"When so I ponder, here apart, what shallow boons suffice my heart, what dust-bound trivia capture me,
I marvel at my normalcy."--Dorothy Parker

Saturday, July 13, 2013

this land, part iii


I have always loved cities and mountains for their ability to block out the sky. A wide open sky renders me vulnerable to the relentless sun during the day, to the vastness of starry space at night. I cannot wrap my mind around it any more than I can grasp it in my hand. It is sublime, terrifying.

Ironic, then, that one of great pleasures of a road trip, for me, is watching the skies change with the topography. I grew up in the mountains of Utah, where the sky is a straightforward and brilliant blue, punctuated by cotton ball clouds. When it rains, they take on an aspect of charcoal but retain their reassuringly friendly form. In West Virginia, we had pale blue skies with long wisps of clouds, and when a storm was brewing the wisps would accumulate until they were opaque and heavy, dumping gigantic splotches of rain onto the windshield.  In the Midwest, we saw layer upon layer of incongruous shapes and textures, various heights and shades mixing together, sometimes flat and sometimes roiling, as fronts from north and south, east and west, collided.  And in Kansas, well...

A week before we left NYC I woke up at two a.m. in a sweat. Tornadoes! Was this tornado season? Was that a thing? Earlier that evening, a Pinterest search for Hays, Kansas, one of the likely stops on our route, had resulted in one promising looking restaurant and several pictures of single and double twisters. The longest stretch of our drive would be across flat, sparsely inhabited Kansas and eastern Colorado, with little chance of finding a cellar in case of a storm. I recalled two summers spent in Minnesota and the occasional evenings when the sky would transform in a few minutes' time from its typical grey-blue to a menacing emerald. Tornado watches and warnings would be issued, at which my friend's family would shrug, This isn't Kansas.

Still in bed, I reached for my iPhone. Tornado statistics. When there were earthquakes in San Diego I used to comfort myself in this way, with numbers. Earthquakes are really not as bad as you think, once you have the statistics. Tornadoes were probably not as prevalent as I thought.  Or... Kansas averages twenty-two tornadoes in June (National Climactic Data Center), and those are only the ones that are seen by human eyes? And there is no way of predicting them with any accuracy?  Headlines from the end of May were no more comforting: After two days of storms and tornadoes, Kansas is forecast to get hit again (The Kansas City Star), Multiple tornadoes reported in Kansas (Fox News), and best of all, More massive tornadoes leave trail of destruction in Kansas (CBS News). Public service sites mentioned that, while tornadoes can devastate neighborhoods, deaths from tornadoes are few; typically only those in cars, trailer homes, and other lightweight structures not heavy enough to withstand the winds are at risk. Reality was not helping my anxiety.

A few days on the road had dulled my worries. We had a lovely dinner at Julian in Kansas City, Missouri, I grabbed green tea and local Christopher Elbow chocolates at the Roasterie next door, and we got our wiggles out (some of them) at a pleasant neighborhood park. Earlier, we had found ourselves in Independence, Missouri, a town of significance in Mormon history. We went to the visitors' center there and had a look at the temple of the Community of Christ (formerly RLDS) across the street, which is one of the most unusual structures in North America, resembling a steel-plated alien spacecraft in the shape of a drill, or in Steve's opinion, a fortress from the Superman movies. The Community of Christ also claims Joseph Smith as its founder, but it separated from what is now considered mainstream Mormonism at his death. It had been a good mini-detour.


As we left Kansas City, storm clouds were visible ahead of us. I checked the weather on my phone. Yes, a rainstorm, but nothing terrible. Winds were low and it was already starting to clear in Salina, three hours away, where we were planning to spend the night. We stopped for fuel and it was as though the entire sky was sporting a dark wooly cap, with brilliance peaking out from underneath it at the horizons. We drove on.

It began to rain and we watched with relaxed delight as bolts of lightning ripping through the sky to our right. It looked like the storm would veer around us somewhat, on its way to Kansas City. Soon, Topeka was behind us and the rest of Kansas opened before us, vast and devoid of shelter. Tornado watches for central Kansas started to pop up on my iPhone just before I lost reception. I turned on the radio, hoping for both news and distraction, finding neither. We turned it off again.

