Saturday, December 15, 2007

Rizdales Christmas

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The Rizdales are a favorite country music band from London led by husband and wife team Tom and Tara Dunphy.

Every year they have a Saturday afternoon Christmas gig at the Richmond Tavern in London, Ontario where they have friends perform and they close the show. It's usually from 4pm until 7pm so it's not too late for older folks like us who have to drive in from out of town (St Marys is maybe 45minutes from the Richmond).

I'm often surprised by the sound quality at the Richmond. Today all the music was crystal clear and very danceable. All this in a seedy old time tavern.

There's quite a crazy crowd of loyal fans at their shows. People who love country music, beer and dancing. What could go wrong? Perhaps their oldest fan, Kaye, got me up dancing! That's what can go wrong!

Their latest CD, Radio Country, is well worth a listen with lots of tunes they've penned. The tune "I Could Tell You Lies" is bound to be a hit -- it has a great story and Tara has the voice. You can get order their latest CD (and earlier CD's) from their web site or check around for places like CD-Baby, Itunes and Spotify for streaming or MP3 versions.

We like the Rizdales, we like the hurtin' tunes they've written.

Sunday, December 9, 2007

Austin

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We spent a week in Austin Texas. The intention was to investigate the housing market. We were thinking about investing in a property that we could use as our winter vacation get away. The Canadian dollar was doing pretty well so we thought we'd check it out. We've been to Austin many times since first visiting back in 1990.

We were interested in the South Congress area -- anything south of Town Lake and north of Oltorf (the Zilker, Bouldin and Travis Heights neighborhoods). We had connected with a real estate agent who showed us around to several places in those areas. Everything was either too small, too tacky, too dark or under construction and all were out of our price range. We ended up looking further afield -- south of Oltorf but north of Ben White -- still to no avail. Suffice to say we did not buy (we should have done so 20 years earlier when prices were within reach). I'm somewhat relieved as owning and managing property out of country can be a pain. The carrying costs would be enough to pay for holidays elsewhere and we can do that instead.

So anyways, enough said about that.

We were in Austin for a week, we flew in, had a rented car and had a room at the Historic Stephen Austin hotel. We got our car and room by bidding on Priceline -- I've had some great deals through them. You don't get to pick the hotel, but you do pick the quality and area. It's always worked out well for us. The hotel is very much upscale and on Congress just a block or so north of Pecan/6th Street and a few blocks from the state capitol.

December in Austin is an interesting destination for many reasons. It's still quite warm (at least by our standards), the trees are still green and it's the holiday season -- Christmas lights everywhere. There was an event where they turned on the lights of a huge Christmas tree at our hotel.

At Barton Springs the entry is free during the "winter season" and the warm weather we had makes the water all the more inviting. It's always cool in Barton Springs as the waters are spring fed. We went swimming a couple of times. In Zilker park, where Barton Springs is found, there are a lot of pecan trees (actually there are lots all over the city). At this time of year the pecans are falling from the trees and ready for munching. You need only collect them as they fall.

We visited Gruene on the first Saturday. It's a small town about an hour south of Austin and this weekend there's a Christmas market and event. We ate at the Gristmill and saw Jimmie LaFave play at Gruene Hall with a full band. Jimmie tends to favor early Bob Dylan folkie music but has many tunes of his own. John Inmon, who toured with Jerry Jeff, played electric guitar in his band today.

We had bumped into this cop a while ago on our travels who had encouraged us to try Artz Rib House on South Lamar -- best ribs in town. We did one Monday night and Sarah Elizabeth Campbell was playing. She's quite good and I bought one of her CD's, she encouraged me to take another (for free) but I declined. She wears glasses and when I was taking pictures she took them off and laughed. We all have our vanities, I guess she felt she'd look better without the glasses. Oh yes, the ribs very good. The place is pretty rough and ready but the ribs were great.

While stumbling around South Lamar we bumped into this very weird taco place -- Maria's Taco Express. It's quite an odd place and appears to have been thrown together with an eclectic mix of bric-a-brac. We'll have to investigate it another time -- it was closed when we were there. Perhaps it's only open in the summer.

