Had I brought my main camera and my good quality lenses with me to America on our 2012 trip this post covering a couple of days venturing into the country’s capital would have been replete with photographs and I’d be filling in the gaps with lots of details about buildings and architects and history and all that stuff you couldn’t care less about. But I hadn’t so it isn’t. I mean, I could still write all that stuff but I think I’d prefer to wait for a future visit, should one happen, so that I can take better shots with which to illustrate the text nobody will be reading anyway.

It’s fortunate that I’d thought to sling my older DSLR and kit lens into the suitcase at all – I’d harboured an inkling that maybe my wife would want to use it (nope) – because this did give me a fallback option to simply using my phone, but it just wasn’t the same.

This was the second visit we’d made to the United States in two years and both to similar geographical locations as the main purpose of the trip was to pay a visit to my wife’s sister who was living there at the time for work-related reasons. Our America 2011 trip saw us based in Virginia at my sister-in-law’s apartment with occasional hops across the state border to Maryland where her boyfriend was based. In 2012 we actually stayed with the boyfriend as his house was substantially larger (everything’s bigger in America) and we were also travelling with my in-laws this time since their US-based daughter was now pregnant. Both spots weren’t too far from Washington, D.C. hence us checking the place out both years.

When we’d seen the city in 2011 – Washington, D.C., 2011 – it had just been the pair of us and we’d hit museums and galleries because those are the sorts of things that interest us. For 2012 there was less of that as it didn’t interest others quite as much (plus we’d done it before, plus I was still fuming about leaving my camera at home), hence the following photos being mostly just external shots of some of the American capital’s tourist landmarks.

Brace yourself now for some photographs of the White House, the Jefferson Memorial, the Capitol building, the Washington Monument, and the Lincoln Memorial, just like every other person who visits Washington, D.C. While the material for the buildings and structures and general appearance looks similar and aesthetically-pleasing it’s interesting to see the different styles of architecture surprisingly working seamlessly together.

Those photos were obviously from a simple walk along the length of the National Mall in Washington, D.C., and if you’ve never visited the city before then you can expect to do the same thing when you eventually do because everyone does.

During this trip we hit the city of Washington twice. On the second occasion we made for the Chinatown area in order to have a meal together; sister-in-law and boyfriend, parents-in-law, and my wife and me. The place we ate at was Tony Cheng‘s, an Asian restaurant, and while I can’t remember the specific details of why we ate there – it might have been because our anniversary and my in-laws’ anniversary had all been in that week but it could easily have also been to celebrate the pregnancy, or both, or none – and I can’t recall what we ate, I’m going to assume it was good because we didn’t really have a bad meal in America. I can tell you that some of us had Polynesian Grog cocktails, though.

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One Comment

  1. Penelope Rice

    So, those are the pics you took without having your *proper* camera?? They look better than the ones I take with my *best* camera.

    You would hardly recognize DC now. Downtown is all boarded up and blocked off. The National Mall, particularly around the Capitol Building, looks like fucking Baghdad. Away from the immediate downtown/National Mall area, DC is normal, but then, all the touristy stuff, which you’ve already seen anyway (other than the African-American museum, which I don’t think was open when you visited), is on the Mall. I think I ate at Tony Cheng’s once. The most authentic Chinese food in the DC-area is in Rockville, Md. That’s where you can find all the authentic Chinese dishes that “mainstream” American Chinese restaurants won’t touch, like duck intestine and 100-year-old eggs. For Korean food, DC natives go to Annandale in Va. For Vietnamese food, you go to the Eden Center in Falls Church. DC itself is best for Ethiopian and West African cuisine and for Indian food.

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