Thursday, October 15, 2020

On the Road Again, second try

 August and September were pretty much the same, except September has three more letters.  Daily schedule never changed: wake up, exercise, coffee, read, second walk, breakfast, shop every ten days or so, lunch, read, nap, walk, BBC news at 6, dance at 7, cocktails at 7:05, dinner 7:35! Not grueling, not exciting, not much to write about!  Which is why we jumped at the chance to drive to Florida to help out with some of Megan’s needs such as appointments.


We hopped in Petite Rouge on the morning of October 1st and headed south. We got to South Carolina and spent the night near Hilton Head. We walked to shake off having been seated for nine hours and were amazed that everyone we saw was acting like it was 2019. Restaurants jumping, no masks, outdoor bars packed with folks singing while sitting rather close together; we were dumbfounded. Cindy had packed our cocktails and dinner so that once we got in the room we didn’t leave. The next morning we were offered a very lovely breakfast and since no one was near us in the breakfast room we sat and enjoyed a hot meal before getting back on the road. Our first meal out in seven months!!  Stupid Covid!


We arrived in North Port on Friday afternoon Oct. 2 and checked into our rental home that Cindy had found online a few days prior. It is a lovely three bedroom, two and a half bath Florida home with a huge pool, hot tub and lanai. In the past two weeks Cindy used the pool twice to cool down after a run and I put my feet in just to say I used the pool. I have spent most of my time in the kitchen cooking meals for us and for Megan and her son Blake.  We bring their dinners to them at about 4:30 and sit with them - at a distance with masks on - until about 6. Sometimes we head over to see Valley, Kent and Aidan for a quick hello and then head back here to make our dinner. The location has changed the routine has not.  Stupid Covid!


We have rented another home in North Port because this one is not available and we’ll move there on Saturday; it seems to be quite similar to this one which has been very good for us. Planning on departing on the 24th and arriving home on the 25th at which time we’ll hibernate in West by god Virginia at least until the end of November when we’ll most likely come back here for a month or so.  It seems so weird to be here and not to be able to kiss and hug and sit close and chat over wine and dinner.  Stupid Covid!


Stay well, stay happy and this too shall pass.    Cindy and William

On The Road Again

October 15, 2020


On the Road Again

 August and September were pretty much the same, except September has three more letters.  Daily schedule never changed: wake up, exercise, coffee, read, second walk, breakfast, shop every ten days or so, lunch, read, nap, walk, BBC news at 6, dance at 7, cocktails at 7:05, dinner 7:35! Not grueling, not exciting, not much to write about!  Which is why we jumped at the chance to drive to Florida to help out with some of Megan’s needs such as appointments.


We hopped in Petite Rouge on the morning of October 1st and headed south. We got to South Carolina and spent the night near Hilton Head. We walked to shake off having been seated for nine hours and were amazed that everyone we saw was acting like it was 2019. Restaurants jumping, no masks, outdoor bars packed with folks singing while sitting rather close together; we were dumbfounded. Cindy had packed our cocktails and dinner so that once we got in the room we didn’t leave. The next morning we were offered a very lovely breakfast and since no one was near us in the breakfast room we sat and enjoyed a hot meal before getting back on the road. Our first meal out in seven months!!  Stupid Covid!


We arrived in North Port on Friday afternoon Oct. 2 and checked into our rental home that Cindy had found online a few days prior. It is a lovely three bedroom, two and a half bath Florida home with a huge pool, hot tub and lanai. In the past two weeks Cindy used the pool twice to cool down after a run and I put my feet in just to say I used the pool. I have spent most of my time in the kitchen cooking meals for us and for Megan and her son Blake.  We bring their dinners to them at about 4:30 and sit with them - at a distance with masks on - until about 6. Sometimes we head over to see Valley, Kent and Aidan for a quick hello and then head back here to make our dinner. The location has changed the routine has not.  Stupid Covid!


We have rented another home in North Port because this one is not available and we’ll move there on Saturday; it seems to be quite similar to this one which has been very good for us. Planning on departing on the 24th and arriving home on the 25th at which time we’ll hibernate in West by god Virginia at least until the end of November when we’ll most likely come back here for a month or so.  It seems so weird to be here and not to be able to kiss and hug and sit close and chat over wine and dinner.  Stupid Covid!


