New Haven is my kind of town.

Took our time driving up to New Haven today, via the dirty ugly smelly New Jersey Turnpike again.  I tell you something for nothing – that must be one of the more expensive bits of toll road that I’ve had the misfortune to need to use… it cost us $2.05 when we got off the Pennsylvannia Turnpike, $11.80 for using the New Jersey Turnpike, $13.10 for the George Washington Bridge and then another $1.25 when we got off somewhere else, I don’t know I lost track!

imageimage Still, glad we were going North, because the traffic going South was totally cactus! imageWe made an unexpected stop at the PEZ factory as we made our way through Connecticut for a place to stretch our legs, but that is a whole other post as it is full of silly photos and stuff.

Anyway, we made it to New Haven just after lunch time and decided to go check out the B&B first up. We had booked to stay at The Farnam Guest House, which is a beautiful quaint old building on the north side of town on Prospect Street.imageThe Farnam Room where we were staying for the night, also another bedroom whose occupants had not yet turned up for the evening, the main parlour and dining rooms were also gorgeous.farnham-house.jpgfarnam-house-2.jpgfarnam-parlour.jpgfarnam-dining.jpg
So, after we settled in we decided to go take a drive around town before heading to the centre of town to check out the University and the local shopping district. I have to say that I am finding Connecticut is absolutely my kind of town. I love the architecture here, I love the beautiful old houses, the buildings that belong to Yale are all gorgeous, and I can only imagine how lovely the place looks when it is all green with new foliage (I’ve said it everywhere we have been – but the North East REALLY needs more evergreens!), or even better, during the fall when the leaves are al turning. New Haven reminds me a lot of some of the university towns in England, Oxford, Cambridge etc… I am pretty sure that is no mistake. So we went on a bit of a real estate tour, checking out beautiful houses as we drove past 🙂new-haven-lawyers.jpgnew-haven-house-1.jpghouse.jpgreal-estate-new-haven-1.jpgreal-estate-new-haven-3.jpgreal-estate-new-haven-2.jpgThe photos are a bit on the wonky side, but that is what you get for snapping out a moving car window with an iPhone!

After pottering around the suburbs a bit, we went down to the town centre which is is full of gothic style sandstone buildings, and of course, bulk Yale stuff everywhere you turn. My university sells a couple of hoodies, a jumper or two, some umbrellas and maybe a hat, some cufflinks and a compendium… Yale has several stores dedicated to merchandise and you can get Yale and Yale Bulldogs, printed on nearly anything! Even a garden gnome – and you know I totally would have bought one of these silly things home if it weren’t for the stupid airline’s luggage allowance rules. 😉yale-stuff.jpgyale.jpgyale-shop.jpgI would have loved for it to be a little less cold, so that I could have done a bit more wandering around taking photos of the buildings, but as it was, it was hard to stay out of the car for more than five minutes together.architecture-new-haven-1.jpgarchitecture-new-haven-2.jpgarchitecture-new-haven-3.jpgarchitecture-new-haven-4.jpg
After checking out a little bit of pottering around town, we went for a drive to ferret out the Lighthouse, which we were assured is at the aptly named, Lighthouse Point. Only it turns out you can drive for ages around the shoreline in this area and NOT find a public access to the water. We could find the lighthouse in the distance, but it appeared the only place to get anywhere near it was a private, fenced off, boat ramp area. Oh well, a bit more driving round in circles and finding lots of dead end streets confirmed that suspicion. So we head off looking for any access to an area of East Haven beach, and we eventually found the one area that seemed to have parking and access to the beach – mind you, everywhere we looked there were signs up saying ‘No Parking, Residents Only, All Others Will Be Towed’. Enquiries a little bit later revealed that these signs only applied during peak season when the car parks were busy, and it was to make sure that East Haven residents could go park near the beach and keep the tourists out… no shit, it seems that there is so little public access to the beach, that they make it a priority to allocate parking for residents, and bugger the tourists! It makes no sense to me – surely if you live nearby you have some way of getting to the beaches?! But apparently not. Anyway, we parked by the beach by encroaching on a restaurant car park and went out there for… oh, about three minutes. Given it was *mumble mumble* below zero and the winds were apparently around 35MPH, it just was not pleasant at all, no matter how pretty the area was.
east-haven-beach.jpgeast-haven-beach.jpgimageIt was at about this point that we decided to resume our real estate tour of Connecticut, and keep checking out beautiful houses. The median price in New Haven is approximately $240,000 which sounds awesome if you ask me, even if many of these homes are considerably smaller than what we are used to back home. Obviously many of these houses might have been much more than that, but $240K for a property in East Haven, Connecticut close to beaches and all the amenities of New Haven? I think I have found somewhere I could handle living on the East Coast now – San Francisco being the only place I have found that I would consider living in, on the West Coast. 🙂 connecticut-house.jpgconnecticut-house-3.jpgconnecticut-house-2.jpgAfter a quick bite to eat (delicious and cheap lobster rolls… why, yes. I am planning on overdosing on all the fresh seafood while we are in New England!), at the Sandpiper restaurant with the handy carpark, we then tootled back the the guesthouse for a warm and toasty night in.image

