USA – the EAST

Boston, Lexington, Cape Cod, Montreal, Quebec City, NYNY, and Ottawa.

Our Last Day In Washington DC

Above is the free H Street Streetcar that we used every day to get into town. It’s a straight shot to Union Station and from there a long-ish walk to the Mall. I walked it once and then I chose lyft. Most of the time everyone else, with their average 17,000 steps per day, took that walk.

From unionstationdc.com, look at all these words: “Union Station D.C. is a superbly restored, historic, mixed-use, intermodal transportation and shopping center located just blocks ((many blocks!)) from the U.S. capitol Building. .. Washington Union Station is one of the country’s first great union railroad terminals. Designed by renowned architect, Daniel Burnham, the station opened on October 27, 1907 and was completed in April 1908.”

Rick and Jim took me out for a last day excursion while the others went to Georgetown and ‘a nice walk’ in that they walked back from Georgetown via the Mall and a museum or two. So many steps. We covered our longest distances by Metro and the H Street Streetcar.

From outside the front door of Union Station you’ll find the Postal Museum. I like it!

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Rick had identified the Phillip’s Collection (founded in 1921) as something to look at, and indeed it was something. It’s one of those places I’d never heard of but was fantastic.

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And lastly, SAAM, the Smithsonian American Art Museum which includes the National Portrait Gallery.

We popped off the Streetcar a stop early so we could enjoy this street of murals.

Back home we scavenged the refrigerator and freezer for dinner which was fun. And we don’t have game night, we have game week! Rick brings a bag of options and it’s totally fun although I’d give up after a few rounds (or before they even got started!?) and head up to bed while play extends into the early hours. Ah, the theme, everyone had fun, just the way I like it.

Marita, Lill, Tony, Jim, Rick, Per

Lucky Dog Me

On Friday we split up into three different activities, all of us visiting friends and relatives in opposite directions. I got to go see Caleb and Hannah and ELLIOT! Caleb is my sister Lona’s son Trevor’s son, and Hannah and Caleb got married here in the DC area in July 2023. Caleb and Hannah got married!

And then along came Elliot in 2024 on June 19th, My Birthday! WOW!! I always enjoyed sharing a birthday with Christa who was born on the 20th and now we can make it a trio of birthdays:):):)! Christa is Caleb’s older sister. The youngest sibling, Charis, is pregnant now so More Babies on the way, we love the babies. The moms and dads are cool too, of course…

I’m going to try to put more pictures together since the ones I took are not worthy, but here’s one from WhatsApp that is adorable. We were eating dinner (thanks Hannah!) and Elliot was so enthused to eat everything too. Like fists of food from plate to mouth, entirely avoiding ears and hair. Caleb and Hannah were pretty amazed because it was the first time he had fed himself his entire meal, and a big pile of seconds too.

(from WhatsApp)

Mostly At Night

I stayed home for most of the day, resting, reading, and messing with my pictures. Then around four, Rick and Jim were home and we walked together to meet the rest of us at the restaurant where we would celebrate Jim’s birthday. “We” (read me) were walking slowly and the rest of them caught up with us a block before our arrival.

Here are some pictures from that walk.

We gathered at Belga Café..

..for Jim’s birthday fete and everyone was pleased with their beverage and their meal.

(group picture from Tony taken by the waitress)

Christopher from Perfect Private Tours picked us up at the restaurant in a comfy 10 passenger Sprinter van to take us around the Monuments At Night.

He told us interesting and entertaining stories for 3 hours!

Andrew Jackson in Lafayette Park

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Here come several from the WWII Memorial.

Jefferson.

Martin Luther King Jr, “Out of the mountain of despair, a stone of hope.”

A wall of fabulous MLK quotes and yet another view of the Washington Monument.

Small part of the Korean War Memorial.

Lincoln, a favorite of most visitors.

It takes a village.

Rick, Lill, Jim

Raising the flag at Iwo Jima located in Arlington Ridge Park in Virginia, near the Arlington National Cemetery.

We got home late, snacks were procured, and for the first evening since our arrival, no games were played.

Let’s Go For A Walk

The above map is pretty good, the best I could find anyway despite that it’s missing a few favorite spots such as the Hirshhorn and the Postal Museum.

Along the way, in Mount Vernon Triangle, this tells all about the mural “Zero Hunger“.

We lyfted ourselves to the Jefferson Memorial with the intention of visiting the monuments and walking *all* the way to the end of the Mall.

Soooo many kids everywhere.

Below, from Rick, we all were hot for Delila, complements of the National Park Service. Lill fed Delila her lunch apple and made a new best friend.

(from Rick)

Across from Jefferson.

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FDR’s memorial especially touched me this time. Talk about quotable quotes: “The test of our progress is not whether we add more to the abundance of those who have much; it is whether we provide enough for those who have too little.” FDR January 20, 1937

Here are “six columns wrapped in bronze bas-reliefs depicting scenes from the New Deal. On a nearby wall are these same images on sheets of bronze. The idea is that the columns are the rollers of a printing press, while the wall is the paper. Notice that the images on the columns are sunken in—negatives—and those on the wall protrude from the metal—positives.” from npplan.com.

Next came MLK. We entered on the river side seeing the carving first but the design is for you to come through the split rock first and slowly come around to see the carving. The rock says: “Out of the mountain of despair, a stone of hope.”

You could spend a lot of time thinking about the quotes along the walls. I keep coming back to this one: “We shall overcome because the arc of the moral universe is long, but it bends toward justice.” Washington National Cathedral, March 31, 1968. Remember when we all thought that we would overcome?

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These names were added to the Korean War Memorial in 2022. This isn’t my picture, I instead went looking for a bench in the shade and ended up with a group of Vietnam Vets. I was standing under a tree when one of them came across the path to offer me his seat and a cookie. It was a welcome rest and a memorable 20 minutes.

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I didn’t attempt the Lincoln steps either, but here’s the view from the plaza.

The Washington Memorial is a dominant feature of the skyline, peeking its way into so many views.

Vietnam.

Below is the clock tower of the Old Post Office building that was a Trump hotel for a few years and in 2022 sold to the Waldorf Astoria group.

This article, written in February 2018, is great in talking about Robert Irwin’s piece “48 Shadow Planes” and it’s place in the space. At least the Waldorf Astoria made it “great again”. The picture on the right is from the top of the clock tower.

This is my last picture. Was this the day we went to the White House and I couldn’t bear it? I even forget how we got home!