Stay well, stay happy and this too shall pass.    Cindy and William

Tuesday, August 4, 2020

August Already

Goodness, how time flies - even in a pandemic with a halfhearted lockdown.  We only brace for the worst as we see no improvement in the statistics for Covid19.  

Nevertheless, I've started to hit my stride with a few attempts at travel planning and that feels good.  Plans are for the fall of 2021 - which on the one hand seems far away but on the other hand is probably way too soon for us to get on an airplane and head for Europe. "Time will tell" has  probably never been more apt so I'll spend a lot of time keeping an eye on cancellation deadlines.  The good news is that the cruises we canceled for 2020 have resulted in a 125% refund that must be used within two years. This means we have more moolah to apply to the next cruise(s) and we can spring for a bigger cabin just in case we are quarantined on the ship. 

Speaking of which, as we tentatively start to plan cruises for next year we note with some discomfort the fact that two ships, one in Norway the other in the South Pacific, started cruising last week and guess what?  Yep, despite what they called state of the art preventive techniques both ships are now docked for two weeks' quarantine since crew members and guests contracted Covid. As the great Yogi Berra once said,"It is deja vu all over again!"

I asked Cindy to glance through her daily journal for ideas that we might want to include in this blog, and she lost count of the number of times these words appear:  mowing, weeding, and mulch. Pretty exciting times here at Casa Embee, and of course the references to mulch included buying, hauling, unloading, and spreading ... and by the end of June we realized we needed some help in the form of a truck.

Therefore we have swapped out our fleet of vehicles. We are giving Cindy’s beloved Tweetie Bird, a bright yellow 2006 Chevy Aveo with only 25K miles, to granddaughter Emily so that she has a reliable ride when and if Florida State opens again. Cindy has greatly missed her old Ford Ranger so we looked around and found a lovely 2008 ebony-colored Ford Ranger to replace Tweetie.  It is in great shape and with all of our gardening needs, we really needed a pickup not only for mulch but for rock, sod and sand. Her name is Vol de Nuit!  Here is a story Cindy wrote about her first solo flight in Vol de Nuit.

No Good Deed Shall Go Unpunished
 - or -
The Good Idea That Wasn't

The first was my title; Wm weighed in with the second one ... trying to make a long story short here, but we've had a minor issue in the neighborhood with tree branches hanging over the sidewalks.  This forced the walkers and runners into the street so I posted a nice message on our "Next Door" app requesting residents to trim their trees. It was amazing how much action ensued - almost everyone with offending branches cut them (including me; those trees keep growing).  The other morning I was running past one of the last hold-outs and he happened to be outside mowing, so I stopped and asked him if I could cut the lower branches off his tree. He was only too happy to accept, so an hour later I drove the truck over, loppers and gloves on board.  

I started my work and within a few minutes he joined me and offered to help. I started to put branches into the truck bed and he said he'd take them, but Smart Cindy said, oh no - I'll take those branches (since I was thinking that was part of my offer to help).  In my defense, I was only planning to cut 3 or 4 small branches.  But Jorge (or whatever his name is) decided to trim the entire tree, all the way around, far beyond what was needed to clear the sidewalk.  See attached photo! I was very glad that Wm was in the backyard and did not see my pyrrhic victory before I had time to get all the branches out of the truck and bound together.

Those of you who reply, don't be TOO hard on me.  Ha.

Stay healthy and don’t worry, be happy!    Cindy and Wm 


Vol de Nuit and the Yard Crew
Heaping Helping of Greens

Saturday, July 25, 2020

Montreaux Redux

Thirty years ago this month I was working for ABC News and had been asked to attend the Montreaux Jazz Festival in Switzerland; oh the labors I’ve endured!  Cindy and I arrived and were greeted as though we were important since ABC was sponsoring some events and our little pins seemed to get us invitations to all sorts of VIP events.  One was a private cocktail party for the artists who were to perform at the festival. The venue was a lovely park, overlooking Lake Geneva, owned by the hotel, and the catering and service were impeccable. As we wandered about with Champagne in our hands, Cindy would gently remind me to close my gaping mouth - the scenery and guests were that jaw dropping. 

