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ontheroadwithjp

~ tales of a wanderer

ontheroadwithjp

Author Archives: jwpenley

Memories

28 Friday Dec 2012

Posted by jwpenley in Uncategorized

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IMG_9822-1Memories

This is a time of year that I don’t travel, I let others come to me. It is good fortune that they still want to do so. Being an honorary member of the Kids’ Club could be a factor. Or, the Grandma sleepover with movies, pizza (or, sometimes an unusually formal meal, candles and all), and the favorite ice cream sundae with as much whipped cream on top as one could desire. Perhaps it’s that there is often a ridiculous allowance like the time we roasted penne pasta and asparagus spears over the candle flames. There is the suggestion that what happens at Grandma’s stays at Grandma’s but somehow the stories get told. I am scolded but always forgiven.

There are lots of memories stored from this holiday. The oldest child is now 45, the oldest grandchild now 14. There are tree decorations from all of those years, many hand made by a grandmother/great grandmother who is no longer here but fondly remembered for these elaborate, colorful felt characters. It’s a tradition that stopped with her, those every year additions to the Christmas presents, but I did manage to make a fantastic stocking for each grandchild to complete the circle.

Christmas morning has gone from the utter chaos of children tearing at packages and counting to see if one received more than another, hardly looking at the presents, to that now eerily quiet iSomething concentration. Something to be said for the chaos, then again…. Mid-afternoon, the crowd moves on to my house for the family and friends meal. After a near disaster with a smoking turkey several years ago, the bird is cooked in the company of others and transported when ready to eat. Christmas dinner hasn’t changed although there are some who would like to try something different. Bacon/garlic brussel sprouts made an appearance this year. Maybe another “new” dish next year.

The apartment is quiet now but the glorious sound of laughter and the strains of Jingle Bells and We Wish You a Merry Christmas performed by saxophone, two clarinets, a violin and a five-year-old vocalist still echo. The neighbors will surely forgive.

Memories

Memories

Memories

Memories

Monster bag

13 Thursday Dec 2012

Posted by jwpenley in Travel

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I am a proponent of traveling light. This stems from growing up in the heavy Samsonite-suitcase-as-graduation-present era without the funds to hire a porter. I once traveled three weeks in Thailand with two smallish nylon SportSacs and had room to spare for the souvenirs. Thus, the purchase of a monster suitcase for six months in Italy was out of character. The reasoning was well-founded as changes in weather required a much larger wardrobe, not an outrageous assumption. What was outrageous was thinking that such a bag would be portable and hiring a porter was still out of the question.

Baggage claim in airports is always a challenge, fraught with the anxiety that the airline and your bag will not agree on a destination. Upon arrival at Fiorentino, I approached the whirring conveyor belt eagle-eyed with fingers crossed. I watched as bag after bag met its owner. Bag after bag was not mine. It was so big, how could I have missed it? How could the airline have missed it? If you are a seasoned traveler, you will recognize that panicky feeling when the whirring stops and the empty conveyor belt grinds to a halt, all bags claimed. No monster bag in sight. The next four days were spent in the same travel clothes until monster was finally found and delivered three-and-a-half hours north of Rome. Airlines will deliver if they find the bag.

Onward with the monster. If you are lucky, such bags will only take up all of the room in the small trunks of cars common in Europe. If not, they won’t fit at all. I was safe if I traveled alone and kept the spare tire in the back seat but I was ready to ditch monster after three months. Unfortunately, circumstances and logistics prevented this disposal and I found myself again at baggage claim, this time in Venice. My fears were unfounded this time and the monster appeared for claiming. Struggling it onto the hotel launch, I made my way through the canals toward my home for the next three weeks in sestiere San Marco, a short walk from Piazza San Marco, two sets of bridge stairs from the launch dock, a fifth floor walk up. Monster is again a problem.

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Old Venetian apartments have very high ceilings, eleven feet or higher. It’s a long way up five flights of stairs. The overnight flight from San Francisco with a stopover at Heathrow was not conducive to hauling a giant bag up those stairs so the monster spent the night in the trash room just inside the door. The next morning, braced with a strong cup of Italian coffee, I met the challenge and managed, step by step, to reach the top. It would be at least another three months before that bag saw the light of day. I bought a smaller bag, stored the monster in my friend’s closet then proceeded to travel throughout Italy with a greatly reduced wardrobe and a significantly lighter load. The bag now resides in a storage locker where it holds more reasonably sized bags. It’s a reminder–if you bring it, you carry it.

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Baggage light

06 Thursday Dec 2012

Posted by jwpenley in Travel

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I follow the crowd. Climbing the spiral stairs up from deep beneath Montmarte at the Lamarck/ Caulaincourt Metro stop, I am happy to be a baggage-light traveler.

Traveling light is my signature. I always have the smallest backpack, fewest number of bags, least amount of superfluous clothing of anyone in any group. My goal is to carry everything on the plane, no checked luggage. I have it down to a science and, over the years, have found the perfect bags to meet that goal. Baggage-light means arriving at De Gaulle with a small daypack and a cabin-sized rolling bag ready to walk, however far, up however many steps to reach my destination without hailing a taxi. The trip into Paris from De Gaulle on public transportation was a breeze, on the flat or escalators, taking me from Gare de Nord to line 4 to line 12 arriving at my destination in just under an hour. Perfect.

