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October 28, 2006

Sweet city smells, great city tastes -- Chicago style

The Bloomer  Chocolate Company factory adds to the distinctive experience of downtown Chicago. As we walked around the Near North Side on our way to eat a pork mole dish (another chocolate concoction), we noticed the heavy odor of chocolate. The Bloomer factory, which has supplied chocolate wholesale for decades, operates near the Loop and Magnificent Mile. The odor has been so heavy, in fact, that a neighbor complained and the EPA fined the company last year.

I am glad I didn't have to breathe in that alluring powdery smell every day because I'd never be able to curb my chocolate cravings. A constant, powerful reminder of  chocolate's seduction would undo me.

With all the cocoa wafting in the downtown air, it's no wonder we spotted so many prime shops filled with chocolate goodies. Within an eight block radius (or so), W. and I found a Hershey make-your-own chocolate "factory" store (complete with little chocolate-maker hats and ID badges), a Ghirardelli store right across the street from Hershey, a Lindt store, a Godiva store and, rarest of all, a Leonidas store.

We sampled products from all the chocolate makers except Ghirardelli, and that was only because we hail from that company's market stronghold. We even bought hot chocolate on our Chicago Architectural Foundation boat tour and chocolate cocktails at our hotel bar.

There must have been something in the air -- besides a chill -- that influenced our purchasing decisions!

March 19, 2006

NYC in late winter

Next time I resolve to go to at least one new place each week, I hope I get over the compulsion to write them all down. I have traveled a lot this late winter and spring and have lots of new places to document.

One of the most exciting was my trip to NYC during the week of March 12, 2006. Since most of NYC is new to me, I'll just describe the trip. Unless I specify otherwise, assume the experience of place was a new one.

My friend and I arrived on a Friday night and left on a Monday afternoon. This entry just documents the week ending Saturday night. Sunday and Monday will have to come under another entry.

We took the AirTrain and Metro from JFK to downtown, all new to me.  (I had been on the Metro, but went from the upper West End to Wall Street with my good NY friend, M., several years before and now I'm also glad M. made us stroll by the WTC that night). When F. and I stepped off the subway car into the thinning crowds of Friday night commuters, we were bewildered by the signs and snaking tunnels. I recognized a street corner, we followed the signs toward it and found ourselves on a downtown New York street just as the setting sun touched the very tops of the high-rise office buildings around us.

Before I left the west coast, I had scoured online maps for T-Mobile Hotspots in the blocks surrounding our hotel. Without realizing it, I had memorized all the streets in a three-block radius of our hotel, the Millennium Hilton Hotel, overlooking Ground Zero.  In all my studies of the online maps, I did not realize that we would be looking at such an historic place as Ground Zero each time we moved around during our stay.   

I got another shock when I tried to get my bearings after climbing to the streets of NYC. Just a day or two before, I had spent half an hour studying photos of what that area looked like before and after 9/11. Not only did I recognized the street name, I recognized the buildings and scenes from the photos. 

I turned to my friend and said, "Don't worry.  We are only a block from our hotel." F. was skeptical, even after I told my friend my reasoning that, if the sun, which was invisible to us, is hitting the tops of the buildings above us and turning the buildings day-glo orange, both the hotel and the sun must be "that way" and we must go toward the sun, which we can't actually see.  We found our hotel after just a block or so, just as I said. F., amazed, put me in charge of navigating the rest of the trip. Not only that, but we found a closer subway entrance just yards from our hotel.

Dsc00027 As I settled in my room, I was stunned that it looked down into the Ground Zero. I used my cell phone's panoramic feature to capture the view, just after the sun had set.  When I saw trains moving around in the depths of the pit, I thought they seemed like worms moving in a corpse. I don't know when the train station opened again, but it looks like a major hub for the Metro. It must have been reopened as soon as possible after the attack.  (I have wanted to look that up ever since, but never quite found the time.)

We were late, late, late meeting my friend M. for dinner at Lattanzi Ristorante Italiano on Restaurant Row near the theater district. We underestimated how long it would take to find the place by taking the subway and figuring out which way to turn on which street. M. suggested the place because of its double menu is so charming. Lattanzis serves both modern Italian food and the food of the Jews living in Rome 2,000 years ago.  We basked in the New Yorkness of the place, its emptiness while the plays were showing nearby, the white cloth table linens, the ornate lily-shaped blown glass chandeliers. It was a perfect setting to introduce two of my dearest friends to each other.

Dsc00056 After dinner, we changed clothes again at the hotel and went to a night club in Chelsea, SBNY (Splash Bar New York), to be exact.  I left my friend there around 5:00 a.m. (only 2:00 a.m. West Coast time) and caught a cab back downtown.  I'll only say that I would go back, in certain kinds of company, but next time I'd rather venture to the near mystical, unattainable other club, Avalon.  We never quite made it over there.  After that Friday evening and Saturday morning, I am convinced that RedBull is a great drink to order at a club.  The caffeine keeps you going and going and going...

On Saturday morning, my friend and I met around 10 a.m. (7 a.m. West Coast time) to find a place to eat.  We took the subway to SoHo and ate at Fanelli's Cafe, where the service was haphazard, but the food simple, tasty and on the cheap side for NYC. We stopped in the L'Occitane store just across the street, where I found out that F. likes lavender.  A lot.  I also learned that if you want lavender, L'Occitane is the place to go.