At one point I noticed that Roberta Flack was having a conversation with someone at a small table by the shore. Roberta and I were in graduate school together at the University of Massachusetts, and in fact I was the teaching assistant in a course she had taken. When there was an opening I approached her and introduced Cindy and myself, reminding her of our time together at UMASS. I’m sure she didn’t know who I was but she was very gracious and made like she remembered, and we began talking about mutual friends from UMASS and where they were now. Cindy and I were celebrating our seventh anniversary and I told Roberta how romantic it was for us to be able to be in Montreaux for the festival. She asked if we were attending her performance that evening and we told her we wouldn't miss it for the world and we hoped that she would be singing "Killing Me Softly."  She assured us that she would. 

That evening we were seated in a box that had a fantastic view of the stage and we enjoyed all of her performance, but when it ended she had not sung Killing Me Softly.  This was a bit disappointing, but only for a little while. She sang the song as an encore and looked directly at us, or so it seemed, for the entire time. It was, to say the very least, a very special way to celebrate our anniversary.

Yesterday was our 37th anniversary, thirty years after Montreaux. I didn’t think a romantic dinner, fine wines or special cards would be enough to let Cindy know how much I still cherish our marriage so I learned how to play Killing Me Softly on the guitar and accompanied myself as I serenaded her as a surprise before dinner. Thank you, Roberta Flack!

Best wishes,  Cindy and William

Monday, June 8, 2020

C'est la Vie

Sunday, June 7, 2020

According to my Google Reminder, Cindy and I should be boarding the Crystal Symphony in Lisbon at this very moment, starting a 13-day cruise, mostly stopping at French ports. It was booked last year to celebrate Cindy’s birthday month. Then France said they were closing their ports which meant we had to stay at home for a few months. C'est la vie!  We have cancelled all of our travel until at least mid-December and it most likely will take me that long to get our refunds or travel credits.

So it has been four months, 126 days of staying home. 126 morning coffee services and 63 lunches.  Cindy has made 126 breakfasts and 63 lunches; amazing how we track time!  I have had a chance to really hone my cooking skills: 126 dinners without a break will do that for you.  I’ve taken up the guitar again after a failed attempt four years ago. I practice every day and think I peaked two weeks ago when Cindy and I did a duet of Chuck Berry’s ‘You Never Can Tell’. For me it involved three chords and vocals while Cindy actually learned how to play the melody on violin. It took me three months of practice and it took Cindy three hours, C'est la vie, said the old folks, it goes to show you never can tell.  For your enjoyment click here to hear the song and dance as portrayed in Pulp Fiction.

Now to be honest, we are very lucky. We have been retired for years and our daily routine hasn’t really been much different now than before Covid-19.  In four months we have used a half tank of gas since there is nowhere to go and nothing to do. My furthest excursion was a sixteen mile round trip to the medical clinic to get some blood work done. Cindy takes her music lessons via Zoom so no trips for her. Just a trip to the grocery store - four miles round trip every ten days - where we pull in, open the trunk, accept our groceries and we are gone. It is all surreal. We feel so fortunate to have a big house with lots of inside and outside space to wander. Daily runs/walks have not been affected since our neighborhood has lots of open space and everyone is very sensitive to social distancing. We so appreciate all of those first responders, grocery workers, utility folks and others who place themselves in harm's way for the social good.

I mentioned Zoom but you could not see my face when I wrote it. I have lots of problems with communication that isn’t face to face. If I talk on the phone for more that thirty seconds it's a record. I spent too much time during my working days on “interactive conferences” and I found them to be horrible. Everyone talking over one another, technical failures, no one knowing when to mute and when to speak, or more importantly, when to stop speaking. I can last fifteen minutes with dear friends and family if there are no more than four or five involved, but all of a sudden we are getting invited to Zoom events that involve twelve to fifteen people!  Impossible.

So, what do I miss?  I miss French fries!  It is not so much the food, but the fact that you can only get it outside the home. (We don’t deep fry in this household.)  I miss the smell, the first crisp bite, and dipping one in mayonnaise for a double cholesterol bomba. The first thing I’m going to do when this is over is go to a little restaurant we know not far from here where you can get the best mussels and frites outside of Brussels, and they have carafes of ice cold French white that are more than acceptable.

We hope you are all healthy and safe and riding this out as best you can. My happy place in all of this is thinking of all the money we are saving for future travels by not going anywhere for nine months!!

