Welcome to the Benson Family Reunion Blog!

Patti, Ann, Mark, Alex & Matt look forward to hosting the Benson Family Reunion in July 2007. We can't wait to see you!

Tuesday, July 24, 2007

Weather Report


Wondering about the weather forecast in Charlotte for the 2007 Benson Family Reunion? 2 days of mid 80's and 2 days of upper 80's with a 70% chance of rain on Thursday and isolated or scattered thunderstorms all other days (typical Charlotte weather).

Thu Jul 26
T-Storms
84°/67°
70 %

Fri Jul 27
Isolated T-Storms
89°/69°
30 %

Sat Jul 28
Isolated T-Storms
88°/68°
30 %

Sun Jul 29
Scattered T-Storms
84°/67°
40 %

Safe Travels to All


Safe travels to all as you begin your journey to Charlotte. Looking forward to seeing you at Ann's house on Thursday.

Wednesday, July 4, 2007

Tuesday, July 3, 2007

Birkdale Golf Course: Introduction


For those interested, Ann is hosting a 9-hole golf outing as one of the Activity Options during the family reunion. As posted on the agenda, you need to RSVP to Ann by Friday, July 13th should you wish to golf.

The course is named "Birkdale" and is located in Ann's neighborhood. Read the below text and visit www.birkdale.com for more information on this beautiful course.

About Birkdale...

The Arnold Palmer designed Birkdale golf course, is a public facility with a with "private club" atmosphere. Located on 200 acres of rolling terrain, carved between tall pines and natural streams, Birkdale is a challenging 7,013 yard, par 72 course made up of Bermuda fairways and Crenshaw bent grass greens offering a true test of golf skills.

Birkdale has received a good deal of acclaim, being voted one of the top five public golf courses in North Carolina. When it opened in 1997 it was voted The Best New Golf Course in North Carolina and was named Charlotte's Best Public Course in 1998. Four sets of tees allows golfers of all abilities to enjoy the layout at Birkdale. The course features a number of elevation changes, which are appealing to the eye and add to the challenge. Well placed water hazards require players to use every shot in their bag.

Always well manicured with firm and true greens, Birkdale Golf Club provides an outstanding daily fee golf experience that should not be missed.

Family Reunion Agenda: At-A-Glance


Patti emailed the complete Agenda for the 2007 Benson Family Reunion to everyone on July 1st. Please note the following highlights for each day as posted on the Agenda:

Thursday, July 26
PM: Arrivals, Family Dinner & Free Time

Friday, July 27
AM: 3 Activity Options...1) Golf, 2) Shopping or 3) Relax/Play Time
PM: Fun & Games, Free Time

Saturday, July 28
AM: Talent Show
PM: 3 Activity Options...1) NASCAR Garage Tour, 2) Tour of UNC Charlotte, or 3) Relax/Play Time

Sunday, July 29
AM: Church, Family Pictures & Tour of Grandparents Garden
PM: 2 Activity Options...1) Nature Walk, School Tour & Slave Cemetery or 2) Relax/Play Time

Please note that we are always open to other suggestions and ideas. Let us know if there is anything you'd like added or changed!

Sunday, July 1, 2007

Family Reunion Agenda - Watch Your In-Box


Welcome to July!

The 2007 Benson Family Reunion is a mere 25 days away with the event kicking off with dinner at Ann's house on Thursday, 7/26 at 5:00 pm. Patti, Ann & Mark have finished a draft of the Family Reunion Agenda that is designed to keep our growing clan on track and on time to ensure maximum fun during our time together.

Patti will be emailing the Agenda to each of you shortly (most likely today) so watch your in-box.

Please note that a 9-Hole Golf Outing has been scheduled (for those interested) on Friday, 7/27 at 8:30 am. Cost is $33 per person. Should you care to participate, there is a mandatory RSVP to Ann by 7/13.

Sunday, June 24, 2007

Confirmed: Bill & Jean's Travel Plans


Bill, Jean & Kylie are confirmed to arrive into Charlotte by car on Thursday, July 25 and plan to depart on Monday, July 30.

Bill is interested in visiting a NASCAR garage during his time in the Charlotte area. Anyone else interested in doing the same?

Wednesday, June 20, 2007

Confirmed: Tom & Nicole's Travel Plans


Tom, Nicole, Andrew, Amy & Alison plan to arrive in Charlotte by car on Thursday, 7/25. Our favorite New Hampshire residents plan to depart Charlotte on Monday, 7/30 for Oriental, NC.

Psst...rumor has it that Alison is sporting multiple teeth, Andrew is a 2-wheel biking pro & Amy is feverishly taking notes on Andrew's technique for future 2-wheeling hijinks of her own!