That’s our place with the red door. The front garden was lovely and there was a table and patio seats out back.

It’s Jim’s birthday, tomorrow, but a friend from back in LA ordered these two cakes knowing there were seven people here, and goodness we ate on those cakes for days. Between the cakes, the grocery shopping, and all our porch food from the wayward delivery, we had plenty to eat.

Great Falls Park In Virginia

Great Falls Park is part of the National Park System but from all the lists I can find, it is not a named National Park. What other areas have this designation, I don’t know! But the Senior Lifetime National Park Service pass worked perfectly. The National Park Service protected the land in 1960 and Great Falls Park opened to the public in 1966.

The NPS website is not very informative but wikipedia of course will tell you everything starting from 1785.

Rick and Jim rented us quite the machine, the Ford Expedition, and we 7 traveled in comfort and style.

Great Falls Park is 45 minutes or so, totally depending on traffic, from DC. It’s very very lovely. I was planning to go as far as I could with enough umph left to get back, and that worked great thanks to everyone else who helped me over the hump of the first view point and at the end too. Boulders! Ankle grabbing rocks! Roots! But mostly it was groomed trails. I turned back at the place where there would be extended scrambling required while the gang moved on.

Welcome to Great Falls Park

Jim, Rick, Marita, Lill, Per, Tony

Rick took this near the end of the trail, where the old canal bed would flow into the Potomac.

(Rick’s photo)

Ice CREAM!

Since we were driving around in what could be mistaken for a pope-mobile, we decided to swing by the “The Cathedral Church of Saint Peter and Saint Paul in the City and Episcopal Diocese of Washington, commonly known as Washington National Cathedral or National Cathedral.” There was scaffolding around one side and it was very expensive to get in, so we enjoyed the grounds and headed back into the soul-crushing DC traffic.

Some snaps out the window on the way home.

The only info I could find on this guy: “Mother, a mural at 37 New York Avenue NE, was painted by Philadelphia-based artist NOSÉGO in 2019.”

We got home on the late side after having gone for a big grocery run, and omg there were 7 bags of groceries from Whole Foods on the porch. After calls made and emails exchanged it turned out to be the previous tenant who forgot to change their delivery address. The store and the property manager said ‘it’s yours now’. Unfortunately it had been on the porch for at least 5 hours so we had to pitch a lot of it. Still, it was like Grocery Christmas.

(Lill’s photo)

No Way “We” Can Keep Up This Pace

Jim, Tony, Per, Marita, Lill, Rick waiting for the streetcar.

What we did: Air and Space Museum, Museum Cafe, Hirshhorn Museum, National Museum of African American History, NASA Headquarters, MatchBox Pizza.

Everyone gathers their own breakfast from the cabinets and refrigerator full of food.

And then we were off! We took the free streetcar that takes you to Union Station.

The rest of the group walked from Union Station to the Air and Space Museum but I decided to ‘shepherd’ my steps from the start so Rick went with me in a Lyft. We got there before the others and my heart got stolen by the smells of a grilled hot dog. It wasn’t very good, I don’t need another one, but oh yes I was very happy to have this one.

Here’s the thing about our visit to the Air and Space Museum, most people’s favorite Smithsonian – more than half the exhibits were gone!

But they had a Millennium Falcon and other planes to admire.

I was going to take this guy’s tour but a few minutes in I saw there was a movie playing narrated by Neil deGrasse Tyson about the Dark Universe so I decided to do that instead, cute as this guy was, the movie was in a theater with cushy seats.

Between Air and Space and the Hirshhorn was this thing that screamed my name. Stop! Look at me! Take my picture!!

sigh… and now on to the Hirshhorn Museum that we all adored and intend to visit again.

Oh goodie, two of my favorites! From their website: “Basquiat × Banksy is an exhibition of two major paintings, one by Jean-Michel Basquiat (b. Brooklyn, New York, 1960–1988) and the other by Banksy (anonymous; b. near Bristol, England). Placed in dialogue, Basquiat’s Boy and Dog in a Johnnypump (1982) and Banksy’s response, Banksquiat. Boy and Dog in Stop and Search (2018), reveal throughlines among street art, contemporary art, and the popular imagination.”

We just got stuck in this room which is why we missed so much. Laurie Anderson: Four Talks.

(above from their website)

Only a buzz through the rest of the second floor.

And the entire third floor was dedicated to this guy where I could poke my head out of the elevator and go back down to meet the group on time.

Along the walk to our next destination.

The National Museum of African American History. Sure, you know, but it never hurts to be reminded, and important for those who don’t know. Let’s hope we don’t try to pretend otherwise.

I picked a couple easy images, and below is a woman I sat with for 30 minutes and we chatted about this and that, it was her birthday, it was lovely, and all this reminds me again and again how we did not overcome.

More walking.

(from Tony)

From Tony: “Here at NASA Earth Information Center getting info from the Director of NASA Earth Satellite program, my friend Dr. Karen St. Germain.”

They call this the Immersive Room. It’s small but we could all fit in and get these shadow pictures. Interesting images are projected on all four walls, ceiling, and floor. We expressed all the ooows and aaahs.

Then we all went for dinner at MatchBox Pizza. The Pizza was fantastic. We all agreed, worth going out of your way.

Karen, Tony, Marita, Lill, Per, Rick, Jim, me

Our waitress was a delight and took the above picture then she said sure take my picture too. Thank you sweetie!

A Comfortable Travel Day To DC

The Early Arrivals

Above are the early arrivals and below, the whole gang gathered for first night greetings. My flight went well including an empty middle seat, ahhh, the joy of an empty middle seat. Per and Marita are in from Sweden, Rick and Jim from Long Beach, and Tony and Lill from Culver City.

Jim, Lill, Marita, Tony, Per, Jim

Georgetown And Then Home

Since we didn’t fly out until late afternoon we decided to go into Georgetown for a look around and the fine folks at Rosewood Hotel stored our bags for the few hours we were out and about. It was again, as it was every day, hot. We gave up early and went to the airport an hour before we had to just to lavish ourselves in their air conditioning.

Our first plan was to eat some early lunch at Filomena, which we did do, but not early, because this sign for a massage tripped us up and we had to respond with a sigh and Yes, Please!

After the massage and lovely lunch we walked up many blocks in search of thrift store where Windy could do some treasure hunting. Georgetown is indeed lovely and I can see why people choose to stay here and commute into DC for sightseeing.

