Sunday, October 7, 2018

The Pacific NW - Understated Majestic Beauty

Oops! Lounging in my draft folder since August! 

The Pacific Northwest has its own particular look, feel and culture that’s distinctly different then New England or virtually any other place we have been and, as those of you who follow our humble blog know, we’ve been to more then a few places.  Besides the visual, this unique sense permeates the food - people’s sense of personal space - the pace in which they walk.  



For  us, no trip out west feels complete unless we’ve been in Eugene to visit Evie, Clara, Erin and Jeremy.  The landscape has a bit of everything, but we particularly love the rolling hills. The kids small piece of paradise thrives with fruit trees, veggies, flowers, hay, chicks and a few other four legged critters.  Close by vineyards in the Willamette Valley offer an evening escape for the adults, with Karen gladly sampling a flight of local whites.  The summer days are warm, as we join the family for an early bike ride along the river, allowing Evie to demonstrate her newly expanded bike riding skills.  Pop-pop and Bubbie are more than happy to go with her to her to witness her new found fascination with horseback riding.  Clara’s  artwork and passion for reading are complimented by her participation in debate club. Erin continues her art making and finds time for hospice work.  Jeremy continues to teach in the nursing program while caring for the farm’s orchard.  (Only Evie agrees to the occasional photograph, or we’d gladly include a picture of the entire family.) 

Then it’s on to Orcas Island - north of Seattle on the Puget Sound and nestled in the San Juan Islands close to Vancouver Island.  Yes, that is a bit complicated.  You can take a ferry and weave through a hundreds of verdant islands or you can fly by seaplane. We chose the latter. One’s entire energy shifts as Seattle’s Harbour disappears behind you and literally hundreds of islands appear below you.  By the time one lands, the mainland seems thousands of miles and many days in your past.   Anyone recognize the cool looking guy in the shades?



We were hosted on Orcas by dear friends Stephanie and Frank.  Orcas is known for its bucolic natural beauty, picturesque water inlets, terrific hiking opportunities and love of nature both by its native America residents and those who are more recently arrived, as well as its wildlife - particularly the Orca whale.  We gladly went to local outdoor markets, hiked, indulged our senses, slept late and simply enjoyed these amazingly peaceful surroundings.  (Yes, I was there too, but someone has to take the photos!) 


A less known Orcas Island factoid is it’s history as a west coast berry growing stronghold.  In 1935, local farmers established the Orcas Island Berry Growers Association (OIBGA) to build a cold packing berry station in the town of Olga. The plants opening  was made possible by the arrival of electricity through a New Deal program, which, in 1938, brought electricity via underwater cable. Workers brought flats of freshly picked berries from trucks through the buildings large sighed door and weighed them on a floor scale, present even today.  The site also boasts a wonderful small restaurant and gallery filled with diverse works by local artists.  So add the Catkin Cafe in Olga on Orcas to your list for an outside lunch date. The Dutch Baby Pancake is ABSOLUTELY worth the calories.  


 Beautifully green hills dotted with richly colored wildflowers, views of water around nearly any bend and friendly folk who smile simply to be surrounded by such beauty. We have a friend who insists Orcas Island is where she is determined to take her last breathe.  We can now understand why. 














Thursday, July 5, 2018

Fourth of July - Bahama style





Happy July 4th from Harbour Island 🇧🇸 Bahamas! 

Ironic since originally those arriving from America  were British Loyalists who escaped during THE  Revolution.  But the Bahians are willing to put on fireworks for the rest of us, so who are we to argue? 
And keep your eye out for cigar shaped manatees.  Often over 8 - 10 feet long and easily weighing in at 800 to 1,200 or more pounds, they love the cool fresh water from the boats and will gladly accept a few leaves or romaine if you have them handy.  



Even without a boat, arriving here is easier then you think.  Fly into Miami or Ft Lauderdale, take a puddle jumper flight less then 200 miles to the Eleuthera airport and in 10 minutes a water taxi will have transported you across the harbour to Harbour Island.  There are several guest houses and small single story “hotels” to choose from.  The later is generally a traditional Bahamian home now consisting of a central dining room and bar with 8-10 cottages on the grounds built high on the island, looking east over its pink sand beach.  You’ll definitely want to rent a golf cart to get around.  Beach access near Dunmore’s will guarantee a much quieter experience then accessing next to Coral or Pink Sands, where the college crowd gathers and a DJ keeps things lively.  Walk the beach, cool off in refreshingly warm celadon colored waters, rent an umbrella and lounge chair for sun protection and your good for the day!

