Friday, November 24, 2017

cold shower weather



First sunset of the season

We have been here for 8 days and only got hooked up with our Internet service and phone TODAY.  Communications from the house have been out for about 6 weeks total.  We had a bit of service for a few hours last week, then nothing until Monday (with a promise to return Tuesday to deal with internet), but now everything is working fine ~ for the time being.  So I will take advantage of this connection for a post.

It has been a busy time; a trip to Colima to shop at Walmart, Home Depot, Sam's Club, and lunch at Kronos, of course.  Then three trips to Tecoman, the latest to make an appointment for the new car's service, buy bacon, cheese and good potatoes in the heart of the city, Mr. C's first "beach" haircut, and a stop at the Bodega for yet more supplies.  Monday was the first shopping at the tinges  our regular grocer was delighted to see us and he had some pretty good stuff.  We had comics at Fernando's presto  last Sunday and will go again this week.  Tonight being Friday we'll go to Dago's; didn't go last week as we feared the bugs, but it has actually been very bug-free for the time being. Thanksgiving was quiet and delicious.  We cooked a big chicken, had brought-from-home wild rice, cumin carrots, and one of Mr. C's stellar pumpkin pies and our own ice cream.  Very yummy.

The town has not changed one bit.  It is as seedy and rundown as ever.  But our house is looking pretty good.  The repairs to the collapsed ceiling were very well done.  He even fixed one of the cabinets and the cracked cement around the kitchen window.  So we are now ready for the hoards of prospective buyers to come in!  I am trying to be as positive as possible and concentrate on selling this wonderful place.  For about the last year I have thought that it would probably be a smart idea to have a hidey-hole in case of big trouble, and I still think that, but not here.Maybe in the mountains of Montana!

Books I recommend:  Everything I Never Told You by Celeste Ng; A Constellation of Vital Phenomena by Anthony Marra; The Alphabet House by Jussi Adler-Olsen.  Now reading Before the Fall by Noah Hawley.  He is adapting it for the screen.   When I finish it I will go back to Berlin Diaries by William L. Shirer; Germany between 1934-41.  I've been working at it, little by little, for about a month; I need to take a break every so often.  It's very intense.  But excellent.

That's it for now.  I'll get back to taking pix and posting more often now that my lifeline has been restored.


Sunday, November 12, 2017

Autumn's gift





Our little town is beginning to have a nice Autumn feel.  The days are sunny and cool, the nights are clear and cold.  The trees are starting to turn, especially the ginkgoes, Chinese pistaches and liquid ambers, all of which are plentiful in our neighborhood.  This beauty is around the corner and you can see it a block away. I'm leaving on Tuesday so I have to get my fill of all this gorgeous color NOW!  The temperature here was 65º today; in Cuyutlán it was 87º.  I would really like to have another few weeks here to enjoy the cooler days, sit in front of a few fires, eat those yummy cold weather dinners.  But alas, it is not to be.  So palm trees, grilled fish and avocados every day, here we come!


Friday, November 10, 2017

72 hors in the town that never sleeps



Remember the rumor that I was going for a quick visit to New York City?  It was true.  I did go, I had a fabulous time visiting with family and getting somewhat reacquainted with that big, loud, bright, brash city.  I flew from Sacramento to Atlanta, had a SEVEN HOUR delay due to high winds at JFK, and finally dragged into the hotel at 12:30 AM.  Cait was already tucked in so I went directly to bed for what was left of the night.  We stayed on the lower West Side at the Hudson Hotel.  Very funky, perfect location.  It has a very interesting history. Big rooms, big bathrooms, no storage, very dark.  But since it's only for sleeping, who cares!


Wednesday was MOMA day.  Niece Kaley took the train to Grand Central from West Haven, Ct. and g; daughter Emily took the subway down to Columbus Circle from 110th Street and we all gathered in our room before hitting the streets to walk to the museum, about 8 New York City blocks away.  I especially wanted to see this show.


The exhibition considers the many relationships between fashion and functionality, culture, aesthetics, politics, labor, identity, economy, and technology and includes things like Levis 501"s, the hoodie, down jackets, the Little Black Dress, the ubiquitous pearl necklace, the sweat shirt, the white T-shirt, black and white lace up basketball sneaks, plus some utterly outrageous shoes, one pair of which actually belonged to Elton John. Loved the display of the "shift" dress, popularized by Jackie Kennedy and now a staple of many (MY) wardrobes.


shift dresses, all different fabrics but the same basic cut.





