Showing posts with label travel. Show all posts
Showing posts with label travel. Show all posts
Friday, May 2, 2014
Bosque Journal: May Flanerie
I've started a new routine of strolling along the river in the Bosque near my Downtown Albuquerque home in the mornings. While I would like to say my motivation is a deep appreciation of nature, I have to confess what got me to lace up my shoes was reading the advice I would burn off more calories if walked before eating breakfast. This appealed to my inner sloth.
I've never been into competitive sports, other than racing a sail boat, the ingenuity being I could skipper while staying comfortably seated in the back.
With the need to get more movement in my life, I've discovered the lost art of being a flaneur. Described in the 1800s as equal parts curiosity and laziness, it was a leisurely way to become an urban spectator of boulevards, parks, arcades, and cafes. Perfected in Paris, it was a philosophical cousin to the development of the dandy, minus the fancy clothes.
On my first couple of outings, I spent most of my stroll scrolling through my phone to check messages. When I returned home I didn't feel particularly refreshed. I've since learned to pay attention. The walk is an hour long meditation of footsteps.
We don't have an English translation for the French word flanerie. It remains a foreign concept. I recently read an advice column which posed the question-- What would you do if you came across a windfall? What if you were gifted with a large amount of unexpected money? How would you spend it?
The article went on to lecture the reader that wealth should be invested, not wasted on frivolous pursuits. As an example, the author stated using a home equity loan was better utilized for a kitchen remodel than blowing the money on a month-long vacation. Upgrading a home's kitchen and bathrooms was an investment in real estate.
How very American! We are taught from a young age to be small-minded about the rest of the world. We value the shiny new toilet. Never mind that unless the house is about to be sold, the kitchen and bath upgrades will soon be outdated. How does anyone calculate the value of a month of sabbatical? What if it saves the marriage of a decades married couple? Getting divorced is more costly in the long run than a great vacation.
We've lost any concept of leisure. Of how wasting time can broaden horizons. We are so busy doing we stop seeing the world around us.
During my jaunts in early May along the Bosque I am watching spring unfold. The geese are tending new babies, wild roses are blooming along the water, beavers are busy gnawing down trees, ducks strike off in pairs, the occasional rabbit crosses my dirt path, while song birds gather at the south end of the ponds.
The world changes a bit each day.
Thursday, March 27, 2014
Route 66 by Amtrak: Albuquerque
Want to visit historic Route 66?
Hop aboard Amtrak's Southwest Chief. The train has several stops with preserved sections of America's Main Street.
The Southwest Chief's main service stop is Albuquerque. The city has some of the longest remaining sections of Route 66 motels and storefronts in the country. The pre-1938 alignment traveled north to south through town on what is now Fourth Street. The later re-alignment ran from east to west on Central Avenue.
The train station was built to resemble the former Alvarado Hotel and now serves as Albuquerque's transportation hub. While the city's center declined through the second half of the twentieth century, revitalization is under way. The Rail Yards to the south are being redeveloped, and an innovation corridor has started by the station.
Train Stop
A couple of hours during the Amtrak service stop is enough to explore Route 66. Exit the platform on the far north end, past the Rail Runner stop, to Central Avenue. You are now on The Mother Road.
Route 66 Crossroads
Walk four blocks west (away from the mountains) to reach the crossroads of the two alignments of Route 66.
Food
Lindy's Diner, at Fifth and Central, has been a family-owned restaurant since the 1920s. Want a taste of New Mexico? Order your food with green chile on top. Breakfast is served all day.
Shopping
Skip Maisel's is a landmark on Route 66, on the same block as Lindy's Diner. They claim to have the largest selection of Native American jewelry in the Southwest.
Must See
The city-owned KiMo Theater, across the street from Lindy's Diner, is one of the best examples of Pueblo Deco architecture in the country. If you arrive during business hours for the box office, step inside.
Self-guided tours of the interior are available for free. The theater only requests you stay away from the stage area. Be sure to look up to find the lighted cow skulls and painted details on the ceilings.
Historic Lodging
Want to stay a couple days?
Nearby the Hotel Andaluz was opened as a Hilton in 1939. It's only one of two historic GOLD Leed certified hotels in the USA.
Budget Lodging
the Hotel Blue
Route 66 Hostel
Getting Around
If you don't mind travel by city bus, the Route 66 runs the entire length of Central Avenue from one end of the city to the other. The most scenic section of The Mother Road is Nob Hill. Taxi service and car rentals are available in town.
