Tuesday, November 3, 2009

My Winter Haven

Ok, I've described the rental process (somewhat), my trip down, my first impressions and later ones of the unit and area, so here are photos of the inside of my winter rental.  (Click on "winter rental" preceding this sentence, if you are unfamiliar with live links.)

And notice how it doesn't look like a cave from these pictures (probably because most of the lights are on!)  Or.....wait just a minute....the walls have been painted brown, not cream as in these shots!   Well, now, that explains a lot.  (I just noticed that while looking at the photos again....duh.)

P.S.  There's a second bedroom and bath, so come on down for a free stay!  :)

First Impressions

Sometimes first impressions can be dead wrong.

I drive along Hwy. 98 in the Panhandle to the north entrance of Sandestin Resort, present my rental agreement, and am waved on through the (heavily guarded) Baytowne Wharf gate.  The 2400 acre property consists of individual "neighborhoods" of condos, townhouses or single family homes on ponds or each of the two golf courses.  I find mine, Bayou Village, and locate my rental.  My unit backs up to one of the golf courses.  (There are also highrise condos, a huge, huge hotel with conference center, its own little "village" named Baytowne Wharf, with shops and restaurants, a grassy "town square" with bandshell for music concerts, and a seasonal, tented ice-skating rink -- yes, Virginia, ice-skating in FL -- all on the bay.  Sandestin is located along the Choctawhatchee Bay, as well as across Hwy. 98 along Miramar Beach.  There are miles and miles of walking/biking trails, too.)

Opening the door, I experience a sinking feeling.  "Cave" comes to mind.  Windowed walls appear only in the front and back, none on the sides.  And although they are triple sliding glass doors, the back ones don't let in much light, as a screened porch adjoins them, its roof blocking out the sunlight.  So I have to turn on a few lights even during the daytime. 

In addition, I can't turn the A/C any cooler than 75 degrees.  Is the thermostat actually rigged not to go lower?  Maybe we Northerners have taxed the A/C systems beyond repair down here in our efforts to stay cool, who knows.  But I am seriously rethinking March and April if I can't get it down to 70.  (The bane of being a woman of a "certain age"....sigh.)

After unloading the car, I drive across to the resort's beach area and although the sand surely is finer than any sand in which I've ever wiggled my toes and the ocean emerald green-azure blue just like the pictures I'd seen, I don't know if I like the "feeling" of this particular beach.  Maybe I'm just hot and tired.  (What I come to figure out is that this beach is narrower than those of St. Pete or Clearwater and, thus, makes for a more "intimate" feel.  I usually prefer "big" and "anonymous", which was, by the way, why I left a small, private college for a big university in my youth.)

However, after a good night's sleep, everything looks much, much better today.  I don't even mind that the condo is a little dark inside (notice how today it is "a little dark" as compared to yesterday's "cavelike feel".....it's all a frame of mind, dahlink). This is how I leave the condo, stepping off its front porch (click photos to enlarge):




Breakfasted al fresco this morning in the "village", visited the ceramic shop where you buy an unfired, unpainted product and under the tutelage of the shop manager, paint, fire and create your own masterpiece (something I am definitely planning to do), picked up some fresh fruit and veggies at the local grocery, and explored a little more.  Wound up on the beach "down the road a piece" (I hear ya, Mick) and snapped the following sunset:


Beginning of the sunset behind the clouds

Some artist's creation


The sunset intensifies....


A small inlet, the Gulf in the background

Drivin' Down South

Second day on the road was orange and russett and burnt sienna.  Autumn departure is ever so much better than winter.  No ice or snow or gray to contend with.  Sunny and mild and little traffic.

Driving to St. Pete/Clearwater was never as entertaining as the last leg of this drive....Hwy. 331 to Hwy. 98 takes you through, shall we say, "down home" America.  Witness the signs I made note of along the route:

Ed and Otis Lane
(really and truly...there were four houses on it)

Church:
There are no fire escapes from hell

Local eatery:
It Don't Matter Family Restaurant
(What don't matter, how it's cooked?)

Brantley, AL:  Front Porch City
(And every single house I saw had a front porch...this I found very charming)

Store sign:
Live rattlesnakes
(Um, why?)

Company sign:
Dongwon
(Not sure how to pronounce this or what they manufactured, but it sounded to me like either the result of a battle of the sexes or that classic lover's name, Southernized.)

Hillbilly Mall
(Hey, they said it, not me!)

And the one I liked best:
Betty's Firecracker Store -- Best Bang in Town

Sunday, November 1, 2009

On the Road Again.....

Half way to Florida tonight.   Haven't driven through the Gary, IN area in years since it had been under construction like my entire life and could hang me up for an hour or more....risked it today and sailed along 90 past the Loop and down south on the Skyway in a flash, even though tailgating Bears fans were heading to Soldier Field.

The IN-KY-TN route is much more scenic than the IL cornfields.   And it was so nice to see sun!

In Nashville for the night and tomorrow, if all goes according to plan, will be on the beach under the palms (do they have palms in the Panhandle?)

Nitey nite



Friday, October 30, 2009

What's Important

I'm running around getting my brakes fixed, seeing my mom, doing errands before leaving this weekend for Florida.  But I just had to post this story I just read on AOL.  Makes us remember what's important in life.

Twenty Years Ago, One Hit Changed Two Lives Forever
Posted Oct 28, 2009 12:00PM By David Whitley (RSS feed)


Brad Gaines will do it again early Wednesday morning. He'll grab some Clorox and glass cleaner, toss them in the trunk of his Buick and head to a little cemetery 175 miles away.  His long, strange trip actually began 20 years ago today.  "I'll be doing it until I die," Gaines said.

He goes to visit a friend he never really knew. Then one crazy football play bound them forever. On a Homecoming afternoon, he collided with Chucky Mullins.

