UTUSN
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Fri Sep-11-09 08:36 PM
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Anybody know anything about Boston?!1 Going there in a couple of weeks. |
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I'll do the JFK Library, Harvard, ------------DURING THE DAY.
4 or 5 P.M., will do Happy Hour somewhere.
7 days.
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Critters2
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Fri Sep-11-09 08:40 PM
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1. I lived there for 4 years. What do you want to know? |
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I'd walk the Freedom Trail. But then, I find history fascinating. And it takes you through some interesting parts of the city--the North End, Downtown Crossing, etc. Must have Italian in the North End at some point. Lots of good eateries there.
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TK421
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Fri Sep-11-09 08:45 PM
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2. No, but if you're in the Philly area we need to hang out! |
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:toast: hit some bars....there are just too many around here, you know!
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applegrove
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Fri Sep-11-09 10:15 PM
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3. Drive around Cambridge. It is gorgeous. Also Sam's American Cafe around |
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the corner from the Ritz is great (I was there twenty years ago). My brother's told me there is also an old fashioned public steak house where a bar maid dressed in period costume will yell at you as she delivers your food. The Italian section is great too. Love Boston.
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Gormy Cuss
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Fri Sep-11-09 10:26 PM
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4. IT SUCKS ! Possibly the worst American city there is. |
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Okay, I kid. What do you like to do? You probably know that Harvard has about a billion museums. MIT has a Gehry building if you're into architecture and has a pretty neat museum reflecting the tech aspect of the school. In Boston, the Isabel Stewart Gardner and MFA are good old stodgy choices.
Duck tours are worth it for a n00b.
Chinatown has some good dim sum houses.
The North End has excellent Italian food as long as you avoid the spots on Hanover St. Do go to Hanover St for cannoli.
Take a ride out to the Harbor Islands park.
Drive up to the coastal North Shore towns or Cape Ann for seafood and rocky coast or beaches. Wingersheak and Crane's are great beaches on the North Shore. Closer to Boston, Revere Beach is beautiful these days and you can have clams or roast beef at Kelly's.
Drive south to Cape Cod - lots of nice towns, nice beaches there.
I could go on -- I'd still live there if I had the choice.
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Sebastian Doyle
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Fri Sep-11-09 11:00 PM
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5. They aren't worth a shit without Brad Delp |
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I mean, it's bad enough to have Michael Sweet from Stryper sing for them, but then on top of that, to hire some karaoke singer from a MySpace page?? http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mwu_HagnHgo
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sohndrsmith
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Fri Sep-11-09 11:25 PM
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6. I'd recommend the Boston Aquarium (I love aquariums...) Fresh, raw |
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Edited on Fri Sep-11-09 11:31 PM by sohndrsmith
oysters in/near Fanieul Hall were lovely... not sure the exact locale but they were oh, so sweet... perhaps the Union Oyster House? The Urban Spoon can be a useful resource - here's the link: http://www.urbanspoon.com/n/4/316/Boston/Faneuil-Hall-restaurants(edited to add) Link for the Aquarium: http://www.neaq.org/index.phpEnjoy! : )
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leeroysphitz
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Fri Sep-11-09 11:45 PM
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7. I was once asked to come to Boston. I said no. |
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Edited on Fri Sep-11-09 11:47 PM by leeroysphitz
Boston ain't my kind if town.
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Forkboy
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Sat Sep-12-09 03:39 AM
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leeroysphitz
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Sat Sep-12-09 09:21 AM
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10. There ain't no golds and there ain't nobody like me. n/t |
rug
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Sat Sep-12-09 09:36 AM
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11. Go to Denver when the snow falls. |
leeroysphitz
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Sat Sep-12-09 09:41 AM
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12. No. Why don't you come home to me? |
rockymountaindem
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Sat Sep-12-09 12:20 AM
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8. There's no happy hour in Mass. |
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Otherwise it's a great place. Living here for the past two years has been a really cool experience. You should just walk around town and see what you find. It's easy and there's lots of cool stuff to stumble across.
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SoxFan
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Sat Sep-12-09 10:24 AM
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JFK Library (Red Line to JFK/UMass)
JFK birthplace (Green Line to Coolidge Corner); Michael Dukakis lives nearby, so you might run into him on the trolley!
Adams National Historic Site (Red Line to Quincy-Adams) in Quincy. Home of two presidents. Lurch doesn't live there anymore, unfortunately.
Salem, Mass (commuter rail Newpuryport line); a bit hokey, but fun. The Peabody Essex Museum can take care of your Serious Stuff, and there are lots of interesting shops around the architecturally neat downtown.
Museum of Science (Green Line to Science Park).
Museum of Fine Arts (Green Line to Museum); world class collection, especially French Impressionists and ancient Egyptian.
If you have access to a car, go to Concord. Stop at the North Bridge, part of Minute Man National Historic Park and site of the Revolutionary War battle. Then head over to Author's Ridge at the cemetery, where Ralph Waldo Emerson, Henry David Thoreau, Louisa May Alcott, and Nathaniel Hawthorne are slumbering.
Thai Basil. It's a good, inexpensive restaurant on Newbury St., a place where "inexpensive" isn't usually part of the discussion. Great phuket noodles. Makes for a nice pit stop if you're browsing the shops in the neighborhood.
Any local Italian bakery in the North End, Somerville, Cambridge. Cannollis are one of God's greatest gifts to humankind.
Canobie Lake Park. An amusement park that combines some modern rides with an intimate, old-time charm. It's about half an hour north of downtown Boston in Salem, New Hampshire.
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petronius
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Sat Sep-12-09 10:40 AM
Response to Reply #13 |
14. I'll add a vote for the PEM (also, the Charlestown Navy Yard if you like ships) |
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Do lots of walking around - it's a great walking city. The textile mill museum in Lowell (IIRC) is cool, as is the whaling museum in New Bedford.
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SoxFan
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Sat Sep-12-09 07:34 PM
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18. The Whaling Museum is awesome! |
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We took my wife's parents and grandparents there a few years ago. It was a fascinating mix of science and history.
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UTUSN
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Sat Sep-12-09 11:09 AM
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15. Thanks, all. I knew DUers would be better than guidebooks. I've been Google-mapping like crazy. n/ |
OffWithTheirHeads
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Sat Sep-12-09 11:40 AM
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16. Worst drivers IN THE WORLD! |
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The only driving rule I could discern when I was there is that the biggest vehicle ALWAYS has the right of way.
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peekaloo
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Sat Sep-12-09 11:51 AM
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great walking city though
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Fri Apr 19th 2024, 10:36 PM
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