There’s no shortage of delicious food and equally memorable views.  Dunmore's or Sip-Sip (closed Wednesdays) has wonderful lunch and an escape from midday heat.  Runaway offers Thai inspired options, along with more traditional Bahamian fare. Her owner acts as DJ, with curated music influenced by who she observes in the dining room, eventually slipping into music for its sophisticated evening bar retreat.  Aguapazza has moved to Romora Bay Resirt marina and Massimo’s  Italian influenced recipes never disappoint.  



Before Harbour Island (I know this is working backwards, but you can do this!) we anchored out at behind an essentially deserted island cay. To the west, clouds lowered at sunset, with bright gold offsetting bulky dark, tall, dark silhouetted clouds.  It was the post sunset eastern view;under-lighting this anvil like cloud formation that really caught our attention.  Part of the magic of “swinging on the hook” instead of tieing up at a marina.  



Our first stop post Ft Lauderdale (remember we’re working backwards) was Great Harbour Cay; part of the Berry Islands where passports can be stamped and boats pass out of quarantine. But we like it’s laid back unpretentious nature and always try to stay for a few days.  The weekly mailboat hadn’t arrived - so neither had the island’s groceries. We had brought plenty of our own provisions - a must when going to the Bahamas.  Our usual favorite restaurant, Carriearal, was not accepting diners,  as it struggled to feed its own guests.  So we tried the more local no name restaurant, down by the government dick, whose chef is also its part time driver (the island’s sergeant also helps out) AND a retired Nassau (Bahamas) Detective.  (Bahamians tend to piece together a livelihood on the smaller islands.) Although the food was limited, how can you beat freshly caught fish and lobster? We’ll be back!

Karen also found the sea grape she’s promised to draw, among some other tropical plants, for a Useppa botanical guide.  The boats running well.  Our first guests have arrived - so we are off to a good start!!
(Except for some internet issues, which is WHY this particular entry is in reverse. Hmmm.) 

Sunday, June 3, 2018

Memorial Day Weekend and the Chicago Dogs



On Memorial Day Weekend,  we escaped to Rosemont, Chicago for the opening of Impact Field on May 25 - the new home of the Chicago Dogs.  AND please note,  the incorporation of the  Chicago flag classic color and five-star logo..  The “Dogs” are part of the American Association of Professional Baseball,  an independent league founded in 1902 as an independent minor league foe the larger midwestern cities.  Ted Williams, Mickey Mantle and Wiley Mays got their start in this league.  Following their old school tradition, the Chicago Dogs move by bus to play over 100 games per season against 4 other midwestern and 1 Canadian Team as part of the AAP Northern Division. 

On opening day, families, little league teams and people of all ages swarmed the 6,300 seat stadium, with its 360 degree open concourse.   No, it’s not the same as seeing the Cubs, but with ticket prices beginning at $5, a family can attend live baseball for less than a movie.  Every day is Fan Apprectiation Day, with the stands and its activities created so that the fans are the heroes at every game.  There something for everyone, whether it’s inter inning fan competitions, after game fireworks and guests as young as two running the bases. There’s something for everyone at the uniquely Chicago style baseball field. 


And most importantly, don’t forget there’s NO CATCHUP on a Chicago Dog! Yes, there’s ONLYN the classic nine ingredients - bright green pickle relish, chopped onion, 4 tomato wedges, 1 dill pickle spear, 2 sport pepper, celery salt, yellow mustard, enwrapped in a poppy seed bun and  the all beef hot dog is almost ancillary.   Mustard is the Chicago Dog mascot, but that doesn’t mean that the evil tomatoes squezze bottle doesn’t try to make its way onto the field. Just a three miles from O’Hare and less then half a mile from the convenient Aloft Hotel, Fadion Outlet Mall of Chicago, Dave and Busters arcade (a Chicago classic), Alllstate Arena, Stephens Convention Center - a stop at Independent Field for a Chicago Dogs is definitely worth a stop. Have you experienced Chicago traffic lately!  With 70 million cars annually traveling by the stadium’s digital billboards on Interstate 294 each year, why not take a break? And yes - a quick congrats to our friend and an Impact Field co-founder, Steven Gluckstern and his wife, Judy, for creating a baseball experience everyone can enjoy! 
Looking for some affordable family fun near Chicago? Landing at O’Hare or planning on staying near the airport with a few hours to spare? Make your way to Independent Field and catch the Chicago Dogs! 
  

