Monday, March 26, 2012

She's Back!

It is wonderful to be back in Palm Springs. 


I never tire of the view from the deck, or the shifting colours on the hills.


The bunnies have come back in force....

As have Fred and Ethel, our resident ducks.

Fred and Ethel were actually last seen taking a dip in the pool, but I wasn't quick enough on the camera trigger!

The bouganvilla has come back in force by my deck....

.
..and Kokopelli seems to have settled into my garden....

...as has his friend the road runner....

Friend Mariah has been here all week, getting settled into her new house, just five doors down from mine.  We are both thrilled!  We always thought we would retire somewhere in the sun, but never thought it would be in Palm Springs.  She loves her new place, thank goodness, as I had bought it on her behalf, and she came to it sight unseen!  Well, we pretty much had to do it that way - although manufactured homes are a dime a dozen, this view is not!  Anyway, she loves it, so all is well.  We spent the week getting her settled in, or, more accurately, waiting - for the painting, the carpeting, the tile, pretty much everything - and finally moving her stuff up from the other house in the last few days.  (how many people get to move in a Lincoln (Artie's) and an Audi convertible (mine!)?

In the midst of it all, we took a break for lunch with friend and former colleague Eric and his wife Maureen, who were visiting Palm Springs from Vancouver....

There's Eric, making the decision of the day - which wine?

and Maureen, tackling the other difficult decision, what to eat?

 
and Mariah, happy as always!

and the view at the Escena Golf Club was pretty good too!
Mariah left on Saturday, leaving a punch list of what needs doing at her place, but I got a few days off for good behaviour (and if you believe that - the good behaviour part - I'll sell you a bridge that is only slightly used).  Friend Robin from White Rock (who has a place here in La Quinta) came over yesterday, to see my new additions (previously mentioned new dining room set, television and the inevitable bookcases), as well as Mariah's new place, and we spent the day overeating at Sherman's Deli and walking it off all afternoon on the bike path!

And today, back to the routine - gym, socializing, and serious pool and patio time!  This is the first time I will really be here for an extended stay - but for a few days in San Francisco, until May 10 - so I am hoping I have intrigued you all enough that you will come to visit.  You are all welcome - there is a bedroom with your name on it, and the Allegiant flights from Bellingham are getting cheaper by the day!

Sunday, March 18, 2012

Okay, So I'm Not in Palm Springs Yet

No, I'm not in Palm  Springs yet.  Soon though - I am  leaving in an hour (yes, at 3 A.M.) for Bellingham, to catch the 7 A.M. flight.  In the effort to keep myself awake, I thought I would catch you up.

I've noticed that while I have talked about spinning, and introduced you to the gym folk in Palm Springs, I never introduced the Vancouver people.  So, here they are, or at least some of them..

Debbie is not quite awake!

The shining faces which greet us every morning....

.....the equipment....




....."MY" bike!

...working hard

And yes, I actually work hard too!

And it is a good thing I do, too.  With all this coming and going, there also seems to be a lot of eating and drinking.  Case in point:  on Tuesday night, I met friend (and former law school classmate - we go back a few minutes) Philip, for three hours of martinis and talk at the swich Wedgewood Hotel downtown, a favorite watering hole.

Don't you hate people who get better looking as they get older?

 On Wednesday, more bridge, but with a twist.  Former bridge partner Jules has been spending a lot of time in China, but is back, at least temporarily.  He requested some friend time, so we decided on dinner at Milestones and bridge at my place for a change.  Throwing a monkey wrench into the works was the fact that the Milestones (one of a chain) where we were to meet had closed, and Dennis did not have a cellphone.  (yes, Virginia, there are legitimate reasons to have a cell phone).  We did - finally - all connect, and had dinner at another restaurant close by.

Jules and bride Ruicia

and the usual cast of characters, Dennis, yours truly, and John

With all the excitement about meeting, Jules had left his lights on, so we had to do the jumper-cable bit before we finally headed for my place for the much-delayed bridge game.  By the time we got our usual 24 hands in, it was after 1 A.M.!  Good thing you need less sleep as you get older!

The remainder of the week was spent in tying up loose ends - those of you who travel know the drill - no open wine bottles, no food left to spoil, mail-pick-up arranged, in my case invoices submitted (who would have stayed in this cold, wet weather but for the pay), and now, at last, I am ready to roll.  Next post will definitely be from Palm Springs, where I will be (with the exception of a few concert jaunts) for 8 weeks!  Hip hip hooray!

Monday, March 12, 2012

Did I Say I Was Retired?

Most of you know that I officially retired in August, 2011.  However, I hadn't been gone for a month before I received an email saying "we're swamped", and so I signed up to come back on contract, as needed.  As you know, I have an expensive bucket list, and so I was happy to do so.

