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Well, my children all have plans for the Thanksgiving holiday, therefore, I will not have any plans. So I have decided to take a trip to Washington DC for the day. I will be traveling by train to arrive and depart for the trip. My questions are... will most things be open for this holiday? Will the bus and rail systems be moving about? Mostly everything that I want to see is outside and I do not plan on eating nor shopping. I am in hopes that I can pull off this trip for around $140.00 with the round trip train travel costing $128.00. I hitch hiked across the US when I was 16 so I know how to go places with out spending a lot of money and yet still having a blast. So any ideas you may have that you would like to pass on would be great. I will have 7 hours and 45 minutes to do everything I can. I am not beyond eating somewhere that will not cost an arm or leg but close enough I can walk from the memorials.

2006-11-20 06:36:08 · 5 answers · asked by S Groover 1 in Travel United States Other - United States

5 answers

The metro should be open, but I am not sure the museums will be since most federal workers are getting the day off on thursday. The museums, of course, will be available. You can eat at the food court in Pentagon City Mall - just take the blue line/yellow line metro to get there. Try to avoid eating at the expensive museum cafeterias and the hot dog stands (even these are expensive!). You can also take a nice walk around Georgetown (take the bus from Foggy Bottom metro) and Old Town Alexandria (blue and yellow metro lines).

2006-11-20 07:38:49 · answer #1 · answered by Atena4ever 6 · 0 0

Monuments and memorials, diverse neighbourhoods, true local taste this is what Washington, DC is; a spot unlike any other; just like this website hotelbye . Washington it's your home away from home with free museums and America's front yard. Washington is acknowledged all over the world as a image of the United States. Here, the spot you can't skip may be the Capitol. Capitol could be the seat of the House of Representatives and the Senate. The large dome, on the basis of the dome of St. Peter's in Rome, stands out especially different Washington buildings. Like Washington itself, the building has developed over time since the central part was built between 1793 and 1812. The final supplement, in 1958-62, increased the key façade where presidents get the oath. On one other part, a marble terrace presents lovely opinions over the mall and the city. The interior is resplendent with frescoes, reliefs, and paintings, especially the rotunda underneath the great cast-iron dome with a ceiling painting by Constantino Brumidi and large paintings of views from American history on the walls.

2016-12-23 04:59:18 · answer #2 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Here's a link for you: http://dc.about.com/od/hoildaysseasonalevents/a/Thanksgiving.htm and if you click on where it says "National Mall" you'll get the specifics on the area you're looking for and from there you can easily find what's open, what has restaurants, other places to eat nearby, transportation options etc.

Where better to celebrate our early days as a nation than the nation's capital? I'm sorry you're not going to be with family... but I'm happy you'll be celebrating this way. I'd like to suggest, for the most authentic Thanksgiving Day meal possible, that you visit the National Museum of the American Indian and have your dinner at the Mitsitam Cafe there. They have native inspired soups, sandwiches, entrees and desserts from five regions of Native Americans: http://dc.about.com/od/museums/a/NMAI.htm

Most things are open every day except Christmas Day and on top of that, admission to anything run by Smithsonian is free :)

Please enjoy your day. I think this was an inspired choice of how to celebrate! There's a power in being alone and something special about just being able to do your own thing and enjoy your own thoughts. I'm wishing for you a beautiful and peaceful day tomorrow... and I'll be thinking of you as my own family squabbles and argues and does their usual Home for the Holidays routine and I race about madly fixing dinner for 16 people.

If you see someone who looks like a slightly overweight 46 year old version of my Avatar... shake her hand, it'll be me, and I will have escaped the madness of what this day has become to cherish a glimpse of what it should be.

2006-11-22 02:08:21 · answer #3 · answered by thegirlwholovedbrains 6 · 0 0

I grew up close to DC so we never had a visit only commonplace field journeys..in any case look at the mall, holocaust museum, undercover agent museum, capital bldg, white residing house, lincoln memorial and confirm you consume a crab cake once you're on the city! close by stable point!!! maximum severely have stable strolling footwear, a digital camera and characteristic a blast!

2016-12-28 06:45:22 · answer #4 · answered by riquelme 4 · 0 0

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2006-11-23 08:52:30 · answer #5 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

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