Posted in Travel & Experiences

A Traveler’s Thoughts on…. Traveling

Every time I travel, I’m struck with the same line of thinking.

First, it’s amazing to me that I can hop on a bus and travel a couple hours with a group of complete strangers, and we’re all traveling for our own unique purposes. I think there’s a certain beauty in that. Of the 40-some odd people on this Greyhound bus traveling down the highway, how many are headed home, and how many are going off to some wonderful vacation or trip? How many are headed towards a final destination, and how many are simply headed to a crossover, a layover along the way? We’re all on our own journeys, but for this moment – whether it’s an hour or six hours – we’re all going in the same direction.

And we’re all going for different reasons. A handful may be off on a vacation, while others are tidied up for a business or work-related trip. Someone may be headed to visit family members they haven’t seen in ages; to celebrate a wedding or a birth, or to mourn at a funeral. Others may be on the journey returning home from such events. I find the beauty in that; we’re all here for different purposes and at different points along our own individual maps, but this is the point where we all intersect.

When we reach our destination, we’ll all be headed off in our own directions, and it’s likely that I’ll never see most of these people again in my lifetime, unless our paths somehow happen to cross. Some will continue their journey with a whole new set of companions on the next leg of the trip, while for others, this is the end of the line. Either way, this journey is ours together, for this moment.

I’m also struck with the fact that while I’m off to visit a city that may be hundreds of miles from home, I’m a tourist; a visitor, a temporary occupant. But there are people who have made lives there, who have constructed a paradigm and grounded themselves in this spot, whereas I’m just a fleeting pushpin on that spot of the map.

While I’m basking in the glory of the tourist attractions like the Capitol Building and all the memorials in DC, there are people who live here daily. I wonder if, to them, walking by these attractions is no big deal anymore. I wonder if they see the White House and think “Yep, that’s there,” whereas I pass and think “Wow! How incredible! The PRESIDENT lives there!” That goes for any city. I wonder if the people who live in Pittsburgh every day truly appreciate the majestic beauty of the yellow bridges and the three rivers; I wonder if the people in Toronto recognize the beauty of that skyline and all the amazing things it holds, etc.

That makes me wonder, then, what I could be missing about my own hometown. Do I appreciate it the same way that tourists may? Or do they see something else, something deeper, that has simply become ingrained in my mind due to living here for so long?

Posted in Travel & Experiences

Tifft Nature Preserve: An Oasis Just Steps from Downtown Buffalo

Tifft Nature Preserve
Photo: Melissa Kania

As the temperature begins to rise and spring and summer (hopefully) begin to creep their way into Buffalo and the surrounding area, it’s great to get outside. Exercise, fresh air, and a chance to connect with nature in ways that simply aren’t possible if you’re cooped up in the house.

One great way to do all those things at once is to visit Tifft Nature Preserve. Now, this isn’t my first time writing about Tifft – I first posted about it in July 2012, but I feel it bears repeating.

Tifft is a 264-acre nature refuge located between downtown Buffalo and Lackawanna, New York. It’s easily accessible and is a great way for you to get a taste of fresh air, connect with nature, get some exercise and perhaps gain a great appreciation for the world of nature that surrounds us.

I try to visit Tifft as often as I can, though I never get to visit as often as I’d love to. I could go every week if I had the time. Whether it’s winter, summer, spring or autumn, it’s a wonderful place to go. In fact, I suggest visiting it in all different seasons. The setting is so unique, and it’s neat to watch it go from green grass and plenty of things blooming to a snow-covered wonderland. You can go alone, with a significant other, with family, with children or adults, with friends…… anyone. They also have guided tours every Sunday at 2 p.m. and have other events throughout the year. You can even host a child’s birthday party there!

My most recent visit to Tifft was on Sunday, May 4. My father and I went, despite it being slightly muddy outside due to lots of recent rain. (Thankfully, I was smart and wore my rubber rain boots, so none of this really affected or hindered me!)

I find that I almost always use the same trails while at Tifft, so this time, we made a conscious effort to take a different route through a new part of the preserve. I saw the low-maintenance marsh trail and walked through a bit of that (thank you, rain boots) and walked up part of the trail that covers the mounds. We saw deer grazing, we saw the bat clouds, lots of geese around eating, other people walking through the trails, etc.

(Note: I’d never seen or noticed the bat clouds before, but apparently they’ve been at Tifft since 2012. They were installed in May 2012 by a UB professor and a group of students and are designed to educate the public about bats while providing a high-tech home for them. As someone who used to be really interested in bat conservation as a kid, I thought it was super neat!)

I really need to find more places like Tifft. The only place I’ve found so far is the Montezuma National Wildlife Refuge in Seneca Falls, New York. I visited there last summer on a trip to Aurora, NY. It was nice, but it just didn’t have the same charm…. having to be in your car while driving through the refuge, not exactly the same thing.

There’s just something about visiting Tifft, or places like it, that makes me happy. It’s my peaceful place where I can just breathe the fresh air and connect with nature in a way that I don’t get to do every day. It’s my oasis.

Posted in Travel & Experiences, Uncategorized

A New Adventure: Washington, D.C.

This slideshow requires JavaScript.

After getting through some little mishaps that tried to steer us off the course, my mother and I eventually hit the road for a smooth ride to Washington, D.C. – our first trip to the nation’s capital.

Originally, our plan had to been to take Megabus (just $20 for both of us!) on Wednesday night to D.C. It would have been an overnight trip, and we should have arrived in DC around 9:40 a.m. on Thursday. Mother Nature had something else in mind for us, as a blizzard hit the Buffalo area on Wednesday, thus cancelling our bus.

But fear not, for Greyhound saves the day! I was thankfully able to book us tickets for Thursday to DC. It meant spending more money and 14.5 hours on buses, including three transfers…. but we knew it would be worth it in the end.

Continue reading “A New Adventure: Washington, D.C.”

Posted in Travel & Experiences

The Revitalization of Buffalo

(Photo: Melissa Kania)
(Photo: Melissa Kania)

I’m proud to say that I am from Buffalo, New York.

Everyone has their own conceptions of what Buffalo is about. Ask people who aren’t from here and they’ll say things like: the winters, snow, Lake Erie, being close to Canada, less-than-stellar sports teams, chicken wings, etc.

While those things may or may not be true, there are also plenty of other things that are a part of my city. It’s the City of Good Neighbors and the Queen City, and I’m happy to be here. Right now, there is a lot of development going on in Buffalo, and these various projects are really helping to boost the economy, morale and vision of the city; revitalizing Buffalo is a great task and I am so happy to be here to see it occur.

Continue reading “The Revitalization of Buffalo”