Thursday, February 29, 2024

Leap forward into a familiar routine

Aren't you supposed to do something unusual on this unusual day in our calendar year? I heard on the radio (on my drive to the bakery) that some people put things in a time capsule on this day. To be read at a later February 29th. I suppose to a person who blogs daily, a time capsule seems very irrelevant. I have an ongoing time capsule. Most of which I will never reopen, but so what. I keep on stuffing it with details every day regardless.

Did you catch those words? "Driving to the bakery." I am back to that. First, though, there was the walk to the barn. A first one for me since I've been back. And a sad reminder that we only have two Bresse hens left. 




As I poured out less food than usual into their feeding dish, I thought about the three that we lost. Unie and two Bresse nameless ones. The trauma remains. Each evening, only one of them now goes into the coop. The second one hightails it to the garage and flies up to the rafters to rest there for the night. We have to climb a ladder to get her down (and into the coop, under lock). Last night, Ed was late coming back from his machining work so I did it for him and even standing on the top rung of the ladder I could hardly reach her. Ed has noted that that chicken is going to kill us in the end, in our attempt to keep her safe.

Well, there wont be "just two Bresse girls" for long. We're getting more chickens this weekend. More on that later.

And yes, I then did drive to the bakery. Madison Sourdough. I needed cookies for Sparrow. (He just loves their cookies and only their cookies! Him and Ed! Must be a guy thing.) The bakery itself felt heavenly! The smell, the presence of all those warm breads and croissants..




Here's a fact: those croissants are actually better than most that I have for breakfast in Europe. Why? Because nearly every hotel now serves mini croissants for breakfast, replacing the traditional full sized ones we get at bakeries. Mini croissants may be excellent, but they aren't the real thing. You dont have enough of that soft center to satisfy your croissant craving. So, good, but not great. Whereas Madison Sourdough croissants are the full blown wonderful heavenly breakfast treat. With a milky coffee -- nothing is better.




Notice the flowers on the table. I picked up several bunches at the grocery store yesterday. Spring is my favorite time to buy grocery store flowers. Daffodils, tulips, hyacinths. They're beautiful and fresh and of course, the markers of this next season.

And speaking of that next season, we are so close to it now! We have had a crummy snow-less winter (too warm, too dry), but we are to have a warm March and that forecast starts today! Yesterday's Arctic blast? A thing of the past. We're climbing the temperature charts once again. It's still windy and that brings a bit of a chill with it, but it's also sunny and just so very lovely. We seize the opportunity!

(I swear he wears shorts year round...)



(Lake Waubesa has a thin layer of ice in one small portion of it. Our bigger lakes have no ice at all. In February! Weird.)


 


And look who is back with their beautiful piercing cries!




In the afternoon, I'm once more in line to pick up the kids after school. This is what exuberance looks like!

 


 

(Sparrow, as always, wants his own closeup)



Nothing like a break from routine to get them so very excited to be back here again!

It's a bit out of the ordinary for me to also pick up their little brother later in the day. Ah, the trio of bandits!And a field of blooming snowdrops!




I take them home and return to a pack of deer on farmette lands.




Well, okay, but please stick with the old growth. Leave any new plants alone! (I don't think the deer are especially listening to me...)


And now it's time to reheat that soup and turn on a new show we discovered on my soon to expire Netflix account: Loudermilk. Maybe it's that we are so ready to laugh, maybe it just hit us at the right moment, but we both thought it was witty and therefore very funny. 

Ending February with a chuckle is always a good way to proceed.

with love...

Wednesday, February 28, 2024

International Day

This is why I changed my flights for an earlier return: to be back for International Day at the older two kids' school today.  

It happens only once every two years and we got notice just last month that they picked February 28th for it. Today. Snowdrop had begged for me to take part and Sparrow joined in the chorus: do Poland!

The school asks families to volunteer. You get a table (or two), and you display the country of your ancestry to the school community. Putting something interesting together is a huge commitment and it's no surprise that out of their school of several hundred students, only fourteen parents and two grandparents volunteered to do it. One of those grandparents was me. Poland will be presented, or else! -- I said this to myself even as I realized that the work for it would have to be done within that brief period of time when I found out the date (when I was in Chamonix) and when I left to meet up with my friends in Italy. If you were an Ocean reader then, you will have noticed that I spent days on this -- acquiring poster boards, books, thinking up fun facts, harassing my Polish friends to supply me with some postcards of the Warsaw mermaid, days upon days! 

