I promised to share the DC trip details and some pics so I've done that at the bottom of this email.
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DC Trip Review and a Few Pics
My now grown kids had been in 8th grade but I’d never gone. They wanted to see things from an adult perspective.
We stayed at The Riggs hotel in Penn Square. Beautiful little hotel that used to be a bank – the one many presidents banked at and also the bank that loaned the money to purchase Alaska. The
room mini fridges look like a miniature bank vault (pic).
Day 1:
Upon arrival we were extremely tired. We were planning on seeing the National Mall at night but instead, we just went to Old Ebbitt Grill for dinner. I’d read that it’s the oldest restaurant, but really the original is torn down and they just saved a bit of pieces of it to integrate.
This place was so loud you couldn’t hear yourself think. It’s beautiful in there in terms of older, rich wood, velvet seating, patriotic paintings, etc. The food was pretty good but if you can’t chat with who you’re dining with, it’s a no.
Day 2:
We had Café Riggs for brunch – it was incredibly good. They were
booked so concierge got us in. They had these unusual hashbrowns like little circular potato cakes.
We then walked (I scooted) to the National Building Museum. 90% of the building is a large empty atrium in the middle. Each of the floors has a few exhibits – not all rooms are exhibits. Some were interesting (I love miniature models of stuff and old trinkets) and some were boring (too many screens showing movies or just pictures
on walls of repeated things). It was almost totally empty – no one there.
After that we went to the Capital One Arena which was the purpose of the visit (my son is a Caps fan and it’s projected that Ovi might retire). I’d never been to a hockey game so now I’ll have to become a Dallas Stars fan. My daughter loved it too. Whole family is excited for this new hobby. We had 4th row by the rink – close to the
action.
That night we had dinner at La Grande Boucherie – easily our second most favorite meal of the trip. The only drawback was a birthday party nearby that was using a very bright light for their videos (makes you hate social media) but otherwise, the food, service, atmosphere etc., was spot on.
Day 3:
Started off with brunch at the Hard Rock. Big mistake. It wasn’t interesting inside. Food was blah. After this we walked to the National Mall, where I proceeded to get wrecked emotionally. My dad served in the navy in WWII aboard the USS Wisconsin and in Korea and Vietnam in the Air Force.
We started off at the Lincoln Memorial and it’s way bigger than I thought it would be. Very quiet, somber and beautiful
there. You look off towards the Washington Monument. I’ll bet it’s even better when the water features are filled but they were empty/being prepared for the 250th I think.
Then we went to the Korea Memorial which hit me the hardest. The standing soldiers and wall of faces did me in. With tears streaming, we decided to keep going to the Vietnam memorial, also emotional there. The wall is so much longer than I would have
imagined, and the little notes and pictures left there for those who died destroyed me. After, we stopped by the WWII Memorial. Also beautiful – the Freedom Wall was overwhelming. Walked by Washington Monument as we went back to the hotel.
VERY heavy emotionally leaving the National Mall. You get lost in a swirl of thoughts about sacrifice and present and future thoughts and loss.
We went to Ford’s theater next for a tour. Now I did not know this was NOT a guided tour. So we entered and were sent downstairs into the museum. There’s a tour guide there and we listen to her, follow her around, only for a Secret Service man to kindly let me know it’s a private tour for secret servicemen but I was welcome to stick around – he just didn’t want me to miss the rest because we were near closing. LOL! So thankful he clued me in.
We went to the Petersen house where Lincoln was carried and it felt very heavy being in the room where our President passed away. One of those things where you don’t think it would affect you being so long ago, but it did.
Dinner this night was at Joe’s Seafood and Prime Steak. I had high hopes for this one but it wasn’t good unfortunately. He food was either cooked wrong (rare instead of medium)
or flavorless.
Day 4:
We had a White House tour scheduled at 8:30 AM. The White House was smaller than I expected, while all the other buildings in DC were bigger than I expected. Secret Service and Park Rangers are funny and filled with awesome stories.
You go through about 3 checkpoints, past a drug sniffing
dog, and finally into a makeshift hallway before entering the White House. It’s a self-guided tour, so you just walk through. Everyone takes a pic at the end between the flags with the door and seal. Then you can walk outside to the back and take a pic in front of the big white columns before leaving. As we were leaving, Secret Service quickly shut down the street as the motorcade was leaving. And they do NOT mess around. You are basically standing still – don’t try to cross the road, walk
forward – anything or they will yell at you. (We didn’t but others tried).
This was our favorite historical stop because how many people get to say they’ve been in the White House? It only took about 30 minutes or maybe a bit more once inside – not crowded at all. We were usually the only ones in a room at a time.
After this we went to the Unconventional Diner for
breakfast. It was SO good. Food, service, etc.
After this we went to the Museum of American history and the Museum of Natural History. We were going to do the Gallery of Art but by this time my kids’ legs and feet were hurting, so we opted to skip it. I enjoyed the Natural History museum much more than the American history one. Along the way walking, you pass a lot of buildings with significance - the DOJ, the FBI, the IRS, etc.
The doors on the DOJ were weird looking (see pic). Almost dystopian looking. LOL!
Dinner was at Capital Grille and this is where the Who’s Who of DC appears to. During our dinner my own Senator Ted Cruz showed up and ate a few tables from me. Everyone looked like a senator, lobbyist or foreign diplomat. It had the best food of all the meals.
As for safety etc. I
watch the news and fully expected DC to be chaotic. It was one of the most peaceful, friendly, clean, calm places I’ve ever been. Literally not a single person acting up. (National Guard patrols here and there). EVERY person was friendly – citizens, police, Secret Service, servers, you name it. The greenery around town and the architecture was incredible. The buildings almost felt a little like NYC where you have old mixed with new.
There was SO much else I wanted to see. My kids had already done many other things previously, so we didn’t double up on those. This is a very dense place filled with things to do. You’d never be bored.
I’ll probably go back someday. I was pleasantly surprised. Here are some pics:
Top L to Bottom R:
White house lawn once inside the gate, the senator arriving near our table, the strange DOJ dystopian door, the booth where Lincoln was shot, the Riggs hotel bank vault mini fridge. Another pic below...
Top L to Bottom R:
Chicken dish, chocolate pie, a mocktail (pineapple, etc.), blueberry lavendar pancakes, and a chocolate peanut butter dessert.
All in all a great few days off to give my brain a break and now it's back at it!