Getting around Downtown is easiest by walking or bicycle. Routes Rentals & Tours will deliver bikes to your location.
Side Trips
Old Town
Want a quick taste of Santa Fe without having to travel north? The Hotel Albuquerque is 1.7 miles from the train station in historic Old Town. Nearby attractions include the Albuquerque BioPark gardens, aquarium and zoo. Bicycle rentals are available in the neighborhood to cruise the shade of the Bosque Trail or take a guided tour.
Santa Fe
The Rail Runner provides daily service to Santa Fe from the Alvarado station.
Tuesday, December 17, 2013
Contemplation
When I travel I often visit a museum.
View the Slideshow.
Why?
This past Thanksgiving my family and I journeyed to New York
City. The week was dreary—cold with rain, sometimes turning into face-stinging
sleet. In short, a perfect time to see The Cloisters. Part of the Metropolitan
Museum of Art, the museum sits like a medieval castle on top of a hill
overlooking the Hudson River. The immense grounds have the feel of a
countryside, rather than being in the nation’s largest city.
The winter darkness created a contemplative mood. The
collections of the museum feature Medieval European works, which focus on the
religious, and include sculpture, stained glass, tapestries, painting,
manuscript illumination, and metalwork.
Looking through the artifacts my daughter asked me about Lilith.
Remember Adam’s first wife before Eve in the Garden of Eden?
Me neither.
In Jewish
folklore, from the 8th–10th century Alphabet
of Ben Sira onwards,
Lilith becomes Adam's first wife, who was created at the same time (Rosh Hashanah) and from the same earth as Adam. This contrasts
with Eve, who was created from one of Adam's ribs. The legend was greatly developed
during the Middle Ages, in the tradition of Aggadic midrashim, the Zohar, and Jewish
mysticism. In the 13th
century writings of Rabbi Isaac ben Jacob ha-Cohen, for example, Lilith left
Adam after she refused to become subservient to him and then would not return
to the Garden of
Eden after she mated with
archangel Samael.
I was reminded we
are never too old to learn. In my own writing I am l learning I haven’t
developed my evil characters well enough. The author Margaret Coel
advises the antagonist should be as well developed as the protagonist. What
better example than Lilith? She is a complex character, Adam’s equal, who
leaves the Garden to be replaced by the younger Eve. Lilith is the original
member of the First Wives Club, along with the embodiment of evil.
People of the
Middle Ages spent much of their time, resources and energy on their spiritual
lives and the hereafter. While modern society offers a much longer and more comfortable
lifespan, I was reminded we can get so focused on daily living we forget the
bigger picture.
Do we spend
enough time in contemplation? Have we contributed enough to our community? What
legacies do we want to leave behind?
View the Slideshow.
Monday, December 9, 2013
Brooklyn, NYC
Park Slope
My Family and I spent the Thanksgiving holiday in Brooklyn. A couple decades ago I attended college at Pratt Institute. While I was a student I worked at Helene von Rosenstiel in the then unremarkable neighborhood of Park Slope. We heard rumors people were starting to talk about moving there, but most of us didn’t believe it.
My job was restoring antique costumes and textiles for
private collectors, Sotheby’s auction house, and museums across the country. I
once helped to prepare the sequins to be sewn on a pair of ruby slippers from the
original Wizard of Oz movie. To restore old quilts, we often mounted them to
stretchers, similar to a canvas used for painting. We built the frames
ourselves, which required supplies.
One day the manager sent me down the street to the local
hardware store. I gathered the nails and other supplies and went to the
counter.
Asked the guy, “Do you want me to put this stuff on your
tab?”
I looked around the otherwise empty store. He had to be
talking to me.
“Wait a minute,” I said. “I’m standing here in a city of
eight million people. You’ve never seen me before and you’re going to let me
put this on a tab? How do you even know where I work?”
(If you ever want to feel like a true New Yorker, you must
obey rule number one, which is to always get into an argument with the clerk
behind the counter, no matter how trivial the debate.)
He replied, “I know you have to work at Helene’s. Nobody
else ever comes in here looking like you guys. So, do you want this on the
company account?”
I said yes and left without having to show ID or pay.
While in the past couple decades quite a bit has changed—soaring
property values, upscale restaurants and fancy boutiques—other things remain
classic New York. We rented a VRBO apartment for our vacation in Park Slope. To
get the keys we stopped by the corner deli to ask the guy behind the counter
for an envelope. Upon leaving, we returned them to the deli. I wouldn’t have a
set of keys floating around strangers where I live, but it seems to work in
Brooklyn.