Tuesday, May 29, 2018

Shanghai - Everyday life


Name a brand and you will find it in Shanghai, including Ikea, which is so popular that seeing those bright blue bags over someone’s arm is hardly a surprising sight! 

With the largest middle class in the world, the stores and pedestrain streets throng with people dressed in a completely western style (okay, people still walk around with umbrellas when the sun shines, but other then that) and enjoy a modest but arguably more balanced economy then most Americans can imagine.  For example loosing a job here or being “relocated” does not mean that you are expected to pull yourself up by your bootstraps, collect short term unemployment that requires  managing on a fraction of your salary or worry about basic education and healthcare.  Life is much more like what you would expect in western Europe then what we experience in the US. 


Yangs Dumplings - boiled then seared - are a must. Remember to pierce with your chop stick to allow the “juice” to run out prior to biting into these tasty morsels.  Now your eating like a Shanghainese!

There are stores, LOTS of urban malls and innumerable eateries. Even though the 2015 GDP per capita is US$16,553, everything bustles, reflecting that Shanghai is generally an affordable city. Yangs Dumplings is popular with both locals and Trip Advisor voters for a memorable meal costing US$5US. Our Grand Central Hotel centrally located near The Bund, offered an incredibly popular all you can eat buffet for US$40 with piles of crawfish, carving stations etc. A good glass of wine US$7.   M on the Bund  will set you back a bit more, but this Australian entrepreneur, Michelle Garnaut, who now has a sister location in Beijing, offers an incredible combination of delightful food, amazing art and unforgettable views. 

Starbucks can be found throughout Shanghai, but the Reserve Roastery is a destination not to be missed, even if you don’t like coffee. 

Starbucks Reserve Roastery, Shanghai in many ways personifies the direction of this city and China overall.  Two full floors of sipping, eating and buying options are open from 7AM - 11PM and offer an experience you won’t soon forget.  Coffee beans from around the world are freshly roasted here behind a glass wall for all to see. A stock exchange type board educates consumers of their province and announces when they are being released via pneumatic tubes and to what coffee station. Sit at the bar as your personal barista creates a coffee tasting flight.  Another area has a broad selection of teas.  Multiple open kitchens create a wide variety of scrumptious western and eastern foods. The well curated merchandise offerings are of incredibly high quality and are certainly pricey, even by western standards, but move quickly.  By the way, Starbucks flagship Reserve Roastery is in Seattle, one is opening this Summer in NYC’s Meatpacking District and another is planned for Chicago.  


Fashion in Shanghai is certainly on par with London, Paris or New York.  Presence is important here, whether your Gucci, Chanel, Burberry, a new Chinese designer or Botega Veneta.  Shanghai’s own Feiyue sneaker brand is very popular in Paris, but available at bargain prices in here.  Long gone are the drab grey, olive and blue that many associate with China’s past.  


Winding through pedestrian streets in protected neighborhoods, undisturbed by development, feels like an oasis. 

Archetypical meets contemporary in specific parts of the city.  The government keeps rents incredibly low in the French Concession market, Tianzi Fang. Here tiny shops host both traditional goods and new fresh designers, safe from being crowded out by far more powerful brands. Shanghainese will tell you if a business can’t survive here, it can’t survive anywhere. It also provides a restful vintage feel that we all crave from time to time. 


The art is incredibly more varied and free then 10 years ago and certainly more so then what you see here - but I just loved this monochromatic selection. 

Art galleries are plentiful and varied in material usage, subject matter and approach.  Images may reflect the past or comment on the future. There’s a surprising amount of high tech and interactivity that allows images to change colors and move, such as watching a young girl balance as she actively dances across a clothesline. M50 Hub,  is anotable area of artist studios and galleries that are generally open to the public.  Wander around, stop at one of the eateries and reminisce about the SoHo of days gone by.  


One way bicycle rental is readily available at nearly free prices. 

