Sunday, January 31, 2016

The Villages in Florida

Monday
January18

Yikes!  I'm about a thousand pictures behind in posting.  Better get back to it.


A visit to the Villages in Florida showed it to be about as much like our Villages in San Jose
 as a turkey is to a baby chick.

The concept is the same;  active retirement community for people  65 and older.
 But the Florida Villages is located in the center of the state which is largely devoid of any topography on its over 50 square miles. Its boundaries are 13 miles long.
 
 So it doesn't have hills.
  What it does have is 630 holes of golf and 65,000 golf carts for its 100,000 residents.  It's huge!
80% of the residents live here full time.


I met high school chum  Sharon and her husband Bud who toured me around the beautiful area.

 There is plenty here to keep busy with 
2300 clubs and organizations, one of which is a softball team for those over 80. Yes, they allow designated base runners.
 Bowling, not golf, is the main activity.

 There are 79 swimming pools in over 80 villages, one pool for children, and no one under 30 is allowed in the main pools.




 There are 10 shopping plazas, all accessible by golf cart.
Within the Villages are 15 grocery stores, 100 restaurants and 5 health care centers. 






One of the 12 main clubhouses, this one, the Eisenhower Center, is dedicated to all branches of the armed services and is loaded with memorabilia donated by residents.  
All 12 are open to everyone to use for card playing, etc.







Five of the clubhouses have fitness centers.








Every neighborhood has live entertainment in the evening as I found when I came out of Margaritaville Cafe after Happy Hour and ran smack into this live band at a gazebo. 







This couple was dancing with their little dog. So cute!

Socialization here takes many turns.
At the Redsauce Bar in Sumter Square a drink was named after a couple caught making love in the park late at night. The drink was called Sex in the Square and was made of wine and cordials.



 And now I've saved the best for last. What does all this cost?



Home prices run the gamut from $160K to over $1M.

Monthly HOA dues are $145/month for everyone because everyone maintains their own home.

$15 to $65 for golf.

It's a great place to retire with only one drawback.  
It's not in California. 











Tuesday, January 19, 2016

Back to Sunny Florida

Tuesday
January 19


Back to the beach, the only place where salt lowers your blood pressure.


To paraphrase Jimmy Buffet:
Change Your Latitude and it Changes Your Attitude.
Since coming South to Florida last month  I'm looking at life differently.

This is not the bridge over troubled water. It's the bridge over calm waters.


Back after Christmas I leave Miami and head to Cedar Key on the north Gulf coast. I have all the "essentials" in the Doodlebug--- bottles of wine stashed away in nooks and crannies, warm and cold clothes, packaged Margarita mix and Jimmy Buffet CDs and old tapes of Ella Fitzgerald.


I still want one.

Came across this blast from the past at the next RV park.  Something I've wanted since 1967, a 1967 VW camper van.
This one belongs to Rob from Toronto, who found it online and had it imported from the UK.
Rob reminded me a lot of Maynard G. Krebs. He even has a GoPro mounted on the dash.




My home for the next week will be Sunset Isle on Cedar Key on the Gulf coast. 
It has a definite 60's vibe which attracted me as well as a bunch of musicians who hang out there all winter and play whenever they feel like it, especially Friday nights.



We heard folk songs, country blue grass, old ballads long forgotten, and one guy sounded so much like James Taylor I had to get a good look  to be sure it wasn't him. 
Still not convinced it wasn't.
His Sweet Baby Jane was the real deal.








Every night there's a cozy campfire where everyone gathers
  by the Clubhouse.








 Elly and her Wheaton Terrier.    Buildings painted by a local artist.


 This one went down in the last storm, and yes those are bowling pins around the palm tree.



Their own cafe, Ada Blue,
has great grub







My site by the water
 with  Nemo windsock








Tiki Bar next door to the RV park








A very friendly crowd 
and cute bartender







Cedar Key pier in town has
shops and restaurants









I always wanted to be a mermaid.










Watchband made of alligator skin by a local guy















New friends Carole and Marc, 
French Canadians who spend the winter here 
in their Doodlebug twin Roadtrek







My view out the back window
with the moon barely visible in the night sky.






Every place I go is a change from the last place --- the scenery, the people, all different.
That's the point of my journey, everything changes, my life, the country.
For me, I'm looking for a new beginning.








Saturday, January 9, 2016

Christmas at Home


Thursday
January 7, 2016

Around Thanksgiving I began to get really homesick for family and friends, and yes, it did take 5 months for that to happen because I have been having such a good time on the road. So this 3 week break spent at home was just in time. Left the Doodle in a Miami hotel parking lot and flew home.


Great to see everyone at a
big family Christmas party at Shelly and Trav's








Tammy and Kris,
Brandon and Jarad










Pandemonium









Me with brother Mike as Santa

Hey Santa, what about your 'stache?!











More Christmas at Lisa and Michael's on Christmas Day:


Michael hard at work preparing our Christmas feast.  Lisa watching.
She is afraid of knives (they're sharp) and the stove (it's hot), but does a good job of cleaning up.
Here Michael prepares our Lobster Ravioli in Brandy Cream Sauce. 







Our six course menu was fit for a four star restaurant.
It's great having foodies in the family.














 Ugly Christmas Sweater Contest

grand kids Dylan, Emily and Ty








Pontiers and Planes out for some
 holiday dress up fun









Digesting dinner before diving into presents








Catching up with friend 
Patt Houston in Willow Glen

Saw so many friends while home, wish I had taken more pix.

I think of the Doodlebug often.
I wonder if it thinks of me...





Crossing the elegant new Bay Bridge which connects Berkeley to San Francisco.

The exciting culture of art and food here in the Bay area can't be beat.





Bobbie and I are headed for the DeYoung Museum in Golden Gate Park to see an
exhibit of art from the
1915 Pan Pacific Exhibition.
It's hard to believe the City got itself together in just 9 years after the 1906 earthquake to create so many beautiful buildings for this exhibit.


Afterward we have lunch at the Beach Chalet on the Great Highway. I had a Beet Burger. That's
right, a burger made of beets that was very pink and quite delicious.
The lobby here is filled with Parisian artist Lucien Laboudt's 1926 mural of San Franciscans at the beach.




Closer to New Year's we celebrate at Opa! in Willow Glen with Michael before Ty takes off back to Park City.

Lisa is seeing double.



Back to some nice 80 degree Floridays now.  It's been in the 50's here. I'm ready for warmth.