I recently went to the Titanic Exhibit at the Aquarium and I left with the impression I’d been on luxury liner. A lot of the display is about class – there were first, second and third class passengers. In fact, one of the reasons that there were enough lifeboats for only half of the passengers is that the British shipping company, the White Star Line, had made the decision that all those boats cluttered up their luxury ship.
You will walk through a first-class cabin and a third-class room. There are eye witness accounts, photos and many exhibits, including pieces of the china used in both first class and third class. My “Boarding Pass” was in the name of a second class passenger traveling to Akron, Ohio, who was, coincidentally, my age. At the end a list of all the passengers and crew is presented with diginity, as well as the individual stories of some and how they came to be on that particular ship. Even if you have no interest in the romance of the popular movie, this is a fascinating trip back into time.
I have been to the Aquarium before but it is still beautiful and awe-inspiring. Just watching the whale shark and a manta ray swimming overhead is other-worldly. The music adds to the tranquility of the place. I can see why the belugas are such a popular exhibit. They are big and well, almost huggable.
The Titanic exhibit will only be here until Spring. See www.georgiaaquarium.org.
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If you’re a nature enthusiast, you will be glad to know that Charles Seabrook’s column on natural Georgia will be back at the Atlanta Journal Constitution this Sunday. Among the many changes the paper is making to try and survive, Seabrook’s column got canned. But the newspaper leadership...
December 17th, 2008 | Linda Erbele | Read More | Comments: 0
Whoops – it’s Saturday morning and you haven’t made plans. Or there’s lots to do, but you just don’t want to go very far today. Log onto the website of your nearest small town. Everyone is having some kind of Christmas festival, Tour of Homes or Lighting of the Tree. Here...
December 13th, 2008 | Linda Erbele | Read More | Comments: 0
Nothing to do with the holidays but ending December 31 is the Breman Museum’s exhibition, “Seeking Justice: The Leo Frank Case Revisited.”
This is the truly tragic story of a murder that happened in 1913 that had a tremendous effect on Georgia and the nation. Very briefly, Leo Frank...
December 12th, 2008 | Linda Erbele | Read More | Comments: 0
Filed under: Bremen Museum, Leo Frank, marietta, museums
In the German tradition of combining food, music and entertainment with markets of imported and local Christmas specialties, Georgia’s “Alpine” village is holding its first annual Christkindlmarkt. Long a tradition in Chicago, there are Christkindlmarkts in Pennsylvania, Colorado and...
December 5th, 2008 | Linda Erbele | Read More | Comments: 1
Filed under: Shopping
About an hour north of Atlanta, Lake Lanier Islands offers six and a half miles of lights and a carload price. It bills itself as the “world’s largest animated light extravaganza” and includes a live nativity scene, carnival rides, pony rides and the Santa Shop. The Holiday Village...
December 5th, 2008 | Linda Erbele | Read More | Comments: 1
Filed under: Lake Lanier Islands Resort, Light Shows, Magical Nights of Lights, Must-See Sights
With gas prices so low at the moment, you might consider driving south of town to the Fantasy of Lights at Callaway Gardens, just over an hour away. Famous for its azalea trails in the spring, the gardens light up for the holidays with 8 million lights. If you’re concerned about your carbon footprint,...
December 1st, 2008 | Linda Erbele | Read More | Comments: 0
Filed under: Callaway-Gardens, Christmas-lights, Light Shows, Must-See Sights, Top 20 Event
I had heard a lot about the Dillard House before I went. The food is delicious, the service is great, it’s just something you have to do in the mountains – so my expectations were high. There is a long line at traditional meal times, but it moves quickly. (You can admire the view from the...
November 26th, 2008 | Linda Erbele | Read More | Comments: 2
Filed under: Dillard House, Food Finds, local food, southern-cooking
There you are driving along enjoying the mountain views and trying to ignore whatever the kids are doing in the backseat when the clamor becomes a little louder, “Those are sheep!” and “No they aren’t. It was goats on that roof. Dad, tell her that goats have horns.”
What? Indeed there are...
November 21st, 2008 | Linda Erbele | Read More | Comments: 1
Filed under: Amish furniture, Georgia-made cheese, goats, gourmet-farm goodies, Just a Bit Weird - Fun & Quirky Places, mountain views
No, that’s not a brush fire over there. Smell that? It’s the smell of the South – boiled peanuts. For many who grew up here, this is truly comfort-snack food. After I-985 becomes Georgia highway 365 on the way to North Georgia, Jaemor Farms is one of the most visible stops for boiled peanuts....
November 18th, 2008 | Linda Erbele | Read More | Comments: 3
Filed under: boiled-peanuts, Food Finds, fried pies, local produce
While most media reported the “peak” around the 8th of November, it’s a nebulous term. You can find yourself admiring one view thinking, if just those spots would spring into color, this would be peak. Almost overnight those trees will light up in yellow, but you’ll discover that...
November 17th, 2008 | Linda Erbele | Read More | Comments: 0
Filed under: fall leaves, north-georgia-mountains, Scenic & Short Trips
I’m Linda Erbele and I’ve dusted off the backpack and shaken the moths out of the old Atlanta Traveler hoodie. I’m going to tell you about places in Atlanta (and out of the city) that you’ve never been, and maybe things you don’t know about places you have been. Our readers...
November 15th, 2008 | Linda Erbele | Read More | Comments: 0
Filed under: Announcements