Getting around Shanghai is not as challenging as you might imagine. Although the presence of automobiles has increased dramatically, so too has the easy to use and very inexpensive subway system. (Apparently subways are easier to build in Shanghai then the stalled 2nd Ave line in NYC.) Motor scooters and bicycles were the traditional modes of transportation, so bike lanes and lane sharing is something Chinese take for granted, particularly within the older areas of the city.  However the newly built major arteries can easily get clogged with traffic and a 6 mile car ride can take the better part of 45 minutes. (Think of the Long Island Expressway.)  Yes, air pollution can certainly be an issue - similar to LA of the 80’s. But with a government who takes a long term view and exerts a steady hand, strict limits, easy access to bicycles and creating architecture focused on incorporating alternate energy and carbon footprint reduction would imply that this problem too will be solved.  


Sunday, May 27, 2018

Shanghai - China’s largest city

Shanghai and China poses some interesting and sobering facts:

With a population of 1.38 Billion, China is the most populated country in the world - followed by India at 1.29 Billion  and the USA in position number three at a mere 329 Million. YUP - that is considerably less than 25% of China’s population.  It takes  a moment to fully absorb that littl factoid.  From a marketing perspective - that’s the equivalent of saying that if 25% of the Chinese population prefers Dunkin Donuts over Starbucks, it is the same number as 100% of  the American population preferring Dunkin Donuts over Starbucks. (More on Starbucks later.)  So, when it’s reported that there are more consumers drinking wine in China then in any country in the world, what is that report actually saying? Is it then any wonder that a wide variety of brands are focused on a rising middle class in Asia? The numbers are fascinating.  


This Shanghai Urban Planning Museum 2010 model, indicatesin yellow all then current structures and lighted planned projects, now completed on both sides of the Huangpu River,

Shanghai, with a population of 34 million  is the most populated city in China and yes that’s more than 10% of the entire USA’s population and over 4 times larger than NYC’s population of 8 million. Shanghai is also the most populous city in the world. Although growth began in the late 19th century, Shanghai has experienced  a population growth of 37.53% since the year 2000. It is known for its architecture, temples, and gardens.  More recently, it has become the financial and industrial center of China, and increasingly considered its art and fashion capital, rivaling Paris and London.



The Huangpu River divides and, in many ways, defines Shanghai. The Huangpu  is 70 miles (113 kilometers) long and was man made in 221BC as a major tributary to the Yangtze River, which then empties into the China Sea.    (Yes, the river was excavated and completed by 221BC, another factoid that takes a moment to absorb.) The river defines Shanghai’s two primary districts. On the western shore is the historic area of Puxi, home to The Bund which is known for its historic early 20th century Beaux Arts style architecture that housed international consulates, trading and banking houses On its eastern shore is the modern area of Pudong, home  of the iconic pink Pearl Tower. The Communist Party of China (CPC) was founded in Shanghai by Chen Duxiu and LI Dazhao on July 1, 1921 in the neighborhood referred to as the French Concession. Today, Rodya, Shanghai is the home to two branches of the China Stock Exchange, cementing its importance as a Chinese financial center. One should take care to not confuse Communism as a form of governing with its underlying free market economy. Anyone would be challenged to find such a rapidly growing, prosperous midlle class in any American or western city.  The economic change here in the last decade is simply jaw dropping. 



We were last here in 2007,  the year before returning for the 2008 Olympics in Beijing. There was the unique and  iconic pink Oriental Pearl Tower. along with a handful of low, bland buildings on the Pudong side of the river.  (When Steve had been here in in 1999 Pudong was farmland being plowed by water buffalo, so to him, even this initial transformation seemed exceptional.)  However, over 25% of the world’s  building cranes were also here in 2007. Today the Oriental Pearl Tower blends in with a bevy of internationally designed,  modern, high tech architectural wonders. This vertcal building boom inspires architects to create multi-use structures built to withstand typhoon winds and reduce carbon footprints by increasingly utilizing wind turbines and rainwater collection to work with building materials to warm, cool and light. Today there are over 30,000 buildings with a minimum of 24 stories in Shanghai, including the 128-story Shanghai Tower - the tallest in the city and 2nd largest in the world. 

There is a light show for several hours every evening, before the buildings go basically dark to conserve electricity. Thousands flock  to The Bund for photos. Absorb the full affect by taking an evening cruise  on the Huangpu. It’s an event to remember. 