Retiring was actually a scary thing.  I am blessed with a good pension, and could live on it, but not in the style to which I was hoping to become accustomed.  So, I applied to another agency, The Mental Health Review Board (stop it!  I can hear the cracks from here!), to see if I could get some contract work there.  It was such a long time ago that I had almost forgotten, but just recently, I got appointed to that board as well.  On Monday, March 5, 2012, I chaired my first hearing.  The neat thing about administrative law is that hearings, although they vary in format, the basic requirement is simple; natural justice must be done.  For the uninatiated, that basically means that the claimant must be heard, must hear the evidence involved, and must be able to have the ability to rebut that evidence, and, of course, be entitled to a representative.  Beyond that, the western world as we know it will not come to an end if mistakes are made.  Luckily, the Mental Health Review Board panels are three person panels.  I was chair, with a doctor and a community member as wingers.  They were both seasoned veterans, and graciously shared their expertise with me, and, after the trauma of making sure the recording device was working, all went well.  It is actually quite exciting to get to know people from different backgrounds, and mastering new problems.  I have four more hearings scheduled for this week, so, hopefully, by the time I leave on Sunday for Palm Springs, I will have the routine down.  These hearings are always available, so I will be able to pick up where I left off in June, when I get back to Vancouver.

Wednesday night, I was back to the usual bridge game with the boys.  Every once in a while (i.e., when there is a coupon for lobster fest in the paper - some of us still read newspapers!), we spice it up with dinner at the Boat House before bridge, and this was one of those nights.

Yes, those are palm trees.  They were planted years ago, on my favorite street in Vancouver, Beach and Denman, and I caught the sunset before we went in to dinner.

from the left, John, Dennis, Tom, and Yours Truly

On Thursday, there was actually an open house at the Mental Health Review Board, as they had just moved to lovely new offices in New Westminster.  No, no pictures available; see excuse in the previous blog.  However, it was lovely, and, as there are about 70 members of the board on call, nice to get a chance to meet some of them.

Sunday morning, one of the gals in the spin class invited a few of us over for brunch, and there I did remember to bring a camera.  You all have seen what my place looks like, so I thought I would show you another of the wonderful residences in Steveston.

Interesting architecture, great view of the Fraser River

lovely presentation!

Kelly, our hostess and gourmet cook on the right, and Sue, her trusty sidekick doing Mimosas on the left.


Donna, just coming from another class!

And lots of healthy food!

Jeannie, instructor and friend, finally arrives, bringing yet more food (as if we needed it!)

And another week has whizzed by.  When you hear from me next, I will be in Palm Springs, where, presumably, it is not howling a gale, with rain blowing sideways, and where, presumably, I will not be freezing!

Till then!

Tuesday, March 6, 2012

P.S.

So, in my poem  to New York, you might have noticed that some photographs were missing.  I used to document everything, but since David died, well, not so much.  I kept on forgetting to bring my camera.  These are taken by Lesley's ever-present cell phone.  I think they are great, and well worth adding.

The Red Rooster, in Harlem

A Harlem Brownstone

The Brooklyn Bridge
George M. Cohan, a local here

Nora with New York Cops with horses


Nora and Lesley, dinner at Lincoln Center

The iconic view of Lincoln Center

Lesley and Nora at the opera

That's all, I promise.  But just to whet your appetite for future installments, I will be returning to Palm Springs next week,  to San Jose and Los Angeles in April for three, count them, Bruce Springsteen concerts, back up to San Francisco for the Wall Concert on May 11, and leaving from San Francisco to Arle France for a river cruise on the Rhone on May 12.  Enough to keep you interested?  And you're surprised that I keep working!!!

Monday, March 5, 2012

New York, New York

I do love New York!

When I found out that the Metropolitan Opera was going to do Moussorsky's Khovanschina, and that it was not going to be simulcast in HD, I knew I had to go.  And this, my dears, is why I am  continuing to work - I have very expensive habits!  When I mentioned it to colleague Lesley, she decided to join me.

So, on Wednesday, February 29, off we went, driving down to Seattle (Jet Blue is much cheaper than Air Canada out of Vancouver, trust me, and well worth the drive) to have dinner with Mariah (always a treat), and off on the Red Eye to New York.  I must say, I thought I was way too old to be taking the red-eye, but much to my surprise, was quite functional on Thursday.

We stayed at the Affinia Hotel, at 31st and 7th, right across from Madison Square Garden, a hotel I highly recommend, for its rooms, its prices, and its location.



We of course couldn't get into our rooms at 6:30 in the morning, so opted for leaving our bags, having breakfast, and heading uptown to 53rd and 5th Avenue to MOMA (the Museum  of Modern Art), where membership indeed has its priviledges and we could get in early.  Going back to this museum  is like visiting old friends, so it was a wonderful first stop.

By this time, even I was tired, so we returned to the hotel for a nap, to prepare us for the opera evening ahead.  And a great evening it was.  We headed uptown on the subway (more on the subway later), and ate in the restaurant in Lincoln Center.  I tell you, everything in New York is like home to me, but nothing more so than Lincoln Center.  Going into the opera house again was a real thrill.  My mother and I used to do standing room  here, many many moons ago.  Noone did pathetic better than my mother, so we always ended up with seats, after spending only the $5.00 price for standing room.  A little different these days - we plumped for $140 seats in the orchestra.  Khovanschina was wonderful, very Russian and therefore sad (the only opera I know of that ends with the self-immolation of the crowd).  I was thrilled to be there - nothing warms the cockles of my heart like a standing ovation at the Met - and Lesley was game, as she always is.  In short, a great night was had by all.