I was, in fact, ready, though I did have to miss the set up window yesterday early evening. I was still flying home then. My set up at the school would have to be this morning, which is a chore only because it is darn freezing this morning (think: 13f or -11c), and the presentations will be starting promptly at 8 a.m. I had to get there before the school even opened for business, so that I could unload the car and put up all my Polish loot.

So, up by 5, waiting in the Starbucks line for a mighty strong brew at 6, and at the school doors, unloading at 6:55. Actually I was there earlier, but no one else was, so I sat in the car sipping coffee and thinking how nice and warm the bed had been this morning.

 

The kids came by grades, forty minutes for each grade. 2nd, 1st, K, 3rd, and finally 4th. They were divided into small groups of 4 or 5 and volunteer parents or teachers lead them from one table to the next, where they would spend a few minutes admiring your country and listening to you do your spiel. 

 


 

Effectively, that meant I had to do a presentation some ten times for each grade, or a total of 50 times. Enthusiastically. 

(Sparrow, coming to listen!)


The day passed for me in a blur. I was so hyped for this that I ran on triple overdrive (and triple strength Starbucks!). I put all my energies into this. All my energies. I did everything but dance and sing. By the time the (more sophisticated) 3rd and 4th graders came around, I added jokes and zingers. 


(Snowdrop, with her Polish gaga!)



In retrospect, I think I felt like I was on a voyage into my past. I was, prior to retirement, a teacher, of course, and teaching large classes was a bit of a performance. A more serious one, to be sure, than, say, drawing "talking pierogi" on a board and imitating different voices for the mushroom stuffed one and for the one with blueberries, but still, the goal is the same -- to get them to listen, to be engaged, and to walk away with a new perspective on the world.




Done! Packing it all up now, in a sleep-deprived daze!


From there, to the grocery store, where I spent a very relaxing hour grocery shopping. Only I must have put some foods into someone else's cart, because I came home without two packs of chicken and I swear I had carefully selected two such packs from the grocery shelf. 


Lunch? Or was it breakfast? Finally, at 3 p.m., once I unpacked. I had coffee and a leftover cookie from my last restaurant in Florence.



It was one heck of a day.

In the evening I made soup. I just need a big pot of soup for this week. And some evenings on the couch, dozing off, with Ed.

And so much love...

Tuesday, February 27, 2024

leaving Italy

Good morning. Yawn... Let's see how much of Florence is awake at a quarter to four in the morning:

 


 

Not very much. No surprise. 

Shower, zip up suitcase, go downstairs. The hotel wanted to pack me a boxed breakfast. I passed. And even as I leave I notice the smiles of the staff, the kind gestures, the good words. Arrivederci of course means until we meet again. The question for me is not when I'll be back, but will I be back. For the first time in leaving Florence, I have to say -- I don't know. It's my second favorite European city! Normally I would say -- of course I'll be back! I always return to the places I love!

And yet...

Bee and I watched an old woman navigate the Tivoli Villa d'Este Gardens. She was pushing an oxygen supply. Walking slowly. Was she a traveler? I doubt it. I'm guessing a local, knowing how to navigate the hilly terrain. At some point, the burdens of going great distances are just too great. So how many years of travel do I have left? You can never tell when your lungs, your heart, your health in general will just put the brakes on it all and I will have had my last trip to Florence. To Europe even. Some are lucky enough to continue into the really ancient years. Others not so much.

So how many more visits to Florence do I have in me still? The great mysteries of life!


The taxi ride is super short. The driver tells me how nice it is to do it in the early hours. Later, with the rain -- he tells me -- it will be a mess! Many hand gestured went into that comment.

The Air France flight to Paris is on time, early actually, my layover there is pleasant. Clarins is accepting sign ups for free facials. I have the time for it!

