Saturday, August 20, 2016

Vermont: A Splendid Set of Wheels

Well what a bit of luck! Newport happened to have a car show. And it hadn't started raining yet.Which was a good thing for this car.


 Car show owners worldwide have a sense of humour, though this one was a bit macabre.


Yup - it's a rat


Aha, nice to see a small British contingent. The car I mean. The owners appeared to be Vermonters - with good taste in motors.


They don't make 'em like that any more.


There's something about a blue-and-white Cadillac convertible..


 And those retro dashboards


Those white tyres

The fins

The chrome


The knobs and dials


The insignia


Which looked incongruous on this little Nash Metropolitan, "An Austin with a different skin", as hubby put it.


 Here's nostalgia on wheels - a 1940 Ford Woody


 Someone's got their original manuals


Zut! The French are here!


 Which reminded us that we were supposed to be heading across the border an hour ago. We had plans for dinner in Canada.

To be continued

Thursday, August 18, 2016

Vermont: Lovely Little Newport

I'm sure it's just as nice as ts posh namesake, Newport Rhode Island, though I don't know about Newport, Gwent. We discovered many delights, such as the tiny Brown Cow cafe, where you can eat a dish called Cow Plop, as shown below.  That brown stuff on top is an American delicacy known as sausage gravy. Bangers and Mash it sadly ain't but it tasted a lot better than it looked.


Nearby was another interestingly-monikered eatery.


Hubby reckoned that it should be Wok n Woll but I think this was more subtle.
As our transport to the wedding reception. I had a ride in a real American school bus!


It was a little rattly and the seats were awfully close together. Possibly a control mechanism. Perhaps you can pay for more legroom.


And to make sure we all behaved ourselves...


The reception was in a rustic barn


With Vermont artefacts inside


A very Vermont scene outside


And here's a Vermont pie for dessert (pudding). Incidentally, if you ask for pudding in America, you get Angel Delight - remember that? This was a lot tastier.


The ceremony was in this gorgeous church, romantically named St Mary Star of the Sea


I loved the sepia frescoes. (The pictures, incidentally, taken the day after, before Sunday Mass)


And a rather nice presbytery.


Meanwhile, here's the unpronounceable lake again, as seen from the church steps.


Pity about those floodlights but you can't have everything.

Monday, August 15, 2016

Into the Green Mountain State


This has to be one of the most beautiful lake scenes I've set eyes on in America. This is Vermont, home of cows, cheese, maple syrup, the Von Trapp family and Bernie Sanders. Remember Alistair Cooke's Letter from America? And how often his relaxed and hypnotic tone would eulogise Vermont, the quintessential rural paradise? Exquisitely pretty it is too - I get the feeling that the cows in Vermont are cleaner than the muddy ones in western New York. They're probably house-trained and take showers before they go out into the fields. Solar-powered showers, of course, as Vermont is very green - in every sense. Vermont is not quite the fairytale, particularly where economics are concerned but never mind about that now, it's the summer holidays and hubby and I have been there for a wedding, followed by a short trip to lands beyond on which more later. Meanwhile, the above lake must be a contender for the most unpronounceable lake in the western hemisphere. It glories in the name of Lake Memphremagog and the Canadian border runs right through it, so you need your passport if you go boating.
To be continued....

Thursday, August 11, 2016

Off to the Ballgame

   My American husband had been saying it for a long time, “You really should go to a baseball game”.
“But”, I said, “I have been to a baseball game.”  On my first visit to America, way back when,  a friend dragged me to see the Los Angeles Dodgers. I fell asleep.
  Hubby was insistent. I’d frequently said that, while I’m not the world’s biggest cricket fan, I do like the  idea of traditional cricket on an English village green. 
 “So”, he said, “Let’s find the equivalent. A local game, not too commercialised,  where we can get close to the action.”
  So off we went to the ballgame.