View the slideshow of photo illustrations of Park Slope.
View the slideshow of photo illustrations of Park Slope.
Monday, November 11, 2013
Drawing: Santa Fe Window
Santa Fe
I attended the 2013 Tony Hillerman Writers Conference by WORDHARVEST in Santa Fe, New Mexico.
With beautiful sunny weather I was able to take some photo illustrations on break of the shop windows on the main plaza.
View the collection at Pinterest.
Labels:
artwork,
design,
fashion,
New Mexico,
photography,
plaza,
statue,
style,
travel
Monday, November 4, 2013
Journal of Drawings, Fall Bosque Trail
Bosque Trail in the South Valley
Albuquerque, New Mexico
November 2013
Photo Illustrations
Sandhill Cranes have arrived for the winter.
Farms along the valley.
Fall Colors.
Thursday, December 13, 2012
ABQ: Postcard 1950
ALBUQUERQUE
Postcard 1950
Central Ave., Route 66, in Downtown Albuquerque. The Kress sign still remains. The KIMO recently erected a new sign that is similar to the one in the postcard.
At the time of this postcard, Downtown was still the center for shopping in the city. In another decade that would change as many of the department stores left Downtown to locate in new shopping malls in the NE Heights, like Winrock Mall. They featured plenty of parking near the new housing subdivisions being built.
The abandonment of Downtown had started earlier, however, when autos allowed people to move to new neighborhoods, like areas around the university. One of the earliest auto strip malls was Nob Hill.
Winrock Mall:
In 1961, Winrock Shopping center was completed as a joint venture between soon-to-be Arkansas governor Winthrop Rockefeller and the University of New Mexico on a sandy lot at the edge of I-40. The development included a covered shopping center (the first for Albuquerque and New Mexico) with Safeway, J.C. Penney, Fedway and Montgomery Ward. A freestanding movie theater and attached motor hotel opened in 1963.
The mall was built as an outdoor shopping hub with a screened canopy roof above the main stretch of the mall and acres of parking on all sides. This design allowed for a pleasant shopping experience in the dry summer heat as well as the cold high-desert winters. The 82 acre mall site was bounded by the busy I-40 freeway to the south, with off-ramps to Louisiana Boulevard to the west.
Friday, November 30, 2012
ABQ: Holidays
ALBUQUERQUE
Holidays
The ABQ Visitors & Convention Bureau website has a list of holiday events around town.
Some notable events include:
Luminarias
The holiday season in Albuquerque means Luminarias. Luminarias are a simple brown paper bag, partially filled with sand to make it stable and a single votive candle to illuminate the simple lunch bag. Several of these together create a beautiful ambiance welcoming guests into your home for a holiday party or celebration. A fun way to experience a little bit of Albuquerque’s holiday traditions is to create luminarias to line your driveways, sidewalks and maybe even your roof at home.
The annual Old Town Luminaria Tour on December 24th is not to be missed.
Watch our special two minute holiday video about Luminarias, "Life of a Brown Paper Bag."
Native American Dancing and Pueblo Feast Days
Visit the Indian Pueblo Cultural Center on weekends and enjoy Native American dancing and art demonstrations, you can also take part in baking bread and making art. The holidays are a wonderful time to visit the neighboring pueblos, many of them hold feast day celebrations in November and December. View more information and see the schedule here.
Shopping
Albuquerque has the biggest and best shopping in the entire state with three premier malls and many special shopping areas and specialty stores. Whether you have been to Albuquerque or not, there is something for everyone from traditional Southwestern jewelry and pottery to contemporary designs of paintings, sculpture and more.
Stroll through two of Albuquerque’s historic neighborhoods and shop in unique local shops on two consecutive days.
- The Nob Hill Shop & Stroll on Saturday, December 1 begins with the Twinkle Light Parade and includes shopping and food specials, family entertainment, and photos with Santa.
- The Old Town Stroll on Friday, December 7 features live entertainment, dancers, family activities, Santa Claus and the lighting of the giant Christmas tree at Plaza Don Luis.
Thursday, November 15, 2012
ABQ: Tours by Bike
ALBUQUERQUE
Touring the City by Bicycle
When you live in the same city for a long time it's easy to fall into a rut of going to the same places and doing the same things. To get a different perspective--try being a tourist for a day.
Routes Rentals & Tours is located at 11th and Mountain in Downtown Albuquerque. They offer a variety of bike tours, including BYOB: Bring Your Own Bike.
