San Rafael Valley, AZ ~~ Photo by Bill Haas

Wednesday, May 27, 2009

KEY WEST

How best to describe Key West?  Well, for starters: forty, party-animal years ago, it would have been my kind of place!  Yes indeed.  As I approach my seventies though, it was not super high on my list of places to visit, but curiosity got the best of me, and I found it to be a lighthearted, energetic, amusing diversion.  And decadent!  Key West's Duvall Street may outshine the infamous hedonism found on Bourbon Street! 





Playful sculptures at the entrance to the town's playhouse/theater.

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In Hemingway's day, most Key West homes were small, quaint cottages, surrounded by tropical trees and plants.  It definitely has a Cuban-Bahamanian feel. Well, DUH!  Key West is as far South as you can go in the Continental US, and it's actually closer to Cuba than it is to Miami.  Because so many of its locals hail from Cuba and the Bahamas, it exudes a distinctive "island" pizzazz and is lovingly referred to as "The Conch Republic."






Hemingway slept here.  Missed the tour; this was the best I could do!
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Although I didn't count, I can assure you Key West has waaaaay more bars than churches.  In one block alone on Duval Street, I counted four on each side of the street; and I'm sure I missed a few as I drove by!  Let's take a 360-degree stroll around this establishment called Bo's, that is enjoying a revision of its former life as a cigar factory. 







Many bars are open to the street, perfect for people watching, and some like this one are intimately squeezed between two other establishments. 


There didn't seem to be an ordinance limiting "open" containers on the street, or else gendarmes simply looked the other way, but I didn't see any of them either.  At all.  Ever!  These "kids" kept urging me to cross the street for a "happy hour" special (it was two in the afternoon!):  Three kinds of rum, a splash of pineapple juice, $6.00, and you can keep the "glass."  Lordy, Lordy, those were the days!
Adjacent to Mallory Square, this meeting place had absolutely no sitting or standing room left as time for the sunset festivities approached.  It never ceases to amaze me how waitresses can glide through crowds and deliver the right drinks to the right table without spilling a drop.  I would be a flaming disaster no matter how much I practiced.  They deserve BIG tips.
If there are any Lazy Daze Ladeze who attended our September, 2008 outing reading this, you may recall a different kind of Flying Monkey.  Do I see smiles?
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These competing "message cars" were parked across the aisle in the same parking lot. One of them is more message-ier than the other!


There was so much other distracting stuff to amuse me I guess, that I didn't notice the plant on the hitch until I uploaded this photo to my computer!

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The streets in old town Key West are little more than glorified alleyways.  Parking lots are scarce (the going rate is $4.00/hr.); metered street parking is prevalent, sometimes on both sides of the street, leaving barely enough room for a car and bicycle to pass one another.  And, for some reason, only a few streets are one-way.  
So how do Key Westers get around town?  Let me show you the ways.









In the Everglades, alligators refer to these as "meals on wheels"!


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Ubiquitous "free range" chickens consider Key West a prime roost.  Little chicken families are everywhere.  The town takes pride in their chickens; don't mess with the chickens!  They actually range and roam and strut all over the place, and somehow instinctively know how to steer clear of traffic and stay safely out of harm's way.

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The sunset celebration in Mallory Square was touted "not-to-be-missed" in every tourist brochure I picked up.  So Mallory Square, here I come!

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A Cuban enclave, selling Cuban cigars and trinkets made in China, included a Mallory Square restaurant, Salsa band and Cuban food.  The menu included this little fine-print caveat, squirreled away below the Dessert listing:  "for your convenience, an 18% gratuity will be added to your bill."  This better be good by gawd!!  (The food was mediocre, but the music and dancing entertainment made it worthwhile.)


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Aaahhh ... at last.  Key West's "Sunset Celebration."  A homegrown carnival, major pick up venue and excuse to be wicked!!  Happens every single night, sunset or not!!!!!!!!

I was a little slow on the trigger here, but that tumbling guy in red had made a running start to summersault through the hoop, delighting a huge audience and fleecing us of appreciative dinero!

This local troupe just dresses up in Halloween costumes and charges you for the privilege of taking their picture.
This act featured Millie the Wonder Dog.  First she would make the rounds around the circle to collect bills (as in folding money) from outstretched hands, then she would deposit them in the little red bucket. Hey!  She got lots of  treats and pets in return and then plenty of breathless oooh's and aaah's and applause as she maneuvered the ladder and tightrope.  She deserved every single handout.  (I'm guessing she had to share some with her human though.)





Lots of ticky tacky stuff to buy, but there were plenty of buyers....the cruise ship was in port!!

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TA-DAAAAAAAA.  Here it is!
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Lorna's twisted sense of humor.  Note to self:  "Better be careful, you too could end up frumpy some day"!

Thursday, May 21, 2009

FLORIDA CURIOSITIES

I know I'm easy, and it doesn't take much to please my eye or make me smile...rusting gears and so on!  Here are some "smile" moments I've found along the way in Florida. Enjoy!










I'm in Florida, right?  It has just two seasons:  wet season, dry season.  I'm enjoying -- make that enduring-- the "wet" season right now, which means it not only rains every afternoon, but also the humidity hangs in the 80-85% range.  Every day.  Now I ask you, why on earth does an outdoor cafe need to be spraying more water into the air? That's what those little puffs are in the upper left of the photo.  Just curious.










My Lazy Daze has more windows than this aberration.  But, who knows?  Maybe the entire ocean side is all glass.  I didn't check!

Wednesday, May 20, 2009

BEAUTY AND THE BLIGHT

AM I HERE YET?

Welcome to Florida!  Having been told April and May were still good months to visit, I planned to spend the entire month of May here. Florida is such a fascinating, diverse state that I may end up in Florida well into June -- in spite of the muggy heat, humidity and early rains.  There's lots to show and tell, so I'll be posting in parts again.
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As I entered Florida's Panhandle from Alabama's Gulf Coast........wait just a darn minute!  Did I miss an exit and end up in Miami?  Is this the Gulf of Mexico I've drooled over lo these many years?  Keep going kiddo; someone said you'd get to "old Florida" eventually.  That's good, because this is definitely not my cuppa!
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Ubiquitous Alvin's Island stores were as common as kitschy miniature golf attractions. Tourism for all ages -- Florida has it all.



A reader wondered how I could take the pictures I do without the convenience of a car. Sometimes I rent a car. Most of the time I stop and go a lot.  But other times, I simply slide one of the windows down, set the lens for its longest focal length, point, shoot and hope for the best.  Hell's fire!  I'm not burning up film any more.  Sometimes the shutter stabilizing feature doesn't quite catch up with the speed I'm traveling:  fuzzy photos.  Sometimes (most times) the pictures are crooked and need to be straightened or cropped.  Sometimes parts of the overhead cab, window frame or the mirror gets to be in the picture.  And sometimes, I just get lucky.  Like here! One hand on the wheel, one hand on the camera, eyes on the road...takes lots and lots of practice.  HEY!  At least I'm not putting on makeup while I'm driving (any more)!!
Ahhhh more like it.  Oh to be stranded on a Florida island!  And the nearest store within walking distance -- at low tide!

Cotton Rats are a common sight in dunes' vegetation.
Gulf sand is so fine, castle construction is a breeze.
I can readily agree with my Lazy Daze pal Kate that one can't take too many pictures of skies.  Here's some Florida sky art.

These photos were taken at St. Joseph Peninsula State Park, my favorite so far.
End of Florida Part I...to be continued