Tuesday, June 11, 2024

New Bern: The Tryon Palace

On May 8th Rebecca and Penelope treated us to a day-trip to New Bern, in eastern NC, and then on to Atlantic Beach, in the Outer Banks, both parts of the state we had not seen before. New Bern is a pretty eastern Carolina town, relatively old for these parts, nicely renovated, self-regarding, and attractive. The main draw is the (reconstructed) Governor's Palace, Tryon Palace. Of note also is that New Bern was the birthplace of Pepsi Cola.

Pano of the palace: left is the staff area, kitchen, laundry, secretary's offices; center, the palace itself;
right, stables and staff (slave) housing; all petty much like a (modest) English great house, as you would
expect
The Guv's chamber; the governor was royally-appointed, so the
capital was wherever the then-governor happened to live 

Music room

View across the lawn, to the river...

Dining

Oddly, a portrait of Scottish philosopher Thomas
Reid; the docent explained this as a reference to
Thomas Paine...the proponent of "common sense
philosophy" as a father of the American Revolution?!
I stifled myself; no connection; Reid's "argument from 
design" was one of philosophy's great jokes,
refuted by the bon David Hume 20 years before Reid
concocted it...stifle yourself...


Grand staircase

Amenities, necessaries

Guest room


Guv's boudoir

Kiddie room

Pantry; in the basement now

Butler's pantry: note bars

Housekeeper's quarters

Now in the service building, the hearth...and excellent docent
work throughout



Washing boards

Governor's secretary's office

In the gardens


Among the excellent signage


Alas, not planted in flowering vines!!! Could easily have surpassed 
Three generations


Cary Spring Scenes

Apart from the several excursions noted, as well as holidays and birthdays, and theatrical performances, our nearly ten months in Cary were fairly uneventful. Most days we sorted through our stuff, looking especially for prospective eBay offerings, looking for things to toss, to give to charity, to keep. Vicki sold more than $6000 of stuff on eBay or locally, several of the sales really surprising us...items we thought were sort of idiosyncratically ours but turned out to be in some serious demand. Despite having no specific goals, when it came time to pack up and vacate, were were disappointed that there was still so much stuff left. I never really got to the several boxes of files and mementos from my work life. These minutiae are the hardest to deal with. Next time. Oh, in addition to the death-cleaning bit, we also did quite a bit of walking, probably averaging 12k steps a day. And for the first time in some years, we watched some TV. Then sold the TV.

The pix below and in the next post will have to represent the rest of our time in Cary. I may add to them or edit further as time permits. But I'm already two weeks behind in my coverage of Paris!

Vicki's sister Marie came to visit us in late January


















Out walking


Vicki broke a bone in her right hand in January;
dealing with it, treatment, and recovery, all
had a bearing on our work...I tried to convince her
it was a great opportunity to become ambidextrous,
but she didn't buy it


Daughter Rebecca's February birthday...one of the big ones


An item we sold that we will (hopefully) not miss...our bed-bug oven
(for treating clothes, etc., killing bed bugs and their eggs)


My aspiration to become a Wagner scholar now officially dismissed;
and the scores sold to someone in Texas (Das Barbecu?)


Another item sold, with mixed feelings...my ultra 
light-weight backpack, which got us around five continents...


A disagreement among the doctors: in downtown Durham a bus
from Chapel Hill chides Duke Health for using animals in medical
teaching; there is no end to the hard-court rivalry


Another item not to be missed: our grizzly-proof food sack,
for back-packing


Spring finally arriving


In Cary's downtown park, another edition of the junior entrepreneur
fair


P has won 'best in show' at several of these fairs around
the Triangle; this time her jewelry-making skills earned
her a ton of money


At our birthdays dinner at the Fairview in Durham


Nice finish


Vicki's birthday brunch
























































































































































And three-generation tea party



Surviving picture of Easter brunch at the Peck and Plume
in downtown Cary


The carb table


Of great interest: wild wisteria in Cary, pockets of it here and there,
vining to the tops of the pine trees; the bloom lasts a week
or so, then, all gone...


One of the rescue bikes I acquired and fixed up in Cary; 
now in more expert hands;  the female version is now Penelope's bike


New home: now a merely 10x15 storage unit, temperature and
humidity controlled


Some gorgeous sunsets in Cary, if you don't mind an obstructed view


One of P's 13th birthday gifts from us was a second day at Disney
Paris--Vicki and P are en route from Les Halles as I write...


Part of the celebration...blooming of a Chinese flowering
tea we'd been carrying around with us since Beijing, 2008


The cicadas were with us from late April...not as
bad as some other places, though still creepy and
icky; and noisy


En route to her first prom










Another of P's extracurricular activities were more or less
weekly sessions at our apartment acquiring an assortment of
culinary and textile skills...here working on the dress she
made herself (pix later)
Just  before we left for Paris, we got to see P in her theater arts spring
production of Frozen






































































































































































































































































































































Very talented young woman!