On Wednesday we returned to San Antonio (you remember the Alamo!). We shopped at the Old Spanish Market for a taste of Mexico, had a bit of lunch on the River Walk and took one of the boat tours that goes around through the canal system. We stopped again in a Gruene on the way back. There was music at Gruene Hall but this time it wasn't on the stage. Instead it's on the dance floor area near the bar at the other end of the hall. Younger guys were playing more of a rock 'n roll influenced music. Still with Texas roots though.

On Thursday we went out to the Oasis on Lake Travis. The Oasis is this huge restaurant on a high bluff overlooking the lake. The lake is a dammed river (the Colorado) that supplies water to Austin. There are some very posh homes overlooking the lake - it would be a very desirable area to live. There's lots of expensive bronze sculptures at the Oasis. There's an interesting one of a diver caught in mid dive -- it looks like she's diving into Lake Travis. I've taken out the supporting beam which holds her in mid air in my photo.

Downriver from Lake Travis there's the scenic Pennebacker Arch Bridge on the Loop 360 that crosses Lake Austin (Town Lake is in the city, Lake Austin above that and Lake Travis above that). We stopped so I could take a picture -- it's an iconic picture. It's odd that there isn't a proper scenic look out here.

Back in the city we say Cornell Hurd and his band at Jovita's on South Lamar. We had been to Jovita's years before and saw Cornell Hurd with a band in an intimate but crowded front room of the restaurant. These days they've expanded with a big dance hall area attached at the back.

On Friday we went out to Luckenbach stopping at Pedernales Falls State Park along the way -- the Pedernales was pretty dry so there wasn't much of a "falls". Luckenbach still has people who drop in to swap songs under the live oaks. There's still stereo chickens wandering about and beer is still beer. It's more crowded with tourists but still an interesting place to visit.

That evening we're back in Austin and catch Gary P. Nunn playing at the Broken Spoke -- a rustic (dare I say shabby) honky tonk on South Lamar. Not as old as Gruene Hall but similar in spirit. Gary P. Nunn has some really great tunes -- "Home with the Armadillo" and "You Ask Me What I Like About Texas" are two standouts.

On Saturday we go canoeing on Town Lake -- there's a rental place on Barton Creek just below the dam that forms Barton Springs. There's quite a bit of life around the lake: birds, turtles, dog parks and even fish.

We explored South Congress -- I especially like Tesaro's gift store -- and ate at Gueros'. We closed the day by seeing Lee Edwards at the Waterloo Ice House next door to Waterloo Records.

While we didn't find a property to buy as a vacation home, we did pack in a lot of adventures in one week. Austin is a fun place to visit. We'll be back.

Saturday, August 18, 2007

Fred Picnic

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We went to the annual Fred Eaglesmith Charity Picnic at Sweetwater Conservation Area near Aylmer this year and camped over night.

Our niece Paula and her beau were with us. They used the tent we've borrowed form Mike, we had a camper we had borrowed through Ellen. Cindy came out on Sunday to join us.

Greg Hobbs was there, he does a great tune "Secrets of the Bride". He apparently wrote it for an ex-girlfriend as a wedding present -- it reveals probably a little too much. We love it.

Roger Marin was in attendance and joined Fred's band on pedal steel. He has his own band as well which we really enjoy. His tune "Dagwood and Blondie" has a nice country swing to it. Washboard Hank and Mountain Muriel added their usual lunacy to the proceedings. Bill Durst, from St Marys, played a heavy electric blues set on Sunday afternoon. In his younger years he formed the band Thundermug which had some local success.

Another fine picnic with lots of new music and new artists. We'll be back.

Sunday, July 22, 2007

Home County

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Here's some photos from the Home County Folk Music and Arts Festival in July of 2007. This is a yearly event held in Victoria Park, London, Ontario.

My sister Ellen, brother Larry with his daughter Natalie, husband Peter with daughter Evelyn and son Cameron were there this year.