Stay well, Cindy and Wm

Thursday, April 30, 2020

Lady Canfield's School of Ballroom Dancing

Lady Canfield’s School of Ballroom Dancing 

(First drafted in 2010; revised during the pandemic of 2020) 

I haven’t been invited to any of the Inaugural Balls, which is really too bad.  Not that I expected to be invited, but boy would I have loved to go just to dance! I’m 63 years old and I’ve been dancing since I was 12.  This is due to the fact that my mother thought that ballroom dancing was a sign of good breeding so she arranged for my sister Cathy and me to attend Lady Canfield’s School of Ballroom Dancing in Norwalk Connecticut. 

My parents didn’t have two nickels to rub together, especially in 1957.  I could hear the ‘discussions’ that they would have about how best to spend their limited resources.  My father was sure that dance lessons would be a complete waste of time and money but my mother was adamant and whenever she ended a sentence about money with the phrase, "we’ll find a way to pay for it," the argument was over.  Of course I was rooting for my father because the last thing I wanted to do was learn to dance with girls. There were lots of other things I wanted to do on Friday evenings, most of which involved no shower, no Sunday clothes, and certainly nothing that involved doing something with my sister! 

I tried to do what I could to get out of this.  I spoke as an aggrieved businessman telling them that I would have no time to get my paper route done and get home in time to eat and get cleaned up.  My mother suggested that I didn’t seem to have any trouble getting my route done in time to play baseball and that if I was short of time I could skip eating. My father, now completely behind the project, finally pulled me aside and told me that if I did this without any whining, he would let me wear some of his Old Spice aftershave every Friday for the classes.  That did it.  Wearing his Old Spice was to me the most telling tale of having passed from childhood to adolescence and I most likely would have even played dolls with my sister if I got to wear Old Spice. 

The day finally came.  I did my paper route and even had time for a sandwich before cleaning up and putting on my Sunday best, which included a tie and a handkerchief in my chest pocket.  True to his word, my dad let me splash on some Old Spice just before heading out the door.  I damn near hyperventilated in the truck cab as I kept breathing in and out to savor the manly aroma that was emanating from every pore in my face. It wasn’t long before we pulled up to the corner outside the dance school, which was above a B&B Auto Parts Store.  You entered at a side door and there was a flight of stairs that seemed to go on for miles.  They were wood, very old wood, and they made noises with every step.  The corners of each step were filled with dust that looked like it had been there for decades.  With my father gently but firmly pushing my butt up the stairs, I finally arrived at the dreaded venue.   

My sister was so very excited about this and was already talking with other girls about how much fun this would be.  It was then that I noticed that there were no other boys in the room.  I thought maybe we would have separate lessons in another room and I kept hoping and hoping that would be the case.  My father took us to the small office where my sister and I were introduced to Lady Canfield.  Now I had no idea what a Lady really was - and when I finally found out realized that she wasn’t - but she was very intimidating.  I think she was about a hundred years old and weighed about seventy pounds.  Tall, angular, and wearing funny dance shoes, she took my father’s money and promptly dismissed him with a warning not to be late picking us up at 7:30.  No one had mentioned that we would be taking dance lessons for 90 minutes!  It seemed like an eternity to be doing one thing for that long, but I didn’t have much time to dwell on this disaster.  

At the stroke of six we were lined up according to height.  Despite being the only boy in the class, I was certainly not the tallest.  We were told that we would start with the basics; we would learn one dance each lesson while reviewing the previously learned dances; and we were told that there would be no tolerance for wise guys.  The fact that she looked directly at me while saying that made me very proud and I now had a reason for being there!  I certainly didn’t want to disappoint her judgment call.  Finally she introduced the piano player and the dance instructor, who was this unbelievably beautiful woman in her twenties who wore high heels and a dress with crinolines. I was in heaven and my eyes never left her until Lady Canfield began another monologue and asked me to go first.  Of course I had never heard what she said and had no idea what I was supposed to do first, so she repeated the instructions.  Basically, I was supposed to walk across the room, turn around and walk back to the group and get in line again. 

I thought she was joking and started to laugh and wondered why the others weren’t laughing.  I finally got the point that she was serious so I walked over to the wall, turned around and walked back. The next painful minutes were spent listening to Lady Canfield tell the rest of the class what I had done wrong, step for step.  She then demonstrated how it should be done.  I watched in amazement as she did what I had just done but I don’t remember ever seeing any individual part of her actually move.  She literally seemed to glide across the floor and when she turned I thought she was on a turntable.  She was, without doubt, the most graceful person I had ever seen and I vowed right then to never, ever, ever walk like that! 