Our Last Day In DC

Our plan for today: the Library of Congress, the National Botanic Garden, and the Sculpture Garden of the National Museum of Art.

First, the Botanic Garden.

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The Sculpture Garden.

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The Library of Congress.

We didn’t get a good view of the Capitol Building during the Monuments at Night tour because the front has surrounding scafolding.

And our beds at the Riggs Hotel “set within a former bank building dating from 1891.” From their website: “We are honored to have been recognized as the #1 Best Hotel in Washington, D.C. for the second year in a row in the Travel + Leisure 2023 World’s Best Awards.”

Christa came to have breakfast with us back on day 1 when she was on her way back to Sacramento, but I forgot to use this picture. Unfortunately the picture is unbearable, I couldn’t make it better but maybe I’ll try again later. Thanks for making the time Christa!

A Tour Of The Monuments

And a couple MUSEUMS. And btw, It was so hot. H.O.T. hot.

The view from the roof garden of our hotel..

..notice the roof over the atrium and the columns of the National Portrait Gallery..

..and notice the columns of a few buildings around our neighborhood..

..and the roof garden itself where it was too hot to even consider sitting down for a second.

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Our plan for the day was to visit the Natural History Museum, the Hirshhorn Museum, and then take the Monuments at Night tour.

From the Natural History Museum, this giant piece of quartz.

And the Hope Diamond drew a crowd.

Below is my only picture from the Hirshhorn. This was a huge floor to ceiling triptych that I loved. I went back to this gallery to look at it again. Why, I asked myself. Why do I like this one so well and others not. I still don’t know.

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We picked up some sandwiches for dinner and ate here at this park before catching the bus for our Monuments at Night tour. Notice those swings hanging in front of a fixed table. We saw this exact structure in front of a few restaurants too.

First drive-by on the tour, you can see the raindrops on the window.

Our last stop was at the Korean War Memorial. We got into the scene and the Sky Opened. It was as if someone on a ladder dumped a bucket of water on your head. And then he followed you around dumping bucket after bucket. We made a dash for the bus and that was it for our tour.

Windy got this shot moments before the Big Dump. It looks like Life Magazine.

Into DC For A Few Days

Al-ex-ander-Ham-il-ton. You sang it, I know you did.

Our hotel is right around the corner and down the block from the National Portrait Gallery so, soon after getting settled, we popped in there. It was oddly organized and here’s an explanation from their website:

The National Portrait Gallery shares this magnificent National Historic Landmark Building with the Smithsonian American Art Museum. It is one of Washington’s oldest public buildings. Begun in 1836 to house the U.S. Patent Office, it is also among the nation’s finest examples of Greek Revival architecture. A recent renovation restored its most dramatic architectural features, including skylights, a curving double staircase, porticos, and vaulted galleries illuminated by natural light.

Someone else’s idea but I grabbed the shot too.

This was a great show of modern photographs.
I Dream A World – Selections from Brian Lanker’s Portraits of Remarkable Black Women (Part II).

Our own Queen Liliuokalani. part of the exhibit 1898 US Imperial Visions and Revisions.
This time was so well explained in one of my favorite books, Unfamiliar Fishes by Sarah Vowell.

You know what I’m thinking.

The atrium at the National Portrait Gallery.

Out for a walk to dinner we took a swing into the US Mint Coin Store.

Nice job on what has become a common display these days.

We walked through Chinatown and had a very tasty dinner in a small restaurant with nothing but Chinese people in there.

It didn’t, however, seem like there was much of a Chinatown but we might have missed the good parts?

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Washington DC is go-for-it in pot world USA, including store-front shops like Granny Za’s and look what’s in our minibar in the hotel!

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And not to forget that our dear sister Lona came out to join us for lunch after her visit to the Museum of the Bible where you can find the scientific evidence that confirms the age of the universe at approximately 10,000 years old. We enjoyed ourselves and our lunch and didn’t talk about the age of the universe.

Alexandria VA

Above is a map of Alexandria from 1863. It looks much the same today.

(All of today’s pictures are from the internet except one that Windy took.)

These days, still with full grown trees.

1=location of the wedding 2=where we were staying for the wedding 3=a visit to Alexandria 4=we’re going into DC for three nights.

We were on a route to look for street art but I think we were in the wrong neighborhood altogether. Here are some of what the guidebook called the highlights, pictures from the internet, that frankly didn’t much inspire. I didn’t even get out my camera…

Windy took the picture of the figures on the grass and the internet shows us how they were first installed.

We walked all down King Street where we did some shopping (read Windy bought 3 tops and a necklace) and then enjoyed the waterfront. We were hoping to take a ride on the Potomac River ferry but the timing didn’t work. It was pretty blazing hot in the pounding sun but surprisingly comfortable in the breezy shade.

Windy cooked us a breakfast and a dinner from the first day’s Instacart delivery, and we ate lunch in a nice place in Alexandria. We are certainly not going hungry.

Here Comes The Bride

I had a small job for this Wedding Day, to follow the list of photos from Hannah, getting the people together, who’s next, where’s the last bridesmaid, etc. They did a photo shoot early at a park with the bridal party, and another shoot after the ceremony at the church.

Beth took a few pictures at the park while the event was proceeding.

The guest book, where people left messages in a book full of pictures of the bride and groom. Hannah made this book and I think the idea is brilliant and the execution was perfect.

The beginning of the gatherings after the ceremony. Hannah has seven brothers and sisters and the rest of the family on both sides is pretty prolific too. At one point the whole stage was full!

The reception is here in this large church hall, so well lit with all those cool windows.

And they had a square dance caller who got really great participation.

Some of the professional photos are available now and I snagged this one right off!

Rehearsal Dinner Walking To The Mall

Hannah and Caleb are getting married tomorrow!

Check out this menu for the rehearsal dinner served up family style with all the steaks and the salmon you want. It was quite delicious and the groomsmen were hitting it hard! Did Caleb Finally get all the steak he could eat?

The Grandma and the Great Aunts, then on the right we have the Great Aunts and Another Great Aunt!

And let’s include our newlyweds from a few weeks ago in Hawaii, Caleb’s little sister Charis and her sweetie Peyton!

LAX Queue Up At The Ladies

It seems I just don’t care What I look like… I think it’s the compression socks that really set off the ensemble.

We arrived at Dulles International after a most uneventful flight and easy-peasy transfer to be greeted by our home-away-from-home for the first four nights of our visit East, here for Caleb and Hannah’s WEDDING. It’s wedding season folks, for Lona’s grandchildren.

