Sunday, May 20, 2018

Day 6 - Hershey, PA - Lynchburg, VA

 We rock. Up, packed, in the car and heading back to Chocolate World by 0845.  This is a great time to show up. We had tickets for our first event at 0915. We were in with the first group, it wasn't crowded. We picked up some souvenirs,  tasted chocolate, made a candy bar and went on a Trolley tour of the town.  We were on the road back to VA shortly after noon.


Evidently, all letters will be backwards in selfie mode. LOL 
Stacia, Maria, Me, Krista


Krista is great at fixing sisters hair
Stacia, Me

Available for $9
 Tasting Chocolate

I was surprised how many brands are owned by the Hershey Corp....Lancaster Caramels, Dagoba, Brookside....

Let the tasting begin - cleanse the palette; taste, don't bite...
Our next adventure was to make our own candy bars.  
Suited up and ready to go! 
Mine is the white on the left - haven't opened it to eat yet so no finished photo
 Debbie and Lor both recommended the Trolley tour of Hershey. We learned a bit of history and a lot of interesting info about Milton Hershey. I am very impressed. 
On the Trolley 
 We didn't go into Hershey Park at all - too rainy and too many other things to see. 

Hershey Park with the Chocolate World's smokestacks in the background

Sweetest street lights in America


Our drive back to VA passed quickly, with lively conversation. Traveling throws off your groove...we pulled into Chick Fil A, only to remember - "They're closed on Sunday."

We are home safe and sound in Lynchburg.  We have a couple days left of our trip.

Saturday, May 19, 2018

Day 5 - Chocolate World - Hershey, PA

We planned to spend this morning touring memorials in D.C. However, we were all TIRED of walking in rain and opted to head up to Hershey, PA earlier than planned. 

This worked well as we were able to go to Chocolate World, buy tickets, see the free things and come back for the rest on Sunday. Lorelei, my room mate from high school in the Philippine Islands, lives outside of  Hershey and drove up to see me. What a treat. It's been 36 years since we graduated, 35 years since we've been together.  It was great to share and catch up. We will certainly look her up again if we make the trip next year.  It turns out EVERYONE had decided Chocolate World was a great inside, rainy day, activity. ::snort::  We toured, went out to dinner and then the three girls showed their introverted sides and opted to go to the motel. Lor and I continued to sit and talk.  Here are some photos. 
We made it. 

Familiar characters. LOL 


We got in line for a chocolate tour. I thought the line was the tour. I thought it was self-guided and so I snapped photos. Ah well, a good way to share some fun chocolate facts.  Look at this line - this is 1/2 of the line we could see.

Fun facts...The Reese family developed these in their basement until they sold the recipe to Hershey's. 




...And the town he built is amazing. He did things well. I had no idea at all the things he accomplished - after failing five times. 


Milton Hershey had no heirs, all his money goes to  the Hershey foundation which supports a local school for orphans - that is now a school which takes care of ALL needs for a student body of 2300 under-privileged kids. Couples are paid to be parents of  12 students in a house. When you buy Hershey's the money goes to the foundation which continues to support the amazing school.

Think of it - that's a whole lotta licorice. 


Now you know. 

At this point, we reached the end of the line and I realized we were crossing a moving floor/river of chocolate to enter a car for the real tour. We learned how chocolate was made.

Singing cows, vats of chocolate.....if it had oompa loompas it would be just like stepping into Willy Wonka's chocolate factory.
Via Maria


Amazing amounts of chocolate



We didn't buy any. 

Lor and I - together again. 



Friday, May 18, 2018

Day 4 - Museum of the Bible - D.C.

A note about photos and videos - I am using a new lap top. It does not have movie maker on it (I discovered it can no longer be downloaded as an official Microsoft product) or Light Room.  For the time being - no watermarks, very little photo editing, and no videos -  but we took lots of video footage of our adventures and  I can't wait to get them shared. 

We were up early this morning for the drive in to D.C. We are staying at an Air BnB in Falls Church. This is far cheaper and works well.  Our goal today is to tour the Museum of the Bible. Maria is one of the founding members of the Museum and was here for the grand opening in November. In fact, she visited Krista during that trip. She was looking for a law school and Krista gave her a tour of Liberty University. She ended up coming back, enrolling in the School of Divinity, and she and Krista are now roommates. Fun story. My two worlds collided - my daughter and one of my daughters of the heart from our last Air Force assignment.