We started our lesson and for the first time in my life I heard someone playing a piano without any singing.  It was magic to me and I was entranced with the piano player who simply sat there and watched the instructor dance while - as my father used to say - he tinkled the ivories.  I learned to fox trot that night and I learned how to do it quite well and actually liked it when I was able to do it with the instructor, who noted that I smelled very good.  I was still on cloud nine when we were told to line up again for our break.   

This break consisted of our being able to go over to the ancient water cooler, two by two, take a paper cone from the dispenser and sip the water slowly.  I came to worship these breaks over the years since it was the best tasting water I had ever had and it also gave me a chance to watch the instructor sitting next to the piano player and talking. By dropping my empty paper cup, I could take my time picking it up and looking under the piano to see if I could detect any exposed thigh.  

For an entire school year I attended the dance school every Friday night, until finally my parents decided that I had learned enough and that the money could be used for other things and other siblings.  I never gave dancing another thought until I was invited to go to a summer dance at a local beach at age 16.  A girl that I never thought even knew me - so it was really a big deal - invited me.  I was dressed in a summer suit that I had purchased with the money I had earned from working two jobs after school.  It was a warm summer night and the band shell was decorated with garlands of flowers and there was a five-piece band providing the music.  Gina, my date, stood with me and watched everyone dancing, mostly older kids and college kids home for the summer.  I finally asked her if she would like to dance and she looked at me like I was from the moon.  “You can dance?” she asked with so much incredulity that I was taken aback.  “Of course I can dance! I’m a graduate of Lady Canfield’s School of Ballroom Dancing." She started to laugh until she realized I was serious so she took my hand and up the stairs to the dance floor we went.  

For the first time in my life, I realized that I really could walk like Lady Canfield and I could dance like my instructor.  We danced for hours: waltz, cha-cha, foxtrot, Lindy and whatever else they played.  I was so pleased to be getting admiring looks from lots of other girls that I hardly noticed the glares from the non-dancing boys. Nor, as the music stopped, did I notice the guy walking over to me.  Turns out he was the piano player at Lady Canfield’s and was the leader of this band!  He remembered me and was so pleased that I had retained all I learned.  He introduced himself to Gina and then introduced us to his wife who, of course, had been my instructor.  She was still beautiful and I was still wearing Old Spice. 

Over the years my ability to dance has made a huge difference in my life. In college I was the only male who could dance real dances with my peers as well as formal dances where I would dance with faculty and administrators.  Working with the Carter Administration I was often invited to fancy social events so that I could be the dedicated dancer for donors, visiting dignitaries, and other fascinating people.  But the best part was that at my wedding I was able to dance with my mother and tell her how much I appreciated all that she had sacrificed to make sure that I was a well bred young man. 

Postscript:  With our previously-scheduled cruises canceled and no hope of scheduling another one any time soon, we dance in the sunroom every night before cocktails.  Usually just one dance and there is no band or bartender in sight, but it's better than nothing!
  

Wednesday, April 8, 2020

Love in the Time of Covid-19

As you might remember, we got off our lovely Silver Shadow on the sixth of February  and proceeded to make a marathon trip home from Lima to Charles Town. We got home safely, it a bit late. Those who were on the entire 57-day cruise did not fare as well. The ship made it around Cape Horn and into its ports of call on the East coast of South America until they got to Recife. Things went rather poorly after that since the ship was quarantined for two weeks and no one was allowed to get off. After their time-out the company flew 103 Americans to Ft.Lauderdale. A lousy ending for what for some was the trip of a lifetime; we know, since we met many of them on our leg.  

And thus ends any semblance of a travel blog, so here instead is a not quite fascinating account of our life in isolation.  Current events have just seemed to get the best of us since the cruise, and dealing with all the Covid-19 stuff weighs on us even though there are no significant changes, thanks goodness - e.g., no jobs to lose.  Since I’m in that age category of ‘at risk’ I’ve been playing it safe and staying at home, allowing Cindy to do the heavy lifting. (PS from Cindy:  I'm also in that age category!  But happy to do extra since I am indeed a little younger and I've never had pneumonia as Wm has.) 