We recently took a bike tour along the bosque to look at historic sites in Old Town, ride to the top of the bike bridge over the Rio Grande to admire the view, stop by the Nature Center, do a wine and cheese tasting at a North Valley winery, and a stop by Los Poblanos Farm on the way back.
We chatted with the tourists on the tour about local history and recommended shopping.
Routes offers a variety of tours throughout the year, including special holiday rides and daily bosque tours.
Labels:
advice,
Albuquerque,
artwork,
bike,
cycling,
fun,
New Mexico,
photography,
tourism,
travel,
urban,
vacation
Tuesday, November 6, 2012
ABQ: Postcard Night
ALBUQUERQUE
Postcard of Downtown at night.
Route 66, which is now Central Ave.
Date: 1970.
The tallest building on the left, behind the ABC sign, is now the Banque Lofts. It is, of course, a former bank building.
The intersection at the Walgreens and Woolworth's is now the Fourth Street Pedestrian Mall.
Wednesday, October 31, 2012
ABQ: Cranes
ALBUQUERQUE
Cranes
Brochure about Sandhill Cranes in New Mexico.
Sandhill Cranes migrate to New Mexico for the winter, stretching from Albuquerque south to the Bosque del Apache National Wildlife Refuge.
About the Refuge:
The Refuge is 57,331 acres located along the Rio Grande, and is located at the northern edge of the Chihuahuan desert, and straddles the Rio Grande. The heart of the Refuge is about 12,900 acres of moist bottomlands--3,800 acres are active floodplain of the Rio Grande and 9,100 acres are areas where water is diverted to create extensive wetlands, farmlands, and riparian forests. The rest of Bosque del Apache NWR is made up of arid foothills and mesas, which rise to the Chupadera Mountains on the west and the San Pascual Mountains on the east. Most of these desert lands are preserved as wilderness areas.
The Refuge is an important wintering home for Sandhill Cranes, and will host as many as 14,000 during the winter months. Cranes will begin arriving in November, and will leave as late as the end of February, heading for Monte Vista National Wildlife Refuge and Alamosa National Wildlife Refuge for a month or two before migrating onwards to Greys' Lake, Idaho, their breeding grounds.
The Bosque provides a critical Refuge for Sandhill Cranes and other migratory birds, providing food, protection and shelter. The Bosque is a critical habitat for a large number of resident birds and wildlife as well.
The Bosque is also home to over 32,000 Snow Geese and Ross Geese, dozens of Bald Eagles and Goldens, Great Blue Herons, Occasional Pelicans, Avocets, and many, many other birds. This beautiful Refuge is also home to small herds of Mule Deer and families of Coyotes. Seeing the sunset "Fly In" and the dawn "Fly Out" is an experience you will never forget! If you are lucky you can also see what we call "Puffs" of Snow Geese, thousands rising into the air, sometimes within 10- 20 feet of you. The sound of wings and the sound of geese talking is a fantastic, primordial experience, guaranteed to "wow" you out of your worries and "wow" you out of your own body, and guaranteed to lift your soul to join them.
Monday, October 29, 2012
ABQ: Autumn
ALBUQUERQUE
Autumn in the Bosque, Downtown Albuquerque
Changing Seasons:
“Why do you go away? So that you can come back. So that you can see the place you came from with new eyes and extra colors. And the people there see you differently, too. Coming back to where you started is not the same as never leaving.”
― Terry Pratchett, A Hat Full of Sky (Discworld, #32)
Friday, October 19, 2012
ABQ: Day of the Dead
ALBUQUERQUE
Day of the Dead
Day of the Dead (Spanish: DÃa de los Muertos) is a Mexican holiday celebrated throughout Mexico and around the world in other cultures. The holiday focuses on gatherings of family and friends to pray for and remember friends and family members who have died. It is particularly celebrated in Mexico, where it is a national holiday, and all banks are closed. The celebration takes place on November 1, in connection with the Catholic holidays of All Saints' Day and All Souls' Day (November 2). Traditions connected with the holiday include building private altars honoring the deceased using sugar skulls, marigolds, and the favorite foods and beverages of the departed and visiting graves with these as gifts. They also leave possessions of the deceased.
Scholars trace the origins of the modern Mexican holiday to indigenous observances dating back hundreds of years and to anAztec festival dedicated to the goddess Mictecacihuatl. The holiday has spread throughout the world: In Brazil, Dia de Finadosis a public holiday that many Brazilians celebrate by visiting cemeteries and churches. In Spain, there are festivals and parades, and, at the end of the day, people gather at cemeteries and pray for their dead loved ones. Similar observances occur elsewhere in Europe, and similarly themed celebrations appear in many Asian and African cultures.
