This is part of a series of posts, which you should read in order. Read the first part here. And you can see all the pictures from this trip in the Google Photos album here.
Tuesday, August 26
After polishing off the last of my pizza for breakfast -- always a good start to any day -- we headed up to the Dells for the Boat Tour, hosted by Captain Abby and Emma the Award-Winning Guide, who shares a writer with Jack from the Duck Boats. In fact, she told many of the same jokes, eliciting all the same groans. But she also told some different dad-jokes, and some different puns. But both of them made a fuss about Sherry's and Nancy's crocheted hats, so we like them. And of the two tours, I clearly prefer the Boat Tour, as the time spent bumping around on land in a poorly-sprung vehicle behind a loud smoking diesel had nothing to recommend it, whereas at least the smoothness of the water passage was relaxing, even with the noise of the boat's powerful engine.
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The clear water in Witch's Gulch |
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Stand Rock |
By the end of that tour it was time for lunch, so we repaired to the River's Edge Pub, where we had been for dinner earlier. We hadn't planned that, but it was there and we had started wandering in circles a little bit, looking for inspiration. I had a so-so fish sandwich; I didn't make a note of what anyone else had. It wasn't great, but it wasn't bad, so it was good enough. And it was there.
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Apollo & Slim |
After a couple of rearrangements of personnel on the wagon, Sherry and I got to sit up front with the driver, so we had the best view of the tour. There are lots of places where you think there's no way this wagon is going to fit through the crevice ahead, but it opens up just enough as you round the last curve.
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Oncoming traffic |
I think that of the organized group activities we've been in on this trip, the Lost Canyon tour is my favourite, even though it's fairly short, only about half an hour, and a little bit bumpy; and my preference, it turns out, is unrelated to the cost, which seemed more modest than either the Ducks or Dells tours, but were in the same cost-neighbourhood. The Lost Canyon was just very relaxing and the scenery, seen up close (extremely; I was afraid of hitting my head more than once, and I'm sure Slim's ear brushed the underside of the rocks a few times) was captivating.
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Champions all |
We celebrated completion of the Once-A-Year Athletic Club Members' Meeting with drinks and light snacks on the back deck of the Lake House, where we'd heard the fiddler a couple of days earlier: cheese curds (not great), artichoke dip with pita bread (I didn't try it), and soup for two, plus a shrimp salad for Jeff. Nancy and I tried a strawberry-purée mocktail, while the others opted for actual booze, the lushes. The setting was very nice, the conversation was relaxed and as laid-back as the service. We ended the evening at the condo, where there are surprisingly few stars visible despite it seeming very dark out. Stayed up late just talking about this and that.
Wednesday, August 27
Since we were up so late on Tuesday, we were late out of the gate on Wednesday. I, for one, felt tired all day, and I know Jeff did too, but we all seemed to have a good time regardless. Condo week is always like that. I did breakfast at a little local cafe called Denny's Diner (no relation to the chain of lousy restaurants), where I had a couple of fried eggs, a bagel and a schmeer served to me by, I'm guessing, a couple of Romanian kids. (They seem to be everywhere here, all on summer work visas.) It was good, but somehow I expected more, I don't know, charm? As I was driving back to the condo in that embarrassing truck, I got to thinking about how many middle-class families could live in this condo development, with its roughly 175 one- and two-bedroom units and lots of room to build more. This would make a significant dent in the affordability crisis in most major cities if it could be duplicated on a cost-effective basis; but resort rentals bring a higher return, so investment goes to that instead of what people really need.
All aboard! R&GN Railway |
view from the Riverwalk |
We interrupted our Broadway Schlep with a couple of errands (post office and drugstore), then returned to see the Root Beer Museum. Nancy got a flight of root beers that we all tasted before selecting one to use in root beer floats while she debated charging us for the samples we'd had ... by which point it was really too late and we just refused to pay her. The floats were delicious, of course, and the museum was quirky and entertaining, a good way to pass the best part of an hour. The guy operating the place -- remarkably, not the owner -- was unbelievably enthusiastic and knowledgeable about the subject.
We were pretty drained from a week of activity after that, so we went to a local park, parked by the side of the road, and tried to nap for about an hour. I don't think I managed to sleep at all; not sure if Jeff did; Nancy and Sherry sat contentedly in the back seat, knitting. (They do that everywhere. I'm sure if you google "women knitting in Wisconsin Dells" you'll see random people's vacay Tik Tok videos.) When the clock at the nearby church chimed six o'clock, we fired up our oversized truck and meandered down the road to the Legacy Dinner Theater, where we had tickets for Sneaky Pete's Wild West Show, a local production written by the theater owner featuring an all-you-can-eat meal of carbohydrates and fried food: a cream vegetable soup that seemed to be pure cream; dinner rolls; a pewter bucket of almost-cold fried chicken, which fortunately was not also greasy (it wasn't really bad except that it should have been warmer), and all the basic forms of foods my doctor has told me to steer clear of: mashed potatoes (which felt like they were made from flakes), corn on the cob (which I managed to avoid entirely), macaroni and (soi-disant) cheese, and baked beans (which were actually pretty tasty). Dessert choices were a fudge brownie or an apple turnover. I had the turnover, which wasn't bad, while everyone else had the brownie, which wasn't particularly good by brownie standards, which are high. Bad as the food was, I still ate too much of it, and felt bloated and ill the rest of the night. (The kind of feeling where I wake up, remember my heart attacks, and wonder if this is the Big One.)
And then came the show. We were seated at a "bad guy" table, so we were supposed to boo the hero and cheer the villain. I did neither; I'm sorry, but this show struck me from overture to closing credits as a heavy-handed commercial for all the largest local tourist traps, but geared for second graders; and I assume all those tourist traps mentioned in the show were the ones willing to pay a promotional fee to the writers of the show. It really brought home the crass commercial aspect of this resort town, and in a most unpleasant way that I'm sure my table-mates didn't note or care about, as they were fairly uniform in their mild praise of the evening's entertainment. It was, I will admit, not as bad as the usual local production (probably at least in part because the local high school has a strong performing arts program, including a Performing Arts Center that dwarfs the rest of the the school's buildings). The performers could carry a tune for the most part (though the star of the show seemed to be just the slightest bit off on a lot of her higher notes) and the musicians were more than competent. The music consisted of re-worked familiar tunes with the words changed to tell a ridiculous local story of how the town came to be called Wisconsin Dells instead of Kilbourn, the former name (until 1931). I did not enjoy the evening. I am tired of "family-oriented" entertainment, for which read kiddie shows. I am ready for some adult themes in my show selections.
I slept very poorly Wednesday night.