In fact, yesterday was the first time in three weeks that I got into the car and that was only to pick up necessary  groceries and wine!  Having been retired for awhile our routine hasn’t changed much as a result of the virus. We do a lot of walking and running every day in the neighborhood, we do housework and yard work and computer work, but have no schedule so no stress. I’ve brought my cooking up a notch as a result of having to plan more than usual. I used to shop every other day, a hangover from living in Europe for twelve years and having had a refrigerator the size of a piece of carry-on luggage. Now that we shop every two weeks, I must think ahead and be very organized with my kitchen endeavors.  

Cindy continues to give lessons and receive lessons on the violin, all via Zoom or Skype. We actually purchased memberships, if that’s what it is called, for CBS All Access and Hulu; we already had Prime and Netflix.  We thought we would be doing a lot of binge watching but the best we have been able to muster is two back-to-back episodes of Mary Tyler Moore or Wings. So much for our TV addiction!  You must remember however that our TV is only 32” and six years old so it isn’t as exciting as it might be.

Spring has sprung here and I had to mow the lawn in March! That is crazy; however, it does give me an opportunity to do a lot more exercising and use different muscles as I wack the weeds and march up and down the lawn. Cindy is knee deep in weeds that she has been pulling for weeks. All of our Bradford pear trees and mock cherry trees have blossomed and for a few lovely days the air was fragrant and the yard a blaze of pink and white. Still waiting on the flowering plum trees and lilacs which should come in the next few days.

Megan seems to be getting stronger, although with all this virus she needs to be extra careful. The other kids and families are doing well and learning new routines. For the Florida families, not having access to their beloved beaches is a heartache but they know the risks and have learned to entertain themselves closer to home. We are in lockdown, but as I said, it doesn’t alter our normal routine much at all. We watch limited news; it's all too sensational and numbers-based. We hope our friends in Italy who are entering their eighth week of lockdown emerge healthy and strong. We wonder about our friends in Nice, where we were scheduled to be right now, and try to do our bit here by not physically interacting with anyone. 

We wish you all health and happiness, however and wherever you can find it.  

Saturday, April 4, 2020

Essential Oils

I purchased a humidifier the other day, the fancy kind with cool mist instead of the evaporation style with a filter. Those filters were nothing more that mold producers and I didn’t care for their efficiency.  As I was unpacking the machine there was a little drawer that slid in and out, which perplexed me. I read the instructions and discovered that this drawer was for essential oils. What in the world are essential oils?

When I was a kid I learned about 3-IN-ONE oil, which was essential for maintaining bikes and roller skates. At ten I discovered Neatsfoot Oil, which was essential for keeping my Duke Snider baseball glove in tiptop shape. When I was old enough to drive, 10W40 oil was certainly essential to keep my 1949 Dodge running. In fact I had to keep two cans of the stuff in the trunk since I needed to add a quart a week!

When I had three kids under three years old, I discovered that Johnson’s Baby Oil was essential to keeping the tykes dry and diaper rash free. When I purchased my first house I quickly learned that fuel oil was essential in a Minnesota winter. In my seven years between marriages I found that massage oil, while not essential, could - when used correctly - be entertaining.  As I became more interested in cooking I discovered that good olive oil was essential to producing satisfying meals.  However, none of these oils seemed to be something that I would want to pour into the little humidifier tray, no matter how essential they had been to me over the course of my life. So what are essential oils?

Essential oils are often used for aromatherapy, a form of alternative medicine in which healing effects are ascribed to aromatic compounds. Aromatherapy may be useful to induce relaxation, but there is not sufficient evidence that essential oils can effectively treat any condition. Improper use of essential oils may cause harm including allergic reactions and skin irritation, and children may be particularly susceptible to the toxic effects of improper use. 

I think I’ll keep the tray empty!  


Best wishes and good health, Cindy and William

Friday, February 7, 2020

Panama Canal Transit 2020

Panama Canal transfer, January/ February 2020

You may remember that I said we love to take smaller ships so that we don’t have to worry about taking tenders into the ports.  Well forget about it!  At four of our five ports we were berthed at an ugly container cargo ship port, and when I say ugly, I mean butt ugly! Not only were they noisy, dirty and filled with the dust of corn or concrete being off-loaded, they always required a 45-90 minute bus ride to the center of whatever town we were visiting.  It goes without saying that we usually stayed right on the ship except in Quayaquil, Ecuador where I purchased a genuine Panama hat! Contrary to popular belief, that is where they are all made. 