We wanted to go to museum, but the hour was getting late to go to a big one like the Met. The lavender-selling clerk suggested the Frick Museum. We walked through the Upper East Side till we found the right line to wait in.  Apparently, a Salvador Dali exhibit drew a crowd.  The tickets for that exhibit were sold out.  I didn't care because I wanted to see the Frick's regular collection anyway and F. had seen Dali's works while traveling in Spain. Two pieces in particular caught my eye. I was very happy to meet a new painter whose work I really like. The Lake by Jean-Baptiste-Camille Corot, a tangled, monochrome landscape stopped me midstride. It's pastoral yet so ominous and dreadful. (Of course, the photo on the web site does not do it justice).  The painting that made my jaw drop was St. Francis in the Desert by Giovanni Bellini.  The colors are vivid throughout, yet the light on St. Francis glows. It astonishes me that it was painted in 1480.

After meandering through the exhibit, F. and I agreed we wanted to find  nice place to rest, get something to drink and a nice snack. I told F. I knew just the place, a place nearby (the Mark Hotel). It was close enough to the museum for us to walk, but I insisted to F. that we walk through Central Park as much as possible. We paused from time to time to take photos with my 2 megapixel cell phone. I sat next Hans Christian Anderson bench and felt like a child again. The statue is proportioned so that adults feel like children as they interact with the statue.  When seated, I only came up to the bronze man's chest. A bit further on, we saw a group of people pose for a photo as they draped over the Alice in Wonderland statue, so we only looked at it from a distance. They all wore the same bright blue shirts and it seemed to us that they were on some sort of scavenger hunt, one where they had to get a group photo by the statue.  I'd been to the Mark and the Park before, but not to that part of the Park.

After a snack at the Mark, where we watched people gather for a wedding reception, we headed back to the subway station and back to the hotel.

I selected our Saturday evening activity at F.'s suggestion because most of the things we had done so far had been F.'s choice. I decided we would absorb the ambiance of a neighborhood by just walking around it.  I selected the "shopping" district in Chelsea.  I use "shopping" loosely, because we did not set out on our adventure until about 8:30 p.m., meaning we did not actually arrive in Chelsea until after 9:00 p.m., long after the stores closed. After trying to get cash and losing $80 at an ATM in a pizza joint, F. selected a restaurant for us, Niso's on 8th Avenue.  After we ate, I wanted to go to the world-famous Chelsea Hotel. 

On our way, I stopped in awe by the Salvation Army's Centennial Memorial Temple. It is an Art Deco beauty, massive and hopeful and dreary all at once.  I adore buildings like that, the ones that speak so clearly to the yearning of the people who built them. F. got impatient with me, so I waved my arms toward the beautiful features and raved about how much I loved it and why and how NYC is such an awesome city where you find beautifully ugly things to love without ever expecting they existed all along.  I had only read about such moments, but I felt in standing there with F. that I had found in NYC what I had come to find on that particular trip.  I wanted instead to wander through the temple, but alas, it was shut off from us. I left my heart at 120 West 14th Street between 6th and 7th Avenues. Eventually, I said my farewells to the concrete building with the heavy brass gates and the archaic motto, and heavy with the weight of the moment and the burden of know F. thought I'd lost my mind, we walked on down the street to the Chelsea Hotel

We wandered around the lobby, soaked up the artwork from resident artists on dusty display there and we wandered back down 8th Avenue for late night hot coffee drinks to a bar, Flight 151. Flight 151 had half an airplane sticking out of a partially dropped ceiling, which made me homesick for the Bay Area's St. James Infirmary. The Infirmary, sadly, burned down under suspicious circumstances nearly a decade ago.  That place made stuff hanging from the ceiling into an art form, with its antique hearse drawn by a large plastic horse and its large Wonder Woman statue.  F. and I flirted a bit with the bartender, who struck me as more literary than the average bay-area barkeep. I asked him if he was working on a novel.  He admitted instead to working on a screenplay. The owner dropped by to say "hello" and we complimented him on his place.  He confessed that an Irish bar in San Francisco in Ghirardelli Square that serves the world's best Irish coffee inspired him to open a pub. None of us could think of its name.

Before long, F. got frustrated with the slim romantic pickings and mixed signals at Flight 151, so we parted ways again.  I took a cab back to the hotel and F. took a cab back to SLNY.

March 06, 2006

First report on "new" places

Late last year on a family trip, one of the things I wanted to do was vetoed by the other members of my family.  It didn't help that the thing I wanted to do fell at the very end of the trip after everyone was exhausted.

After sucking in my disappointment, I got to thinking.   Most of the new places I go are because other people have invited me to go with them.  I resolved to go one new place each week and to make it a place that I wanted to go.  So far, I have been one new place each week, but only a few times has it been completely, totally under my own volition.  Here is my report for the first two months of this year.

