Wednesday, January 28, 2009

Pittsburgh, Day II...

Day II consisted of:
  • Snow
  • Heading out of town
  • the Steelers vs. Ravens
  • Dinner at a fun Belgian restaurant 
  • Revolutionary Road
  • Midnight tours of fun neighborhoods. 
We hit the road early, with some fabulous coffee in hand and headed out of town- bound for Wazoo Farm.
Past the stadium where the ravens would later that day be defeated by the steelers. Ironic? I think so. 
WAZOO!
After a lovely brunch, we hit the hill for some serious sledding... I'd done this hill in a radio flyer mid-summer. I have to say I much prefer sledding-- after getting over my initial fear of flying down a hill at a break-necking pace. Snow adds a good deal of comfort sorely missing in the summer months.  

Martin is so down with it...


Look at Katie and Alice go!

The girls, cute as buttons.

What fun!

Sunday, January 25, 2009

Pittsburgh!!!!!

Last weekend Katie and I decided to get out of town and visit Alice in, ahem, the *second greatest city in America,* (aka Pittsburgh). And actually, after a super fun weekend of many fun things, I might be coming around to thinking that in fact, Baltimore AND Pittsburgh are the two greatest cities in America. 

Saturday included: 
  • Snow
  • Breakfast at the coco cafe.
  • Phipps conservatory for some fresh oxygen and greenery
  • The cloud factory
  • The cathedral of learning
  • Tea at a fun tea house
  • A most delicious roast chicken dinner, compliments of Alice
Alice has a lovely apartment in a greatbigoldpittsburgh house...
We spent the morning in the Phipps Conservatory which was all the green growing goodness we could want, a little bit of heaven in the middle of a long winter.
There were rooms full of orchids which were all stunning. Some a little too stunning to post... but this is a particularly lovely little pair of etherial souls.

Some more lovely etherial souls:

Hey mom, check out the size of these pony tail palms...
For some reason this tickled my funny bone. It is my new winter mantra:
Another room was full of miniature old trees in dishes... dwarf ents perhaps. 


En rout to the cathedral of learning, we passed the cloud factory (which, in fact, never ceases producing the clouds that perpetually cover the city... Pittsburgh is apparently referred to as the seattle of the east... which just might be its only downfall, and perhaps why it still only pulls in a close second to Baltimore for the rights to being *the greatest city in america...* in this sun-lovers humble opinion):
We got a good look down through the clouds of the city from the illustrious Cathedral of Learning at the University of Pittsburgh...
And then thawed out in a fun tea place... Katie and Alice opted for some fancy teas... but I, as many of you well know am a purist when it comes to tea, and don't do fru fru tea. I settled on the all american Chai-tea-latte... which well, isn't exactly the real deal either... what can you do? But I must say, the company was really delightful. 

the Lovely Alice.

Note: for those of you who might be confused, Baltimore's tag line used to be, *Baltimore, the greatest city in America...* Those who have lived here for any length of time tend to fall into one of two camps, a. those who whole-heartedly agree or b. those who wholeheartedly disagree... Go figure. 

Baltimore has also claimed to be *the city that reads.* Currently when visiting this great city, you will see, *Baltimore, get in on it!* (Not to be confused for Baltimore, get it on! as many have...)  Ah, love this city. 

Thursday, January 22, 2009

Ps: I WAS there...

Borrowed these photos from R&J so you can see that I really was in fact there...

(c) R&Jphotography

PPS: the cold is subsiding... AND tomorrow is already Friday. I LOVE this week!

Wednesday, January 21, 2009

A most auspicious day...

... and I was THERE! This I will say for the rest of my life as people talk about the day Barack Obama became president. 

January 21st 2009... Today I am home with a nasty cold- my battle scar from braving the crowds and the freezing temperatures yesterday. So I'm hauled up in my bed, sipping tea, and while not so thrilled about the aches and coughs and pounding of my head, I'm glad for some space to digest the past 24 hours- I was a little preoccupied with the actual events of yesterday so my photos are not brilliant; but I will post them just to prove (show off really) to you that I was in fact one of the 1.9 million people in DC yesterday...! 

I spent the night before at Rita and Juans so that we could get into DC early and easily via bus and metro... So 6:00 am here we are waiting at the bus stop- (yes friends, that is RITA jumping with excitement at 6:00 o'clock in the morning!) 
R&J live off the last metro stop on their line, so while it was crazy, we did get on the metro and made it into DC just fine. Unlike many whose stop was in the middle of metro lines... The streets were absolutely packed with throngs of people heading toward the mall. All the Obama paraphernalia you could dream up was available for purchase on the side of the road- from Obama boas to buttons to sneakers...
We made good time and found a fairly decent spot just in front of the washington monument looking towards the capitol (4th jumbotron back). In the hours before the ceremony, they replayed Sundays concert from the lincoln memorial- featuring you know- U2, Springsteen, Pete Seeger (for real!), Usher, Beyonce, Forest Whitaker, Tom Hanks and the like. Oh, so FUN!

Rita catching a birds eye photograph:
The masses as seen from the ground:
"Mr President" (and the crowd goes WILD):
It was absolutely thunderous being in it all.
Snippets of Swahili could be picked out here and there as we wove through the masses- everyone has a piece in this to be particularly proud of it seems.
The aftermath: (which, seriously now, weren't they listening when Obama called on all of us to take better care of our world?)
The sun setting on our bus ride home:

A couple of things that struck me: there were kids everywhere, little itty bitty freshly picked ones, and bigger ones too. There were a lot of older people as well. One couple standing next to us... probably in their sixties but as giddy and happy as the sixteen-year-olds... Another such couple had been there all weekend. There were NO arrests (confirmed later on the news)... and no protestors that I saw. People wore their issues of course- some decked out in support for Palestine, others calling for the end of the war in Afghanistan or Iraq, there was gay pride and of course your token street preachers... but from what I could tell, people were just plain jubilant. 

The most beautiful and moving part of the actual inauguration for me was the Rev. Lowery's benediction

"And now, Lord, in the complex arena of human relations help us to make choices on the side of love, not hate; on the side of inclusion not exclusion; tolerance and not intolerance."

What a day. What a brilliant, shining moment of reconciliation.