Sometimes we cruise for the ports of call and sometimes we cruise as a good way to cross the ocean without a long flight and jet lag, and always we cruise to dance.  And dance we did on the Silversea Shadow from Ft. Lauderdale through the Panama Canal to Lima, Peru. As mentioned, most of the ports of call were a real bust, but we were able to add some countries to our lists:  Columbia, Ecuador, and Peru.  The evenings provided choices of dance venues including a wonderful jazz trio from Ukraine and a young Welsh guy who sang and played the guitar and was quite the entertainer.  One of his tunes was "Country Roads" so we loudly proclaimed we were from WV and sang along.  He played it several more times and added "Charles Town" and/or "West By God Virginia" to the lyrics.  In addition, if we were still awake after 11 pm we could dance to disco music, and after the first night the DJ knew what we liked and always played our favorites (Donna Summer at the top of that list).  Somehow I became known as "Twinkle Toes" and I did my best to maintain that image.  

People often say that they love to watch us dance and even Thursday in the airport we were stopped by a woman who had been on the cruise who said that we made the trip so enjoyable for her because we danced like her parents who are no longer around and we seemed to be so in love. That seemed to be the common comment and it made us feel really wonderful, not only because we love to dance but because others can share our joy! 

The food was terribly average for the first 5 days or so and then improved exponentially and was delicious for the rest of the cruise (another 8 days).  Turns out that we weren't the only ones noticing the lack of quality and some of the others were smart enough to complain.  Not sure how Silversea managed to make such qualitative changes while at sea (same staff and same food stores, presumably) but the changes were significant and were more than welcome.  So who says whining doesn't work?  What really makes us happy is when we train the wine steward to watch for us every lunch and dinner and have two glasses of ice cold Champagne delivered to our table within two minutes of sitting down.  He even anticipated Cindy’s red wine choice for the night and had it slightly chilled for her enjoyment.  That is service!

We were heading home as I typed this, and after a very early departure from the ship at 6:30 AM to catch our flight to San Salvador with a connection to Dulles, we were delayed in the San Salvador airport for hours longer than we'd planned.  Ah well, at least we'll get home the same day (at midnight) which beats another overnight.  

Every once in awhile even I have a moment of perspective. Yes, it is annoying to be stuck in the San Salvador Airport for four hours, but we are in a lounge with quality Scotch and some decent food and it is air conditioned and clean.  On our early morning drive from the ship to the airport we travelled through some of the most depressingly desperate slums filled with open fires, feral dogs, poorly dressed workers, litter strewn everywhere, and a dense haze of windblown sand and smoke.  Therefore relaxing in the airport with Johnnie Walker Black and a passionfruit tart doesn't seem that horrible.

As we sit here we are amazed at how many people think it is just fine to yell into their computer while on Skype or FaceTime or whatever. We have to listen to both ends of the conversation and there are at least five or six going on simultaneously!  Perhaps everyone in El Salvador is deaf! While I can’t confirm they are deaf, I can confirm that very few of them have mirrors in their homes. Young, old, and in between, there is no such thing as appropriate dress, and it isn’t an issue of money since some of the most offensive clothing is EXPENSIVE!  When I was young and my father saw someone whose pants were not touching his shoes, he would say, “he should have a party and invite his pants to visit his shoes,” but now it is the bare midriff that is the offender, not only in men but especially women whose ample midriffs really should be covered!

Cindy says I should keep my head down and keep reading without looking around.  I'll give that some thought.  

all the best, Cindy and Wm


PS: We finally arrived home at 1:30 this morning and for the first time ever we went to bed without unpacking! Now that is tired!

Sunday, January 12, 2020

Jacksonville Beach

We are not beach people!  We do not like to be in the sun very much, detest sand in our shoes and clothes and don’t do much swimming.  We do like to be NEAR beaches and listen to the waves crashing while we sleep and enjoy walking on solid ground above the beaches.  That is why we so love Nice and La Jolla. However, if I ever had to live in Florida, I would consider living on the beaches of Jacksonville:  not because of the beaches, but because of the people!

We have been so impressed with every interaction we have had here - whether at supermarkets, restaurants, dry cleaners or shops - everyone is genuinely nice, concerned and friendly. It reminds us of our first visits to Australia and New Zealand, where the pride of country was evident in every encounter with the locals.  I don’t think it is ‘beach culture’ per se, but rather civic pride, which is usually missing in transient places like beach towns.

