John & Anne Wiley

2013/03/27

Carib Be In :)

Well, we went for it as you guessed. Took off from St. Augustine and flew over the fort we’d only seen from afar yesterday.

0699 St. Aug. Fort

0699 St. Aug. Fort

Also over the tourist part of town we’d wandered the night before while waiting to meet up with sweet Lettie and cool Roy for dinner. Turns out this is the oldest town in the country, and they have some fascinating archeological digs going on dating back into Spanish, French, English and American history.

0715 Tourist Quarter

0715 Tourist Quarter

Then down the coast at 1,500′ to 2,500′ intending to land at Vero Beach to top off fuel and take a stretch. Pretty constant light turbulence, but from what I’d seen forecast for winds aloft I thought it would be worse higher and with more crosswind slowing us down. I was so busy wresting with up/downdrafts I almost blundered into this restricted area over Cape Kennedy.

0742 Rocket Science

0742 Rocket Science

Since winds were plenty strong even low, we decided to just go for it and pay half again as much for fuel on the islands. That turned out to be a good decision, because once we started a gradual climb we were out of the turbulence by 5,000 feet. Again we picked up an express ride at higher altitudes, and up at 12,500 mid-crossing we topped out about 170kts. We were surprised how close both the island and the mainland looked from that high at mid-crossing. The crossing took only a few minutes before we passed this tip of Grand Bahama Island and turned descending toward Freeport.

0762 Landfall

0762 Landfall

Florida had several thick smoke plumes from what appeared to be agricultural burns, and over the island they spread into a high smoke layer that hung over everything.

0763 Smoke High

0763 Smoke High

I quickened our descent to get below it for a better look at the island, only to find that they had fires of their own feeding the layer. Luckily downwind of our turn back toward the airport after touring the town.

0816 Expected Colors

0816 Expected Colors

Down here the colors were more what we expected from the tourist pix we’ve seen. Before long the friendly and helpful guys at ATC had us on the ground. They had me land with a strong and gusty quartering tailwind, but that just made it more fun for me. 🙂

Also wanted me to taxi clear to the end of the long single runway and then all the way back to the customs office at the terminal. Maybe the connecting taxiways were unusable, or they just like you to burn gas. I never did ask what that was about, but wished the tower had told me in advance so I could have landed at the end to look around longer and shorten the taxi.

Update: Pilots can find more details on flying the Caribbean in this thread I started on POA.

Waiting for us on the ramp was the super friendly, soft-spoken and helpful Daron who kindly posed with us for this documentation of our first Caribbean landing. If you ever land there, please tell him you saw his photo here and treat yourself to his disarming non-posed smile. 🙂

0057 Darren & Admirers

0057 Daron & Admirers

2013/03/25

Eyes & Ears

New Orleans is a treat for the eyes, with fascinating architecture and lots of color.

0552 City Mix

0552 City Mix

The mix of ages we see in buildings seems to me wider than in most American cities. As we wander, the character is everywhere.

0555 Casual

0555 Casual

Some of the buildings host plant life.

0559 Life Emergent

0559 Life Emergent

Everywhere people are enjoying themselves and each other in the easy style we see everywhere.

0561 Relaxing

0561 Relaxing

We walked through colorful streets to Armstrong Park with its big white arch.

0570 Armstrong Arch

0570 Armstrong Arch

There was a great festival there, though in many ways the entire city is one giant festival everywhere with interesting and diverse music to caress your ears.

0583 Festival

0583 Festival

Walking back we wondered about the dates 1849 and 1899 on this mysterious building.

0588 Anselm Motto

0588 Anselm Motto

It’s next door to this restored Jesuit church with its distinctive towers.

0591 Two Towers

0591 Two Towers

Nearby is this costume rental store providing another example of the playful contrasts here.

0585 World Of Magic

0585 World Of Magic

Though we’re just beginning to get acquainted with New Orleans, tomorrow we’ll probably head for the Jacksonville area to visit relatives and start plotting our venture out into the Caribbean.

2013/03/24

Mystique

We wandered repeatedly into the realm of magic today. It began with our decision to ride the bus out to look at the Garden district, where many magnificent old homes have been restored. The bus was full, so we each sat with someone else in two rows and struck up conversations. We learned that by going beyond the Garden we could find another fruit: a neighborhood French Festival.

0354 Serendipitous Street

0354 Serendipitous Street

It was such a garden of delights! There was a band playing at the end of the block of course, and lots of arts and foods. But hidden inside the St. Henry School auditorium was the delightful Norbert Slama Trio playing a lilting French accordion and guitar waltz to a nearly empty hall, as if destined for our ears only. And this playful pair.