In lieu of a little black dress, how about this gorgeous tux by Yves St. Laurent?



Then is was on to the Contemporary galleries.  A Matisse or two, a Rousseau or two, a Van Gogh or two.







Then it was on to see Louise Bourgoise's drawings and sculpture and experience her strange preoccupation with spiders.  This huge installation was kinda creepy.


We sent to the museum's 5th floor light filled cafe for a long lunch, shared all the family news we could think of, and generally had a great reunion.  Cait and Em had not seen Kaley for about 8 years so there was lots of catch-up to take care of.  Then we walked back to the hotel and got ready for the theatre.  We taxi'd down to 45th, had a great group hug and bid Kaley farewell as she had to get back home.  The three of us found a good little French bistro for dinner and then walked over to the theatre to see "Come From Away".   City.  Funny, smart, sad, uplifting ~ everything you want from an evening at the theatre.


Set in Gander, Newfoundland on September 11, 2001, it's the story of how the town of 7,000 takes in and cares for the approximately 7,000 travelers stranded when all air space is closed after the attack on New York.  It seems odd to have a "musical" based on 9/11 but it works wonderfully.

So that was Wednesday.  Now let's move on to Thursday.  It was cold and a bit blustery but we decided to "do" Central Park, especially to search out the Ai Weiwei sculptures that are  throughout the park and the entire city.  We walked over to the east side of the park and entered right at his huge golden cage.

























The colors were just beginning to change


We walked for about three hours, admiring the colors, the leaves, the beauty of this amazing oasis in the middle of a very busy, crowded city.  Even though it was a week day, lots of kids, dogs, strollers, sitters.  I think Cait's FitBit recorded that we walked 8 miles.  Then we headed toward someplace to eat, catching sight of this on the way.


The first time I was in New York, in 1975, I rode in one of these carriages just because you must do it at least once!  After a late lunch (to avoid the dinner rush we went back to the hotel, rested a bit, then got ready for another night of fine theatre.  This time it was "Beautiful:  The Carole King Story".

Fabulous performances, wonderful ~ and very familiar ~ music, great seats.  We couldn't get a cab when new got out so we walked home ~ 15 blocks up 6th Avenue.  You would have thought it was 2 o'clock in the afternoon!  The sidewalks were packed with people, Times Square blazing with enough neon to light Belgium for a month.  Back at the hotel we lounged in the bar for a post-peerformance drink while rehashing our day and making plans for Friday.

This was the day for the 9/11 Memorial.  It was sunny and bright, perfect weather to be outside and sightseeing.  We took the subway down to Fulton Avenue and walked over to the museum and memorial pools.  This is a profoundly beautiful place; simple, solemn, quiet, but alive with the sound of falling water.  I was overwhelmed by the enormity of the spaces and the fountain footprints.  The enormity of what happened, the thousands of lives lost, the destruction in the city is there in stark display.






Friday, October 27 was the birthday of Brendan Clark.  The 9/11 Committee puts a white rose at the name of the dead on the day of their birthdays.  It's amazing to look around the edges and see the scattering of white flowers in commemoroation.
I particularly liked this sign.

We did not get into the museum; I had not bought tickets in advance and the lines to get in were around the block.  But in truth I had had enough and needed to take a walk and think about what I had just seen.  We stopped at a great little (actual) hole in the wall for a delicious lunch, did some more walking and then got back on the subway to the hotel to get ready for dinner with Em and Sam and to get our bags packed for an early departure.

We went to the Landmarc Restaurant in the Time Warner building just at the end of our block.  Great table by the window overlooking Columbus Circle and the busy Friday night in the city.  Delicious dinner of mussels in a creamy garlic-y broth, glass of luscious Sancerre, good talk, good company.  Sam is getting ready to go off to Paris for 4 months as part of his Columbia University architecture program.  Em is busy with coding school.  They live up in Harlem with Toni the Dog.  They are happy, busy, eager, and young!

Saturday morning we were out of the hotel at 7, through check-in and security and having coffee by 8:30.  Our flights left at about the same time, me to Seattle/Sacramento, she to Minneapolis/Bozeman.        It's always good to get home and back in one's own bed, but that was one heck of a fine trip.  Now we're all trying to figure out if we can regroup in Paris while Sam's there!

NOTE FROM THE AUTHOR:  I didn't post while in situ because I didn't take the Air® with me. But as of next Tuesday I will be on the road again, this time to the house in Mexico.  I will post from there!

HAPY BIRTHDAY to dear MSMASSF over at No More Commas Period.  You DO read this, don't you?