  1. Week of January 1, 2006. Found myself at Winter Lodge for ice skating. Even though it was more W's choice than mine, but I soon added to my list of places to go back to again and again.  It is rustic like a ski lodge right in the middle of Silicon Valley. Two gas fireplaces, and golden varnished wood everywhere give it a warm, ski-chalet feeling.
  2. Week of January 8, 2006. Attended a membership meeting for a political club.  Even though I had been to the apartment complex meeting room before, I had not been to it under those exact auspices before.  To make excuses, this is before I really remembered that my resolution applied to my life ASAP.
  3. Week of January 15, 2006. Another lame week when my only new place, because I remembered my resolution at last en route to a meeting across the valley. After I spaced out and missed a turn one day, the next day, I looked for and found a new route in case I ever spaced out again.
  4. Week of January 22, 2006. W. and I went to dinner at couple's house. We are trying to start a friendship because we share so many common interests. The couple, who live in the next town to the south, have a charming open-air atrium with a fountain and lawn sculptures, so we already asked them to join us at a nearby art and wine festival thick with lawn sculptures to buy.
  5. Week of January 29, 2006. Visited another friend in his new house on the coast, a 45-minute drive from my place. I took along a picnic and we went to Natural Bridges State Beach.  The park is named after some wave-carved rock formations just off the coast. It is too bad I did not go there before the bridge fell down. Now, the park should be called Pleasant Beach with Rocks Just Offshore.
  6. Week of February 5, 2006. After running in the Kaiser Permaente half marathon and 5K on February 5th, W and I ate at Isobune Sushi in the San Francisco Japan Center. Isobune Sushi claims to be the first ever sushi boat place. How can diners not be charmed by food floating hypnotically in front of them. We were hungry after the race, so we very much enjoyed the good food. Later that week, I saw a movie at Camera 12 in San Jose, then another at CineArts in San Francisco followed by a drink at Irish pub, Joxer Dalys. All were new places for me.  And, finally, very late in the week I joined a friend for something to drink at Splash San Jose.
  7. Week of February 12, 2006.  Went to a place called Brandon Wines in downtown Sunnyvale because they are the only store in a wide vicinity that carries Sweet Shop truffles (the ideal Valentine's candy for Texans or for anyone, really). My beloved was happy to receive them.
  8. Week of February 19, 2006. I went to the corporate offices of a well-known construction company in San Jose for a non-profit board meeting. I consider counting a board meeting room pretty much the dregs in the "someplace new" category of exploration and adventure.
  9. Week of February 26, 2006. I went to a new Starbucks across town to meet someone for coffee. It's just getting worse in terms of new places.

I have never been to Ikea or Old Navy, so those ought to be easy additions. So should the hundreds of nearby restaurants I have never sampled.

So why don't I?  Well, I sometimes don't feel up to the challenge.  Or, I forget.

Today, I have been very distracted.  At lunch, I threw away my cash instead of my plastic cup.  Fortunately, I noticed it right away.  I said a few words, like, "Oh, nuts" and dug my money out of the trash, where I provided entertainment for the people near me. One sympathetic woman told me she had thrown her wallet away without realizing it.  She said someone delivered it to her three months later and that it had clearly been in the dump at some point.  She thought I was a step ahead in the game of keeping it all together.

I am not wild about venturing forth into the world if I can't even hold a thought for five seconds, much less my cash.  Writing a lot helps with the thoughts, but I still haven't figured out how to take care of the cash.

June 05, 2005

Letters of consolation (and weddings)

Just this very day, I returned home from experiencing two weddings in as many weeks. One wedding was local and the part I experienced was not, in fact, the wedding. The other required international travel from the West Coast almost all the way across the entire North American continent to Niagara, Canada. As careful or long-time readers of this blog will know, material to read in flight is always a concern of mine.  I like it to be engaging, but not too deep.  This trip I decided (rather perversely, I admit, given all the nuptial bliss I've been privy to the last few weeks) to read the story of Heloise and Abelard.  As shotgun weddings and marital woes go, their story takes first place outside the Greek tragedy category. 

Briefly, Abelard, the brilliant philosopher of the twelfth century, taught his best, young student, Heloise, not only classic literature and the finer points of Latin and logic, but also the best sexual positions. After Heloise got pregnant and the couple was married in secret, the bride's angry uncle castrated Abelard. In response, the two lived celibate lives apart. Heloise became a nun, then an abbess just as Abelard became a monk then an abbot. 

Fifteen years after these romantic traumas, Abelard wrote a "letter of consolation" to another monk. The idea of a letter of consolation is to tell a suffering person a tale of woe so vividly and sympathetically that the reader will feel better about their own situation in comparison. It did not take me many seconds of reflection to realize that "stories of consolation" tend to be my favorites.  The music of Leonard Cohen, for instance, awakens these feelings in me (along the lines of "I'm so glad I'm not a man"). While these sort stories, songs, and artworks do not always make the top of the best-sellers list, there is a brisk market.  I would put both Tarnation and Lemony Snicket's A Series of Unfortunate Events in this category (the former arguably more sincere than the latter).

I, like many people, have my own tale of woe and could perhaps author a letter of consolation as a purgative like a cat coughs up a hairball. A rather humorous version could be the tale of my weddings experiences of the past couple of weeks. 

The Indian event to which I was invited was not actually a wedding. It was a ceremony hosted by the groom and groom's family the day before the wedding. The Hindu priest blesses and interacts with the groom's parents and the groom out of earshot of the many, many people who attend.  To prevent boredom, the family hands out food and drink to everyone (rose ice cream and water) and gifts to the VIPs and supplies an emcee or wedding singer.

The event, which starts at 9 a.m. for the family perhaps as the invitation stated, really starts closer to 10:30 a.m. for the audience. I arrived too early.  It took me an hour to figure out the the men sit on one side of the auditorium and the women sit on the other (I sat for a while on the men's side).  After I moved, I gazed around the large hall, entranced by the clothes. These were not the everyday saris I see Indian women wear on the street sometimes in my city. The women there that day were dressed in stunningly beautiful silk saris.  Most were studded with sequins and crystals and they sparkled against the bright silks. Those saris not beaded with sequins were embroidered with gold and silver thread. The men in the groom's family wore very flattering ivory silk tunics and, even in the midst of all the pre-wedding confusion, managed to looked handsome if they were young or dignified if they were not so young.

I finally found the person responsible for inviting me and I went to him to let him know I had arrived (in my non-silk, Western attire). He sat me all by myself in the empty women's part of the VIP section. The VIP section seated about 200 to 300 people in white chairs.  The other 1,000 people sat in red chairs.