0362 The Eternal Dance

0362 The Eternal Dance

Walking out a side door, we found this woman in skull makeup turning the Wheel Of Fate for a gathering of kids.

0367 Wheel Of Fate

0367 Wheel Of Fate

Everything was magic by the time we began our walk toward the trolley back into the city, so my eye wandered to these drunks happily loitering beneath the No Loitering sign with their little dog.

0373 Three Men & Dog

0373 Three Men & Dog

After many more enchanted moments that I’ll spare you (and this will still be long!), we were happy to get a seat on the trolley that soon filled to capacity with uncomfortable tourists trying to avoid contact. After meeting more interesting people we’ll never see again, we eventually got to Frenchmen Street as darkness enfolded us and this mannequin welcomed us to the realm of mystery.

0415 Silent Welcome

0415 Silent Welcome

New Orleans is a city of music. Everywhere. All the time. But aside from Lafitte’s the jazz we’d hoped to hear on Bourbon or Royal, was mostly loud rock or blues. Here just beyond the French Market we found various colors of tight jazz in every bar. First the red.

0419 Red Jazz

0419 Red Jazz

Then the black and red.

0428 Black & Red Jazz

0428 Black & Red Jazz

Then the blue gals.

0435 Blue Jazz

0435 Blue Jazz

Next some rainbow jazz.

0443 Rainbow Jazz

0443 Rainbow Jazz

Even lots of great street jazz playing for change.

0541 Street Jazz

0541 Street Jazz

Amid it all, this lonely and all but ignored stoic jazz poet.

0466 Jazz Poet

0466 Jazz Poet

In an alley off the street we found a courtyard jazz artist colony.

0508 Jazz Art

0508 Jazz Art

Anne bought mementos for loved ones…

0522 Jazz Mementos

0522 Jazz Mementos

…as I was entertained by this jazz performance artist playing an angry beaded lady.

0514 Jazz Bearded Lady

0514 Jazz Bearded Lady

One of the tightest jazz bands we heard tonight was at The Spotted Cat, where a guitar and tuba found exquisite harmony in a small ensemble that drew a big crowd.

0507 Jazz Tuba

0507 Jazz Tuba

Few days bring the spectrum of magic that New Orleans provided these wanderers. We’re dizzy with memories, our souls opened by the city of saints so that our dreams can begin to savor the spicy flavor of life here below sea level. I’m reminded of this blessing written for a dear friend.

May we awaken to our Need with the help of other eyes.
Outside our sphere just enough, but near,
That our hearts can stretch to touch new Truth.
Singing what we can barely hear afar,
The harmony of our true nature,
Mingling in the music of ages,
We are blessings each and all,
Rising to the stars together.

2013/03/23

Exploring N.O.

Exploring New Orleans last night and today has been fun, and Weather says we get at least another day! Here then are some pix. Lots of pix. A few picks of our many pix since arriving. 🙂

0292 Bourbon St.

0292 Bourbon St.

Didn’t see any bourbon here, but lots of those sweet mixed drink glasses with some fluorescent green substance possibly called a “hand grenade.” Fun 360, even for the few old folks like us who were completely sober. Though we fit in like two fire trucks in a lush jungle, everyone was friendly or at least respectful and many absolutely thrived on the slightest bit of attention.

0294 Look At Me, Mom

0294 Look At Me, Mom

The mounted patrol officers’ mere presence brings an air of dignity and cool that somehow corrals the fun. One horse in particular looked into our souls, apparently drawn to our sobriety in that mayhem.

0302 Horse Sense

0302 Horse Sense

The spectrum of people is boundless, including families getting group photos at the zoo.

0317 Family Time

0317 Family Time

Inside every door is a diverse crush of people laughing, absorbing the particular variety of music in that bar, dancing, and drinking.

0328 Happy Faces

0328 Happy Faces

For reasons we can’t determine, some places just don’t seem to hold any appeal for more than a solitary drunk.

0338 Contrast

0338 Contrast

I liked this one named New Orleans Heat in particular, because it was quite far from the hot spot next door. Nearby I was fascinated by this man leaning against the wall nodding in and out of a stupor in the thriving Life.

0318 Swamp Spell

0318 Swamp Spell

We entered a spell of our own walking out of the crowds toward our hotel, as the song of a solo blues man emanating from Lafitte’s captured our attention to pause back a century in a moonbeam through the clouds haunting the bare trees outside. Another listener observed solemnly, “This is the Soul of New Orleans.”

0343 Soul

0343 Soul

When we finally moved on, even further from the crowds this lucky but lonely vendor struggled to stay awake under a streetlamp.

0340 Slow Night

0340 Slow Night

This morning we moved downtown, saving quite a bit of money to be in a vastly nicer hotel on the trolley line so we can explore other parts of the city and still be within minutes of the French Quarter. Walking to said trolley down Esplanade we saw some well-kept old mansions like this.

