Note: We spent most of yesterday unpacking boxes and working on getting our offices ready to get back to work, so I don’t have anything new to tell you about today. So instead, I am reposting a blog from our days as fulltime RVers about a day spent playing tourist in Denver, Colorado.
Yesterday we had a very busy day playing tourist in downtown Denver. So busy that by the time we got back to our motorhome at the Westminster Elks lodge campground in the late afternoon, I promptly laid down on the couch and took a nap!
We wanted to tour the U.S. Mint, but as it turns out, that takes advance planning because tour reservations have to be made in advance and they are booked up through the end of next week. But we still found plenty to keep us busy.
Our first stop was at the Denver Firefighters Museum, housed in the historic Fire Station #1, which was built in 1909.
The museum has an excellent collection of antique firefighting equipment, including this 1942 American LaFrance fire truck (top) and antique steam-powered fire engine (bottom).
There are also all kinds of vintage fire apparatus, including hose carts, ladder wagons, tools, dispatch desks, and even a fire pole kids could slide down! The second floor has the dormitory firemen lived in while on duty and hands-on displays for kids of all ages. I know my buddies Mac McCoy and Stu McNicol, both retired from the fire service, would love this place!
From there, we drove a couple of miles to the Denver Museum of Miniatures, Dolls, and Toys, which is housed in the wonderful old 1899 Pearce McAllister cottage. This is a place that will take you back to your childhood, with its displays of toys ranging from Teddy Bears to a model train layout and Hot Wheels.
But the museum’s claim to fame is the exquisitely crafted miniature houses, which are perfect in every detail, down to the plumbing pipes under the kitchen counters!
Some took more than 10,000 hours to complete and they are all true works of art. Even the cups and plates are handcrafted, as well as woven rugs on the floors!
There was also a display of beautiful cathedrals and castles constructed entirely of wooden matchsticks, the work of artist Paul Marti. All we could say was “Wow!”
Our day still wasn’t over! Our final stop was at the Wings Over the Rockies Air & Space Museum, located at what was once Lowry Air Force Base. This huge B-52 bomber greets visitors at the museum entrance.
Inside, the museum has an impressive display of aircraft ranging from experimental airplanes to military fighters, and even an Apollo Command Module test unit.
This is a Vietnam-era F-100 Super Sabre, the first U.S. production aircraft capable of exceeding the speed of sound in level flight.
A bit more mundane and a lot slower is this 1939 J3 Piper Cub, one of the most beloved airplanes by generations of civilian pilots who earned their wings in them. Back when I was a young man I spent a couple of years playing with little puddle jumpers and I always wanted a Cub, but the closest I ever got was to ride in a couple of them.
Today we’re going to kick back and stay home. I have a telephone interview to do in the afternoon, and I want to get some writing done. And we need to recharge our internal batteries after our busy day playing tourist.
Thought For The Day – No man’s life, liberty, or property is safe while the legislature is in session. – Mark Twain
I think I saw an X-wing in one photo.