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Daisey's Dockside Nature Cruises - Chincoteague Island - Reviews of Daisey's Dockside Nature Cruises. Savannah Walks : : Pub Tour. Guests are escorted by a seasoned guide through the Pubs and Taverns of Old Savannah. Your guide will relate stories of how each pub and tavern has earned its place in history. Savannah, with so much history, is bound to have a few skeletons in her closet, and maybe just a bit more! Pubs and Taverns Tour Highlights: Learn about local legend and loreStroll America’s largest National Landmark Historic DistrictGain insight into the City’s cultureNarrated by knowledgeable and interactive guides The Pubs and Taverns Tour takes you though the old colonial part of the Historic District and talks to you about local legends and lore of Old Savannah.

Book your Pubs and Taverns Savannah Walk today! Advance purchase recommended! Click on the thumbnails to view gallery image: America's Most Haunted City. Washington DC Fourth of July. Why the Fourth? Though the Fourth of July is iconic to Americans, some claim the date itself is somewhat arbitrary. New Englanders had been fighting Britain since April 1775. The first motion in the Continental Congress for independence was made on June 4, 1776. After hard debate, the Congress voted unanimously (discounting New York's courteous abstention), but secretly, for independence from Great Britain on July 2 (the Lee Resolution) and appointed Thomas Jefferson to write a draft.

The Congress reworked the draft until a little after eleven o’clock, July 4, when twelve colonies voted for adoption (New York again courteously abstaining) and released a copy to the printers signed only by John Hancock, President of the Congress, and Secretary Charles Thomson. Philadelphia celebrated the Declaration with public readings and bonfires on July 8. John Adams, credited by Thomas Jefferson as the unofficial, tireless whip of the independence-minded, wrote to his wife Abigail on July 3, 1776:

PACIFIC COAST. If your impressions of the East Coast come from driving along the I-95 corridor through nearly nonstop urban and industrial sprawl, following our Atlantic Coast route will open your eyes to a whole other world. Alternating between wildly differing beach resort areas and lengthy stretches of pristine coastal wilderness, the route runs along almost 2,000 miles of two-lane country roads, within earshot, if not sight, of the Atlantic Ocean almost the entire way. In place of the grimy concrete and soulless netherworld of the interstate, this route passes through innumerable quirky seaside towns and timeless old fishing villages, interspersed with huge swathes of beaches, wetlands, and woodlands that have hardly changed since the first explorers laid eyes on them four centuries ago.

Starting in the north at that all-American icon, the Statue of Liberty, and winding up in the south at free-wheeling Key West, this route truly offers something for everyone. ROAD TRIP USA. A Low-Key Drive in Florida | Travel Deals, Travel Tips, Vacation Ideas | Budget Travel. View of Islamorada, Florida Keys, USA (Juan Moyano / Dreamstime.com) Living in Miami Beach, Fla., undeniably has its charms, but sometimes I need a break from international supermodels and Armani-clad valets. Luckily for me, only 50 miles south there's a time machine to an older, quieter Florida, where the only glitz is the sun's reflection on the silvery scales of the tarpon.

Home to an odd mix of rednecks, hippies, and people committed to wearing fishing vests every day instead of ties or panty hose, the Florida Keys have a loose, unpretentious vibe. Too many tourists hurtle through them on the four- to five-hour drive between the discos of South Beach and the bars of Key West. The road itself, the Overseas Highway (U.S. 1), is one of the biggest draws—a mostly two-laner that stretches southwest 125 miles over dozens of islands until it reaches mile zero in Key West.

As I cross Card Sound Road, the prettier of the two gateways from the mainland, my most pressing issue is where to eat. Two More Dreamy Routes | Travel Deals, Travel Tips, Vacation Ideas | Budget Travel. The Maine Coast Rugged shoreline and the freshest lobsters you'll ever eat Best stretch: The 175 miles between Portland and Bar Harbor capture quintessential Maine. The mostly two-lane Route 1 hugs the coast almost the entire way, passing fishing towns, lighthouses, and maritime scenes straight out of a children's book set in New England.

And under those buoys bobbing in the bay—lobster traps, of course. Coolest thing to do: Even in the height of summer, that gorgeous water is chillingly cold (it averages about 60 degrees), making it far more pleasant to sail than swim. It would be a shame to be near all this deep-blue water and not get out on it. Schooner Olad, a restored 1927 sailboat, departs from Camden Harbor, on Penobscot Bay. Captain Aaron Lincoln and his crew let the wind decide the course, along the way giving you a history of the area and pointing out wildlife: seals, bald eagles, and whales, if you're lucky (Camden, 207/236-2323, maineschooners.com, two-hour tour $35). Beautiful Lakeside Drives | Travel Deals, Travel Tips, Vacation Ideas | Budget Travel. Lake Chelean, in Washington State's North Cascades. (Super Stock) Moosehead Lake The coast gets all the glory, but Mainers love their lakes—especially Moosehead. This whole area is moose country (in fact, the shoreline looks like it's in the shape of a moose head), and while you may get a sighting from Rockwood Road, your chances are even better from the trillions of little side roads.

They'll take you deeper into the woods and past ponds, where moose love to linger. See the beautiful lakeside drives! Finger Lakes With all the wineries, the museums, the horse racing, etc., it's easy to forget what first drew visitors to this green slice of upstate New York: the 11 finger-shaped lakes. Lake Lure Despite being the setting for Dirty Dancing, Lake Lure is nowhere near the Catskills. Lake Chelan When even Seattleites can't take the gray skies and drizzle anymore, they head three-and-a-half hours east to the sunny shores of Lake Chelan, in the North Cascades.