Shortly before the family appeared on stage for the ceremony, the male VIPs entered en masse.  Still I sat alone and self-conscious in my gender-specific VIP section.  Right before the ceremony, the women of the groom's family came in and surrounded me on all sides. By chance, the groom's aunts sat next to me. My patron asked that they explain the ceremony (actually, even they didn't know the details, either). I had brought a money gift ($20 plus $1 to grow on as is the custom), but I had no idea what to do with it.

Still we waited. We were not meant to hear any of the proceedings on stage between the priest and the family. (I had met the priest during an earlier visit, so I recognized him and his role in the event.) To keep us occupied, the family had hired a truly bizarre wedding singer. He seemed before the wedding like a reasonably intelligent person, if maybe a but blonder than usual for Indians and certainly more unctious. His English was frustrating to endure.  He slowed his words down to about one eight normal speed, so it pained us all to listen to him. When he spoke his Indian language, he sounded (to my untrained ear) to talk more normally. The aunts and I amused ourselves by mocking him. A lot. Even the bride and her three attandantes came on stage with a great deal of irritating serenading from the wedding singer. (I understood fromt the aunts that this is somewhat unusual.)

Midway through the ceremony, the wedding singer announced that the groom's family were honored by the presence of several community VIPs in attendance. He enumerated us in order of: one U.S. Senators, me, and a county supervisor.  The senator came late, so there was no room for her and her husband to sit in the VIP section.  The organizers found her and her husband a spot in the front row of the men's section.  I pointed her out to the aunts, who attended her when it was their turn to pass out gifts.

And did we VIPs ever get gifts!  We got three separate packs of food. I got a package with two anklets and a sari of my own, as did all the women in the VIP section.

After the ceremony, I waited in line with the aunts to give the groom my gift. Part of the procedure was to place a bit of ocher paste on the groom's forehead and add a grain of rice or two to the mix.  I abode by this custom, much to the surprise and amusement of the groom's father.

Rather than waiting with the masses of guest who were eating in tents outside for lunch, I found my patron who escorted me to the front of line in the VIP room just off the great hall.  (Also a trick I learned during a previous visit). In this hall, I met more dignitaries, more commissioners, county supervisors, candidates for state assembly and the like (non-Indian like myself) as well as many leaders in the Indian community (no women except us non-Indian dignitaries, of course). 

Food at Indian weddings is extra rich. I enjoyed the lentils, for instance, which were made with triple the usual amount of oil. Once I ate, I found the my friend and host (the groom's father) to say "thank you" and "farewell." The groom's father explained that his own fabric factories in India had made the saris he provided his female guests. He introduced me to the manager of the factory, his friend who had flown to the U.S. just for the wedding. The groom's father called all his family and friends around to meet me, called the photographer over to have his picture taken with me, gave me his card, and asked his closest friends to also give me their cards.

I left just after I handed out my last card. I felt curried, so to speak, and more comfortable with the Hindu temple scene than I had when I first arrived.  My main tale of woe, I suppose, is not having any sparkly sari to wear, no rich tone to my skin set off by bright silks, and of course, the moments of discomfort by myself sitting in a sea of VIP seats.

For my most recent wedding experience, beside having to travel for a day there and a day back, I saw it from the point of view of a wedding photographer, a sleep-deprived one at that.  The hotel food and unfortunate location of my room kept me up all one night. (Notes to self: farm-raised quail should not taste gamy and has probably gone bad if it does and if you have a room near the pool, move.)  I ate and drank too much. 

However, I also received many gifts and party favors from this wedding, including extra batteries for my camera, a 1 GM 40x memory card I could keep, a picture frame, Jordan almonds and jaw breakers wrapped in tulle and placed in an acrylic swan.  What is my most prized possession from my journey to Niagara?  Beside the memories, the samplings of ice wine, the sight of Niagara falls lit up at night, and the one or two wedding photos I took in my official capacity that transcend the ordinary? -- probably the swan.

November 23, 2004

Still charming after all these years

I hate flying.  I expected day to be a terrible day because I had to fly today. Not only that, but I had connecting flights.

It was not such a bad day after all.  I got my own row on the first, short flight. My plane from San Jose to the midwest stopped in Orange County. Because the airline used the same plane for both legs, they let me stay on the plane.  A ticket agent came on board especially to deal with my ticket and boarding pass.

I asked a flight attendant on break about whether or not there were electrical outlets on the plane. She explained that the rows with little lightning bolt emblems had one out let.  She promised to let me know if a row with a lightening bolt was still open after everyone else boarded.

We struck up a conversation about European travel. She offered me some water.  Very soon, twenty minutes had passed and the other passengers boarded.

My seat wound up being in the same row with a toddler and a mom. I told the mom about the lightening bolt thing because she had a portable DVD player with her to distract the kid. Trouble was, it was low on juice. The father behind our row, with his own toddler let the mom use his outlet (which I told here was there).

Bev, the flight attendant, found me another row to myself (which I kept for all of 15 minutes into the flight). She also gave me, not just one, but two free drinks for my in-flight self-medication.  That saved me enough money so that I could pay the $3 parking toll to get my father's car out of the airport short-term parking lot.

I'm pleased that I received good karma today. Maybe it started around 7 a.m. PST this morning when I tipped the shoe shine guy $3 or $4 dollars and said a hearty "Happy Thanksgiving."

November 02, 2004

October: Month of Firsts

Lately the days have been falling away like autumn leaves toward winter. I have paid them as much attention as leaves, that is to say, not much at all, because I have been busy.