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Windy ordered a quick InstaCart delivery and we ate tasty food we both enjoyed.

It’s only a three hour time change but still, I’m writing this at 8am the next day, 5am in LA, and I’ve already been awake 4 hours. I’m seeing a nap in my near future because late this afternoon the wedding events begin.

A Last Day in New England

I tried to get some feeling for Les and Elizabeth’s neighborhood but half a block in it started pouring. Here are a couple houses, next door and across the street.

Another walk in the woods in yet another wonderful park of Massachusetts Conservation Land.
Last Meal = Lobster Roll!
Then L&E took me to the Alewife station where I took a train to a bus to the airport. It was so civilized.

JFK Presidential Library and Museum

JFK Presidential Library and Museum, designed by I.M. Pei and dedicated in 1979.

The Kennedy-Nixon debates and the election returns, television featuring prominently in the displays. All the TVs were playing footage of the events and a few chairs were available in all the rooms to settle down and watch.

I was particularly taken with the live press conferences and sat through a few. Newsfolk asked questions on the topics of the day. Kennedy answered in complete thoughts, each thought making grammatical sense. Imagine that, if you still can.

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There were a few displays of era specific objects.

Also there were alcoves dedicated to then current events: Bay of Pigs/Cuban missile crisis, NASA, Vietnam, Peace Corp, Freedom Riders, etc each with artifacts and TV stories you could watch.

Some Oval Office furniture. The RFK alcove was particularly interesting but no picture.
In the back, this aviary (not an aviary but what would you call it?).
The view from the back through the aviary, looking out over a small part of Boston Harbor.

More Museums YAY

First stop, The Museum of Fine Arts Boston. There was a big show “Monet and Boston: Legacy Illuminated”. I think Monet’s pictures are easy to like and mostly I just want to be where he is, to see this sight for myself.

What was different and fun was how they often told the story of a picture’s connection to Boston, and hanging side by side would be an artist’s work that influenced the featured Monet. Also there were several pictures where they had available the same scene in different light. Here are examples.

This, for some reason, caught me by surprise and I liked it especially.

What’s more exciting than to find an artist you’ve never heard of whose work calls your name? (She does make pictures for children’s books so what does that says about me..Oh well.) This is how I felt about “Paper Stories, Layered Dreams: The Art of Ekua Holmes”​.

How charming is the top photo of a major piece used for the entrance to the exhibition and below are a few cropped versions of her portraits. These are made from paper, paint, and objects.

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Next stop, the Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum.

I feel lucky to get to catch this show of six Titian paintings gathered from five museums and being shown at the Gardner in Boston. Titian made the paintings as a set commissioned by King Phillip II of Spain based on a poem, “The Metamorphoses”, by Ovid.

The show is called “Titian: Women, Myth & Power” and subtitled by the NY Times “Can We Ever Look At Titian’s Paintings the Same Way Again?”.

This is the first and last of the six paintings. The first ““Danae,” 1551–1553, in which the god Jupiter, a serial abuser, finds his way into a young woman’s locked room, transforming himself into gold dust.”
And this is the last, “The Rape of Europa,” 1559-62.

And here are a few more as they are mounted for the exhibition.

I’m including a lot here because this is one of those once-in-a-lifetime opportunities, to see all these Titians in one place. This NY Times article about the show (and where I got these pictures) helped me understand my feelings.

The Titian exhibit is in the new wing of the Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum, the original mansion created and built by Isabella in 1898-1901 to house her growing collection of world class art and plenty of other less respected works since she bought what she wanted. From wikipedia: “Well-known artworks in the museum’s collection include Titian’s The Rape of Europa, John Singer Sargent’s El Jaleo and Portrait of Isabella Stewart Gardner, Fra Angelico’s Death and Assumption of the Virgin, Rembrandt’s Self-Portrait, Aged 23, Cellini’s Bindo Altoviti, Piero della Francesca’s Hercules, and Botticelli’s The Story of Lucretia.”

Here’s where Titian’s “The Rape of Europa” hung before the big exhibit, the only Titian belonging to the Gardner, and where, I assume, it will return.
There were three very large floors of rooms looking in some respect like this one.
Inside the courtyard of the Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum.

A Cape Cod Farewell

Thanks Les! Let’s talk about the food since shopping, cooking, eating, cleaning up was 80% of our days.

And it was GOOD.

Les and Cinthia did all the cooking. Dinner Breakfast-Lunch-Dinner Breakfast-Lunch. The dinners were especially splendid fresh fish Feasts! And all the FABulous side dishes. Oh my!

We went out for the last dinner, pictures below, and then out for breakfast on our last morning.

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Bleu, the most delicious restaurant dinners on Cape Cod. Although dinners back at our place were a competition I’d say.

That’s our table there at the far right.
Here’s our place above the garages, and the views left and right below.

So long lovely Cape Cod, catch ya next time!

A Cape Cod Welcome

Too bad I didn’t get any of the lightening flashing across the sky and I didn’t get any pictures of the dumping rainstorm that followed. We did get a nice drive and walk-about in before the big dump.

But first, here we are, good morning! John, Cinthia, Les, and Elizabeth, arms out covered in baking soda hoping for some poison ivy relief.

Four university academics enjoying a coffee and some pastry.
Les and John

Maybe cormorants and an egret.

Cinthia and John. “Yes” says Cinthia, “my dear mother spelled my name with an ‘i’ bless her heart.”
Another inlet with more boats in the distance.
Elizabeth and Cinthia and me and Elizabeth (thanks Cinthia for the picture), and wind in our hair.

You Can Look

You can look but you’d better not touch!

Poor Elizabeth has been in considerable discomfort for the last week having, before I got here, worked in her garden and not noticed all the poison ivy. Her forearms from wrist to elbow, covered. Her torso and toes have got it too. Hourly moans emanate from her sad weary soul.

And with all the walks we’ve been doing lately I see that stuff everywhere.

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Great Meadows National Wildlife Refuge

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The picture below is from Elizabeth’s garden. Flowers planted this year, perennials, and volunteers, her garden is a coat of many colors. There are at least six different plants just in this little patch.

After our walk at Great Meadows we went for a tour of the Louisa May Alcott Orchard House where she wrote “Little Women”. They had made some interesting covid accommodations and it was very fun, very original house and furnishings without refurbishments, but no pictures allowed. So after dinner we watched the latest of oh so many versions of “Little Women” on tv.