 (breakfast at Paris airport)



And the flight to Detroit on Delta is good. Three movies later, including the three-hour Oppenheimer, and we're landing. And finally -- onto Madison. An early arrival there as well. Ed is waiting for me at the airport. Wow it's warm outside! We do have a super cold blast coming in tonight. (Today's high: 71F/22C. Tomorrow's high: 28F/-2C!) I feel that impending change in the air. Is it still February? Is spring nearly on the way?

All good? -- I ask.

All good. We have a new cat hanging around the barn. Otherwise quiet. Missed you.

I am home.


Monday, February 26, 2024

Florence

In the matter of rain

When you are navigating a city alone, rain, of the modest type, can be your friend. It can cause you to look at daily life there in a new way. It gives a luster to cobbled streets and it adds interesting shapes and colors as people flip open their umbrellas. So honestly, I am not disappointed to wake up to rain.




Since I had sunshine yesterday, I know what the Tuscan hills look like. My eyes now focus on the moving waters of the Arno, the wet red tiles of the rooftops, and the shades of damp orange on the houses at the water's edge.




When I walk to my chosen destinations, I notice how deftly locals maneuver their umbrellas. Living in Florence is a challenge for walkers in the best weather conditions. The sidewalks are very narrow. You spill out onto the street to pass someone, mindful of the occasional cyclist, listening for the cars that come out of nowhere. When the umbrellas come out, you have to learn how to move your rain shield, to avoid knocking eyes out of passerbys. Florentines are experts at this.




Streets empty out. Especially on a rainy Monday morning. (The big museums are closed today so it's a day of fewer tour groups passing through. The city seems to have cut its tourist load by about 75%.)




So, it rained today. I liked that!





In the matter of hotel staff

Many hotels have good, hardworking staff members. Indeed, I'd say the small hotels are more often than not places where you'll find friends in those who work there. But I have to say, my hotel's staff is over the top. I know they are paid to do this, but when even the breakfast server greets me by name and knows, too, that this is my one an only breakfast (my plane takes off before dawn tomorrow) -- well, I'm impressed.

You know how yesterday I set for myself the job of finding a comb (because mine, cheaply made, had broken)? I didn't find anything in the department store. Much later, upon my return to my room, I found not one but two new combs laid out for me. Yep, someone had gone to the trouble.

This morning, too, the hotel front desk person (who often has very little to do as there aren't that many new guests arriving at this small hotel) came over and chatted with me in Italian about my travels in this country and his own visits to Torino, to the Alps. He indulged my (occasional) (okay, not so occasional) language lapses, helping me when I was missing a word or phrase. I appreciate this. You cannot improve unless you practice what you remember and learn new words. He took the time.

In the afternoon, another front staff member came over to where I was sipping a coffee to say good buy and wish me a good journey tomorrow. You have been so nice, I wanted to say good bye. I have been nice? You're the one who got me the combs, aren't you...

I will always remember the view from my room. And the exquisitely comfortable bed, and scrumptious shower here (the farmette shower is very weak and it takes forever to heat up). And the breakfast pastries!




But mostly, I will remember the kind staff, that are especially kind to the solo traveler.

Speaking of breakfast, this was mine:





In the matter of museums

I picked three for today: Museo del Bargello, Museo Gallileo, and Museo Ferragamo. Eclectic? You bet! Let me introduce you to all three.

This is the morning when I finally walk past the biggies of Florence: the Palazzo Vecchio on the Piazza della Signoria and the Duomo. I don't spend time admiring any of them in great detail. It's just not the day for it. They are like the Eiffel Tower -- important emblems of the city and they deserve your respect each time you pass through. But I dont feel obligated to include them in a closer examination each and every time I'm here. You can't spread yourself too thin or you'll sink under the weight of it all.

For photos, I have to say that both the Duomo and the Palazzo are best when caught from a distant point in a quick, maybe even surreptitious glance. 




Or with a proper camera for the occasion. Mine is not a proper camera for the occasion. 




Now, the museums: 

I dont remember ever being inside the Bargello. Given how many times I've been in Florence (a dozen maybe), that seems rather incredible, but there you have it. So it was a no brainer for me. Today's the day for it.