We topped it off, by walking the 35 blocks home, passing through Times Square on the way.....




...as well as the garment district....



...where only the street art remained to remind one of its history.  It is a very personal history for me.  When my father and grandfather came over from  Poland, my father worked in the "shmatta" trade, until being blackballed by the union for voicing discontent with its practices. (see, I come by my mouth honestly!).

By Friday morning, both Lesley and I were no longer sleep deprived, and pumped by the energy which is New York.  Lesley had been to New York before, but was still more of a tourist than I, so she did what any friend would do; she dragged my kicking and screaming to do things I wouldn't ordinarily have done.  To start, we headed off to Harlem, for brunch at the Red Rooster, a new foodie place recommended by friends Andrew and Elaine, our arbiters for all things trendy.  As always, their recommendation did not disappoint - great atmosphere and great sould food.  I'll pass on the recommendation.

Then, off to  Brooklyn, where we went to the TKTS booth (for the unitiated, the place for cheap theater tickets - there is a booth in Times Square and the Financial District as well, but this fit into our plans).  We did score tickets, both for Friday night (Rock of Ages for Lesley, and Death of a Salesman with Philip Seymore Hoffman for me), and for the Saturday matinee (Venus in Furs for both).

 And then, we walked across the Brooklyn Bridge back into Manhattan.  What a thrill!  I had never done it before, and I highly recommend it!  (and while I am  making recommendations, David McCullough's book on the building of the Brooklyn Bridge is fabulous, as is Rutherford's book about the history of New York)

Dinner on Saturday night was at Ruby Tuesday's, fine, but no particular recommendation except it was handy and on the way to the theater.


Friend Lesley at Ruby Tuesdays (I do love the name!)


Nora, drinking as usual!


The theater was fabulous.  It is not as if  I hadn't ever seen Death of a Salesman before (and even recently), but Philip Seymore Hoffman just mailed it, as did all the rest of the cast.  It is the kind of evening I live for! Lesley enjoyed her play as well.

Saturday,  Lesley and I went for different museums.  She opted for the Cloisters, uptown, for a dose of tranquility and medieval art.  I had to pay my obligatory visit to the Metropolitan Museum  of Ast.  Again, lots of old friends, but two new galleries as well, the Islamic Art gallery new in the last few years, and the rennovated American Art wing, both well worth the visit.


Rodin's Burghers of Callais

We opted for the matinee, and Venus in Furs was - well, different would be putting it mildly.  It was extremely well staged and well acted, and comes recommended, but not for the faint of heart! 

Now normally, I would have done another play in the evening, but I desparately wanted to go to dinner at Sammy's Famous Rumanian Restaurant, a place where I had eaten 26 years ago, when I was doing bond closings in New York for the Bamk of America.  And it hasn't changed a whit.  It is still a dive (albeit a very expensive one), in a basement, with about 20 tables, and the best Jewish food in New York.  Examples:  not only pickles, but pickled tomatoes.  The best rye bread you have ever put into your mouth, accompanied by - wait for it - chicken fat, served in syrup containers on the tables.  The drink of choice, is frozen vodka, served in its bottle, in a block of ice.  The main course is meat - if you want anything else, it is an optional extra (I have a veal chop to die for, Lesley a 16 ounce steak, with potato latkes and fried onions, and yes, you might have noticed that the only green thing I have mentioned was the pickles.)


 
It was Saturday night, so the entertainment included not only the cute little Jewish boys who were the waiters but a Jewish singer/comedian and dancing - Jewish and otherwise - by the patrons (including yours truly, but not including Lesley).  Both of us enjoyed it tremendously, and went to bed with smiles on our lips).

And, the trip was concluded on Sunday morning by a trip to the infamous Carnegie Deli, for blintzed   (me) and Challah french toast (Lesley, who took a piece of cheesecake to go).





Some miscellaneous notes.  New York is still the city that never sleeps, with an energy that no other city (not even London) can match.  The people are still loud and friendly and wonderful.  The city is surprisingly clean, and  I saw no beggars - quite a change from Vancouver.  The subways were clean, bright, well marked, and frequent.  I did notice that while in the past, everyone would have been reading the newspaper, with the infamous New York fold to accommodate the crowds, now no-one does, which to me seems a great loss.

And so, off  the airport, for the long trip home (although Jet Blue is also something I would recommend - the pilots made two of the best landings I have ever experienced, and the staff are effeciant and friendly - and it's cheap).  It does seem a long way home, but you must admit, we squeezed quite a lot into just a few days. 

And today, another first.  As some of you know, I have been hired on contract with another adjudicative agency, the Mental Health Review Board.  Today was my first hearing, and so the adrenalin rush continued!  I think I acquitted myself  reasonably well, and am  happy to add another source of income for my increasingly expensive pursuits.

It looks to be a busy week, both work and pleasure, so off to bed.  Good night.