Look Who Came to Boston Too

It’s Victoria, one of my zoom call Persian Poetry Pals! Victoria lives in Vermont but comes to Boston often and was able to work it out so we could have lunch together. WOW!

We met at Harvard Square and took a very short stroll through her alma mater, below, and then ate at a white tablecloth Italian place where the waiter took the picture, above.

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What’s coming next is back in Lexington, Elizabeth and some pictures of her garden (as per Les, “her pride and joy”) and their house in the near dark.

Then we continued on for a fairly long walk through a most beautiful part of Lexington. The below is the only picture I took because I spent the rest of our delightful walk in the muggy dusk swatting at mosquitos.

Then Les, who is making daily accommodations to his advancing Parkinson’s, fixed us a feast, as usual!

Taking the Train to Boston

I rode the Amtrak luxury train Acela from New York to Boston. Les picked me up at the station and then we had a Thai feast with Elizabeth and their neighbor friend Jim.

I had a whole double row in the Business Class Quiet Car all to myself. It was a dream ride.
The scenery was so splendid and I didn’t take a single picture. It was gorgeous with mostly handsome forests and boat filled harbors. This is just leaving New York.

MoMA the Morgan P&G&D and Farewell

I’m traveling tomorrow to Boston and might have time to get a few pictures together to tell the story of this day. Here’s the main thing though, if you are a museum person you have to buy a ticket to New York. After all this time of looking at our walls imagine how it feels to look at objects that make your heart beat fast.

Now it’s the day after tomorrow and I haven’t got to this last day yet, but I WILL when I get home!

Above is the hot dog stand I have never yet missed when visiting New York.

COPIED from the The Morgan Library and Museum website, so I won’t forget the glory of the “Shahzia Sikander: Extraordinary Realities” exhibit and be reminded of the unfathomable vocabulary of art-speak. (I also enjoyed the original building, the library, and the gorgeous display of early bookbinding.)

“Born and raised in Pakistan, Shahzia Sikander (b. 1969) gained international recognition in the 1990s for her pioneering role in bringing painting traditions from South and Central Asia into dialogue with contemporary practices. Her work interrogates cultural identity, racial narratives, colonial and postcolonial histories, and issues of gender and sexuality. Through multivalent narratives layered across time, geography, and tradition, she shatters established hierarchies, norms, and stereotypes, using her imagination and playfulness to conjure extraordinary realities.

“This exhibition explores the first fifteen years of Sikander’s career, from her formal training in manuscript painting as a student at the National College of Arts in Lahore, Pakistan, where she enrolled in 1987, to her early years in the United States. Sikander moved to Providence in 1993 to study at the Rhode Island School of Design. She then lived in Houston for two years before settling in New York in 1997. Her work during this period reflects a new openness in the United States toward artists working outside of commonly accepted models as well as a dramatic shift in the perception of Muslims following the events of 9/11. The potent vocabulary of Sikander’s early work continues to permeate her oeuvre today, and the subjects she confronted then have only become more relevant to contemporary discourse.”

And COPIED from wikipedia.

“As an undergraduate student in Lahore, Shahzia Sikander studied the techniques of Persian and Mughal miniature painting, often integrating traditional forms of Mughal (Islamic) and Rajput (Hindu) styles and culture The traditional form of miniature painting requires equal measures of discipline, gesture and expression in order to execute a careful layering of color and detail. Compositionally, miniature paintings exhibit an extensive display of colorful imagery including, human forms, animals, patterns, shapes, dots and connecting lines. Miniature paintings often engage in contextual complexities such as, religious narrative, scenes of battles and court life. Sikander has integrated the techniques and forms of traditional miniature painting, relying on the layering of images and metaphor to drive her work. Her forms and figures exhibit a quality of continual morphing as transparent imagery is layered, providing a complexity with endless shifts in perception. Sikander’s complex compositions “dismantle hierarchical assumptions and subverts the very notion of a singular, fixed identity of figures and forms.” The increasing approach of continual morphing explains Sikander’s relationship to an ever-changing world where opposing societies coalescently interact.”

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Paul joined me for a visit to MoMA, the highlight being acres and Acres and ACRES of Cezanne drawings. SO many rooms of drawings. I hadn’t been in this version of MoMA’s life with yet another expansion, everything moved around, and more more rooms, it was disconcerting actually. I think I’d have to visit several more times before my longtime affection will return.

It was entertaining to turn the corner and exclaim “More!” at the Cezanne exhibit, and I did hunt down Matisse’s “Dance” and stroll through the rooms of Greatest Hits, so yeah, they’re still there, YAY.

Food-Transportation-Misc 16th-21st

Feelin’ it for the ‘hood.

Paul and Gretchen turned Lill on to this Swedish Candy store. Those are the folks running the store and with whom Lill could chat in speedy Swedish. Oh yes, I do enjoy the Swedish salty licorice.


We shared a delicious dinner at an Argentine place a few blocks down the road.
The Lower East Side/East Village parks I’ve visited: Tompkins Square Park, East River Park (my favorite), Hamilton Fish Park, Roosevelt Park, Seward Park. The best part about them is that they exist at all.
I thought this looked a little like a Disneyland version of a New York street.
Yes we did, we went to Katz’s deli and that sign says When Harry Met Sally Hope You Have What She Had…Enjoy!
We took the bus once, Lyft twice, 15 or so rides on the Metro, and miles and miles and miles on foot. I was concerned at first about the Metro stop near me, did it have enough trains, but it turned out to be perfect!

And speaking of transportation, citi bike seemed extremely efficient and well subscribed. We were sitting in a cafe across the street from this stand and watched a couple dozen people return their bikes and others take them away.
A spot for a salad/soup/sandwich just off the High Line.
A yummy snack at the tippy-top of the One World Observation Deck.

This is Scarr’s Pizza where I had two pieces of pizza, one glass of wine, and one bottle of water. Wanna guess the cost? I’ll tell you: Thirty Five Dollars. Shocking! The outside seating was full too. But was it good? I wanted to have the topping on the square piece put on the thin-crust triangle piece, but no, not possible unless you get the whole pie, which ok, I can understand.

These guys opened in the middle of 2020, just in time for lock down.
Biggie’s Cafe. It looked good but I’m not going to have time.
Chinatown, this was fun! We got a good meal and entertainment from the staff and guests at the Chinese restaurant. Then we walked to the end of the block where the Festival of San Gennaro was raging in Little Italy. We didn’t take even one step into that crowd!

