Chicago 2012

A few weeks back, Heather and I took a (long)weekend trip out to Chicago.

The first noteworthy thing is that we tried out the Megabus from Des Moines to Chicago. I realize now that we didn’t take a single picture of the bus, or on the bus… I guess it didn’t seem that noteworthy at the time, but looking back it probably was. So imagine a double-decked charter bus at about 30% capacity. We left early afternoon Thursday   and got into Chicago just after dark.

The bus dropped us off at Union Station, more or less right where we wanted to be. After a little walking (a nice break after about six hours on the bus) we checked into our hotel.

Oh, before I go on I should note, a few great deals Heather hunted down. Thanks to early booking, the bus tickets were a grand total of $8 round trip for the two of us! The Hotel was booked using Hotwire, and while not quite shocking deal the bus tickets were, surprisingly cheap considering it was a great room, and the view wasn’t half bad:

The next morning we walked around down town for a few minutes, had breakfast in a deli/coffee shop kind of thing, and then found our way into a Chicago information center of some sort. The center was staffed by very patent people happy to explain the public transit system to those of us who don’t exactly have a handle on the turbulent mix of letters, colors, and numbers that guide the natives around the city.

A hand full of pamphlets, two conversations with the desk person and one page of notes later, we were ready to take on the rest of our trip! First stop the Museum of Science and Industry. Getting to the museum required walking about a mile, then catching a bus with the correct number on it. We got on the bus without issue, but started to worry if we were really going to know our stop as the maps we had lost considerable fidelity once you left the downtown area.

We got off ‘near’ the museum, but in hindsight we probably could have stuck with the bus for another mile. On the other hand it was a really nice day, and we were walking through a beautiful old neighborhood so I don’t think we lost much in the deal.

Once inside the museum, we wandered into the first exhibit that caught our eye, featuring the first steam engine to break 100mph, and a giant model train set of the city and approximate countryside :

The model came complete with day/night cycles… had we realized that sooner we probably would have taken our pictures during the ‘day’… oh well.

After the train area, we headed over to a weather exhibit, that had incredible potential, but was awash in grade school field trips. I still got to see some amazing things, including what I think is the first Tesla coil I have seen in person!

As it was after noon, and we were standing next to the cafeteria, a lunch break was the natural next choice. The exit from there dumped us into a large farming exhibit (sponsored by John Deer, as you could kind of guess simply by the amount of shiny green paint on display). You would think we could skip that one, given my background and Heather’s current job, but it turned out to be really interesting to see how things were being presented, and how other museum goers were responding.

We could have spent more time there, but we had an appointment to see a boat:

Let me just say that presenting the sub in a room that really felt like it could be a real sub pen was awesome! actually, everything about that exhibit was well done. It was sad that we rushed through the intro area, because our appointment was for the tour of the inside of the sub. After seeing the inside, we worked our way back through all the displays that were leading up to the sub. I suppose it helps that both Heather and I have a substantial interest in that era of history, but the U505 exhibit could have entertained us for another hour or two without any trouble.

Could have, but we wanted to catch a movie on the omnimax screen they had. It’s like imax, but a dome instead of a flat screen. The only problem was we realized about 2 minutes into the movie that we were watching an imax movie on the omnimax screen. It was still really neat to see, but perhaps not quite as unique as it could have been.

At this point we had been to roughly a quarter of the museum, and were just trying to figure out what to see next, when they paged that the museum was closing. So instead we started trying to decipher the bus map again. The good news is we were 2 of about 300 people planning to ride the bus back to downtown, so we didn’t really have to do much searching.

From downtown we caught another bus and headed over to the area marked “Little Italy.” As predicted, it didn’t really look any different from other parts of Chicago, with the possible exception that every restaurant was Italian. The good news is we just headed that way to try some Italian food. I don’t think I could properly explain the food, except to say it was good, and it wasn’t the sort of thing you would find at a chain type place, so I think we accomplished our mission.

For the second day, our main attraction was the ‘Chinatown’ area of Chicago. Getting there required that we use the subway system, another first for us. (we used the elevated train network extensively during our last visit, but the two networks are separate). Again the stop we got off on wasn’t real close, but we had a rough idea where our desired destination was, and eventually found this:

It was very authentic I guess, not real touristy in that it was mostly grocery stores and hair salons, neither of which had an abundance of english signage. Eventually we talked to a shopkeeper who gave us vague directions to “Old Chinatown” that was apparently just down the street, and was the place with the gift shops. After a few minutes of walking we did in fact find it:

That street was made up of nothing but more grocery stores alternating with gift shops all selling exactly the same stuff. It was fun to look through for a while, but we quickly felt like we had seen everything. We looked around for a place to get lunch, but the wait time at the only pace that didn’t have chickens hanging in the window (Heather’s only stipulation for making the selection) was over an hour, prompting us to just head back to the train station.

We then had a very American lunch of hot dogs, and spent a few hours gawking at large buildings before catching our bus back to Des Moines.