1042 Mansions

1042 Mansions

We passed this interesting character we greeted respectfully, yet shamefully refer to between us in shorthand as “Lawn Gnome Guy.”

1045 Wise Man

1045 Wise Man

Reaching the trolley stop so we could ride to the new hotel and leave all our Stuff, my free will was lost when Anne innocently asked if I’d like to buy her a pair of earrings in the French Market.

1046 Marketplace

1046 Marketplace

Guys, learn from my mistake. Sure we found her some great earrings, but it was several hours of me dragging that luggage as she shopped before we reached the next trolley stop. Oscar the earring guy was a treat to meet though, and I did manage to have a great time looking at baubles for my babe and munching exotic goodies.

1048 Oscar

1048 Oscar

We enjoyed a tasty and affordable jazz lunch in the Gazebo Cafe resting our feet near Jackson Square.

1059 Refreshing Lunch

1059 Refreshing Lunch

The donkey carts bring a tiny sample of another era when the city though quite different in pace, had that distinctive Big Easy feel.

1062 Equine Era

1062 Equine Era

While she stood in line for donuts at Café Du Monde, I listened to the really cool (and loud!) steam calliope atop the Natchez.

1066 Music Afloat

1066 Music Afloat

Music and life overflow everywhere in New Orleans, and now that we’re checked into hotel #2 we’re off to explore Night #2. 🙂

2013/03/22

Orleans!

We’re settled into our hotel in the Big Easy, and got this special clearance from ATC to fly past the city to Lakefront Airport (the runway sticks out into the lake in the distance, just right of center).

0247 N'Orleans

0247 N’Orleans

We often fly low and slow, but today was sort of low, fast and slow. Low in order to avoid the stronger quartering headwinds just above our minimum altitude of 1200 feet or so. Fast (100kt., faster than usual for us) trying to compensate for our relatively slow progress across the ground, and of course slow (actually our preferred pace of 80kt.) ground speed due to that same wind. Pretty smooth, and a little longer than we’d have most liked for this leg. But among the advantages was closer looks at things like this.

0223 Whazzat?

0223 Whazzat?

A small lake in a vast marsh was dotted with dozens of these things. Duck blinds? Fishing platforms? Gator traps? You tell me. As we climbed a little approaching the busy New Orleans airspace I told ATC I’d like to fly near roads because I’m unfamiliar with open marsh lands and didn’t want to be a gator snack. He didn’t laugh, nor could I detect even a smirk as he came back with, “Fly 090 degrees at 3,000 feet.”  In other words, shut up and do what I say. I did. 🙂

But I’ve jumped ahead. We woke to this beautiful scene in Galveston.

0023 Galveston Beach

0023 Galveston Beach

Christian and Danica at the airport had not only set us up with a nice hotel (Great, if it only had free wifi like every other place – even Starbucks!). They also loaned us a nice van this morning for a drive around town. So we got to see some of the old buildings that have survived hurricanes that all but wiped this low spit of land clean. Like the old Opera House, which I liked this painted back view of better than the front.

0067 Galveston Opera

0067 Galveston Opera

Anne liked the fanciful buildings and touches like this arch, and the nearby cruise port district.

0043 Playful Arch

0043 Playful Arch

Anyway, on our low, fast, slow flight we also saw the massive refinery complex at Port Charles. This tiny portion somehow reminds me of milk. Certainly not the color, I’m talking about when I was a kid and thought milk came from cartons and then got grossed out when I leaned it’s actually the steaming exudation of a smelly animal.

0153 Black Milk

0153 Black Milk

Since I loved milk, especially with fresh-baked cookies, I soon forgot my distaste for the origins and then got curious about the whole dairy process. Even helped a farmer milk his cows before dawn once and tasted the incomparable sensory experience of really fresh milk. So this pool of hideous black goo is part of the process that makes the “milk” Tripp likes best. Still, I’ll be glad when the aviation biofuel production process is finally ramped up, and even happier when most small planes are electric or at least hybrid powered.

0182 Rice? Fish? Shrimp?

0182 Rice? Fish? Shrimp?

Nearby are large tracts of flooded farm land like this, that I suppose are for farming fish, rice, or shrimp. Which of course got me thinking of how this mixes with the black goo in hurricanes. Remarkable how powerful the forces of nature are, both for mixing these things up and for repairing the damage with new life.

Another discovery today was several places like this. Want to know my guess as to what it is?

0210 Double Parking

0210 Double Parking

I think oil workers drive here, park their cars, walk to one of those helipads, and are flown out into the Gulf for a shift working on a rig.

Well, we’re off to explore the French Quarter…

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