From Emma Taylor, Living & Travel Editor:
I have a confession: I'm not always the Web's most peppy cheerleader. In fact, finding my submission for "Staff Picks" is often a pretty painful experience. Like when an interviewer asks you what's the last book you read, and all that comes to mind is that Judith Krantz novel you read when you were fourteen. Ask me which Websites I like and The Onion comes to mind. Even Suck has been letting me down lately.
Which is why I'm pleased to report that I am once again a full-fledged Web junkie. I needed, I searched (Alta Vista Advanced Query, always) and I found.
This is not to say that I don't spend hours on the Web each day, many of them enjoyable. But all too rarely do I glimpse the Web doing something really useful, really innovative and really Webby.
Friday afternoon, two friends and I decided we wanted to go camping for the weekend. Karen suggested New Paltz, NY, as a meeting point, because her parents went there once. My map was missing, so I turned to the web. My first stop was MapQuest, where TripQuest confirmed that Karen has a great map eye. New Paltz is 108 miles from her house in Princeton, NJ, and 110 miles from Williamstown, MA (Beth from Boston was a late addition to the trip, so she had to suck up the extra distance).
Having established that distance was fair, TripQuest gave us road directions. It even told me how many miles I had to go on 87 South (65, and I measured, and they were right). Then I used MapQuest's Interactive Atlas to get a map of New Paltz and the surrounding area. I asked it to show me local restaurants, and it did. We chose a little vegetarian place, Wild Flower Cafe, as our meeting spot. I used MapBlast to get a street map showing me Wild Flower Cafe (a great accidental find if you're ever in New Paltz). MapBlast will "blast" you a map (their phrase) of any address in the United States. MapBlast tries a little too hard to be fun, but it's a great tool. (Karen brought along a similar map drawn by her company's $79.99 CD-ROM Atlas.)
But I still wasn't sure what we would do with a weekend in New Paltz. I did a search for New Paltz on Alta Vista (the Advanced Search was a must, to filter out the thousands of references to SUNY New Paltz) and found the Hudson Valley Network. This gave me addresses of local campsites, hiking trails, parks, movie theaters, camping stores ... I also took the names of a few B&Bs, in case we got rained out.
New Paltz turned out to house an odd combination of fat tourists in Keds and teenage Deadheads of America. The local kids are pretty hardcore. Just ask them. We stopped by a coffee shop and a (hardcore) waitress smoking a cigarette on the porch gave us a disparaging look. "It's hardcore music tonight," she said. "Very hardcore," she added, noticing our ponytails, white T-shirts and ivy league baseball hats (hey, we were camping -- we can get hardcore on occasion). Karen and Beth wanted me to show them my nose and navel
piercings, but I fear those locations were a little bourgeois for the youth of New Paltz. So we got ice cream instead.
Our campsite was barely off the road, which meant that -- it being a Saturday night -- local kids drinking beer abounded. They wanted us to join them, but we settled for a six-pack, a box of pop-tarts and a full moon.
Happy surfing,
Emma
P.S. Be sure to tell me about your web/travel experiences (good and bad). It's my job to know this stuff.
Read more "Letters from Tripod" in the archive.