Thursday, February 25, 2010

Thinking of Home

I'm finding myself thinking of my city place tonight and looking forward to warm weather back in Shytown.  (Only problem with Chicago weather is that it is six months of winter, then two weeks of spring, then hot summer...sheese!)  But even in hot summer, mornings are perfect for walking/biking and early evenings are usually comfortable again for strolling by the lake or Buckingham Fountain in Grant Park.  (And I'm usually hot when others feel fine, so don't take my word as Gospel.)

Here is some of Chicago I am dreaming about tonight....the views and neighborhood around my condo:


Close up of one of the sights I see from my condo

(Click on these to enlarge)
Navy Pier from my window
(see the lighthouse way back there?)

Close up


As night falls...


Close up


"My" beach (Ohio Street Beach) and Olive Park


Close up on a summer day


City life behind my condo building


DuSable Harbor and Columbia Yacht Club


Baytowne Wharf II

Sadly, I have not recovered yet the dozens of photos of Christmas decorations on the houses in Sandestin that I spent about two hours one night taking from the car. 

But looking for something to blog about, I did find other photos of the little village on the resort.  It's a mile and a half walk through the property to reach from the condo I'm renting, a nicely landscaped walk past part of the golf course, over a boardwalk and past the marina and little island.  All of those I've already shown you, so here is a bit more of the village.

(Click to enlarge)

Great place for breakfast

Free weekly concerts on the square


Dining under the stars at the Marlin Grill


Cabo's Paradise Grill


Human-sized chessboard


Sushi Rocks


Your guess is as good as mine ;)


Graffiti's


No one's riding home on this one








Smokehouse BBQ








One of the condo buildings as seen from Hammerhead's deck




Dock of Hammerhead's


One entrance to Tupelo Court
(Comedy, Jazz, Bakery, Eatery, Martini Bar, Arcade)








And those gray skies?  Yeah, we've sure had a lot of 'em this winter.  I thought Florida was the "sunshine state!"

A Promise is a Promise

Received this photo of my granddaughter (4) in her first ballet class.  I blogged about this a couple of weeks ago and promised I'd post the first picture I got, so here it is:

Those precious young moments...

Wednesday, February 24, 2010

Cheap Eats in Chicago

Just read this on one of my favorite blogs, Solo Traveler.  I'm including the part about Chicago here, since that's home for me.  I look forward to being back in the city, biking along the lakefront, walking through Grant Park, Millennium Park and Lincoln Park, and just hangin' out at Bubba Gump's on Navy Pier warm summer nights.  Chicago is fantastic!  But I don't want to be there until the minimum daytime temperature is 65!  

And P.S. my cold is gone!  First time in my life I've ever had a 3 day cold.  Could it be that gallon of green tea I drank?


Solo travel, Cheap Eats and the Blues Highway
Posted on February 24, 2010 - by Janice


From the Chicago Downtown Farmstand

As I solo travel I find eating more of a necessity than a social event – so cheap is good. Healthy and cheap is better. Healthy, fun and cheap is the best.

On my trip from Chicago to Memphis, Jackson and finally New Orleans, I scouted out the best healthy, fun and cheap eats I could find. Here are my recommendations: city by city.


Solo Travel in Chicago

There are so many options in Chicago. When I asked around, Greektown came up a number of times but my wanderings didn’t take me there. They did, however, take me to a couple of great, inexpensive culinary options in the downtown area.

On the 7th floor of Macy’s on Washington St. is Frontera Fresco by award-winning chef-restaurateur, cookbook author, and television personality Rick Bayless. It offers Central Mexican cuisine using naturally raised meats, fresh ingredients and guacamole made every few hours. One person can easily eat great food for $10.

In good weather, my preference would be to gather up food for a picnic at Chicago’s Downtown Farmstand and take it, along with a discreet bottle of wine, to Millennium park. For less than $30 I filled my basket with a variety of fresh and locally made food that would easily do me for two meals. Add a free concert at the amazing Ghery designed bandstand in the park, and you have a great evening.

Tuesday, February 23, 2010

Beach Bummers

(Click photos to enlarge)


I hardly ever get sick.  But down here I had an upper respiratory virus for a month and when I finally got well, along comes a head cold.  I swear.  All I can attribute it to is the cold and damp we've had this year.  Yeah, these photos look sunny and warm (and I do admit the sun was toasty) but it was only in the 50's.

My posting skills have been sorely lacking lately.  My apologies.  I'll try to look for something more interesting to blog about, I promise.

In the meantime, isn't the water color stupendous here?  I'm thinking of renting right on the beach next season.  (I know, I know, I've complained about how cold it is here, but everyone, including the weather services, tell me it hasn't been normal.  I'll give it one more year.)

Sunday, February 21, 2010

Warm Up

After a colder than normal winter down here, it is beginning to improve. Most of the recent temperatures have been in the high 50's to mid-60's with sunshine. (I'm holding on till 70's...)

Last evening was another cocktail party with the snowbirds, many of whom are leaving by the end of the month. Luckily for me, several will remain through March. I'll be on my own in April.  I'm anxious to see what the weather will bring then.

Biked around the property today, and on the way back, saw this sight behind Baytowne Wharf, the little resort village at which I'd breakfasted. Don't know what was burning, but it didn't look good.


(Click to enlarge)

Friday, February 19, 2010

Food Critic

My gosh, I'm beginning to feel like a food critic, as so often I can't think of anything to blog about except where we snowbirds are dining.  Probably b-o-r-i-n-g for you, dear reader, but I'll include those posts anyway, since I'm planning to use one of those make-your-blog-into-a-book sites one day and keep all of this like a journal of sorts.

That said, I drove into Pensacola a few days ago to see what it was like and was disappointed with the few areas I saw.  I'm sure there are lovely areas in Pensacola, but I was only around the downtown. It isn't much of anything, and the surrounding neighborhoods seemed old and a little rundown. Plus it looks like an area hard hit by our bad ecomony in that there were lots of empty stores and restaurants.  So I went over to Pensacola Beach and found a place for lunch.

I had the tastiest flatbread with shrimp and a pesto sauce and four cheese topping.  So the drive (about an hour from here) was at least worth that.

(Click photos to enlarge)