The folks left for home one week ago. Our trip to Gold Country was illuminating. We stayed in Sutter Creek because it sounded good, not because there is anything there so spectacularly interesting. The day of our arrival, we paid homage to the gold by visiting Coloma, where James Marshall found gold on the north bank of the South Fork of the American River. That piece of information amuses me because it has such an "only in America" sound.

We visited Placerville, which used to be called "Hangtown" because the white people there, back when it was called Old Dry Diggins, hung two men from France and one from Chile without even understanding what they had to say. It turns out placer means something gold-related in Spanish. It refers to pockets of gold found in crevices of rocks in river beds. I read all the guidebooks because I was navigator in charge of selecting where we should go -- once we flipped a coin to decide whether or not to tour northern Gold Country or or southern Gold Country. The northern loving people won the flip, not that it did much good because it rained two days out of three. I really wanted to see Sutter Buttes, but we did not go that far north.

So the new things:

1) I tried a "Hangtown Fry," a concoction of scrambled eggs, bacon and oysters. One of the miners who turned up in Hangtown with a big find ordered the "best meal in the house." I liked the one I ordered at the Buttercup Pantry in Placerville (where I also saw my first turtle-shaped pitcher).

2) I heard about Lakeside Classics books. My father brought the Lakeside Classics book from 1993 which had Gold Country stories in it, called From Mexican Days to the Gold Rush by James W. Marshall and E. Gould Buffum, an account of the life of James Marshall that was written in 1870 and a firsthand account by a prospector who came in 1848, before the big rush in 1849. Lakeside Press books are gifts to the employess of R.R. Donnelley and Sons publishers. They are never sold in stores, but are given to Donnelley employess as Christmas gifts. I've enjoyed reading the Lakeside Press book my father brought. 2.a) This is also the first time in ages that I have read a book that is NOT LISTED on Amazon. Whoo hoo!

3) We had pasties (rhymes with patsy) in Grass Valley. These meat pies came to California with the Welsh miners who settled the area.

4) I had a beer in the Golden Gate saloon in the Holbrooke Hotel in Grass Valley. The bar itself was all ornate carved Italian marble and wood that the builders had had shipped around Cape Horn and installed in Grass Valley in the early 1850s. Not only that, but it is the oldest continuously operating bar in Gold Rush country. None of these facts impressed my traveling companions, so I sat at a table by myself while my nearest traveling companion waited in the hotel hallway.

5) We went to our first gold mine. Empire Mine, part of the California State Park system was a real eye-opener. The mines are now flooded below 150 feet, which is unfortunate because the shafts go down over a mile. We bought a fossil-laden serving platter made out of limestone -- also another first

I will continue adding to this list during the next couple days. I feel a need to add details, which requires actually looking up the names of places. Right now, though, I must go off to work and to vote.

October 22, 2004

Family, recovery, and unexplored territory

My folks are visiting. Because W. had long wanted to go to Gold Country and having relatives in town for a week was a good excuse for a side trip, we decided to take a trip to Gold Country.

So, this morning, we are leisurely getting ready. My father and husband went off to the airport to rent a larger vehicle so the four of us wouldn't have to be cramped for hours in one of our tiny sports cars. I didn't want to go, so my 85-year-old father went to drive my car back. He likes that sort of task.

However, my husband lost him at the last little turn that is a shortcut into our neighborhood. As I write this, W. took of in his other car to go find my dad. I'm not that worried about it, but maybe I should be. The likeliest scenario is that he started following the wrong white SUV. He'll show up at someone's house, after having followed them, and find out his mistake.

In other news, my close female relative just gave me a newspaper article and letter that explains conditions of my cousins who are living and working in Haiti as missionaries. The letter says they are okay. I will go off and see of my husband and father both make it back safely.

Postscript: All is well. Off we go -- into the wilds of Northern California!

September 08, 2004

Memory aids and research

Sorry, no travel account today. However, I did spend time this evening researching location names and mapping out drawings of German train stations in Landstuhl, Kaiserslauten, Heidelberg, Bingen, Baden-Baden and Mannheim.

Guess this is turning from a miniature writing project into a substantial one.

I envy people who write blogs with Internet access during their trips. Things are much easier to remember nearer in time to the moment they occur.

August 27, 2004

Trip Report -- Day 5

Day 5. Thursday, August 26. We got up as usual. It was a bit easier for me. W. didn’t sleep as well as I had. I packed my swimming suit, in addition to my three books, because we planned to go to Baden-Baden. I wanted to go to a spa and so I thought we might be able to lounge by a spring somewhere. “Baden” is German for bath. Baden-Baden is to Germany what Bath is to England, so I heard and repeated many times in telling people about my adventures. My favorite guide book, The Rough Guide Germany, said that Mondays and Thursdays were days when the sexes at the Friederichsbad were kept separate, so I thought it would be a good day to go there.

Going to spas is one of my favorite things, so I was anxious to be on our way. I set out toward S.’s house in a cold drizzle so I could get my breakfast oatmeal and coffee down in plenty of time to catch a 10 a.m. train. As I kissed W. before going out the door (as is our custom), he told me he’d follow along shortly.

When I got to S.’s house, she had written out everything we needed to know to get to Baden-Baden. It looked like a complex set of train changes. We had to change trains twice and we’d be on our first IC train. “IC” trains are “InterCity.” They are faster and fancier than the slow regional trains we took to Bingen the day before.

While waiting for W., I started on my breakfast. When I saw the food spread already on the table – S. is a great host – I was so hungry I could not wait for oatmeal to cook. The bread and “shinken” and cheeses all ready to eat were too tempting. S. fixed me a soft-boiled egg and made one for W., too.

As I ate, S. sat at a computer in the hallway just off the kitchen. She copied out train schedules by hand. When she had two options to leave written down on a piece of paper, she showed it to me. The first train left at 10 a.m.

