Just one link in the massive anchor chain for the USS Missouri in Pearl Harbor, Hawaii
Travel Tuesday photo: Anchor Chain of USS Missouri
Travel Tuesday photo: Talking Trash Can of Malmö
The city of Malmö, Sweden is known for having trash cans that thank you for not littering when you make a deposit in them!
Travel Tuesday photo: Sunrise over Uluru
Travel Tuesday photo: Lone Peak, Big Sky, Montana
Big Sky Resort is one of my happy places. This is Lone Peak which tops out at 11,166 feet (3403 meters). From the top you can see across Idaho and into Washington state as well as into Wyoming.
Travel Tuesday photo: A bull formerly atop a grave
A large bull that was once atop a grave at the Kerameikos Archaeological Site in Athens, Greece. This one is now in the museum while a replica has replaced it outdoors.
Travel Tuesday photo: Changing of the guard at Amalienborg Palace
Lodging Review: Huntley Lodge, Big Sky, Montana (2025)
My last visit to Big Sky was in 2019, just a year before the world changed. While our most recent previous stays had been at The Summit condos, our 2019 stay and our stay this year was at the Huntley Lodge, a hotel. This building was the original lodging at the resort and is located right at the base. Our club has been trying to get back to Big Sky ever since our last visit, but employee housing has become such a difficult thing that one entire wing of the hotel has been given over to housing the workers. That’s made getting reservations quite difficult. However, this year our club attended as part of a larger group from our ski council and with roughly 175 guests we were finally able to secure rooms.
The lodge underwent renovations in 2021, so I was excited to see the upgrades since our last visit. The lobby is mostly the same and the common areas got some new carpet and wallpaper but I’ll concentrate this review on the hotel room itself.
Guest Room
The wing that is open for guests has a fairly long hallway with a dogleg about halfway down. Our room was right in the “outside” part of the dogleg. That meant the room’s layout was different from a standard rectangle hotel room and also gave us a bit more floor space, which was nice.
The bathroom was immediately on the left when entering the room. The bathroom in this configuration is not as large as the one we had in the more standard rooms but it was fine. The sink was on the right side and positioned slightly to the right, so you didn’t have to worry about squeezing between the counter and the toilet. There were two sets of ceiling lights: one over the mirror and one for the room in general, including over the shower stall. In addition, there was a button in the lower middle portion of the mirror that backlit it, though we didn’t use that at all. Though you can’t see it in the photo below, there was a make-up mirror on a wall-mounted arm that could swing out from the wall and tilt as needed. It had its own light, which was quite helpful.
Travel Tuesday photo: The Rocky Mountains
A small part of the Rocky Mountains as seen from Vail Ski Resort.
Travel Tuesday photo: Trinity Church, Lower Manhattan
The Trinity Church in Lower Manhattan, New York City. Construction was complete in 1846 and it was the tallest building in the US until 1869 and the tallest in NYC until 1890.
Travel Tuesday photo: Church of St. Paul in Passau, Germany
The Church of St. Paul in Passau, Germany. It’s the oldest church in the city and was built on parts of the old Roman wall.









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