Friday, September 23, 2011

Commemorating 9/11

Tom and I were married on August 18, 2001 but didn't leave for our honeymoon until September 9, 2001. We arrived in Paris on September 10, the day before 9/11. Below is what I wrote about that time.

Honeymoon Itinerary

Leave Seattle Sunday, September 9, Arrive Paris, France, Monday morning September 10.

Taxi in from DeGaulle Airport in traffic arriving at our hotel on the Seine -- the Hotel Quai du Voltaire -- to find rooms the size of closets, but a fine view from our window of the Louvre and the Seine. Unable to check in, we begin on foot to tour the city -- eating wonderful baguettes of ham and pate and sharing a prune creme brulee tart; buying gold eye shadow and bright red lipstick and nail polish; dinner at a French restaurant we thought we had discovered on the Left Bank only to be joined by Americans. We also manage our first day to walk to the Eiffel Tower, the huge Museum of Anthropology and Archeology from where we have a perfect view of the Eiffel Tower, before heading to the hotel to shower and go to dinner.

September 11, a day that began with hope and excitement for our first full day in Paris. Eating breakfast on the Isle Louis with an American photographer and [an] actress, visiting the Les Vosges square and hotel and settling in for lunch at a curbside restaurant; heading for the garment district which is in the old Jewish Quarters and passing by a television airing the fateful terrorist attacks as they happened on the World Trade Center towers. The crowd gathering in stunned silence, then tears.

We spent the next 6 hours trying to contact our four children. First Peter with an Internet card and computer in a bar, then phone calls to Cherise, Kelly and Peter [Neu]. Finally connecting with Sally Neu and then Kelly from our perch in St. Germaine. Then collapsing in relief to find that Peter [Neu] had gotten to the airport that morning to fly from Seattle to Pittsburgh and Pittsburgh to Paris but when he arrived shortly aft 6:00 a.m. found that his plane and all planes had been grounded because of a terrorist attack.

We eat dinner at a Moule (mussels) restaurant and try to make sense of it all. We can't sleep that night, going over the day's events. Turning them slowly in our mind. We can't comprehend the incomprehensible. We sleep until noon. Planes are not flying to the US for fear of attacks and we are in Europe. We decide the only thing we can do is proceed with our vacation itinerary as we have breakfast at lunchtime at a restaurant near the Rodin Museum. We visit the museum and meet an American couple from Connecticut who are equally stunned -- in fact, Americans we meet everywhere are stunned and muted. We talk about their love of Paris. How they met in Paris 8 years ago, flew home and got married, and returned for 3 months of honeymoon exchanging their home for one in Paris. They are meeting another couple on a canal two hours south of Paris for a two-week barge trip. By barge you can go across Europe we find.

We walk to Napoleon's tomb.

That night we eat at a restaurant in the lively Latin Quarter sitting next to an American girl studying there and living a block away and two Australians on a 5-week trip through France and Greece. They're stockbrokers and talk with us about the terrorist attacks at length -- telling us that colleagues of theirs narrowly missed being there at the time of the attacks. Everyone it seems feels close to the tragedy, with so many people working in the buildings, from every country, the inhuman act affects us all.

Collectively, Europe mourns. People all express their sorrow to us. It helps. Meanwhile, so many of us are in Europe -- Christy, Jim and Jeff Caldwell, Peter Gaffney, ourselves and then, we find, Peter Neu who flies out a week later to Berlin.

On this trip we go on to Tours (where we experience a three-minute moment of silence and church bells ring throughout the city to honor those who died in the terrorist attacks), Cognac, St. Cyprien, Monaco, Massa Rossa (where my grandfather was born), Lucca (and torta verdura), Ponte a Moriano (where we visit the relatives), Florence (where we visit Tony and Marghi), Stressa, and London. We never completely rest easy but we find respite in each other and the calm surroundings of the French and Italian countryside.

Wednesday, September 21, 2011

South Lake Union Park -- a late blog from April

Before leaving for Hawaii, we took the kids and Tom's model boat that he made for Andy and Sylvia to South Lake Union park. It was a beautiful warm day and Tom's friend from high school, Hal, was there with his restored tug Norene. The kids had fun sailing the boat on the pond, rolling down the grassy hills, running through the sprinkler fountain, exploring Norene and finishing the day at Procopio's on the Hillclimb.



















Before sailing his model boat with the grand kids, Tom tried it out on Lake Washington. An incoming plane saw  the boat as it approached and circled around to avoid it. As it came in for the second time, the pilot helped the boat to shore by creating a wake on the way to dock. Our hero.


Row boats lined up on the doc at the Center for Wooden Boats.

Sylvia's 4

Sylvia's First Birthday

Sylvia turned 4 and a sweeter more wonderful girl there isn't. She's so much fun to be with. So funny. So fun. Mom threw her a wonderful party on the hottest day of the summer.
And Sylvia's Fourth Birthday










And her "real" birthday, September 14, she opened presents from the family and then we headed out for sushi and gelato.





She got lots of dolls, especially Barbie dolls, doll house, turquoise car and pool, plus a big girl bed from us. To that she said to us, "that's what I really, really wanted."

More photos from Sylvia's first year --








Abbiamo Mangiare Con Amici Nel Poulsbo Fino Estate

The marble table is all set when we arrive and the antipasti served.

Bonnie and Byron with the first bottle matched to our meal.

Cutting the bread for our dinner

Greeting when we arrive

Rabbit on pasta

From left, me, Tom, Bonnie, Byron, Steve (Cody is taking the picture)


Friends Cody and Steve invited neighbors Bonnie and Byron and us to their beautiful home in Poulsbo overlooking Liberty Bay. They once lived on the 4th floor of Hillclimb Court but moved closer to Cody's work and couldn't pass up the chance to have a sunny slope where they could indulge their passion for growing every sort of vegetable, herb and fruit imaginable and then some. We ate at their marble table outside in the fresh air. I made a four-course Italian dinner which survived the ferry crossing and drive to Poulsbo and Byron matched Italian wines to each course. The first course featured fresh figs from their yard, Parma prosiutto and Italian gorgonzola, dribbled with blackberry honey from the Market and fresh thyme. Second course was rabbit slow roasted with pancetta and first-of-the-season Chantrelles on a bed of parpadelle from Italy sprinkled with parmesan. Third course was heirloom tomatoes on arugula with garlic, parsley, basil and my preserved Moroccan lemons chopped fine and sprinkled on top with some EVOO and balsamic vinegar. Finally, we finished off the meal with my homemade Limoncello and a lemon Mascarpone cake, fresh whipped cream, topped with peaches, blueberries and blackberries gathered on a walk, different kinds of currents, and some old-fashioned strawberries from their garden macerated in a Spanish Vermouth. It's making my mouth water just thinking of it.