Off to our right the sky cleared and we could see the sunset, fiery orange and brilliant against the clouds. It was stunning, celestial. To our left and above us the sky was increasingly apocalyptic, the clouds crackling and intensely electric, casting great white bolts of lighting to the ground with ceaseless frequency. A wall of darkness moved across the sunset, obscuring it from view, and we were plunged into night prematurely. I uttered a silent prayer and told myself that God is aware of the sparrow, and us. I clung feebly to the thought, though the scene before my eyes was a persuasive display of the sweeping power of nature and our little family's insignificance before it. I told myself that my fear was simply lack of familiarity, that the blizzards and hurricanes and gun crimes that threaten NYC, yet cause me nary a worry, are far more destructive than the odd Kansas tornado, but my white knuckles were unconvinced. We made an attempt at an audiobook, but it was impossible with the deafening thunder and we decided to let the storm have its way. We rode in silence.

For an hour, maybe more, we drove on through sheets of rain and searing lighting, simultaneously enraptured by its beauty and and alarmed by its savageness. I eyed the sea of glowering clouds, vigilantly searching for the slightest sign of funneling, though what we would do in that case was by no means obvious, since even such mean shelters as ditches and overpasses were nowhere to be seen on the bare ribbon of highway that stretched out before us. There were still a few tractor-trailers on the road, and seeking solace wherever I could find it, I reasoned that, were there any true danger, the drivers would have heard something on their CB radios and abandoned the highway in search of refuge. We passed the occasional farm or freestanding house and I envied the inhabitants' ability to regard the storm from the safety of a solid structure, evening routines undisturbed by the magnificent turmoil outside. We drove on.

As we neared Salina, small white dots began to glimmer in the velvety black and the torrents eased to a light mist. By the time we pulled up to our hotel, the air was warm and clear, and insects were emerging from their hiding places. We gave each other subdued smiles and assumed the business of checking in for the night. Half-an-hour later, I lay in my bed with nature silent outside the window and the sleeping bodies of my loved ones around me, and gave thanks for the marvels we had seen and our safety in the midst of them.

p.s. I will never be a storm chaser.

this land, part ii

We knew we had crossed into Kentucky when the green became tidier, with short grass neatly delineated by bright white fences, behind which grazed herds of horses. Once upon a time, when everyone everywhere was raising horses, it was remarked that Kentucky's were the biggest and strongest of all. The soil beneath its blue grass was rich in calcium, and an industry was born. Such pretty countryside.

Dinner was gumbo and jambalaya (jam to the regulars), followed by a slice of authentic derby pie and a pillaging of Anthropologie (everything on sale, in my size...we were definitely not in NYC). Fed and clothed, our thoughts turned to shelter. We spoke with a nice B&B owner via telephone who, without so much as a name or credit card number, told us to let ourselves in, grab a bottle of bourbon from the bar, and make ourselves at home in his house. He and the wife were going to a movie. Did I mention we are not in NYC anymore?

The next morning, at Keeneland, Lexington's famous racetrack, we ate with the horse owners and track operators and got a glimpse of a jockey, thrilling in his miniature muscularity, sporting a jaunty cap and uniform. We tucked into excellent pancakes, biscuits with gravy, and eggs and bacon, undaunted by the portion sizes and relishing the price tag of $2.75 per person.


There was a failed attempt to get the kids pony rides at the Kentucky Horse Park, and then off we went toward St. Louis, though not before Townsie learned what a horsie says. Neigh.

We thought that we would stop in Louisville for lunch. So glad we did. Its NuLu neighborhood was one of those gems that we always hope to find as we wander off into unknown (to us) parts of this country. Cool little shops,  inventive design, amazing food. If you should find yourself in Louisville, don't miss the best Mexican cuisine of your life at Mayan Cafe. Chef Bruce Ucan is a genius

A few images from the street...


Wikipedia kept us company across Indiana and Illinois, allowing us to probe the histories of the small towns and weather phenomena we encountered along the way. East St. Louis provided a particularly good read. Crazy how each place has its own story, its own reasons for existence, its own successes and failures.

We did our best in St. Louis--went to a hip local restaurant, tried the farmers market--but it was not quite our town, beyond the Whole Foods and the view of the arch from our hotel window, reminding us that St. Louis is the Gateway to the West. We downloaded The Diaries of Adam and Eve, translated by Mark Twain from Audible for the road. Westward, ho!
 

Tuesday, July 9, 2013

this land, part i

We started our journey after dark that Sunday night, passing through the Holland tunnel and determined to go as far as was reasonable while our children slept. We made it to Harrisburg, Pennsylvania--the first of five state capitals we would see by our journey's end--where we found a room for the night and woke within reasonable proximity to the town of Hershey. We were tempted to continue west and spare our innocent children the marketing prowess of a multinational conglomerate, but the thought of the two thousand miles that they had yet to endure in car-seats softened our hearts. In the end, the spectacle of our baby let loose in his first candy store was well worth the stop.