Today, after a long walk on the beach - yes I do walk on beaches in the winter - I came back only to discover that my glasses must have fallen out of my shirt pocket.  I tried to retrace my steps to find them on the sand, but to no avail. Megan and Cindy suggested that I check the walkways that connect parking areas to the beach because sometimes folks will find something and place it on the flat handrails. So after breakfast I did just that and on the 12th walkway, there were my glasses, completely intact. There was a surfer dude standing nearby and he heard me gasp out loud, "well, I’ll be" and asked what happened. I told him I lost my glasses and some kind soul had found them and placed them here. He said, “we have a lot of kind souls here.”  How cool!

Megan continues to get stronger and is eating and sleeping well. Yesterday we attended a conference on Multiple Myeloma for patients and caregivers sponsored by Mayo. The morning speakers were mostly people we know who have been treating Megan. At one point, Megan’s primary doctor was talking about the breakthroughs in this treatment and said that the very first patient to go through this clinical Car-T trial had just been released from the hospital and was sitting right in front of him. He asked Megan to stand and she got a big round of applause from the crowd.  It was a good experience. 

Megan’s son Blake came up yesterday - always a spirit-lifter for her - and went home today. The four of us had dinner last night at a lovely restaurant not far from the condo. It was not your typical beach menu but rather some sophisticated dishes, all of which were well prepared and served. We shared some of the best crispy Brussels sprouts and bacon I’ve ever had and a small order of perfectly cooked Lamb Lollipops  with mint chutney. My citrus glazed salmon was decorated with the most beautiful edible flowers and blistered green beans on cauliflower mash; Cindy loved her Gorgonzola-filled ravioli with a warm mixture of endive, walnuts, and pears alongside - as I said, not typical beach fare.  Best of all, they had real French Champagne for a mere $8/ glass - not only is the real deal seldom available in this country; it tends to be $12-15 or more per glass. 


Blake's dad, Clay, drove him up here to Jacksonville and back and we had breakfast with him this morning. We haven’t seen Clay in fourteen years but we have been so impressed with his parenting and his concern for Megan. It’s a ten-hour trip up and back and he did it to help support Megan. Gotta love the guy!  We have another week here and if all continues to go well, we’ll start the drive home next Sunday afternoon.

Saturday, January 4, 2020

Jacksonville Mayo Clinic

It has been a remarkable three weeks, filled with roller coaster ups and downs. The great news is that Megan is making a remarkable recovery. The staff marvels at her attitude and her ability to maintain a very positive persona. The first few days after they infused her with her genetically modified and refined blood were tough for Meg. She was quite fragile going into the treatment and having to do an MRI for one hour placed a lot of strain on her body and her pain level at that time was a ten out of ten. The good folks at Mayo got her stabilized and treated her pain. That was ten days ago and now she no longer takes any pain meds at all since her pain is gone!!

All of her blood work is showing signs of returning to the normal pre-cancer readings. She is doing so well that they are letting her leave the hospital a day early, so this Monday we shall take her to the new rental on the beach. She will have a room with a balcony directly overlooking Jacksonville Beach and I predict her recovery will be far more enjoyable than having to stay at the hospital.  We’ll be here for the next two weeks looking after her but they are not placing any restrictions on her in terms of walking or eating. She just needs to be within a thirty-minute drive of Mayo and will have some appointments during the next several weeks to make sure all is well.  We are all so greatly relieved and so thankful to all the professionals at the Mayo Clinic who have made this possible.

As you can imagine, my usual tales of food and drink and long walks aren't being reported now since they haven't happened!  Nevertheless Cindy and I have gotten into a pleasant routine of visits to the hospital to spend time with Megan, lots of little shopping trips for special foods and things she needs, frequent loads laundry so that she had clean jammies every day (who would want to wear a hospital gown?) and some short walks around the neighborhood. I’ve been cooking up a storm for Megan and we deliver hot and healthy meals. I must say that the food at Mayo is outstanding, but I know what my little girl likes!  Once they spring her on Monday we hope to get out and about a little more, but if not we are perfectly happy continuing our routine with Megan with us.  We won't miss the drives back and forth to Mayo - even though it was only 15 minutes door to door, we sometimes felt that we were entirely too far from her.  That ends on Monday afternoon!  


More later, Cindy and Wm