My wife hasn't been feeling well, so I decided to take Dana out for the day. The destination was Batsto. Gas has gotten cheap enough where I don't feel guilty about making the drive, plus we had done Allaire the previous weekend.
Somehow I always end up on the Parkway on the weekend. I've made a little game of seeing how much I can avoid the parkway to get where I am going. I ended up taking the Parkway down the entire way, but on previous trips I've managed to get from Toms River down to Double Trouble, and then hopping on from there. I'm sure there's other back roads and whatnot that I need to explore.
Anyway, I got to Batsto and paid my $5 to park. The place was pretty busy. Walking through the village was nice. I was disappointed to see that they didn't have any of the chickens out in the coop like they usually do. The mansion was nearly entombed in a web of scaffolding and surrounded by "Rent-A-Fence." One of the windows was removed and boarded up with plywood. Some of the shutters were off the mansion and leaning up on the porch. I think whoever is in charge of the mansion restoration should get the workers to keep the mansion site in better shape. There's just tons of junk, tools, etc. lying all over the place and it looks terrible.
They seemed to have been operating the sawmill at one point as I heard them cutting wood. When we got there there was nobody to be found. What do they run the mill on now? Electricity? I wish they would have left it water powered.
We then made for the nature center. Dana LOVES the turtles there. We had a small picnic on the benches outside, and then headed back to the car.
She got her first taste of off-roading. We headed up Batsto-Washington Rd., hung a left at Washington, rode through Mount, and up along the Quaker Bridge road. I wanted to stop at Quaker Bridge, but there were a ton of cars and some sketchy people hanging out, so we pressed on to Atsion.
I passed two guys pushing some sort of dune buggy thing up Quaker Bridge Rd. They said that they had ran it out of gas. If I had some spare gas I would have given it to them, but I didn't so I suppose they had a long push to get back to 206.
I quickly checked out the work on the Atsion Mansion. I was incredibly disappointed to see the same faux block siding up along the side of the mansion. I was hoping to see them side it in real clapboard (as it probably was sided originally) or something better than the siding they covered it in in the 50's.
I'm also curious -- they've reconstructed the side porch. Are the columns holding it up original? If so, where were they all of these years?
In the end, a nice 5 hour day with my daughter, although seems less enthusiastic for the off-roading part of the journey than I was.
Somehow I always end up on the Parkway on the weekend. I've made a little game of seeing how much I can avoid the parkway to get where I am going. I ended up taking the Parkway down the entire way, but on previous trips I've managed to get from Toms River down to Double Trouble, and then hopping on from there. I'm sure there's other back roads and whatnot that I need to explore.
Anyway, I got to Batsto and paid my $5 to park. The place was pretty busy. Walking through the village was nice. I was disappointed to see that they didn't have any of the chickens out in the coop like they usually do. The mansion was nearly entombed in a web of scaffolding and surrounded by "Rent-A-Fence." One of the windows was removed and boarded up with plywood. Some of the shutters were off the mansion and leaning up on the porch. I think whoever is in charge of the mansion restoration should get the workers to keep the mansion site in better shape. There's just tons of junk, tools, etc. lying all over the place and it looks terrible.
They seemed to have been operating the sawmill at one point as I heard them cutting wood. When we got there there was nobody to be found. What do they run the mill on now? Electricity? I wish they would have left it water powered.
We then made for the nature center. Dana LOVES the turtles there. We had a small picnic on the benches outside, and then headed back to the car.
She got her first taste of off-roading. We headed up Batsto-Washington Rd., hung a left at Washington, rode through Mount, and up along the Quaker Bridge road. I wanted to stop at Quaker Bridge, but there were a ton of cars and some sketchy people hanging out, so we pressed on to Atsion.
I passed two guys pushing some sort of dune buggy thing up Quaker Bridge Rd. They said that they had ran it out of gas. If I had some spare gas I would have given it to them, but I didn't so I suppose they had a long push to get back to 206.
I quickly checked out the work on the Atsion Mansion. I was incredibly disappointed to see the same faux block siding up along the side of the mansion. I was hoping to see them side it in real clapboard (as it probably was sided originally) or something better than the siding they covered it in in the 50's.
I'm also curious -- they've reconstructed the side porch. Are the columns holding it up original? If so, where were they all of these years?
In the end, a nice 5 hour day with my daughter, although seems less enthusiastic for the off-roading part of the journey than I was.