Surprise stop at the PEZ Visitors Centre

Not sure why we pulled over at a rest stop and visitors welcome centre when we neither needed a rest nor a welcoming, but we did. And inside were greeted by a display case of PEZ dispensers, of all the bizarro things. Turns out, not 30 mins away and not 5 mins out of our way, was the world famous PEZ factory and visitor centre, and Mr K decided that we HAD to go! In all fairness, a break from driving with these nutters was probably well deserved at this point. So off we went to the PEZ Visitor Centre in Orange, Connecticut! pez-visitors-centre.jpgFirst thing you are greeted by when you step through the door (other than instant diabetes from the smell of the sugar) is a giant Minnie Mouse riding a custom made Chopper hanging from the ceiling, complete with flashing LED lights and fancy paintwork. Apparently the guys from the Custom Choppers TV show were made into PEZ dispensers and in return, they made the PEZ guys this cool motorbike! Wish it was down on the floor so you could see it a bit better, I have a feeling it was quite fancy.Pez-chopper.jpg Opposite the chopper is the Reception lady who gives you a ticket, on a special PEZ lanyard for the grand price of $5 and a $2 discount towards any gift shop purchase… you can tell they aren’t trying real hard to make money off this thing.pez-collectibles.jpgOpposite the reception is a Great Wall O’Pez Dispensers! There are 792 of them mounted on the wall in an enormous collection and in amongst these is THE most rare PEZ dispenser of them all, with only one known to exist in the entire world (no idea why there is only one).wall-of-pez-792.jpg And it’s in this pic and it’s a yellow base with a green lizard like head and I have no idea what it is or why it is so damn special, but it is! 🙂
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Then we went on into to read up on the History of PEZ, and I learned that they were originally from Europe and originally designed as an anti-smoking aid for adults! And I thought that was pretty cool actually, given we now absolutely associate them primarily with children (children and Seinfeld, but it’s a grey area).
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There was a bit of a spiel on how they make the PEZ dispenser heads and how they are modelled, and then loads of different ones on display for people to have a look at, so I took some pics of ones I thought The Small Child might like.how-pez-are-made.jpg pez-angry-birds.jpg super-mario-pez.jpgMr K was rather taken with these ones, and some that had Stanley Cups on them (I forgot to take a pic of the Maple Leafs Stanley Cup one, I’ll be in trouble now!)sports-themed-pez.jpgAnd there was even a limited edition rather expensive looking Swarovski Crystal Ladybird PEZ dispenser…swarovski-pez.jpg
Then we got to see into the factory floor to see how the PEZ machines work and how they make the PEZ dispensers and how the candy is made. This factory pumps out over 12,000,000 pieces of PEZ candy every single day which is a figure that just blew my mind, no doubt because I have just never thought about it before.candy-machine.jpgcandy-machine-2.jpgcandy-machines-3.jpgThis last lady is making Mario Mushroom PEZ dispensers,candy-machines-4.jpgWhich look just like this one: super-mario-mushroom-pez.jpg

We also found a cool Pikachu one for The Small Child but was unable to find one to buy 🙁 and we were desperately looking to see if they had gotten on the Minecraft bandwagon yet, but alas there was nothing. pokemon-pez.jpgpaul-franks-pez.jpg
Then we discovered that there are huge conventions each year where serious PEZ collectors get together and buy and sell and swap their PEZ dispensers, and they meet up all over the place… that’s no weirder than the National Association of Hungarian Pigeon Fanciers or the Cleveland Hibiscus Club, right? pez-swap-meets.jpg
Then, predictably, it was onto the giftshop where you could buy collectable PEZ dispensers:
collectable-pez.jpgBuckets of just PEZ candies in bulk without bothering with a dispenser:pez-by-the-bucket.jpgThere was Halloween themed PEZ dispensers:halloween-pez.jpgAND the full set of Presidential PEZ dispensers which we ran into in bits in Washington DC: presidential-pez-1.jpgpresidential-pez-2.jpgThere was also plenty of PEZ apparel – because apparently there are some people out there whose lives are just not complete without a PEZ hoodie – and I thought this kids t-shirt was kinda cute:pez-kids-tee.jpgI actually enjoyed my little 30 minute break from the highway at the PEZ Visitors Centre, and if all of this sounds like I was surprised, then I guess that is because I was… still, if we had to stop somewhere for a break and a walk around an iconic ‘something’, I am so glad it was the PEZ factory and not America’s Largest Ball of Twine or something!
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