Some will not want to scroll through photos so here's the BLUF of the day. We'd heard it takes several days to see all 7 floors of the Museum of the Bible. We had tickets to get in an hour early and we had a plan..... They were in between temporary exhibits, so that eliminated a floor to explore. We hit the "Top 20" attractions and had a yummy lunch at Manna Restaurant. The Restaurant features Jewish food and it is GOOD.  After assuring we'd hit the major attractions, we went back and worked our way through several floors we had raced through. We walked through Nazareth, visited with characters from Ancient Bible days, and a printer using a replica of Gutenberg's press, traced the impact of the Bible on both World and American history, saw a replica of the Vinegar Bible* and the Kill Bible*, experienced God speaking the world into being, walked by a burning bush and through the Jordan, and traced the Bible through early days to the cannon and on to translations around the world. Debbie, a dear friend from our Goodfellow days, joined us at the Museum. It was a great day.  I have to admit, I wondered if this is how God would want the church investing their money.....but it is VERY well done and is right in the center of the Capitol. It is a powerful reminder of God and His Word that our nation, and the world, badly needs. I was incredibly impressed. The atmosphere in this museum is different from what we encountered anywhere else in D.C. It is well worth the time to add it to your D.C. touring.
*when mistakes matter - vineyard became vinegar
filled became killed 
In the evening, we met with Mary and Alicia, friends from our Japan days.  We ate together and then the girls were ready to head back to bed. Mary and Alicia took Stacia and I to a local oriental store. Joy - the very brands of yakisoba and treats we love from Japan. It was a great day.

We plan to come back to D.C. We never made it to the memorials due to the heavy rain. I'd like to tour the White House and the Capitol building.  There are museums deserving of a full day, EACH. Our plan is to go back next year in early May for Krista's graduation. We'll spend a few weeks touring D.C. in-depth, as well as Civil war sights, see what we can of the East Coast, and try to find an Amish community or two.

Photos are wonky due to the no flash restriction.

This quote....God send us loud voices with YOUR heart. 

Via Maria

Memorial stones with a tribe of Israel inscribed on each stone. A visual reminder to take time to REMEMBER that which God accomplishes in our lives. THEY didn't say that - it's what struck me.
Via Maria 

As always - I like the living  displays - making wine in Nazareth.

The sheep display caught my attention after our recent Gather Women's study on Jesus being the Good Shepherd. They had displays of tools of a shepherd and farmer. 

Yes.  May we do so. 

The sign says, "Provide and protect strangers," - not simply focus on Koinonia Fellowship (Christian community), as essential as it is....but Biblical hospitality....Xenophilia...protection, care, love of the stranger. It's been easy in this season to welcome strangers, as we are totally new to our environment.  May we continue to seek out and welcome strangers...as Christ sought us out, provided for us, and invited us into His family. Oops.....sliding into teaching. 

This spoke to me. 

 Many watched God deal with me to begin to explore Biblical hospitality...which led to changed thoughts, actions,  and even a conference workshop or two. ::wink::   I, who thought "hospitality" was just the fluff and stuff of women's ministry. ::snort::  Seeing the set table, an example of Biblical hospitality - which I've been pondering for six years, spoke deeply to private places in my soul.

Cooking pita - set me up for the pita and hummus at lunch. 

Brick oven from Nazareth. I'm thinking this could work in our outside entertainment area...which is just a dream at this point. LOL 

This gentleman welcomed us to the synagogue in Nazareth and then gave us info which didn't gel well with my study of ancient times....but it was interesting to see the synagogue.  Specifically, he said in Nazareth the males and females all worshiped together. I could swear my studies showed female courts and that they were on opposite sides of the building. I think I made him nervous. 

Via Maria

Debbie joined us for the day. We snapped a picture in front of the Sea of Galilee and dreamed of some day snapping a picture in Israel....with Steve and Michael along. 

We shared a sampler...

Food was so good I visited with the chef. 
Via Maria
Stacia was told she could touch a stone from the temple area

Stacia took a Biblical literacy test and scored 100% for 8th graders - which she will be next school year. The 12th grade quiz included much more about culture and the Bible than simple Biblical literacy. She scored about 85% . Debbie and I teamed up to score 100%.

This gals demonstrates printing a page with the Gutenberg press. 

Via Maria
Unfortunately, I did Polos of Mary and Alicia and I.....and I don't know how to make those a screen shot and then share...but we were smiling and we had fun. Spending time with Mary - whether it is in an onsen in Japan or Red Robins in Falls Church - is always soul refreshing. We discovered a great question to reconnect with friends is, "What is going on in your life that you've not shared online?" Wonderful discussions - not long enough to talk about all on our hearts - but a good start.