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Two-Day Escapes

Southern Living,  Aug 2006  by Thomas, Les

Summer races by faster than a thrill ride. Don't say good-bye yet. The fun's just getting started. There are still beaches to stroll, mountains to climb, and waters to splash.

Send the season off with a blast. Celebrate the end of summer with a quick getaway to one of these three cool destinations.

Glide Over the Outer Banks

Slip into the harness of a bright redand-white hang glider, and take a running leap off a North Carolina sand dune. Besides all the attractions of the seashore, many people come to the Outer Banks to fly. The Wright Brothers did it, and so can you.

Visitors solo with the help of a watchful instructor after a couple of hours of lessons. Most fly farther than the 120 feet Orville covered on his first attempt at powered flight. When you come back to Earth, tour the nearby Wright Brothers National Memorial to see replicas of the 1902 Wright Glider and the 1903 Wright Flyer. The memorial buzzes with activities on National Aviation Day, held on Orville's birthday, August 19.

Meet The Lost Colony Cast

On the night before Orville's birthday, the state's beloved outdoor drama, The Lost Colony, salutes the birth of Virginia Dare. It's the only time that real infants play the role of the first English child born in America.

Reserve a spot for a behind-thescenes tour to meet the cast, see props, and view some of the 10,000 costume pieces used in each night's show. Queen Elizabeth's dresses each weigh 52 pounds and cost more than $25,000.

Book a room at the aptly named Tranquil House Inn, and make Manteo your base for visiting attractions such as Cape Hatteras National Seashore and the loth-century-style formal gardens at The Elizabethan Gardens. Sit outside with tasty shrimp salad for lunch at the Full Moon Café. For dinner, dine on some of the freshest local seafood in the Outer Banks at Basnight's Lone Cedar Cafe in Nags Head.

Chill Out in the Hill Country

You haven't experienced summer in Texas until you float down the emerald-hued Guadalupe River or blast down a twisty slide at Schlitterbahn Waterpark Resort, the world's largest water park. Pumped from the spring-fed Comal River, the water stays a cool 72 degrees all summer long.

Water attractions take center stage in New Braunfels and the neighboring riverside village of Gruene, a half-hour drive north of San Antonio, but there are plenty of other recreational activities. Hone your serve with a lesson at The John Newcombe Tennis Ranch. Cruise to see rhinos, giraffes, and 50 other species of wild critters at Natural Bridge Wildlife Ranch, or step down into the cool air at Natural Bridge Caverns, where you can explore the largest public cave in Texas, with an underground chamber as large as a football field.

Two-step Over to Gruene

Have dinner at the Gristmill River Restaurant & Bar in Gruene. Try the local Polish wedding sausage ($9) and the grilled catfish topped with tequila butter and lime ($12). End the day with a dance next door at Gruene Hall. Colored lights twinkle in the cedar trees outside. Tickets for Robert Earl Keen, Charlie Robison, and other marquee performers cost only $22, and there isn't a bad seat in the house. Not a night owl? Make reservations for the Gospel Brunch on August 13, catered by the Gristmill restaurant.

Relax in West Virginia

I spent the morning cruising the waters of Stonewall Jackson Lake on a pontoon boat. Now I'm teeing it up on an Arnold Palmer Signature Golf Course that careens like a roller coaster through the mountains of Stonewall Resort, a 90-minute drive from Charleston, West Virginia.

Ferris Bueller couldn't pack more fun in a day than you can enjoy here at the luxurious state resort set in the middle of 2,000-acre Stonewall Jackson Lake State Park. Book a room at the lodge on the lake's shore (request a water view).

On the resort grounds, you'll find everything you need for an easy getaway. Rent a spacious pontoon boat from the marina ($130 for 2 hours); then cruise the winding channel of the lake framed by woodlands. Troll along a deep diving plug, and you might land a muskie, one of America's largest freshwater fish.

Early in the morning, visitors are busy everywhere you look, golfing, hiking, bicycling, and splashing in the indoor/outdoor pool. By late afternoon, they're splayed out in the Mtn. Laurel Spa, getting rubdowns and facials.

I finish the day with a meal outdoors on the deck at Lightburn's, my favorite restaurant at the resort. I have the signature salad ($9) made with fresh baby greens, pickled baby beets, and candied pecans. The sun paints the golf course and the lake below me in golden light. So long, summer. Can't wait to see you again next year.

Copyright Southern Progress Corporation Aug 2006
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