Gaines, a tailback for Vanderbilt, got up and headed back to the huddle. Mullins, a safety for Mississippi, never moved again.  His neck was shattered. He died less than two years later.  We read about such things, wince and move on. It's nobody's fault. It's just football.

Gaines knew that on Oct. 28, 1989. He knows it on Oct. 28, 2009.  It doesn't matter.  "I know it was part of the game," he said, "but it doesn't change the fact, you know ..."  He's tried to explain it a million times why he drives from Nashville to Russellville, Ala. three times a year. If it's the date of the accident or the date Mullins died or Christmas, Gaines has to make it to the grave that's marked simply:  Chucky, Man of Courage.

So what force drives Gaines? Why has he has skipped out early every Christmas or left home at midnight to get back for a morning meeting or barely beat the clock and found himself cleaning Mullins' grave by the light of the moon?  "There have been times I have had to hitchhike because I ran out of gas, had blown out tires, my car's broken down," Gaines said. "But I always make it."  Everybody from his wife to total strangers has worried and wondered. Perhaps the only person who could truly understand is Mullins.  "It's almost like it was fate," Gaines said.

He was a white kid from hoity-toity Vandy. His brothers had played in the NFL. He was a stud running back, the leading receiver in the SEC, a kid whose idea of hardship was getting turned down for a date.  "There have been times I have had to hitchhike because I ran out of gas, had blown out tires, my car's broken down. But I always make it." -- Brad Gaines Mullins was a skinny black kid from a nowhere town. His mother died when he was in sixth grade. He wasn't particularly fast or strong or talented, but Ole Miss coaches loved his attitude. Mullins would do anything to win.

So it wasn't surprising that he lowered his helmet and buried it in No. 44's back. Gaines had gone up to catch a pass. The force from behind knocked the ball loose before he hit the ground.  Gaines scrambled to recover it, but the refs called it an incomplete pass. He didn't even notice No. 38 wasn't moving. Before long, the number would literally mean everything to him.  Gaines couldn't sleep after the accident. He no longer cared about the sport he was raised to love. He didn't even play his senior season.

He did try to get to know the source of his pain. The first time they formally met, Gaines walked into the hospital room and tried not to visibly shake. Mullins was in a halo contraption with all sorts of tubes attached to his body.  A ventilator was rhythmically hissing at his bedside. Gaines shuffled near the bed, bent over and strained to make out what Mullins said.  "It wasn't your fault."

That was Chucky. His spirit never inspired people far beyond the South. Walter Payton visited him. So did Janet Jackson and George H. W. Bush.  More than $1 million was raised for his trust fund. Ole Miss built him a specially equipped house, and he was back in class the next year. Then a blood clot formed in his lung.
Gaines read about it and drove to the hospital in Memphis . Mullins was in a coma, but his friend got there in time to say goodbye. Then doctors removed the life-support system. Gaines went to the hospital roof and wept.

Ole Miss started the Chucky Mullins Courage Award, given each year to a senior defensive player. The winner used to wear No. 38 until the school retired it in 2006.  "You say 'Chucky,' and everybody knows what you mean," Gaines said.  You say Brad, and everybody wonders what that means.  "As I get older I've gotten even more emotional about it," he said. "I don't know, maybe raising my own kids and how fragile life can be."

He has four of them now, three girls ages one to 11, and a five-year-old boy. Gaines is a successful businessman but he still drives a 20-year-old Buick his kids hate.  "I wish your car would die," they tell him all the time.  If it does today, he'll just start hitchhiking. Gaines has lost count of the trips he's made to Russellville, but it's at least 60. None of his kids have ever gone with him. They just know their father has something he has to do.  "When I leave to go to the cemetery, they know why I'm going," Gaines said. "They see the importance of that, the importance of having love for your fellow man."

Mullins is buried next to his mother, who died when she was only 32. Gaines will pluck the weeds then clean the dirt and grime off the brown granite headstone.

Then he'll just sit and talk and pray.

It may seem odd that Gaines carries a picture of Mullins in his wallet. That his phone number still ends with the number 3800. That he just can't let go.

Why?

"He's a person I love," Gaines said, "and I miss."  It's as simple as that.

So what will Gaines' headstone read one day? Is he a Man of Guilt or Craziness or Courage or Compassion?

Whatever it is, Mullins would be proud to clean it.

Thursday, October 29, 2009

I Have a Dream

Ok, well I guess we are all too complicated to reduce who we are to one representative song.  So I'm adding another one.............




I have a dream, a song to sing
To help me cope with anything
If you see the wonder of a fairy tale
You can take the future even if you fail
I believe in angels
Something good in everything I see
I believe in angels
When I know the time is right for me
I'll cross the stream - I have a dream

I have a dream, a fantasy
To help me through reality
And my destination makes it worth the while
Pushing through the darkness still another mile
I believe in angels
Something good in everything I see
I believe in angels
When I know the time is right for me
I'll cross the stream - I have a dream
I'll cross the stream - I have a dream


Tuesday, October 27, 2009

Sweet Surrender

If you had to choose one song that best describes your true soul, what would it be?  Here's mine (especially the words I bolded):

Lost and alone on some forgotten highway
Travelled by many, remembered by few
Lookin for something that I can believe in
Lookin for something that I'd like to do with my life

There's nothin behind me and nothin that ties me
To somethin that might have been true yesterday
Tomorrow is open and right now it seems to be more
Than enough to just be there today

And I don't know what the future is holdin in store
I don't know where I'm goin, I'm not sure where I've been
There's a spirit that guides me, a light that shines for me
My life is worth the livin, I don't need to see the end

Sweet, sweet surrender
Live, live without care
Like a fish in the water
Like a bird in the air