By the time she finished explaining our route for the day, we noticed it was nearly 9:30.

“Where is W.?” S. asked.

I didn’t know. He had told me he was going to be there 20 minutes after me. He was by now 40 minutes later than he had said.

S. worried that we would miss our train to Baden-Baden, so she told me we should go to Heidelberg instead. S. copied out two options for going to Heidelberg and had me copy down the return information by hand. The train left at 11:30 a.m.

By the time W. arrived at 9:45, S. and I had revised our day’s itinerary. Before we told W., we asked him what had happened because we were almost ready to come looking for him. He said it had just taken him a while to get ready.

W. wanted to stop by a Hein-Gericke store. Ten years earlier, he bought one of their leather motorcycle jackets in the U.S. He liked it so much that he talked female relatives of mine into fixing it when the lining tore out of it. When we spent the day with my German family, someone had pointed out to him that Hein-Gericke is a German company and that there are stores all over. S. and P. told him the night before that there was even a store in Landstuhl.

W. grabbed a piece of bread and we were on our way, the four of us, S., P.B., W. and I. The drizzle stopped, but the day was still overcast, windy, and gray.

P.B. came along because he wanted to stop at Landstuhl’s fire station. He had done a student internship there and he wanted to show F., his mentor there, that he’d gotten excellent marks on a report he wrote. Also, he wanted to return photos that F. had given him to use in the report.

To W.’s dismay, we stopped at the fire station first. S. explained that, in Germany (or maybe just in Landstuhl), the fire stations in town are all consolidated into one large facility. This reduces costs she said, but may cause some delays in getting fire trucks where they are needed.

The facility certainly was large. We entered a modern building. The foyer had a check-in area and the man behind it agreed to buzz us in. We waited in the glass-enclosed foyer until we realized that the man had buzzed us in. F. met us in the main lobby near the antique wooden fire engines. He showed us the changing rooms, with the rubber firemen’s coats hanging from pegs, the garage with six or eight shiny fire engines. He showed us an extensive training and testing facility in a basement. F. explained that the Landstuhl station facilities serve the entire region. The firemen must pass stringent health requirements. I believed him because the place looked like the facility in the Six Million Dollar Man. A treadmill covered with wires and heart and oxygen monitors sat in the middle of the floor. A walled off monitoring room contained control equipment. In a back room, a three-level maze filled with dead-ends, pipes and obstacles tests how well the firemen do in the dark when the room is filled with smoke. I left with a new appreciation of tha hard work firemen undertake to protect us. W. left annoyed that we didn’t have more time at the Hein-Gericke store. It was 11:00 a.m. by the time we left the fire station.

We scooted half a block away on the opposite side of a divided highway. By the time we got to the Hein-Gericke store, W. had only five minutes to look around. He did his best, but we left ten minutes later. W. found a jacket he liked, but they didn’t have it in his size. S. left her number so the sales people could call around to other stores see if the jacket W. liked was in stock. Both P.B. and W. snatched up catalogs up as we rushed out the door to make our 11:30 a.m. train. Once we got in the van, the man and the boy realized that, perhaps, they should have paid for the catalogues.

S. rushed to the train station, as fast as her minivan would allow. Still, we weren’t fast enough. We ran downstairs to the underground tunnel and up the stairs to the track and saw we missed our train by only a minute.

We went back to the tunnel to find a schedule. The way I read it, another train was leaving for Mannheim in just three or four minutes from another track. So, we ran to the other track and got on the train that arrived just after we did. Less than ten minutes after missing our first train, we were well on our way to another day of quick explorations of German cities.

We had to change trains twice, once in Kaiserslauten and again, with a much longer wait in Mannheim. The Mannheim train station was by far the largest we had seen so far. It had two floors of shops and food booths, including a large book store. We wandered around and relished the sights and bustle of the place. The variety of the shops surprised me. There were places to eat, a pub or two, a flower shop, a gift store, and places to buy leather goods. After fifteen minutes, we went back out to the track where we caught the next train.

It came right on time, our first InterCity (IC) train. All the other trains we had been on so far were slower Regional Bahn (RB) trains. We climbed on near the end of the train into a crowded second class car. We walked forward through the train, looking for a first class cabin, past well-filled seats. The IC trains, even second class cars, were already much better appointed than the RB trains. The upholstery was thicker and made of a fine crushed velvet rather than of a coarser material. The wall and window treatments more detailed and attractive. When we got to a first class car at the front of the train, the layout reminded me of the first class cabin in a plane. Instead of three seats per side, there were two on one side and single facing seats with tables on the other side. W. and I sank down into two seats facing the direction we were traveling. W. read his manga and I read my phrase book. The train, meanwhile, sped through the countryside sun-dappled countryside.

Within half an hour we reached the station in Heidelberg, unfortunately about the same time a summer rain shower arrived, too.

It took us some time to orient ourselves to Heidelberg. We wasted some minutes reading the ticket-machines in the station. We thought perhaps the passes there would also apply to Heidelberg public transit. We walked through the train station and found a bookstore and a newsstand and a variety of other shops, but no posters explaining the Heidelberg bus system.

Finally, we did as the tour book suggested, and waited in line at the tourist information booth. Twice. The first time, I waited while W. went to buy an umbrella. I got the bus number, but forgot to ask where we could find the busses or buy transit day passes. We waited another ten minutes to ask very basic questions. Directly in front of the tourist center are driveways that look like perfect places for buses to stop. The buses there were all tour buses and cars. We found that the public transit stops was off to the side of the station. We skirted the acre or so of bicycle parking and spent more time trying to figure out which direction we needed to go to make our way to Heidleberg’s Altstadt, that is, the old part of town. Heilelberg grew long and narrow along the banks of the Neckar river and between hills that flank the river on either side, so if we were to go the wrong way, it could take some time to get back.