In Albuquerque, Day of the Dead (Dia de los Muertos)celebrations take place over several weeks in October and November, although the holiday is traditionally celebrated between October 31st and November 2nd.
See the Albuquerque calendar of events at About.com.
Wednesday, October 17, 2012
ABQ: Postcard Copper Ave Homes
ALBUQUERQUE
Postcard: Copper Avenue Homes 1940
This postcard is Copper Avenue in Downtown Albuquerque. The house in the foreground is now used by MRCOG, the Mid-Region Council of Governments.
I can't read the postcard clearly, but it may say that the homes were located in the Roundhouse District. I have never heard this reference to a Downtown Albuquerque neighborhood. Usually when people talk about the Roundhouse, they are referring to state government in Santa Fe.
The Wheels Museum has records about the Albuquerque Roundhouse that was used to service trains at the Rail Yards in Barelas.
AT&SF Albuquerque, NM Roundhouse
According to the Wheels Museum:
"The 32-stall Albuquerque roundhouse was built in 1914-15. It included four "long" stalls on the east side that could accommodate Mallets and other large engines. The turntable was an 85-foot through plate girder table that was extended to 120 feet.
MRCOG:
The Mid-Region Council of Governments is a multi-county governmental agency that is helping our region plan responsibly for the future, in light of anticipated growth in New Mexico's mid-region. Representing the counties of Bernalillo, Valencia, Torrance, and Sandoval, we provide planning services in the areas of transportation, agriculture, workforce development, employment growth, land-use, water, and economic development.
Our regional water planning effort addresses a fundamental concern of local governments: how will we meet future water needs? Likewise, the Agriculture Collaborative focuses on another scarce resource: local farmland, which as a result of urban encroachment, is dwindling.
|
Friday, October 12, 2012
ABQ: 2nd Tallest Building
ALBUQUERQUE
Hyatt Regency
View the drawings.
The second tallest building in New Mexico, and the tallest hotel, is the Downtown Hyatt Regency.
Wikipedia:
The Albuquerque Plaza complex was designed by Hellmuth, Obata, & Kassabaum and built in 1990.
The hotel offers a Southwestern decor with a mountain or city view. Amenities include a heated rooftop pool, hot tubs, 24-hour attended gym. The 24,000 sq ft (2,200 m2) conference center contains four ballrooms, three boardrooms and 22 meeting rooms.
Emporis:
Technical Data
256.00 ft
256.00 ft
256.00 ft
21
1990
Wednesday, October 10, 2012
ROUTE 66: Former Hotel Franciscan
ROUTE 66
Former Hotel Franciscan
Pictured is the Hotel Franciscan on Route 66 (Central Ave.) in Downtown Albuquerque. Beside it, on the left side of the picture with white columns, was the Masonic Temple. Both were torn down and the empty land continues to be used for parking lots.
1941 postcard of the hotel said:
This structure, typical of the architecture brought to the Southwest by the early settlers, is regarded as the most unusual building of its type anywhere in the world. It was built by the Community Spirit of Albuquerque. The Hotel contains 175 guest rooms. In lobby, magnificently decorated, is the most artistic interior in this section of the country. The Hotel is especially adapted to the entertainment of Clubs, Conventions and large social gatherings. Every attention is paid to the comfort of cross country tourists, whose prolonged stay is desirable to all Albuquerque.
Wikipedia about Pueblo Revival:
The Pueblo Revival style is a regional architectural style of the Southwestern United States which draws its inspiration from thePueblos and the Spanish missions in New Mexico. The style developed at the turn of the 20th century and reached its greatest popularity in the 1920s and 1930s, though it is still commonly used for new buildings. Pueblo style architecture is most prevalent in the state of New Mexico.
Pueblo style architecture seeks to imitate the appearance of traditional adobe construction, though more modern materials such asbrick or concrete are often substituted. If adobe is not used, rounded corners, irregular parapets, and thick, battered walls are used to simulate it. Walls are usually stuccoed and painted in earth tones. Multistory buildings usually employ stepped massing similar to that seen at Taos Pueblo. Roofs are always flat. A common feature is the use of projecting wooden roof beams (vigas), which often serve no structural purpose.
Emporis:
Technical Data
96.00 ft
96.00 ft
82.00 ft
7
1923
1972
2
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)