By comparison, the Hong Kong’s nightly laser show pales in comparison. Might there be a message there? 

And what about everyday life?


Ia country that prescribes a specific amount of green space per capita, Shanghai is no concrete jungle.  Particularly on the weekends people get outside for socializing and fun.  ThecPeoples Park Matchmaking Corner is not to be missed. Beyond the usual city park activities, parents come here to pin the bios of their adult single children to umbrellas, hoping to meet and exchange information with other parents who are “shopping” for potential suitors for their single children. Bios include height, weight, education, interests of both the suitor and the person they desire to meet.  Very important is if there is a “marriage home”, because who really wants to live with their in-laws? AND if the parents have already met and like each other, then that removes a huge potential barrier to a promising match.  Parents generally scope out “their soot” among the hundreds who come here. Not  so surprisingly, this meeting and exchange becomes a weekly social event. Who needs to go on-line? This could truly be an exportable idea!


This entire love lorn concept, may also attract just a bit of theatre.  Here we find a young man who claims that after seeing this beautiful Chinese woman on-line, he has spent years searching her out.  He has traversed  oceans, travelled thousands of miles, conquered multiple challenges and all for love. And yes, today he is going to meet her for the first time.  The crowd gathers.   The girl is ushered in by his friends who capture on video the long anticipated meeting.  She seems in awe, shyly smiles, is smitten and after a short time is literllly carried away. Will they reappear next week to again live out this tender moment? We’ll never know.  

Parks are also a place for older people to gather daily during the week.  Retirement is mandatory at 55 for women and 60 for men.  There is time to be filled; with city parks and senior centers waiting.  Besides morning Tai Chi, there are a wide variety of activities throughout the day. I wandered through Fuxing Park, built in 1909, in the French Concession.  Dancing is VERY popular. But there are coral groups, musical instruments to learn to play - including Maraca, the card game  Dou Dizhu, aka “fighting the landlord” , Mahjong and chess. Maybe  you want to practice your painting or character making with sumi brush and water?  This man writes - “beautiful land” - the Chinese characters for America.  





Sunday, May 20, 2018

Nanjing



We left Hawaii, May 7, took an 11-hour flight to arrive in Shanghai.  But there was no rest for the wicked. After checking into our hotel, and Steve ensuring his nearly 80 Harvard Business School students were settling in, we were off to visit our Useppa friends in Nanjing. The trip begins with a ride on immaculate modern and very inexpensive 50-cent subway ride to Shanghai’s main train station which looks and feels more like a newly built regional air terminal.  The less than 2 hour bullet train trip to Nanjing travels as fast as 220 mph. Another four hours on the white bullett  and we could have been in Beijing.  


As we move from Shanghai to Nanjing, high rises eventually fade to individual homes, to open land and then again  miles of high rises, each punctuated with prescribed green space per capita, schools and everything else that makes high rise living seem completely unlike living in a concrete jungle. Nanjing’s population of 8.3 million  is essentially the same as New York City. 



Nanjing is commonly referred to as the green city, although the direct translation is “Southern Capital”.   Plane trees, with their distinctive mottled bark, arch over the streets in the older part of the city, reminding you of  the shade provided along the boulevards in small French villages.  



Nanjing is an inland port on the Yangtze River Delta and one of China’s Great Ancient Cities. The  older part of the city is still partly defined by deep moats and tall stone walls that date back to the 3rd century Ming Dynasty when  Jiangnan (Nanjing), this area south of the Yangtze River, was the Capital of China and its city wall was the longest in the world.  The inside layout was highly organized and densely built. The Imperial Palace was the archetype for for the Forbidden Palace later built in Beijing.  People fled from the warring north and brought technology and innovation that continued to strengthen the area for centuries.  In fact from 1368 - 1425 it was the largest city in the world with a population of  just under 500,0000.  


The written works, weaving, painting  and ceramics reflect  much of what we still think of as Chinese design. What’s amazing is the technology used to create these gooods was  far beyond what was found in most of the western world.  



For example, the design of this commonly used ceramic oil lamp  utilized animal fat, which was typical at the time, but employed a technology that directed the sooty smoke into the bull’s  belly where it was absorbed into water and prevented the soot from fouling the air. Leonardo da Vinci was the first westerner to “discover” this technology over 1,000 years later.  