 


 

A quick fact check for those who dont know it: The building itself dates back to the 13th century. First a seat of government, then a prison (think: executions in the courtyard!)...




... and now finally a museum. It's nearly empty today. I dont know why. People are spoiled by art everywhere in Florence. 




But, oh, the sculpture! There's a whole room of Donatellos, and it includes two Davids!

 

 

 

Here's the more audacious bronze David, which has to have raised some eyebrows in the day (he did it years before Michelangelo sculpted his own, now extremely famous David). A guy without clothes, in a hat and designer boots. Okay!




Here, too, you'll find the panels that were submitted in the competition to do the bronze doors of the Baptistery. Only two survived (the others were melted down) -- the winning one of Ghiberti and the second place finish of Brunelleschi.






I read earlier that this competition may have changed Florence forever, since Brunelleschi got so pissed at losing, that he abandoned sculpture and turned his attention to architecture. And Florence is the better for i!

This museum also has Michelangelo's Bacchus. The artist was so young when he did it! (Just 21.) Maybe that's why there's an almost playfulness in this statue: drunk, leaning, almost as if ready to fall over (he's supporting himself on his back foot!).




Wonderful museum. Really great. And empty!

From art, I move on to science and fashion. Let me talk about these under a different heading.


In the matter of shoulders of giants

Florence is full of memories for me. I remain loyal to it, despite the great variety of thoughts that run through my head as I walk the wet streets of the city. When you're 70, you're going to remember: your first trip to the city and the relief when parents said morning was for museums and afternoon was for ice cream. You're going to remember that you came here with your boyfriend when you were just freshly an adult and you wasted many minutes sitting on a bench and arguing with him how often you should wash your hair. You're going to remember when you first brought your own young family and you booked a family room in a bed and breakfast up the hill, only the owners decided to go away at the last minute. No email then, no cell phones. They left instruction to go down to the Arno River instead and stay at the hotel of a friend. It was my first and very memorable upgrade! A fantastic hotel on the river! Only, in trying to keep the budget steady, we ate a take-out lunch in the room, and someone spilled olive oil on the bed covers... Oops! You're going to remember a return trip with somewhat older daughters, where we rented an apartment and pretended we lived in this incredible city. You're going to remember when you came with your new boyfriend, who'll turn out to be your partner for, well, maybe, who knows, for life? But he was just a fairly new sweetie and we were just learning stuff about each other. We'd been hiking in the Cinque Terre and then it started to rain so I proposed we hop on a train and make our way to Florence. Terrible idea! Boyfriend was not as in love with Florence as I was. I wanted to go out to dinner, boyfriend said -- you go. I want to sleep. It took years before I fully grasped how good it is to have a boyfriend that doesn't judge my choices, and that in return, asks that I not judge his (at the same time, he learned what makes me sad and he will go the distance to avoid doing that; in the future, he will spend time at the table with me, even if eating is not his thing at the moment). And you will remember when, in trying to please fairly new boyfriend, you took him the next day to the Uffizi but also to the Galileo Museum of Science. Because you know that boyfriend, with incredible engineering skills, likes science more than he likes Renaissance canvases.

I returned to the Galileo Museum today, not so much because I like to look at ancient instruments used in scientific discovery, but as a book mark to my trip that was so focused (as it often is in Italy) on churches.

Galileo. An astronomer, a physicist, a philosopher. Born in 1564. Oldest of seven. Dad send him off to study medicine at the university, but Galileo had his own ideas and switched to math and science, such as it was then. Hired first to teach math at  U of Pisa, he was then fired for abandoning old belief systems on motion and heaven and earth. And he really made himself unpopular with the Church (capital C here) when he concluded that Copernicus (that famous Pole!), back in 1543, was right: the earth does orbit the sun. Not the other way around.


(Armillary Sphere, 16th c)



For this, he was called to Rome, where he is found guilty of heresy. Placed under house arrest for the rest of his life. Takes another 100 years for the Church to lift the ban on studying/teaching Copernicus theories and, you wont believe this, it isn't until 1992 before the Pope publicly declares that Galileo's findings are correct. Talk about stubbornly clinging to the party line!