-Jordan

Chicago, The Video

Our “get out of Des Moines because we are tired of the snow” Chicago trip was the first trip Heather and I have taken with a video camera. I don’t know if the results are really amazing, but we had fun shooting it at least.

For the most part it is video of us… and I guess if you want to see Chicago, I am sure there are plenty of pictures and videos done with more professional equipment you could look at. This video should at the very least provide something fun to look back on.

I wonder if youtube will be around, with a full archive by the time we have grand kids running around? I did save a local copy, but I am sure there will be challenges in keeping that playable over time.

One final note, there is footage of a bridge being lowered… you can also hear Heather laughing at me in the background… suffice to say I was fascinated, all the bridges are suppose to be able to raise and lower, but I get the impression that they don’t do so all that often. I was really excited to see one moving!

post production notes:

Virtual Dub proved to be a fairly painless way to trim out the garbage on the beginning and end of each of the videos. The only challenge was getting the video into a format it liked, but I figured that out when I did the cooking video a few weeks back.

I may need to come up with a more aggressive means of compression for these videos, the Chicago clip is eating 500 megs on disk! If only MPG4 was a more open and free standard /sigh.

-Jordan

Chicago Day Two

Following up from, Day One

On our second day, we understood the train schedule much better, so we caught breakfast and had plenty of time to catch our train. One of the things we discovered the night before while chatting with people in line to get our table at the pizza place, was that the St. Patrick’s day festivities were going to be on Saturday (day two for us). This mean that there were extra trains running! It also ended up meaning downtown was busier than normal, but we managed. The extra train was an express train, meaning after our stop, it went all the way to Union Station without stopping! That saved us about 30 minutes getting into the city. The train was full of people decked out in green and planning their bar crawls… the mood was “festive” to say the least.

Once in the city, we flowed with the sea of green over towards the park where the parade was slated to begin in about an hour. Neither Heather, nor I had realized that it was going to be the St. Patrick’s day weekend, so we didn’t have any green to wear! We only felt a little out of place, as it was so cold and rainy, lots of people were bundled up in coats of all colors.

Our pre-learning about the parade plan had been to head to the aquarium first thing on Saturday. The parade was more or less on our way from Union Station to the aquarium, so we figured it was an ideal addition. The parade started about 20 minutes after we got to the park. In talking about it, most of what Heather and I knew about the parade was from watching the movie “The Fugitive.” As the movie lead us to believe, the parade was opened by a large band in kilts.

After the first few entries went past, we started walking “upstream” of the parade, towards the aquarium. Our thinking was that we would get to see most of the parade, and hopefully bead the crowd to the aquarium. (The parade started at noon, so it isn’t like we had a real early start). I don’t know how long the parade actually took to finish, but we walked about a mile of it in progress, and then saw another almost mile of floats packed together waiting to start down the route. It was fun to see all the pageantry, but I am glad we didn’t stand in place for all of that, it was way too cold for the way we were dressed.

Past the end of the waiting floats, we only had about another half mile to get to the aquarium. As we started getting closer, we could see what looked distressingly like a line leading up to the front doors. When we got there, we found that people were lined up for 200+ yards waiting to get in! The line did not appear to be moving all that fast, and we had been standing outside for about as long as we could handle at that point. We had a plan ‘B’  that was to head to the planetarium just a little farther down the waterfront from the aquarium. That walk was unspeakably cold! The path over there was exposed, and there was some powerful wind coming off the lake. Once we got to the planetarium, they had signs announcing that their system for doing the “feature” shows was broken, but at that point it didn’t much matter as we just wanted to be inside, anywhere! We bought entrance passes and tickets to a more basic planetarium show, then headed to their cafeteria. I would go back to the planetarium just to eat at their cafeteria on a clear day! The location kind of sticks out into the water, and we in a big glassed in area facing back towards the city, looking over the lake. It was a nice view, even on a cold rainy gray day.

After our late lunch, we wondered around the museum area for an hour or so, then headed into the planetarium show. It was Heather’s first time in a planetarium, and I hadn’t been in one for a long long time. The show was not riveting, but the narrator was very much the astronomy geek he claimed to be, and we enjoyed having him explain the things we were seeing. The show centered around the things you would see in the night sky if the background light from the city didn’t drown out all the stars. Considering that late nights are not Heather’s forte, I think it was a nice was to kind of get in some stargazing together  :).

After the show we thoroughly covered the rest of the museum. They had a lot of really neat displays, and it provided great opportunities to talk about astronomy, something I probably have a much greater interest in than Heather, but she seemed to be enjoying it, and learning a lot!

When it was time to leave, we decided there wasn’t much reason to try and eat dinner in the city, and that we would go out someplace back in Naperville. Surprisingly, the walk back to the train station seemed about four-times longer than it has been when we were floating along with the group decked out in green. By the time we made it to the train station we definitely were ready to sit down! We had managed to make the station in time to catch an express back, meaning we saved another 30 minutes or so on our train ride.