Sunday, June 10, 2007

Budapest

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In June Kate's annual KBS conference was held in Budapest Hungary. We stayed at the hotel attached to the Gellert Thermal Bath on the west side of the river. The pictures in the album are an odd bunch and not well sorted... there's a reason for that.

The camera I was using at the time was a Minolta DiMage A1 which I had been using since our long trip to Australia/New Zealand in 2004. It was an excellent travel camera which worked very well — a long fast zoom, image stablization, reasonable film speed, it worked well. The Compact Flash memory cards at that time were quite small which meant that every day after shooting I'd strip the cards onto Kate's laptop. Unfortunately, on this trip the camera and the laptop both failed! We were able to resort some deleted photos off my memory cards but lost quite a few. Many of the pictures in this collection are from friends who shared them with me.

The picture above is from just before the camera failed. As I recall that's taken at the one end of the Erzsébet Bridge.

This note composed 2023/08/09 ... much more work required. I'll come back to this another day.

Tuesday, May 22, 2007

Burgundy

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In May of 2007 Kate had a meeting in Geneva Switzerland and asked if I'd like to come along. We've had some cool weather in the spring before, and we were to be in Budapest later, so I was not too keen on another trip to the area ... but then Kate mentioned that the Burgundy wine region of France is right next door. Well then, Ok, count me in!

We met our niece Paula at the Geneva airport and she travelled with us for the duration of her stay. She had been travelling in England with Gordon, her dad, and Eva, her sister and it's a short flight over to Geneva.

Geneva is on Lake Geneva (of course) but is a very short distance from France (it's not clear to me why Geneva isn't in France!). It's in the French canton of Switzerland. We rented a car for our trip at the airport and found our way to Annecy France which is due south but not that far. We had reservations for a place in town but it was one of those "You can't get there from here" problems. Paula, who is reasonably fluent in French, was some help and we stopped for directions several times. We ultimately found the hotel and squeezed our car into an impossibly small parking spot in an under ground parking lot beneath the hotel.

We found navigating the Burgundy region much easier. We found our way to the city of Beaune in the heart of the Burgundy region. We had a lovely two story suite for the three of us in a converted building (perhaps it was an animal or wine barn at one time) called the Hotel Belle Epoque which was just a short walk from the walled city. Our room was on a warm sunny courtyard and every morning we dined on fresh bread and croissants with fresh butter and jams, strong coffee. Every night we dined out and always had escargot (snails: it was the season for fresh snails). Escargot in garlic butter, escargot in pastry, escargot in lots of things. Each morning Kate swore she'd had enough snails and garlic but each night we were back for more.

On our first day we visited around the city. There's a city shuttle train that takes you around the city and out into some of the vineyards. There's even some vineyards right in the city. And there are wine caves to explore and lots of wine to taste.

Burgundy wines are some of my favorites. There's the major region Cote de Beaune with Beaune at the north end, then the Cote de Nuits region to the north with lots of minor regions nearby. We visited several wineries to the south of Beaune and enjoyed them all. At one we could have bought a 1980 Burgundy (from the year we were married) for only 100 euros. They have an extensive library in their underground caves and would open, taste and recork a bottle for us -- they might have to open quite a few bottles to find one that hadn't gone bad. We travelled as far as Mount de Sene where there's a scenic overlook of the valley.

After Burgundy a friend (a sommelier) back home had recommended we explore the Jura Region. This is a recommendation I'd not pass on. It's an interesting area to explore but the wines are oxidized and tast awful. That's apparently how they're supposed to taste.

In Geneva for Kate's meetings we stayed at Le MontBrillant which is right in the CBD and beside the train station. Paula was a great help with shlepping our luggage from the closest parking spot (several blocks away). It was great to have her there, it would have been very difficult without her. I took the car back to the airport and then returned by the city metro system. We had dinner at our hotel that evening. Everything was very expensive and we ended up having "Raclette" -- boiled potatoes, pickles and melted raclette cheese. Well, it was the only thing that made any sense!