Lill’s Last Morning

Lill’s last morning and we’re out for a 4-5 mile stroll. Oh my we have been walking a lot. I knew I’d have the afternoon free when at last I would spend many many hours not taking even one step so ok, let’s go. We walked around the East Village and then down to the East River Park.

Above, according to 6sqft.com: with 39 community gardens blooming between 14th Street and East Houston Street, the East Village is the Emerald City. The neighborhood boasts the highest concentration of community gardens in the country thanks to a proud history of grassroots activism that has helped transform once-abandoned lots into community oases.

Nice.
Urban wildlife.
You don’t often get a view without cars.

A pedestrian bridge to cross the FDR Highway, and under the Williamsburg Bridge.
Here’s a handsome park, 57.5 acres, along the East River and quite the opposite of Little Island. There are tennis and basketball courts but mostly it’s paths, grass, and trees, for running, games, and picnics. All the trash from the weekend was neatly bagged up by the fence. It was all remarkably lovely.

One World Observation Deck

You can see to the curvature of the earth..or so it seems anyway. Above are three of the four bridges to the east, from the top, the Williamsburg, then the Manhattan, and then the Brooklyn Bridge.

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We had tickets for Friday but since the visibility was Zero they were giving re-bookings and we got new tickets for Sunday.

They’ve been checking vaccination status and keeping the numbers down everywhere we’ve been. No excuse-me excuse-me to get a chance at the window.

We passed through the 9/11 Memorial..
..and past the Charging Bull. This is the line of people waiting to get a picture with the bull’s face. There is a line twice as long to have a picture from the back..

Lady Liberty and Ellis Island

We did what needed to be done: ‘All ferry ticketing is run through Statue Cruises, which is the only vendor authorized to provide tickets and transportation to Liberty and Ellis Islands.’

“Give me your tired, your poor, your huddled masses yearning to breathe free, the wretched refuse of your teeming shore.
Send these, the homeless, tempest-tossed to me, I lift my lamp beside the golden door!”

Lill has a picture of herself in this pose from so many years ago.
I know, my hair, always good for a laugh.

Here it is below, Ingalill herself, circa 1987.

The visitor’s center was very good, with interesting displays about the history and construction of the statue.

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The arrival building at Ellis Island.

When talking about Ellis Island we mostly hear numbers, how many passed through this hall, from where, how long did it take, how many were turned back, and how many were sent to the hospital. The displays here tried to personalize at every turn. We saw images of individuals, the things they brought, the clothes they wore, pictures of their families back home.

And for $10 you could use their computer for 30 minutes to try to find your relatives. Is this my grandfather? We thought he came in 1910, we thought he was 17, we thought he came from Ukraine but then google has never heard of Hamentz, Russia.

We three sisters remember the story differently so I’m going to tell my version! Grandpa told me that when he was coming to America, when he first caught sight of the Statue of Liberty he jumped off the ship and swam the rest of the way straight to New York City. But then he was the kind of guy who might very well make up a city to be from…

Inside our 30 minutes I couldn’t remember the first and last name of my other grandparents, all immigrants who would have come through Ellis Island. Lill couldn’t remember the full names of any of her relatives that came during the time frame (1892-1954) either! I think this resource is available online and you might not even have to pay the 10 bucks.

The below is a photo from the screen.

UPDATE Sep 26!

Above is the ship’s handwritten manifest including my grandfather’s entry, line 4, and this is a blowup of the Place of Birth in Russia. The typist had transcribed the name as Hamentz, so I started googling around starting with a K and look at that, Kamenetz (Kamenets) is a place in western Ukraine!

A Walk Along the High Line

from Wikipedia: The High Line is a 1.45-mile-long elevated linear park, greenway, and rail trail created on a former New York Central Railroad spur… The abandoned spur has been redesigned as a “living system” drawing from multiple disciplines which include landscape architecture, urban design, and ecology. Since opening in June 2009, the High Line has become an icon of contemporary landscape architecture.

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They’ve left remnants of the old train tracks along the way. It was fine to walk in the shade but mostly the day was HOT.
I read they chose plantings to match what had grown naturally along the tracks.
There was a lot of scaffolding which didn’t look that great but we welcomed for the shade.

Our traditional reflect-o and more of the natural foliage from the railroad tracks.

Art.
And more art. There are many art pieces on the High Line and wikipedia is happy to tell you all about it.

To find out about this eye-popping building I googled ‘jetson’s building on the high line’ and sure enough, there it was.

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The inscription above says ‘This book belongs to its owner Fathallah Saad. He bought it with his own money at the beginning of March 1892.’
We ended at the end, at Hudson Yard, more of that later.

Little Island

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Here’s an internet aerial so you can get an overview of its siting and the scale of Little Island. It’s a highly designed space, seemingly made for crowds to move along landscaped paths with occasional stops for a selfie. There’s not much room for ‘free play‘ and the amphitheater holds only 687 people, nice for the lucky ones who can get a reservation.

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One of the two entrances.
Those catawampus buildings are, in fact, catawampus!

Little Island is a vanity project of Barry Diller (from Bloomberg.com) While it may be Barry Diller’s ideal park, it doesn’t line up with the needs or expectations (or budget) of most of the 8 million plus New Yorkers, many of whom don’t have access to private outdoor space and need room to walk, play, party and sprawl. This is a pretty harsh review. Many reviewers are delighted with the space. My personal impression was dominated by ‘wow, this feels expensive’.

Music! You go Lill.
Notice the tallest building, One World, next to where the Twin Towers once stood.
Looking back.

9/11 Memorial and Museum

The fire station across the street from ground zero.

Every time I see a skyline picture with the Twin Towers I’m re-awakened to how totally they dominated the views. I remember the towers were very controversial at first and how over time I think we just got used to it.

(Internet picture)

And then they were gone.

(Internet picture)
(Internet picture)

The pools are situated on the footprint of the towers. The lighter building is the museum. The city has given up real estate where, on a typical weekday, an estimated 50,000 people worked in the towers and another 140,000 passed through as visitors, for the sake of this memorial.

The winged building is Oculus btw.

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Central Park and The Frick

We did a quick buzz into Central Park. Central Park is big, we probably missed your favorite place, but we did what we wanted to do.

I wanted to see Alice in Wonderland and make a picture for Rome. Here it is babe!