We joined a gazillion Chinese school children as we made our way through Nanjing Museum - which really was impressive.  Besides art, the museum told the story of Nanjing from its early Ming Dynasty in the 3rd century, through 1421, when the Capital was moved to Beijing. In 1912 the Manchu Empire fell and Sun Yat-Sen turned China into a Republic and moved its capital back to Nanjing, where it was  reestablished again by Chaing Kai-shek in 1928.   The Captial was moved to Taiwan, with many of its treasures, in 1946  during the Chinese Comunist Revolution and 2nd part of the Chinese Civil War, when the People’s  Liberation Army occupied the Nanjing  Presidential  Palace.   In 1949 Mao Zedong established Beijing as the Capital for People’s Republic of China .  The museum is definitely worth a visit, including its use of interactive technology that would be the envy of almost any  American museum.  


But our REAL reason for visiting Nanjing, was to spend time with our Useppa friends Becki and Michael Carmichael.  Michael is a cardiac surgeon who has been volunteering his time in China for the better part of 20 years, sharing techniques and supporting the exchange of cardiac medical staff between our two countries.  Now, as part of his “retirement” he is spending 6 months at Nanjing First Hospital, which has become a major cardiac resource in the are.  He generously allowed Karen to watch a quadruple bi-pass and several valve replacements.  (Steve took a pass.). Becki is busy assisting in the department. and teaching English.  Yup -sounds like retirement  to us!  We thnak them both for their hospitality and just might come back next year if we can tempt them to take some time off and do some additional exploring.  



Wednesday, May 9, 2018

Where are we now

Watch a movie, close your eyes for just a few hours and everything changes - dramatically! More later.  

Tranquility Calls



Sometimes you simply yearn for complete decompression,  to rest the  mind without the  distraction of things to do and the temptation of sites to be seen.  You crave a place to simply be and allow internal quiet to be be restored.  This is that place.  

The Mauna Kea’s location was identified over 50 years ago by Laurence Rockefeller, who flew over all eighth Hawaiian Islands with the desire to find the epitome of Hawaiian tranquility. He selected this small crescent beach with its lava cliffs on the west coast of the Big Island (also known as the Island of Hawaii) as the location to conserve and build a small 125 room beach hotel that would disappear into the landscape at a time when  tall structures were the norm. When the Mauna Kea opened in 1965, the  remote location and rugged logistics of building on lava rock and sand contributed to its then being the most expensive resort ever built, bar none. 



The Rockefeller family bestowed an extensive 16,000 piece collection of Asian and Hawaiian sculpture and artifact. It is still on exhibit throughout the property.  Organized tours provide richly detailed explanations of the collection highlights or you can simply wander to your hearts content, finding pieces at every turn. 



The surrounding nature is strong competition the any art collection.  The richly colored, bold foliage punctuates light sand and dark larva rock. Bird of Paradise, spider lilies, towering tulip trees, plumeria flowers used in leis and red ginger are just the beginning of what surrounds you, silhouetted by intensely bold blue skies.  And then there are the wide variety of bird song and charming bright green geckos.  Nature simply abounds. 



The feeling here is completely casual and multigenerational; both which we love.  If you plan to stay put on the property and have brought more then a couple of bathing suits, shorts and tees, a coverup and okay a sundress to throw on and a shirt for dinner, you’ve probably overpacked.  (We did.) How relaxed were we? The 6.9 magnitude earthquake 70 miles away on the Big Island’s east coast, was felt by those sitting on Mauna Kea’s beach on the west coast, but we missed the entire event while lazily dozing through a massage.  Oops!

We hadn’t realized how much we craved the delight of “nothingness” and have vowed to take 5-days truly off every year.   Feel free to hold us to it. We’ll remind you to do the same!

Monday, May 7, 2018

Family and Friends - Redoux



The highlight of springtime on Useppa is always a visit from family.  From youngest to oldest is Evie (just 7), Clara (about to turn 14), Erin and Jeremy.  It’s a long trip form Eugene Oregon which we attempt to reward with warm weather and lots of relaxation - so after a day to settle in, off we went for a brief boat ride and an afternoon on Caya Costa to wander the beach, collect shells and venture into the turquoise waters. 



