to do these. Not too much muggle traffic (except for the MSU Marching Band and Sparty at the Atwood Brewery grand opening), and we were able to find parking at each stop. We LOVEd Grand Rapids!




Final stop before heading home was Donkey Taqueria off Wealthy Street in Grand Rapids. Recommended by ThreeInATree, it features Mexican street food in a converted gas station. The food was DELICIOUS!


Just east of Downtown Grand Rapids is a neighborhood encompassing four thriving business districts: East Fulton, East Hills, Eastown and Wealthy Street. This is the city's hippest destination, where an eclectic mix of specialty shops and galleries, restaurants, coffee houses and entertainment venues reflect the area's friendly, funky, fabulous character. It's an easy walk or quick drive between the four business districts, on streets lined by historic homes and leafy trees. [Experience Grand Rapids]
Wealthy Street was a haven for fascinating restaurants and shops. Stepping out of Donkey's and seeing all the choices - you wanted to spend all day eating up and down the street. Next time we go we're definitely trying out Jonny B'z next door. If you do the Virtual and/or Adventure Labs, you will be lost in food choices on this street. Highly recommended!

We had such a fabulous adventure right in our backyard!

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