Constructed in 1959 by José de Creeft, commissioned by Delacorte where children are invited to climb, touch and crawl all over Alice and her friends.
But First! Gotta get a dog at the park!
Bethesda Fountain, centerpiece of the Bethesda Terrace, present in the park since the beginning in the 1860s.

Check out the buildings above, the ones in the distance. Notice you can’t see the top of the building on the left. This will play into the second part of our day.

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Now it’s time to talk about The Frick, currently known as The Frick Madison. Briefly, The Frick Collection has been housed in the mansion of the late Henry Clay Frick who passed in 1919. The mansion and the fabulous collection has been open to the public since 1935. In March 2021, the Collection temporarily relocated to Frick Madison, at the Marcel Breuer-designed building at 945 Madison Avenue, during the renovation of its historic building. I heard that The Frick has a 2 year lease.

All this doesn’t fully express what a monumental change the new building brought to the exhibition of The Frick’s collection. If you have the least interest at all in museums I promise you will want to click on this link to an: article from the NY Times.

No photos allowed, I got this from the NY Times article referenced above, the picture in it’s home of 80+ years and how it looked on moving day. You might think NOOO you might think YESSS but you won’t be indifferent. Do read the article before you decide.

A Walk Across the Brooklyn Bridge

I very likely would not have done this were it not for Lill, her youth and get-up-and-go. After her arrival in late afternoon we took the train over to the base of the bridge. This is not a cut and paste but rather Night Sight that certainly could have done a better job.

Starting from the beginning, here’s the Chambers Street Station.

We’re heading into Brooklyn around 6:15pm.

The crowds were no problem, they were cute actually, everyone striking a pose for their photo.

From Wikipedia: The Brooklyn Bridge is a hybrid cable-stayed/suspension bridge, spanning the East River between Manhattan and Brooklyn. Opened on May 24, 1883, the Brooklyn Bridge was the first fixed crossing of the East River. It was also the longest suspension bridge in the world at the time of its openingIts stone towers are neo-Gothic, with characteristic pointed arches...the city, in 2021, installed a two-way protected bike path on the Manhattan-bound roadway, allowing the existing promenade to be used exclusively by pedestrians.

Super-telephoto in the camera and again in the computer, because I wanted to.
At this point we are making a slow amble back to Manhattan, waiting for a black sky.
People in Brooklyn living in glass houses, taken from the bridge.
That’s the Manhattan Bridge, and you can walk across it too. The internet seems to think it is good because it is less crowded than the Brooklyn Bridge but it is bad because the fencing makes it difficult to get good views. We liked looking at it and if there was all the time in the world we cross that one too.
Another one, because.
This is what happened when I tried to do a pano.
This is what happened when Lill did a pano.

P&G and The Tenement Museum

Not having been to NY in 15 years so many sites are new to me, for example The Tenement Museum, which is awesome.

You can tell this is an internet picture because of the trees.

What makes a building a tenement? What our guide said, and may I note that we had a private guide, which was wonderful: 1) 4-5 floors walk-up 2) shared by at least three unrelated families 3) each with their own kitchen.

They have fitted out one floor to represent a few exact families (we learn their individual stories), from the 19th and 20th centuries, that lived in this building. Below are some samples of the rooms from the internet since no photos were allowed. You can choose among several tours from different eras. I recommend you chose one related to your own background. You will be amazed. My grandparents definitely lived here!

More tenements, the basic construction of the Lower East Side.

Here we are, too cute, right?!

Following are a few pictures from my street. Soon Ingalill will arrive and we’ll head out for a walk across the Brooklyn Bridge. Oh Goodie, I’ve never walked across the Brooklyn Bridge before.

There are three of these pocket parks within five blocks.
Our synagogue, speaking to the hugely mixed nature of this neighborhood and all the immigrants who have passed through.
Highly decorated and severely plain, living side by side…

Arrival Evening

This was my first plane ride since covid and I think it went very well. The airport was not crowded (at 5am..) and in both the airport and on the plane mask compliance was 100%.

I’m settled here in the Lower East Side in a most curious hotel and a different kind of neighborhood. The dotted line shows the 8 minute walk from the hotel to the most useful metro stop, one of the downsides to this hotel. I think it will be fine though, I think the 8 minutes will dissolve into the many hours of walking to come.

What the hotel says about itself: The Sanctuary NYC mission is to provide a ‘retreat for the soul’, a respite from the usual non-spiritual accommodations available to travelers who journey to New York. As Sanctuary NYC is part of St. Christophers Interfaith Community/Dharma in Action, we live by the credo that taking care of guests is our intrinsic dharmic duty, as St. Christopher was the patron saint of travelers.

From the hotel’s website, the lobby above showing the yoga studio past the glass doors, and the room. The door in the distance of the room leads to a private patio, pretty rare in the city I think. They ask you to only cook vegetarian food in the kitchen.

Pictures from google street. There are about 100 restaurants between the metro and the hotel and these mini-marts on every corner. I got a very nice salad at Wholesome Foods for dinner and then fell into a deep sleep, waking up at 3:30am NY time. I’m typing this at 4am. Let’s see how I do with the time change..since I never know what time it is anyway!

When I was getting my salad at Wholesome Foods the guy, who appeared from his demeanor to be the owner, said it’s your first time here, right? and I said yes, that’s right! and he said why don’t you pick another ingredient, it’s on me. Opinion affirmed: people in New York are perfectly lovely.

From the spiral staircase…

October 16

From the spiral staircase to the second and third floors of our house looking into the living room, a not-yet-ready to leave lay-about. The perfectly comfortable dining area and kitchen would be behind me.

Annalee and I each had our own bedroom And our own bathroom while the boys slept dorm-style on the third floor and shared a bathroom. And air-conditioning! Returning from the outside into the inside was always a rush of welcome cool air. I was happy with this house.

Then we walked (and…

Then we walked (and might I add again that we were walking Fast…or is it that I walk slow?) through the Warehouse District, through the Bywater, to a heritage breakfast place where the specialty was praline bacon and I had an entire order plus cheesy grits for my breakfast, a memorable meal for sure.

In the distance in the upper left is the Crescent City Connection, the bridge previously know as the Greater New Orleans Bridge, construction beginning in 1954 when I was already seven so how is it old? I think not.

We had dinner at…

We had dinner at Meril, Emeril’s new restaurant. Richard had made the reservation well in advance, as well as setting us up at Commander’s Palace, and organizing all our outings.

Thank you Richard, what a great time I had!