Saturday, June 16, 2007

Recommended "Must See Site" - - The Blue Ridge Parkway


The Blue Ridge Parkway is a 469-mile scenic corridor that runs through the southern Appalachian Mountains from Shenandoah National Park, in Virginia, to Great Smoky Mountains National Park, on the North Carolina-Tennessee border. It has much in common with these parks -- notably motor-vehicle access to hiking, camping, and picnicking opportunities; cultural and historical attractions; and modern lodgings nestled in some of the most striking mountain scenery in the East.


Conceived in 1933 as a Great Depression-era public works effort, the Blue Ridge Parkway was begun in 1935 -- the first rural national parkway -- and finished in 1987. Its aim was to link the parks and to fight the area's dire unemployment. Today the parkway attracts more than 20 million visitors.


The Blue Ridge's attraction is its elevated views of the wooded mountains and valleys that typify the Southern Highlands: modest peaks cloaked in a lush, leafy canopy of oak, hickory, and maple, with an occasional evergreen highlight of hemlock, spruce, or fir. With the exception of North Carolina's 6,684-foot Mt. Mitchell, the highest mountain east of the Mississippi, only a few Blue Ridge summits peak above 4,000 feet, but, the Blue Ridge Parkway reaches its highest point at Richland Balsam, which is 6,047 feet. Enveloping this expanse is the bluish haze that allegedly gave the Blue Ridge its name. Originally a product of moisture given off by the forest, today's haze is frequently infiltrated by airborne pollution that occasionally restricts views and has damaged some of the high-elevation foliage.


More than six decades and 600 million visitors after it first opened, the parkway attracts a steady but uncrowded flow of weekday visitors from April through September; highest visitation is on summer weekends and during October's peak fall foliage, which usually occurs the second or third week of the month. In particularly popular areas, such as Virginia's Mabry Mill (Milepost 176.1), the traffic can sometimes resemble a big-city traffic jam -- the parkway is the most visited area in the 368-unit National Park System. Few travel the road in winter, and sections are frequently closed due to ice and snow.


For more information:






Tuesday, June 12, 2007

Dr. Beach Gives NC's Ocracoke Beach the #1 Ranking in America!


Move over, Florida and Hawaii. Your beaches are no longer the best.

The nation's best place to get a tan and enjoy the ocean's waves in 2007 is North Carolina's Ocracoke Island, a place so remote that even people in the offices of "Dr. Beach" — Florida International University professor Stephen Leatherman — didn't know where to find it on the map.


"It's not the end of the world, but you can see it from here," Leatherman said from Ocracoke, the first beach not in Florida or Hawaii to earn the top spot in his annual ranking of the nation's top 10 spots on the shore.


Technically, it's Ocracoke Lifeguarded Beach that is the nation's best. But Leatherman said there's little that separates those 300 yards of postcard-perfect sand from the rest of the island, almost all of which is protected from development as part of the Cape Hatteras National Seashore.


"Here, you have 14 miles of unspoiled, undisturbed barrier beach," said Leatherman, director of Florida International's laboratory for coastal research. "Where do you find that in the world?"
Ocracoke is at the southern end of the Outer Banks, the fragile chain of barrier islands along North Carolina's coast known as the "graveyard of the Atlantic." Accessible only by boat or private plane, there are only about 800 full-time residents of the island where the pirate Blackbeard met his untimely death at the hands of the Royal Navy in 1718.


"People shouldn't come here to play golf, and don't come here for the Hilton spa or something like that," Leatherman said. "They're not going to find those things here. What you will find here — it's like going back in time with very quaint, small inns. It's my favorite getaway island beach. And it's definitely that."


Ocracoke has been a favorite of "Dr. Beach" for years — he ranked it No. 3 in 2006 and No. 2 in 2005. By winning this year, it will be retired from consideration, along with other past champions.


"Obviously, it's a great honor to be put up at the top of the heap," said Julia Howard, the administrator for the Ocracoke Island Museum and Preservation Society, who has lived on the island for 35 years.


Leatherman ranks beaches on 50 criteria, using a 1 to 5 scale. No beach has ever gotten all 250 points, and Ocracoke ranked somewhere in the 230s, he said. The sand, for example, isn't lily white, so it lost points there.


He considers only swimming beaches, which leaves out those along the Maine and Oregon coastlines, where the water is just too cold. Beaches with lifeguards get high points, as do those that balance the natural environment and the built environment.


"I'm just a stickler for detail," he said. "There's no perfect beach by the rating criteria, but there are so many great ones."


Earning the No. 1 ranking on the "Dr. Beach" list is usually a tourism booster. When the north beach at Florida's Fort De Soto was named the best in 2005, Leatherman said, the number of hits on a related Web site jumped in one day from 1,000 to 10,000.


But the remote nature of Ocracoke and its place as part of a national seashore should spare the island's 25-foot sand dunes, topped by sea oats, from an onslaught of beachcombers.
"When things are inundated with people, it isn't quite the same place any more," Howard said. "We hope people who do come here would honor our beauty and keep it looking the way it does for a long time."