We wove southward into West Virginia, making our way to Harper's Ferry, which the guidebook praised as a picturesque town (of historical significance), but which turned out to be a blink-and-you'll-miss-it two hour detour (of historical significance). Lonely Planet's USA was thenceforth stowed deep in the trunk, untouched for the remainder of the trip.

West Virginia is a shirt-optional state, at least for its male inhabitants. Should you sight a shirt on a male West Virginian, it is as likely to be (okay, more likely to be) worn on the head, turban-style, or stashed in a back pocket, as it is to be worn on the body.  This is solely for cultural reasons, rather than to show off a painstakingly chiseled set of abs, as it is in SoCal, another region in which I have witnessed this anti-shirt phenomenon.  Fascinating.  We glided through emerald hills, enjoying spectacularly peaceful scenery, marked only occasionally by human habitation, usually in the form of a single trailer home, invariably sporting a rooftop satellite dish, set by the side of the road.  When we stopped for the night it was at a very nice hotel in Morgantown, home of WVU, a bargain courtesy of our Hotwire app. Go Mountaineers!

What a difference three years can make in the Technological Age.  When we made the reverse trek three years ago, from California to New York, I spent weeks beforehand compiling lists of charming sights along our potential routes, with printed maps of Whole Foods and farms permitting visits in a folder.  Nights in the hotel were spent on my laptop, researching B&B's and historical hotels that we might reach the following night, desiring the flexibility to drive and stop at will.  This time, our iPhones, equipped with apps for the aforementioned Hotwire, as well as Hotels.com, Wikipedia, Google Maps, and Pinterest (to find cool restaurants and sights in tiny towns along the I-70), replaced any need for advance planning. We owe Steve Jobs a big kiss.

On we went to Kentucky, drinking it all in as we went...

Tuesday, June 25, 2013

graduation

It wasn't until I was removing a scrap of Ogilvie plaid and my grandmother's brooch from Greta's shoulder the night before the movers came that I realized what this move really is. I had been thinking of it as a little break from New York, a chance to explore Europe with our kids and buy us a little time to save up to combine apartments with the neighbors'. But as I contemplated which room in our house in The Hague the dress form should inhabit, I realized that never again would she be shoved into a living room because there was nowhere else to put her. She may not always have her own room, as she will have in the absurdly large house that awaits us now, but with this move we are graduating from young couplehood and early parenthood, the stages when a cozy apartment was our preferred footprint. We and most of our friends now have children, multiple children, in fact, and things like a dining room or the ability to stomp without disturbing the people downstairs no longer feel like luxuries, but necessities. I would like to think we have not graduated from city life entirely, but this form of it, definitely.















With the end of the school year, we have been celebrating other graduations, as well. Violet turned in her kindergarten smock to the school director and sang:

Start spreadin' the news 
I'm leaving today
I want to be a part of it
First grade, first grade!

In the fall, lunch will be in the cafeteria with the big kids, and she will do her schoolwork in a desk. She is sad about leaving her friends here, of course, especially after the backyard movie nights and playdates with favorite friends that coincided with the end of school, but I have been impressed with how completely she understands what we are doing and that she is up for the adventure.

Townes is no longer a baby, but has the cutest little waddle of a run, a keen sense of comedy, and a word for whatever he wants to communicate, which is mostly "fun!" "play!" "bite" "thanks!" and his own name and those of the people he loves. Steve is eating barbecue in South Africa and negotiating with Saudis. I just finished my first (and maybe only) residential interior design gig and am working on a book or two. It's a whole new world out there, for all of us.
 
 And now that we have said our goodbyes, had our last milkshake and pretzel at Cafe Sabarsky and buns at Bauhaus, and done our last load of communal laundry, off we go. Our furniture is on a slow boat to the Netherlands, and our car is packed for a cross-country road trip. I'll post along the way. Goodnight, New York City! We love you!
 

Saturday, May 25, 2013

ready for takeoff



So, I have been a little bit...absent...lately. Only from blogging, though, and that because I have been so present in my own life, or should I say lives. As we prepare to exit our New York life for a while and commence a European one, we have a foot in each. Finishing Violette's first year of all-day, big kid school, chasing Townsie, that jolly little elf, up and down and all around (literally), dinners and theater outings with friends, kid parties, Relief Society, all of the things we love about our life here, and meanwhile, hopping back and forth across the Atlantic, house shopping. It's crazy fun. And I do mean crazy.

Steve and I took our first solo trip without the kids, to Holland, and our experience so resembled the above video, sent to me by my friend Cassie, that I had to share. If you haven't already been planning a trip to visit, start!

And thanks to Mom and Danielle for watching the babies while we fell in love with our soon-to-be new home.  Love you!