Finally, we bought our day pass the covered us both boarded the right bus and now wondered which stop to make. By this time, it was nearly 2:00 p.m. and we were famished.

We got out at the stop nearest the path uphill to the Schloss, the huge palace overlooking Heidelberg. W. realized that, yes, he had been in Heidelberg before. We wanted to catch the train leaving for Mannheim at 6:15 p.m. We now had to decide what to do in a strange city with only four hours. At least, we had not had to actually use the umbrella W. bought.

First, we decided not to climb a hill for twenty minutes to see the Schloss. Both of us had been there before and we were both famished. We decided to wander around to find a place to eat. We doubled back to the Marktplatz, the market place. The Heiliggeistkirche, or Holy Ghost Church, dominated the center of the square. Spread out beneath it were dozens of little vendor tents where tourists could buy postcards, T-shirts, commemorative silver spoons, and hundreds of other highly useful items. We ignored these booths, but looked instead with interest at the menus of restaurants that ringed the marketplace. Many of them looked too fancy and slow for our needs. Just off the marketplace, we found a promising place. It looked like a glorified pub. Its glory, primarily, was that it was packed with happy German-speaking people who looked very content with their food, with the service and with life in general. W. and I reasoned that such a popular place must have exceptionally good food, so we entered the Palmbräuhaus Gasse and asked for a table.

The hostess led us to the back, near the entrance to the kitchen and near a service counter, and sat us at a long table with another couple of English-speaking tourists. These two ladies had just finished ordering by the time we were seated.

The place smelled pleasantly of good food and roasting meat. We were in a dark corner – most of the light came from the front windows and we were tucked away behind a huge stone fireplace along one wall. However, a hallway past the entrance to the kitchen led to a large cavernous room with a skylight. I walked toward it, attracted by the light and colors. The hall took me to a landing with stairs leading down to another level. Below me, sat many German men at benches drinking beer served from a bar on the far wall. Signs in German indicated that people could exit the premises and reach restrooms if they would take the stairs down. What an interesting place! I thought. It looked authentic German to me. We studied the menu with great care. W. ordered chicken cooked with a mustard cream sauce. I ordered Schweinhaxe, which the menu explained, was a specialty of the house.

While we waited for our food, I enjoyed a fine German beer and even W. ordered one. By the time our food arrived, the place had completely cleared out. I asked the waitress about it, in German, and she explained that tour groups occasionally booked the restaurant. We had come just as a group of a hundred or so was finishing up.

Our food was excellent. The Schweinhaxe was a ham hock. It was a large piece of meat, baked or broiled, still attached to the bone. The flavor was outstanding and the slightly crispy texture was very appealing. We liked the food so much, we stayed an extra fifteen minutes to drink coffee and cappuccino. We discussed where we wanted to go for our remaining two and a half hours. I wanted to go along the Philosophenweg, the Philosopher’s Way. The tour guide said that the views along the path on the opposite side of the river were among the best views in the area. Even though I looked, I could not find the path on the map in the tour book. Again, I asked the waitress and my German was good enough to get the general idea of the way we should go to find it.

We left the restaurant, happy and ready for a bit of exercise. Just as we walked another block toward the river, the rain started falling again. We ducked into a funky little store, run by Spanish-speaking people, who sold jewelry and tiny little T-shirts with pictures of Che Gueverra on them. Before we left there after the quick little shower passed, I checked the map one more time and found the Philosophenweg on the map. We were on our way.

We took many photos of the old-time bridge we crossed by foot. Heidelberg is one of the prettiest cities in Europe. It is Germany’s answer to San Francisco. The light shimmers and the whole place looks like the fulfillment of a dearest wish could materialize from the glowing air at any moment.

We found signs pointing our way to the path up a steep set of stairs. I got a bit winded, but we stopped at all the many lookouts on the way from the banks of the river to the old path up above us. W. was too shy to speak Japanese to any of the several groups of Japanese tourists we met. Heidelberg is a famous intellectual center known for its university and the poets and thinkers who have lived there. This is still true because there are a great many physicists who live and work there and the University is still highly regared. Eventually, we reached the Philosophenweg. It ran parallel to the city. Benches and clear spots with views were plentiful as were many local joggers. We did not encounter many other tourists along the path. We sat a while. We photographed each other and the city below. W. was fascinated by the sheep grazing just below the palace walls. I thought the view was fabulous to contemplate the relationship between government, religion and nature. The white Schloss dominated the scene, but we also counted no fewer than five church spires. Wooded, misty hills rolled up mysterious and dark beyond the city. W. jolted us from our reveries by asking how long it would take us to get back to the train station. I asked some local men how far the path went. They assured us that we were only 1 kilometer from the end.

Sure enough, the path soon ended in a lovely garden, which we did not linger to enjoy. Instead, we hurried on to the public streets and wondered how to get back down the six hundred or so feet to the river. We passed by large physics institutes and nodded “hello” to some brainy-looking young men. We asked one of them to tell us the best way to the river. He pointed us to another set of stairs just ahead.

As soon as we reached the road at the base of the hill that ran near the river, the rain started again. W. and I rushed to the first pub we could find. We holed up there drinking beer and mocha coffee until the rain stopped. The café was full, but not crowded. It had great restrooms and played French folk music. We read French magazines and wondered how to get back to the train station. I found an article in Der Stern about the German dismay at facing longer workweeks and shorter vacations in order to stay competitive in a global market. I confess to feelings of schadenfreude.

