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Chicago, Illinois

We began our trip to Chicago with a tour of Wrigley Field, home of the Chicago Cubs baseball team.

Opened in 1914, this is the second oldest ballpark in the US (Fenway Park in Boston is the oldest). The tour lasted about 90 minutes and took us through most of the facility and out on to the field. If you go, don’t go on a game day, like we did, since you can’t go to some places (locker rooms, media box, executive/game suites, etc.). Having said that, we still enjoyed our tour and feel we saw quite a bit.

Wrigley Field
Seating on top of houses across the street from Wrigley Field – most of these homes are now owned by Wrigley Field
The field all prepped for game day
Seated in the outfield – known for being the rowdy section
Standing in the dugout at Wrigley Field

Also, Chicago is not a cheap city! Be prepared to pay for parking on game days. Surprisingly, we talked our way into parking for free since we were there for an early tour and leaving well before the game started.

We stayed in the middle of town so we could walk to all the sights (we find traffic really tough in a big city). There are so many hotels along the river and walking around is fairly easy. This was the view from our hotel room.

View of the river from our hotel room

Our first evening in town we signed up for an architectural tour of the city by boat. There are a couple of companies in town that provide these tours though it seems one of the best is through Shoreline Sightseeing. Be prepared for information-overload. There is so much to see in a short period of time that you will quickly lose track of where to look. Here are some of the highlights from our trip. (Note: we went on a foggy sunset cruise so we couldn’t see many tops of buildings – which we thought was kind of neat).

The Westin North Shore (our hotel)
A drawbridge
Chicago Tribune
Trump Tower
Our tour guide
Navy Pier
Willis Tower (was Sears Tower)

One unexpected thing we noticed on our river tour…we could see the cars from under each bridge.

We ended our 1st day walking back along the river and captured two more great views of the city at night.

jj

Who does what here? Honestly, it’s really a good collaboration. We both decide where to go and plan the trip together. Once at our destination, Jeri takes most of the pictures and edits them for our website, though Joel has a much longer arm and is better at taking our selfies. Once the pictures are done then Jeri writes the posts and Joel edits them before they go live. Joel is also the IT guy when things go wrong (but what could possible go wrong when a computer is involved?)

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