   There is no equivalent of an English village green in our western New York small town. Instead we headed for the town stadium, with a rudimentary  grandstand at one end and an uninterrupted view over the foothills of the Allegheny Mountains at the other.


 We paid five dollars for two tickets and found ourselves a vantage point.


  The local team are called the Oilers, from the town’s oil-producing origins and were big in the 1950s. After a gap, they were recently revived  by a community-spirited lawyer, who’d gone to the local high school and Franciscan university and wanted to encourage college students with professional aspirations to come and spend the summer playing baseball,  getting plenty of practice and possibly attracting the attention of a talent scout.
  The Oilers were playing the Dodgers – not the LA ones but a team from the next county.  I’ m not going to pretend I entirely understand the rules of baseball, although there are some similarities to cricket with a bowler ( sorry, pitcher) and batsman ( sorry, batter)  and innings and runs. The batters run from one base to the next  in a square – or “diamond”. If they do it all in one go, it’s a “home run”, though, as they are constantly caught out, this doesn’t happen too often.   
   And a bit like cricket, baseball is swathed in nostalgia and dreams of a golden age,   a “pastoral” game, according to hubby. Having said that,  it’s a very American sport – though it’s hugely popular in Japan. 

 
   Some of the Oilers,  who, I was disappointed to see,  were wearing long  white trousers rather than the traditional knickerbockers,  came from as far away as Florida – they were probably enjoying a slightly cooler summer.  In a nice touch, one player from Rhode Island had a grandfather who’d coincidentally pitched for the Oilers in the good old days. There was a stand selling drinks and merchandise and while it wasn’t exactly commercialised,  the tannoy intermittently boomed out plugs for local businesses – the  owner’s law firm,  a dental practice promising  “that hometown smile”,  Primo Limo  and its “professionally attired chauffeurs”.
 The small crowd clapped and cheered politely,  not unlike a village cricket crowd, though with  occasional transatlantic exuberance,    “C’mon Oilers, let’s go!”, shrieked a woman beside me,  “I’m not having a very interesting day!”  


As teams switched – and they frequently did – from fielding to batting,  kids ran up for autographs. Our town is proud of the Oilers. Until the very last innings, I couldn’t understand why. Then I did.
  With the teams level at 2-2,  our lads suddenly gained momentum.  In a moment of glorious inspiration, the batter hit the ball right out of the ground, the Oilers got a home run and finally won 4-2. 

 The crowd erupted. I didn’t quite grasp what had happened but I joined them. I’m glad we stayed till the end. And I didn’t fall asleep once.

Saturday, August 6, 2016

Spotted in Buffalo Harbour


 Is that what I think it is? The zoom doesn't work too well but yes...


It's a dog. In the background, the USS Little Rock and some of Buffalo's more attractive housing. Well the pooch looks happy enough. Perhaps he should be driving the boat.

Wednesday, August 3, 2016

And The Inexorable March of Autumn


What a surprise! Last time I struggled through the jungle to reach this particular apple tree, it didn't seem to be offering anything. Now it's positively groaning. But there's something sad about little green apples getting rosy. The nights are drawing in. I used to feel that way about the Edinburgh Festival and the Glorious Twelfth (12th August - the start of the grouse season in Britain for the uninitiated. That's the start of what my American friends would call the hunting season.) The chipmunks are already laboriously stuffing the peanuts I throw them into their cheeks and scurrying them off to their burrows.  We'd better get the snow shovels out.

Monday, August 1, 2016

The Stealthy Return of the Foggy Morning


 And our innocent lane turns into a journey to fantasy land.


 While the early morning light effects make for a spooky forest.


And rays pierce the mist like the dawn of time


This isn't a sinister crop of some futuristic superfood but just the ubiquitous weed, goldenrod, getting ready to bloom.

While grasses wave far from any beach


And trees morph into monsters.


 But wait, what's happened to my wooden friend? He's twisted his head round to look at something.


Whatever it was, I was too late to see it.