 


 


From the Galileo Museum, I walk over to the Ferragamo Museum. This definitely is a first for me! (I get in free because of my choice of hotel, which, as I said, is owned by the Ferragamos.)




Okay, so there are the shoes. 

 


 

But what is really interesting is the life's story, very well depicted of Salvatore (the eleventh out of fourteen kids!). You could like it for its rags to riches elements. And for his gutsy pursuit of a better life. But also for his talent (he made his first pair of shoes at age nine). And his smooth move into the world of Hollywood stars and elites.






And finally, for his return to Italy, where, in Florence, he established his shoe and fashion empire. And then the poor guy dies early of cancer, leaving a widow and six young kids. Luckily his wife was well integrated into the business and continued to grow it, eventually with two of her daughters, turning it to what it is today. (I washed my hair with Ferragamo shampoo this morning. Lovely!)

 

In the matter of squares and bridges

I made a point of passing through three great squares and going over two great bridges. Here they are, empty, beautiful.

(Vecchio)



(della Signoria)


 

 (della Santissima Annunziata)



(di Santa Croce)



(Ponte Santa Trinita)




In the matter of artiginale gelato

I do know that the word "artisinal," when placed before foods, is much hyped and overused. But in Italy, artisinal, as placed before gelato, means something. It tells us that the gelato is made by the store owner, daily, in small batches, using only fresh ingredients. No preservatives, no fake colors. 

Note that I avoid using the term ice cream, because gelato is not really ice cream. Gelato has less cream and more milk. No eggs. Less fat, less air, so it has a different texture. 

To be in Italy and not eat gelato? Impossible! And yet, I haven't had any. My days have been full of food and full of everything else and frankly, chasing down good gelato stores was going to take time that I simply did not have. 

But today I have the time! 

You say -- too cold! Too wet! I say -- that is so un-Italian! In fact, at the end of my museum run, I find La Carraia at the Oltrarno side, and as I stand there wondering which flavors I could possibly choose from the tempting selection...




...no fewer than a dozen Italians come in, get their ice cream fix and go out.

(I like her bag...)


 

 I finally pick the cream with chocolate and orange, and the more traditional pistaccio. Heaven. On. Earth.




In the matter of dinner

You already know that I had trouble finding places to eat here. For tonight I finally chose Il Guscio. On the "left bank," of course! I don't remember what else lead me to it. The menu maybe?

(dusk, out my window, with clouds this time...)



(rainy walk to Il Guscio)


How was it? On balance, good. Very informal once again and a bit out of the way. All points in its favor. There is the question of ordering well -- I think I strayed there. The fried artichokes as a starter were a total wow! They may not look good in a photo, but the taste was spot on! Hot from the fryer!

(with burrata on the side)


The pasta dish meh reaction is on me. The description (with shrimp and zucchini flowers) was too much of a draw. I should have thought a little harder. I mean, why order shrimp in Florence, zucchini flowers notwithstanding! (the pasta itself was beautifully made).

Then, did I really need to order lamb with artichokes? I know I am in Tuscany. I know I need to slide into their meat culture, but it was just too much, even though I again skipped lunch so that I could do a three course dinner.

Dessert? Vin santo and cookies. Their home made ones were superb. The lovely wait person gave me a baggie to take the leftover cookies home.




Ordering in new restaurants is hard.  You want so much to try their best, adjusted to your palate. That's a lot of guesswork! I'm sure I could have done better at Il Guscio. And the big question, the one that says it all -- would I go back? Would I recommend it to friends? I don't know. Maybe.

Since I could not pick up any signal inside the building, I was forced to put my phone down and just space out. (I hadn't taken a book, because, well, I thought I had my (turns out useless) phone.) I used the time to listen in on other people's conversation and to watch them order their own meals. Not sure that helped much. I had Americans right next to me, and the dad talked nonstop, and the mom said absolutely nothing, and they all just wanted steak and a salad.  

The walk back, in the rain, was lovely.




Tomorrow, I can't even say I'll be in Italy. I'm out of the hotel by 4:30 a.m. and hopefully, at the farmhouse by evening, or by night if I dont push the clock back the requisite seven hours.

Enviously wishing you all a good rest!

Ciao, with so much love!