Sunday, May 26, 2024

Interim Update #1,281

Nous sommes maintenant Ã  Paris. In the last week, as planned, we put everything in storage (again! but far less this time), vacated our Cary apartment, and returned to our Paris apartment, same one as last year, in the 6th, by Luxembourg Garden. We're here for six weeks. And then, ever on...

As usual, I'm behind on the blog, owing a couple more posts on our time in Cary. We're settled-in here already, and I'll get to the blog forthwith. Patienz!

Us, Saturday evening, Luxembourg Garden, 250 steps from our
appartement


Thursday, April 18, 2024

Total Eclipsters

Last fall, Vicki read of the then-impending April 8th total solar eclipse. We immediately decided we wanted to see it and quickly wrote to Indianapolis family/friends Joey and Jodi to see whether their spare bedroom might be available around that time. Indeed it was, so we rented a car for the week, studied up on astronomical matters, solar and lunar periodicity, etc., and made our travel plans. 

Said plans included "dropping by" younger daughter Rachel's house in DC, to deliver several boxes of her childhood mementoes, a TV, and other items, and to pick up items we had left there on previous visits, as well as others she wanted to pass along, maybe even have eBay maven Vicki sell. Vicki has an expansive notion of "along the way," so along the way, after DC and the stop in Indianapolis, were also brief visits with Mead/Stephenson family genealogist cousin Ann in Salem, IN, and then with sister Marie in Knoxville. We were gone about a week all-told. See map below.

It was not our first total solar eclipse. That was on March 7, 1970, in Miami, FL. I had just graduated from Florida State University (BA, honors in both philosophy and religion) and was working as a bellboy (bellman then) at the Miami Springs Villas.* No philosophy jokes, please. (Ask me about Joe Namath, Arthur C. Clarke, Eddie Arcaro, et. al.; also where I got into graduate school a few months later). Vicki was doing her student teaching at Shenandoah Jr. HS, and, accordingly, has no memory of any of this. Teaching junior high will do that to you. At the Villas, somehow I had arranged to be outside during totality, as it is now called...I think my excuse was something about making sure all the golf carts were plugged in and charging. My chief memory is of standing there, in the bamboo grove where the golf carts were charging, observing the increasing darkness, listening to the increasingly weird behavior of the birds and other critters.... I doubt that I looked at the (eclipsed) sun...maybe briefly. There were no specialized glasses for the event. Mostly I was impressed by what was going on on the ground. But I digress.

Along the way






















Our steed, a Hyundai Genesis; I did not like this car; next time
we will ask for a Leviticus or Deuteronomy

Crossing the Ohio River; not pictured: daughter Rachel; we had a
productive and good but short visit in DC, sufficiently short that I
neglected to get any pix; she is pictured elsewhere on this blog; amply






































Late lunch Bahama Mamas at Schmidt's in Columbus, along the way;
a favorite place in a town where we spent 13 formative years...five graduate
degrees between us and my first actual full-time "permanent" employment




















Next afternoon, we are with Joey and Jodi and our nephew, Joseph,
Joey's son, at a friend's house nearby, an eclipse party sponsored by
their church discussion group (I think Joey said it was the agnostic
Methodist discussion group; but, no matter, they were really nice
and interesting people and offered some wonderful eats); plus,
where better to view an eclipse than on a suburban landscaped lake....






















Trying on my new shades



















Group portrait


















By 3PM, things were getting pretty dark


















And then, totality, as seen by my Pixel 8 Pro

Ditto


















And then by my old-fangled but still impressive Panasonic Lumix
ZS65 

Jodi notes the dip their solar panel system took for those three
minutes; temperatures dropped almost 6 degrees during the eclipse



































Moving right along, after another great day and evening, and dinner,
with Joey and Jodi and Joseph, we are down the road a bit, in Salem,
having lunch with Vicki's cousin Ann, Mead/Stephenson family
genealogist, scanning new-found pix, etc; again, I failed to get any
more relevant pix...Vicki's mother is left-most on the bottom row...























Lastly, after a splendid day with Marie and Norm and Stacey, but no
pix of them--again, they are amply represented elsewhere on the blog--
we are on the way home, stopping at the Buccee's in Sevierville, TN;
Buccee's is, of course, one of the cultural gems of the American South...
aka the United Shit-Holes of Trumpistan--an humongous truck stop
that doesn't allow trucks...and this is currently the largest of all the
Buccee's...located, appropriately, on that longest stretch of tawdriness
in the world, the road from Gatlinburg through Pigeon Forge to
Sevierville; not a particularly fitting end to a great ecliptic road trip;
but it is what it is...











































*which may account for the fact that The Cocoanuts is my favorite Marx brothers movie; not Horsefeathers, despite my long association with higher education, "college" football, etc.

Cicadian Rhythms Begin

Pictured below is, according to Google Lens, a dead cicada I found in our parking lot this morning. Let the cicadian rhythms begin! You saw it first here...