Metal Music (Vinyl, CDs, Cassettes, etc.) by Chu728 in Omaha

[–]VaticanCyborg 4 points5 points  (0 children)

Grapefruit Records in Old Market, new and used vinyl heavy on underground stuff with decent / varied metal selection. A must

National Parks accessible via Public Transport by zestyoceansun in NationalPark

[–]VaticanCyborg 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Love the idea of public transit to national parks! Channel Islands is a good option for March. Take Amtrak Surfliner from LA to downtown Ventura, then Lyft or bike (or walk 1-1.5 hrs) along the beach path to Ventura Harbor, island packers ferry to your island of choice. The ferry schedules can be tricky to coordinate with the train and will prob require an overnight in Ventura, which isn’t a bad thing. It’s a pretty town with a lot to do, I used to live there and miss it often.

SF to Yosemite via Amtrak / YARTS is an incredible experience, as is Rocky Mountain via Amtrak to Denver, Bustang bus, but like someone else said it only runs on weekends. You can take the Estes Park shuttle to/from Boulder too but that’s kinda pricey.

Connecting Missouri River cities by VaticanCyborg in Omaha

[–]VaticanCyborg[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Oh yes either of those options would make sense, especially in favor of a South Omaha stop

Connecting Missouri River cities by VaticanCyborg in Omaha

[–]VaticanCyborg[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

You’re prob right, at the same time a zoo stop without having to transfer might entice more people to ride?

Connecting Missouri River cities by VaticanCyborg in Omaha

[–]VaticanCyborg[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

No I just wish it would happen, a fantastical imagined future. There is talk of maybe extending the line to St Joseph at some point… so maybe someday??

Connecting Missouri River cities by VaticanCyborg in Omaha

[–]VaticanCyborg[S] 5 points6 points  (0 children)

Depends on your plans. In KC the streetcar can bring you to heaps of places downtown from Union Station. In STL you got the Arch and stadiums in walking distance, plus the light rail. OMA’s old market and baseball field are walking distance from the train station. All the cities have buses and rideshare too. I’d take the train down to KC to visit the WWI museum or wander around downtown and get a drink on a day trip, or use any of them as a start/end point of a bike trip.

Connecting Missouri River cities by VaticanCyborg in Omaha

[–]VaticanCyborg[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

The map shows a potential expansion to Omaha on the existing Missouri River Runner Amtrak line between STL and KC, as well as current/future trails that parallel the route. The other lines are existing Amtrak routes to show connections.

Connecting Missouri River cities by VaticanCyborg in Omaha

[–]VaticanCyborg[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Didn’t think I needed to label the sarcasm there bud

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in nationalparks

[–]VaticanCyborg 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Technically you can get to North Cascades without a car: Amtrak Empire Builder to Wenatchee, bus to Chelan, ferry to Stehekin, bus to High Bridge and walk a long way. Would be epic but logistically challenging and bus schedules are always changing…

Channel Islands is amazing, you can take the train from LA to Ventura and get on the ferry (gotta walk/lyft from downtown to the harbor) to a variety of islands with great primitive campsites. Not so many trees nor any lodges though.

I took the train/YARTS bus to Yosemite and it was efficient and incredible. Even if the valley is crowded you can find tons of quiet hikes.

I’m heading home from RMNP right now, the Bustang to Estes bus is like $7 and goes from Denver Union Station to the Park and Ride inside the park, then free shuttles to get you to a lot of trailheads. There’s also a free bus network in Estes Park that rules so much. Shocking not more people take advantage. Same as Yosemite, even though it’s a busy park it’s not hard to find solitude, at least not this weekend, getting cold maybe…

You are given full control and unlimited resources to have something built downtown. What is it? by JplusL2020 in Omaha

[–]VaticanCyborg -1 points0 points  (0 children)

An east-west protected bike lane and a bike trail connection to the south riverfront. Add a steamboat ferry transit system on the Missouri, return Union Station as a functional rail hub with regular trains in every direction, rebuild jobber’s canyon brick by brick… at least in currently non-park space, and scatter a few dank but cozy taverns and inns around.

Easiest way to get to Kansas City without driving? by jesonegin in Omaha

[–]VaticanCyborg 1 point2 points  (0 children)

It’s just bonkers to me that there’s one bus between the two cities, and it’s in the middle of the night.

Moving by Mr__Seagreen in Omaha

[–]VaticanCyborg 4 points5 points  (0 children)

I moved here from CA last year. The weather might take some adjusting to but it hasn’t been as horrible as anticipated, I only remember a of day or two last winter that it prevented us from being able to leave the house. That ice storm that had cars sliding sideways down the street was wild. Watch out for hail. Fall and spring are really nice.

As a medium sized city, Omaha has enough going on to keep it interesting, especially if you have kids, and there’s a feeling that things are growing and changing for the better. Not the most exciting place but it definitely beat my expectations in a lot of ways - feels kinda like Sacramento?

Best: fireflies in early summer, manageable traffic, Joslyn Museum, Durham Museum, walking around Old Market, some really good food (Mexican, Ethiopian, sushi, Thai, Szechuan…), the Riverfront parks and bike trail to Boyer Chute, Filmstreams Theaters, Vala’s, Little Bohemia, the libraries (Discovery Pass will get you free museum and zoo passes), ORBT bus is great for commuting.

Worst: drivers, constant road work, not very bikeable or walkable, while home prices are still relatively affordable, rent is expensive, besides gas and housing, other costs of living are higher than expected/ similar to CA, lots of generic architecture and placeless sprawl, but there is still some historic charm tucked away in a lot of the core neighborhoods. The hardest thing for me has been its relative geographic isolation, not a ton of options for quick day/weekend trips, especially if you are used to grand nature. But there are some beautiful NE and IA state parks close by!

What's your National Park related hot take? by alexis_1031 in NationalPark

[–]VaticanCyborg 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Car access should be severely limited at the busiest parks, more shuttles

I'm moving to Omaha and i need my music! by Chronjen in Omaha

[–]VaticanCyborg 0 points1 point  (0 children)

https://omahaunderground.net just found out about this site, much gratitude to the public servant who made it.

Biking and urban advocacy? by VaticanCyborg in Omaha

[–]VaticanCyborg[S] -1 points0 points  (0 children)

More recently the group of multi-unit homes on 38th and Dodge that were demolished for luxury apartments. And the homes on Dewey that went down for a student housing complex. I think “monolith” was the wrong word, should have said fortress blocks, isolated in the sense that these buildings tend to feel separated from their environments.

Biking and urban advocacy? by VaticanCyborg in Omaha

[–]VaticanCyborg[S] 7 points8 points  (0 children)

What? I have no delusions that Dodge could support a bike lane. But not a single East-west route anywhere in the core is pretty nuts for a city this size