After W. coaxed me, I finally concentrated on getting us back to the train station. I looked at the bus map and schedule and decided we could take the bus, no problem. The bartender pointed out where we were on the map. I’m not sure we came out ahead buying the day pass for the buses. The day-long pass cost 8 euros, which was more than the 5 euros the tour book quoted. I think we broke even on the deal. It would have cost us about 8 euros to take the bus the normal way. We leisurely finished our drinks and took a bus in sunshine back to the train station with plenty of time to spare for shopping.

W. bought a couple of expensive magazines at the magazine store. He cleaned me about of 35 euros just on two items. From there we went to the bookstore. Here, we could not help but notice that American political books were doing quite well on Germany’s top 10 best sellers lists. Michael Moore’s books were particularly popular, but Clinton’s autobiography was also selling briskly. I wanted more classic German literature to take home, so I found myself in the poetry section. I bought a Herman Hesse book of poems. When I showed W. the book of hiakus translated into German, he bought it as a gift for his Japanese teacher.

We boarded our train for Heidelberg. By the time we arrived in Mannheim around 7:30 p.m., we were famished again. We found a pizza vendor on the second floor, then be bought an ice cream for dessert. The station was nearly empty and we had no trouble finding a seat on a bench just a few stores away from our food vendors. We even had time left to visit the Mannheim train station bookstore. By this point, I was starting to worry about having space to pack all the books we (mainly W.) had been buying.

While we were waiting for our train to Kaiserslauten, W. figured out that the tracks showed little diagrams of each train. We could know ahead of time which end of the train had the first class cars and where the dining cars were. Unfortunately, we did not know for sure which direction the trains would enter the track. I gloated a bit for being correct even though W. prevailed and we went to the wrong end of the track, away from the first class compartments.

We boarded the train and found a closed off, glass-walled compartment that held four people. I promptly fell asleep, but W. woke me up when the conductor asked to see our tickets. I said that it seemed that a conductor always checked our tickets on the first-class IC trains. They seemed to care less on the RB trains. We could go for hours without anyone asking to see our tickets. Fortunately, W. consistently remembered to add the day’s date in the proper way, so we always had our papers in order whenever anyone asked to see them.

I spend the ride from Kaiserslauten to Landstuhl trying to wake up. The family would want to hear about our adventures. Again, we discussed how long our family would want to visit and how long it would be before we could go to bed.

J., the newbie driver, came to pick us up. He met us on the street – he was parked right in front of entrance to the lobby with the ticket counter when we walked out of the station a little before 8:00 p.m. We loaded our backpacks in the van, but before we left, J. told us he wanted to buy us some beer at the market. W. and I were surprised that there was a little snack stand right there in the Landstuhl station. J. picked out a couple beers for us and also some chocolate.

When we arrived back at S.’s house, S. and P. were all ready to take us to “see the deer.” S. told W. that Hein-Gericke said they had a jacket in inventory in one store, but they couldn't find it in stock. She said that, anyway, even though they could ship it to her house, it would be expensive to do so and it may not arrive before we had to leave. We got the impression there is no weekend delivery of express packages. We didn’t have the hart, er, heart, to tell them that we also have deer in California. So, after drinking a token amount of beer and eating a couple pieces of bread and meat, we piled into the van again and drove out into the fields. By 8:30 p.m. in California in late August, we would already be calling things dark. The twilight in Germany lingers on forever it seems. We walked along a tiny paved road for nearly a mile, until we found an open field visible only through some shrubs, that had a couple of deer and a few rabbits a quarter mile away in near darkness. To aid our vision of the deer, P. handed us a pair of binoculars. They apologized that the deer were not closer. They said they come to see the deer several times a week and that, often, they can get much closer before the deer run away. Next time German relatives come to visit, we’ll know how important wildlife sightings are to them and we’ll take them to either a petting zoo or to one of the open space preserves where we frequently see deer grazing 50 yards away. W. chose not to mention his history of hunting deer in Texas. It was a pleasant night and W. took some artistic photos of quaint farm equipment. Even so, when they asked if we would like to walk farther or turn back toward home, we chose the option to going home.

As we walked, we talked. W. and I told them about our adventures that day. P. was astonished I had tried the Schweinhaxe. He had heard of this dish, he told us, but neither he nor S. had ever tried it. Once again, P.’s vocabulary astounded us. We talked about electronics and the power plant we could see glowing in the distance. I explained to S. my involvement in the community. These things don’t translate well because Germany’s system of government is different than in the U.S. and each state in the U.S. does things differently.

When we arrived back at S.’s house, I gave her my two rolls of film, one each from my two Russian cameras. One camera has 9 lenses, in a 3x3 array. The other camera has a Colorsplash flash, a flash that lets you place a colored gel in front of the light that flashes. We had played with these on our first night in Kaiserslauten and I wanted to show her the results of these two novelty cameras. I gave her strict instructions to request exposure correction, but to insist on no color correction.

With that task off my mind, I fell asleep very quickly once we arrived back at our own place with our own little cots.

August 26, 2004

Hallo from Europe!

So, we made it safely to our European destination! Our luggage arrived eventually, too. We are visiting with family (except I snuck away for a moment to post this). Normally such visits would be fun and interesting, but I have so much jetlag, I can barely remember how to type. The fact that German keyboards switch the location of the Y and Z keys does not help. Even the @ and : characters are someplace strange and different. At home, it is only 1:27 p.m. Maybe I need to break away and get some sleep. I've only had about 12 hours in 4 days! Speaking German and staying awake would all be much easier if I got some sleep.