While Kate was at her meetings Paula and I explored the city, which is quite scenic and very historic. There's a very old well maintained cathedral that we explored with great views from on high of the city. There's the waterfront of course and lots of lanes and alleyways to explore.

Another day Paula figured out that we could take a train (from our hotel door step) along the north shore of Lake Geneva through Lausanne and just a little past Montreux to find the Chillon Castle -- a medieval fortress on the shore of Lake Geneva which was used as a choke point on the trade route through the Alps. We spent the day there, it's authentic and fun to explore (e.g. a prisoner in the dungeon of the castle was made famous by Byron in a poem "The Prisoner of Chillon") and walked back to Montreux where we caught the train to return to Geneva. It was a good day.

Here's some photos from our visit for those who are interested.

Sunday, March 4, 2007

Cuba

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We spent a week at the Breezes Jibacoa, Cuba with Paul and Judy this winter. This smallish resort is on the north coast between Havanna and Varadero -- you fly in and out of the Varadero Airport.

Becky Castillo, our travel agent has arranged all four Sunwing vacations. We're meeting up with my brother and his wife who live in Halifax, Nova Scotia.

Becky has recommended this resort is as a good place for snorkeling -- Varadero is a sand spit suitable for sun bathing and frolicing in the surf. We are more interested in snorkeling. And the snorkeling from the beach at this resort is very good. There's a sandy beach, then some shallow coral and just past that there's a nice deep good sized tank to explore with lots of fish and coral encrusted walls to the tank. From there you could go out to deeper waters but we never ventured. Check out my picture from the bluff above -- you can see the coral and the tank.

There were days when the beach was flagged -- too windy, rough surf or wind blown Portugese Man o'War jelly fish. You don't want to get entangled with that jelly fish. It will hurt like hell and leave lasting damage. Anyways, it was good snorkeling. I'd recommend the resort for that.

The resort is well appointed, solid construction, quite comfortable and well maintained. Grounds are lush with lots of Royal Palms (that's the national tree of Cuba) and exotic plants. There are 18 buildings with 260 guest rooms. These buildings are two stories with 8 rooms below and 8 above. We pay a little extra to get a room on the ground floor on the beach. There's one large swimming pool, tennis courts, and so on. For dining there's a large buffet hall and two restaurants (where you need to make reservations).

There are several bars, of course, but we spend most of our time at the beach bar. Every day there seems to be some event at the beach -- e.g. one day they roasted a whole pig. There are big show events every night with dancers and tom foolery. We attend a couple of them.

One morning we went on a short nature hike with "Mini Mike" through the woods to the bluff overlooking the resort. From there we visited a local farm and walked back along the roadway.

For such a small resort they do put out a big effort to keep guests entertained.

Our big event was a day trip into Havana. We stopped along the way to have a drink (apparently the "best" Pina Colada) at a sea side bar. This must have been a very nice spot years ago but it's sadly in decay. In Havana we stopped to see Fidel's tank -- Viva la Revolucion! On to the Capitol building -- very impressive. The Hemingway bar -- it's just a bar. The Bacardi building -- seized by the state when industries were nationalized. We went to a bar on the top floor of a very tall hotel for the views -- there's the American Embassy (closed since the revolution). And we wandered the streets of the old city. Havana is an impressive collection of Colonial Buildings and many are in good repair. I understand there's UNESCO money here. There is a decrepit oil industry in evidence -- a oil flare within the city and polluted waters in the bay.

That evening in Havana we went to the Tropicana show. There's another similar Tropicana show closer to Varadero. The one in Havana is the "original". It's a Las Vegas styled show with lots of flash, lots of pretty girls in skimpy outfits. The venue is open air with several stages, several tiers on each stage. When you enter all the men get a cigar, the women get a carnation and couples get a can of coke and a half bottle of Havana Club -- the rum of Cuba (which used to belong to Bacardi?). It was quite the show and we got thoroughly pie-eyed in the process. But we had fun and made friends.

We enjoyed this resort and hope to return some day. It was a good time with brother Paul and his wife Judy.