Back on Useppa, there was also visits to the Grotto, with its increasingly odd assortment of art and artifact.  The girls were very helpful in the butterfly garden, where we spotted newly hatched Monarch caterpillars on Giant Milkweed bushes.  Egrets were spotted fishing on the dock. Most mornings Evie could be found patiently waiting for Po-pop/Steve  to finish reading the morning headlines, while Bubbie/Karen watched the sun come up while preparing the first round of breakfast.  


There was also the very unexpected visit of some of Karen’s closest and most enduring friends to help celebrate her BIG birthday. (We’ll let you guess which one.). Steve had spent months contacting, planning and plotting their travel and a weekend of surprise events.  They braved unexpected snow storms and boarded trains, cars, planes and boats to meet on Useppa, where they hadn’t been since witnessing our wedding over 10 years ago. They, and the all of Useppa,  kept this secret and certainly pulled off the surprise of a lifetime! Proof positive that secrets truly can be kept and that really good friends are one of life’s most precious treasures. 

So what are you waiting for? Be in touch and let us know when to expect you!

 


Monday, April 23, 2018

Useppa Celebrates

The Spring is filled with cultural and religious celebrations honoring new beginnings, often tinged with a sense of the surreal.  Particularly after this long winter, who wasn’t  looking forward to the promise of a new start? And yes, we in southwest Florida, were not battling the March snows, now famously visiting the northeast like the weekly plague, but we did have a flu season that knocked out about two-thirds of the Island for weeks at a time. So when the occasions arrived, Useppans were out in full force!



First up - Saint Patrick’s Day.  With a Grand Martial leading our own fire truck (one of two) and over a dozen ingeniously decorated golf carts, no one misses those  oversized  balloons anyone can see on TV. And, of course, we have prizes - lots of prizes -  as well as genuine leprechauns!


However it is the ecumenical Easter sunrise service, now in its 20th year, that is truly Useppa magic. This weekend tops any other in terms of people on Island.   It begins with the questionable privilege of  arriving before dawn to participate in a morning of thoughtful community reflection, music and readings as the sun arrives, carefully timed, with the first speaker.  The newest participant in 2018 was less then 2 weeks old and represented the third generation of her Carmichael family here.   

This year our opening greeting was from Allen Symonds, a Jewish resident, who reminds us of our shared heritage. And for the first time, Mr Steve Kaufman opted  to attend  and see what all of the fuss was about.  We think he enjoyed it, although surely the suggestion that blueberry muffins accompany  hot-cross buns is a memo being composed for the suggestion box.   

Winter is the obvious time to make a southern visit - but those in the know “think Spring”. You won’t be disappointed.  




Monday, March 12, 2018

Winter 2018

What HAVE we been doing? We have been pretty much exclusively on Useppa since Christmas.  Ok, except for a pre-New Years foree to New Hampshire for Karen’s godson Henry and Mary’s wedding.  

Back on Useppa, the weeks fly by. If you read our holiday letter, you heard Steve bemoaning a lack of overseas travel. Clearly he’s focused on correcting that issue in 2018.  


Shanghai was Steve’s first passport stamp of the year. He was quick to raise his hand to do a pre-visit, in preparation for our return in May with a group of HBS students.  Yup - more on that later.  


Santa brought Steve a drone, which he has quickly mastered.  Besides zipping around the Island and dodging palm trees, Karen now has areal views of the Butterfly Garden - perfect for planning!


Karen’s work to attract yellow Sulphur butterflies and capture their lifecycle has paid off. Eggs, caterpillars, chrysalis and butterflies found the masses of Senna and Cassia planted last summer.  Karen’s threatening to get her Master Gardener certificate so that she can come out of retirement and officially start a career in Butterfly Gardening. Perfect for a NYC girl, don’t you agree?

Looking for culinary, culture and local art? Come to the Pine Island Clam Jam - where you can find a bit of everything while the experts judge the best “chiefs”.  Karen and her neighbor John eye an outdoor fire pit made from discarded iron tanks.  Ok - we’d need a bigger backyard and a crane, but stil......


Like many sailing club members, Karen and Steve took a turn at the grill for upward of 40 after the Saturday afternoon Catboat races.  And this year the Useppa Yacht Club sponsored the biannual Catboat Rendezvous - where sailors and their boats come from as far away as New England.  

So when should we expect you? We’re leaving Useppa before the end of April, so the clocks ticking!