Custom Weekends: Wash Those Men Right Out of Your Hair

STAY
Highland Farm Bed & Breakfast, 70 East Road, Doylestown, 215-345-6767, highlandfarmbb.com. Rooms $120 to $170 Sunday to Thursday, $150 to $225 Friday and Saturday. (Two have fireplaces!)
EAT
For dinner: The Freight House, 194 West Ashland Street, 215-340-1003, thefreighthouse.net. For lunch: Pizzas, Italianate sandwiches and salads at Café Alessio, 24 North Main Street, 215-340-1101.
DO
Essentials Salon and Day Spa, 454 North Main Street, 215-489-8800, spaessentials.net. (Ask for Sara or Alexy). James A. Michener Art Museum, 138 South Pine Street, 215-340-9800, michenerartmuseum.org; Mercer Museum, 84 South Pine Street, 215-345-0210, mercermuseum.org; Fonthill and the Moravian Pottery and Tile Works, East Court Street and Swamp Road, 215-348-9461, fonthillmuseum.org.
TRAVEL TIME
40 miles from Center City; 50 minutes if you’re lucky on I-95.

“I love Rodgers and Hammerstein!” Liza said.
You can love Rodgers and Hammerstein and still be a little leery of a B&B with rooms patterned on their works. Would South Pacific’s namesake chamber feature coconut shells and a grass bedskirt? What pseudo-Siamese horrors might The King and I room hold? Never fear; Christine Cole, new owner of Highland Farm, where Oscar dwelt for 20 years, has been content with sly suggestion: a handsome palm-frond-print spread for Nellie and Emile, petite Thai sculptures for Anna and His Highness. When Cole bought the place, Hammerstein’s stepdaughter Susan (who married Henry Fonda) stopped by to share family secrets, which Cole now happily imparts. What with the big wraparound porch, tennis court and lush landscaping, a stay at Highland Farm is like a visit to a friend’s country manor — if only one had such friends.
Liza and I would happily have settled in on that porch with books from Oscar’s study, but I’d heard great things about the massages at nearby salon/spa Essentials. The reports were under-exaggerated; we were so smoothed, stroked and soothed that we floated out giddily an hour later, men banished from our muscles and hair. The next day, we took in Doylestown sites — the quirky exhibits at the James A. Michener Art Museum (in the former county prison), concrete czar Henry Mercer’s over-the-top Fonthill estate and Moravian Potter and Tile Works, and the Americana-on-steroids at the Mercer Museum — without once having to worry whether our husbands were bored.


PHILLY
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