Notice the Girls! Girls!…

Notice the Girls! Girls! Girls! glowing in the window on the far left. These are the kind of lines that form at windows where they sell alcoholic drinks to go. You are welcome to wander the streets beverage in hand.

…where we enjoyed yet…

…where we enjoyed yet again another great entertainment.

I’m including this not very good picture to give a feel for the combos on stage. This looks like many of them that we saw. The lead was the guy on the far right whose name I’ve forgotten.

We started off the…

October 15

We started off the morning with a stroll down to the long row of souvenir and food stalls called The French Market, newly refreshed and plenty crowded.

One of the many…

One of the many opportunities to sample hot sauces and barbeque sauces from hot and sweet to hot and so hot you can’t breathe.

Looking back I see I don’t have any pictures of all the praline tasting opportunities I enjoyed fully as well.

One of the main…

One of the main activities, and the reason Richard chooses these particular dates, is the BBQ and Blues Festival held every year.

We ate BBQ and heard some Blues but I completely punked out on sitting around in the hot hot sun and very soon decided to take a slow stroll back to the house.

The St Louis Cathedral….

The St Louis Cathedral.

From Lonely Planet: “One of the best examples of French architecture in the country, this triple-spired cathedral is dedicated to Louis IX, the French king sainted in 1297; it’s a most innocuous bit of Gallic heritage in the heart of an American city. In addition to hosting black, white and Creole Catholic congregants, St Louis has also attracted those who, in the best New Orleanian tradition, mix their influences, such as voodoo queen Marie Laveau.

“The present cathedral was dedicated on Christmas Eve, 1794, and awarded the rank of minor basilica by Pope Paul VI in 1964.”

The kitchen at Commander’s…

The kitchen at Commander’s Palace.

We ate in one of the dining rooms which was lovely and cool, the downside being we never made it out to the gardens which is the signature Commander’s Palace venue.

I changed my shoes…

I changed my shoes and we went for a wall, first through the well-known Lafayette Cemetery No 1 built in 1833 and filled to capacity a few decades later.

These guys called out…

These guys called out Good Afternoon Y’all and we chatted a while before I asked them for a picture. I was holding up the walk so I took what I could get and was glad for it.

We stopped twice for…

We stopped twice for food and drink during this walk as relief from the heat, and it wasn’t even that hot in comparison to the summer when it gets much hotter.

I forget the name…

I forget the name of this place, the second venue for food and drink. You can be sure you’re not in the French Quarter by the clean, modern look.

Back home for a…

Back home for a nightcap, and I in fact did not have one drink the following day.

Thankfully all this drinking was spread over so many hours and thankfully I didn’t feel sick, just stuffed to edge of my very being.

…where we got to…

…where we got to hear Antoine Diel, a killer cutie for sure.

The Spotted Cat is a pretty down home-everybody stands, funky kind of place and Antoine and his fabulous band made me smile 100% of the time. We saw him again at an upscale hotel bar with a different set of players and I still loved every minute but its The Spotted Cat guy I’ll want to see again.

“.. The portion of…

“.. The portion of the park immediately in front of the New Orleans Municipal Auditorium is the site of Congo Square, formerly known as Beauregard Square, famous for its role in the history of African American music and spiritual practice.”

What the sign says: “Congo Park is in the vicinity of a spot which Houmas Indians used before the arrival of the French for celebrating their annual corn harvest and was considered sacred ground.

“The gathering of enslaved African vendors in Congo Square originated as early as the late 1740s .. By 1803 Congo Square had become famous for the gatherings of enslaved Africans who drummed, danced, sang, and traded on Sunday afternoons.

“..These African cultural expressions gradually developed into Mardi Gras Indian traditions, the Second line, and eventually New Orleans jazz and rhythm and blues.”

Wiki: “Louis Armstrong Park…

Wiki: “Louis Armstrong Park is .. located in the Tremé neighborhood of New Orleans, Louisiana, just across Rampart Street from the French Quarter.

“In the 1960s a controversial urban renewal project leveled a substantial portion of the Tremé neighborhood adjacent to Congo Square. After a decade of debate, the City created the present-day park from that land. This park was designed by New Orleans architect Robin Riley and was named after New Orleans-born Jazz legend Louis Armstrong.

I do enjoy a…

I do enjoy a good building. They’ve done a nice job with the electricity to run the streetcars – there is an example in the foreground.

There are plaques on…

There are plaques on so many historic buildings and these maps available around town, all in service of the tourist floods that some say are destroying the French Quarter with the force of daily hurricane.

The Pearl, opened in…

The Pearl, opened in the 1920s and closed in 2015. Back when I was working and came here several times for conferences I always looked forward to a meal at The Pearl.

We stopped off at…

We stopped off at Hotel Monteleone, at the Carousel Bar, where this delightful wedding party invited us to join them so we could get a good view of Mr Cutie himself, Antoine Diel, who was playing here with an entirely different band.

We did all this on foot too. So much walking my step-meter couldn’t go that high.

Music on every corner…

Music on every corner and pouring out of every door.

I see I don’t have any pictures of the chaos that is the French Quarter at night. I would have had to go out by myself which I never got around to, since it is so so crowded I couldn’t stop and also keep track of the gang.

We better get some…

We better get some food, and some drinks to wash it down…so we stopped here at Buffa’s where Tom McDermit was accompanying this very excellent clarinet player who also sang ala Janet Klein.

I met Richard at…

I met Richard at the airport – we taxied in to town stopping off to pick up a case of wine(!) one of Richard’s friends had sent, which was a great treat to have bottles of good wine always at hand.

Arriving at the rented house we found Richard’s daughter Annalee, Richard’s brother Rob and Rob’s son Sean. It’s a house full of delightful Fannans and me.

And my first oyster po’boy of the trip from Verti Marte down the street.

And then we were…

And then we were off for the evening’s entertainments – Three Muses, for cocktails, and the ever-present meat and cheese plate, and…

This is my metro…

November 7

This is my metro station in Takoma Park. It’s an outside station and when the wind kicks in you can really feel the cold. How great that you always know when the next train will be there. You can watch those minutes ticking off and it doesn’t feel so long. A nasty downside with public transportation is when you’re just waiting and waiting for you have no idea how long.

Another thing. Fall is crispy and colorful and bright and swell but for me who even likes it crispy, cripsy turns to cold in a flash. And for the next many months it’s going to keep getting colder and the cold is going to turn to freezing. BRRR!

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