US North East Tourist Ideas for Italian Visitors

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Discussion Overview

The discussion revolves around suggestions for tourist destinations in the North East U.S. for Italian visitors. Participants share various ideas, including cities and attractions, while considering travel distances and preferences.

Discussion Character

  • Exploratory
  • Debate/contested

Main Points Raised

  • Some participants suggest Montreal as a nice destination during the current season.
  • Washington DC is proposed as a must-visit location if within a reasonable distance.
  • New York City and Long Island are mentioned, although some participants note that the Statue of Liberty has already been visited.
  • Block Island and Newport, Rhode Island, are considered for their historic mansions.
  • Portland, ME is suggested for its appealing features, especially during the off-season.
  • Boston's Natural History Museum at Harvard and the Museum of Science are recommended, with a focus on their unique exhibits.
  • Participants express a desire to compare the quality of museums in NYC versus Boston, depending on interests in art or natural sciences.
  • Mystic, Connecticut is highlighted for its quaint charm and attractions like Mystic Seaport, which recreates a colonial whaling port.
  • There is a discussion about the geographical and administrative nuances of Mystic, including its division between Groton and Stonington.
  • Another participant shares a similar experience with a confusing town structure in Fairfield, Connecticut.

Areas of Agreement / Disagreement

Participants present multiple competing views on the best destinations, with no consensus reached on a single preferred location or attraction.

Contextual Notes

Some suggestions are dependent on travel distances from Connecticut, and there are unresolved questions about the ongoing status of attractions mentioned, such as the tall ship project at Mystic Seaport.

Stratosphere
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I am having relatives over from Italy to visit us in America. I live in the North East U.S. I am looking for suggestions of places to take them to. Any ideas?
 
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Montreal is nice this time of year.
 
Stratosphere said:
I am having relatives over from Italy to visit us in America. I live in the North East U.S. I am looking for suggestions of places to take them to. Any ideas?

Could you provide your approximate location and the distance you are willing to travel?

Washington DC seems like a no-brainer if it's not too far.
 
New York City (Statue of Liberty), or if that's too busy, try Long Island.
 
NY, DC and Boston would be top 3, no real reason to go anywhere else if you're on limited time
 
Wellesley said:
New York City (Statue of Liberty), or if that's too busy, try Long Island.

They have already been to the Statue of Liberty once.
We were thinking of going to Block Island and Newport RD to see the old Mansions there. I live in CT, were probably won't want to go anymore than 200 miles out of CT.
 
Too bad about the distance restriction. Portland, ME has some nice features, and if you are willing to wander farther up the coast, there are lots of nice sights to see. This is the off-season, so hotel and restaurant prices will be reasonable.
 
If Boston is OK, hit the Natural History museum at Harvard (the Glass Flowers will entrance anyone) and perhaps the Museum of Science.
 
turbo-1 said:
If Boston is OK, hit the Natural History museum at Harvard (the Glass Flowers will entrance anyone) and perhaps the Museum of Science.

We were thinking of going to a large museum in NYC or Boston, which city has better museums?
 
  • #10
Stratosphere said:
We were thinking of going to a large museum in NYC or Boston, which city has better museums?
Depends on what you want. If you want to see large installations of "art" NYC is pretty much the go-to. If your relatives like geology, natural science, etc, I would suggest that you head for Harvard, and if you have any kids in the group that would enjoy demonstrations of scientific concepts (even 60+-year-old kids), it's hard to beat Boston's Museum of Science.
 
  • #11
Once I spent a very pleasant weekend in Mystic Connecticut. It was a whaling center and still makes money from whales without harvesting a single one.
 
  • #12
Mystic is a really nice area, along with Gillette castle, both are great one day trips. I also love Cape Cod / Martha's vineyard.
 
  • #13
I live in Mystic, Connecticut. Every summer, thousands of tourists come into walk around our little "quaint" village. If you do come by, please tell me what the heck it is that people do while they are here! (Other than photographing themselves under the sign of Mystic Pizza).

Actually, as Jimmy mentioned, there's the Mystic Seaport, which is a recreation of a colonial whaling port in the manner of Sturbridge Village and Colonial Williamsburg. Fans of boats, model boats, and maritime history generally love it. There's whale-watching outings, but sometimes they're just seal-watching. It's conveniently halfway between NY and Boston, and right off the interstate.
 
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  • #14
Chi Meson said:
I live in Mystic, Connecticut. Every summer, thousands of tourists come into walk around our little "quaint" village. If you do come by, please tell me what the heck it is that people do while they are here! (Other than photographing themselves under the sign of Mystic Pizza).

Actually, as Jimmy mentioned, there's the Mystic Seaport, which is a recreation of a colonial whaling port in the manner of Sturbridge Village and Colonial Williamsburg. Fans of boats, model boats, and maritime history generally love it. There's whale-watching outings, but sometimes they're just seal-watching. It's conveniently halfway between NY and Boston, and right off the interstate.
Yes, I meant Mystic Seaport which if I read the map correctly is not in Mystic, but in West Mystic across the Mystic River. When I was there there were some college kids building a full size tall ship. They were very enthusiastic and I enjoyed listening to their descriptions of the work they were doing. I don't know if that is an on-going project or it is finished. I was there more than twenty years ago.
 
  • #15
jimmysnyder said:
Yes, I meant Mystic Seaport which if I read the map correctly is not in Mystic, but in West Mystic across the Mystic River. When I was there there were some college kids building a full size tall ship. They were very enthusiastic and I enjoyed listening to their descriptions of the work they were doing. I don't know if that is an on-going project or it is finished. I was there more than twenty years ago.

The "What the heck IS Mystic?" speech:

Ahem

"Mystic" is actually not a town itself, but a village. There is no incorporation nor municipality that is "Mystic" other than the zip code and a fire district (There is of course the Chamber of Commerce, which now extends halfway across the state). The river divides two towns, Groton on the west and Stonington to the east. The seaport is on the Stonington side, and the Pizza is on the Groton side (as am I). Both sides of the river are still "Mystic." There is a "West Mystic," but that is a smaller village halfway between Mystic and Noank; many maps incorrectly call the Groton side of Mystic "West Mystic."

Then there is "Old Mystic" which is at the top of the river/estuary. Back when Old Mystic was just "Mystic," The Stonington side of Mystic was called "Mystic Bridge," the upper Groton side was called "Mystic River," and the lower Groton area was "West Mystic."

We'll have a short review quiz just before break today.
 
  • #16
We have a similarly confusing town a bit to the south. The town is called Fairfield, but there are villages scattered all over it, each with its own post office, though one has been closed for a while. In the NW part of town, there is the village of Larone, which was once a farming community, now reduced to a loose cluster of run-down old houses. In the NE, there is the village of Hinckley that houses a school for kids with social/familial problems, a couple of convenience stores and a few residences. South of there is the village of Shawmut - just a cluster of homes and a hydro-dam, and west of Shawmut is Fairfield Center - a non-descript little place with a couple of convenience stores that grew up around the intersection of a couple of roads. Except for Larone, each has its own post office and zip code, yet they all located in Fairfield. The Postal Service should shut down all those little one-room post offices if they want to save money, rather than cutting back to a 5-day service schedule.
 

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