When we got back to the train station, we were right on the banks of the river, and had hoped that by 5-ish that evening, it would be green. It wasn’t! I had read on some event guide that they were dyeing the river, and there was a specific bridge that provided “the best viewing” I guess it must take a long time for the dye to propagate though the entire river.

Setting for 30 minutes on the train really put us in a relaxed, sleepy mood, so we didn’t even manage to go out anywhere for dinner, but instead got some Chinese delivered to the hotel room. We had the laptop along, so we watched a movie on that and crashed.

I am going to roll the minor details of Sunday into this post as well, because they don’t really warrant a full post.

Sunday morning was the time change, only we didn’t know that. I had really been looking forward to one last day of the rather amazing waffles they had in the breakfast room. When I headed down to breakfast, I was sure I had about 30 minutes to spare before they closed things up, as did the family with the two young kids riding the elevator down with me. We dumbfounded by the closed door, until eventually, a nice member of the staff explained about the time change. The staff was really nice and let us sneak in and grab some milk and cereal to take back to our rooms. It was a let down from the idea of waffles, but at least we got to take advantage of the free breakfast!

After breakfast, the drive home was mundane, but we were wonderfully refreshed by being away from the norm for a few days.

-Jordan

Chicago Day One

Heather and I drove from Des Moines Thursday night, to the western edge of the Chicago metro area. We stayed in Naperville, at a hotel with easy access to the train station.

Friday morning we took kind of a casual start, and were almost too late getting downstairs to get breakfast. I am really glad we weren’t though, because the breakfast room had those big Belgian waffle makers that clam shell open, and can flip over in their mounting. Combine one of those with good batter, and you have an amazing waffle! It was a great way to start our first day of a mini vacation!

Leaving the hotel, we managed to miss three different turns on the way to the “easy to get to” train station. In hind sight, it wasn’t hard find, we just missed some easy turns. We ended up missing the train by about ten minutes. The next train wasn’t due for another hour, so we decided to walk around the Naperville downtown.

Fun side note, calling the town “nap-ville” will get a rise out of Heather most of the time. 🙂

The weather was just warm enough to call it nice, and we really enjoyed getting to walk around the nicely restored / preserved downtown area. They have a little river that runs through the middle of the area, and some parks we looked at. After living in a snow and ice covered city for the last few months, seeing some green in the parks was really refreshing.

Next, we headed back to the train station, caught our train, and hit the city! The city, as it turned out, was rainy and cold, with a touch of fog. We worked our way over to Michigan Avenue (aka “The Magnificent Mile”) and kind of took in the sights. Our only real stops were the Disney store and the Hershey’s shop. Makes the trip sound less… sophisticated I suppose, but that’s where we stopped.

After some time looking at the shops and people, we headed out to Navy Pier. When we were last in Chicago, the place was a rather busy carnival atmosphere. On a cold foggy day it was more of a lonely eerie kind of place.

I really started to wonder what that kind of a day would be like for a local, it seemed strange to me to not be able to see the normal skyline at all. We could only see the first few buildings before the fog enveloped the city. It kind of made me wish we had a better camera, but then again a more robust camera would have been to big to lug around all day in the name of “just in case we see something cool”

At this point, the day was starting to get late, so we headed back down town to find some pizza before catching our train back to our hotel. Friday night is kind of busy as it turns out, and the wait to get a table was 30-40 minutes. We ended up in line between some former UNL students, and some current Des Moines residents. The world is just as small as people say I guess. Eventually we got a table, and some pizza.

Shortly thereafter, we discovered that eating what winds up being one inch of pure cheese in a almost pastry crust, isn’t quite as rewarding after you have walked five miles, and are cold and dehydrated. It was still good, but it hit a lot harder than expected. We really found this out when we started walking again, and had about a mile left to get back to the train station. It wasn’t like we were in pain, but we were moving a little slow, and it was becoming clear that we were going to miss our train again. Lucky for us there are taxis everywhere, so we managed to make the train with time to spare!

This is a rather large post, and I feel like I glazed over so many details. It does pretty much sum up day one though!

-Jordan

Chicago!

Heather and I went to Chicago last weekend!

We took Friday off, and drove up after work Thursday night. Having three days off was a really nice break! Unfortunately it also meant we didn’t have a weekend at home so we are still trying to catch up on laundry and cleaning around here. I have no idea how two people in a two-bedroom apartment can make so much of a mess so quickly! Maybe we just have high standards.

So, back to Chicago… We had a great time despite the weather being cold and rainy for the majority of the trip. We took a few pictures, and shot some video. Heather and I really had fun with the video, and I have grand plans of cutting the segments into something worth posting. The problem is we are gone again this weekend, and I haven’t ever tried to do that kind of a thing before, so I should probably get a few traditional blog posts up before I forget all the details on the trip.

That isn’t going to happen tonight though… midnight is closing in, and I should wrap this up.

-Jordan