Back to that spiral staircase. By landing number five, I am struggling with my baggage-light load and think I may not make it to the top. This upward journey started with three straight flights before the spiral even began. I was already panting at the second turn and praying that the end was near on the fourth. The good and the bad about a spiral staircase is that you can’t see that end.

The architect of those stairs must have known that five turns are all a body can withstand because that fifth landing was the last. As I proceeded to the exit gate, exhausted but happy to have made it and relieved that the return trip would be down, I watched a large number of people disembark from the elevator. Who knew?

Squats–of the toilet variety

30 Friday Nov 2012

Posted by jwpenley in Travel

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Balance is key when confronted with a squat toilet. For the westerner, it is useful to have a handle for stability, but, more importantly, to have strong leg muscles. I am no stranger to squat toilets. My first encounter was, surprisingly, in a small town in France. There have been times when I would have welcomed the squat. For example, on the train to Mexico City when I discovered the reason the seats were unsittable as the door flew open on a bend in the rails and I saw the woman standing on the toilet. Better a hole in the floor.

But the biggest challenge came at the bus station in Kaili. My guide had gone to buy the tickets and I was left to fend for myself with bags. I manage to travel with a relatively light load, keeping my backpack to 12 kilos with camera gear in a front pack so walking and climbing stairs do not hamper me. A squat toilet presents a different problem that may not be apparent until too late. There I was, pants around my knees using the walls for a little support, when it came time to get up. My leg muscles failed me. I could not raise myself to a standing position and I didn’t know how to yell, “Help, I’m stuck in this position, get me out of here” in Chinese. Nor would my pride have allowed me to do that even if I had known the words. This was a small space with not enough room to propel myself forward and get up camel style. This required a straight up motion. Several false starts and I was officially concerned that there was no way up that didn’t entail sitting on the toilet floor, or worse, and removing the backpack. The solution presented itself when I looked up and saw that I could reach the top of the door. Pull myself up. By this time, the leg muscles were jelly and useless. Arm muscles, my weakest, were required. Panting and panicked, I struggled, legs quivering and tears in my eyes, gaining upward movement an inch at a time. With one final end-of-strength pull, I was upright; shaking and heart pounding, but upright. With a nonchalance I didn’t feel, I opened the door and stepped out into the crowded room. My backpack was never out of sight, but the next time it will be on the floor.

On leaving Zhaoxing

23 Friday Nov 2012

Posted by jwpenley in Travel

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The sky was dark when we started for the bus stop. I had asked Kyra what time the bus came but her answer was vague. Seven o’clock, maybe, or eight or nine, if it comes. This is the small village of Zhaoxing in Guizhou Province, China and there is much that is vague. We stopped for a quick bowl of noodles for breakfast then walked to the center of town where, we supposed, the bus would stop, if it came. At seven, no bus. Kyra left several times to recheck the schedule. Always the same, maybe now, maybe later, maybe maybe. Her aunt sat with us for awhile, sharing juicy oranges and nuts. She spoke no English and my Chinese is limited to the most basic of pleasantries but she wanted to share in the waiting. Five past eight, we heard the clatter of a struggling bus coming up the main street, leaving a cloud of dust in its wake. Kyra stepped out to wave the driver down, otherwise he would have kept up his momentum and driven straight through. She spoke briefly with the driver, handed him a slip of paper and waved me onto the bus. I had the note with directions in Chinese she had given me the night before but I was happy to have someone sharing the knowledge who spoke the language.

It was a small bus and almost full but I found an empty seat where I was able to sit the necessary sideways. It’s a rare Chinese bus that allows me to sit any other way. I require either two seats or an aisle. I settled in for the 9 hour bus ride and waved goodby to Kyra and her tiny home town. I was on my own for the next four days with only a vague idea of where I was going and no idea where I would be sleeping. As the bus made its way along the rutted road, it stopped occasionally to pick up passengers until there was standing room only and my legs were swung out into the aisle. Two hours into the trip, the bus stopped.

There was a noisy discussion that seemed to indicate that this was unusual. Most of the passengers left the bus and headed toward another bus stopped just ahead. No one had said anything about a transfer point and we were a long way from anything resembling a town. A twinge of apprehension prickled my neck as I contemplated my next move. To stay or not to stay. The young couple who spoke just a little English started to leave just as the bus driver returned to the bus with note in hand and started pointing at me. The couple and the remaining people on the bus now came to my aid and started gesturing toward the exit. I got the message. Get off the bus. The first step was into a mud hole. Clearly the bus exchange was a result of the recent rains that left a portion of the road impassable forcing us to slip and slide our way through the muck separating the two buses. The good news was a bus upgrade to a newer, larger bus with seats for everyone.

Next stop, Kaili, where I did expect a transfer and was armed with my second note in Chinese and the correct pronunciation of Guiyang, my destination for the night. A semblance of a line was forming in front of a lone window and I dutifully joined it. Ticket buyers kept coming in from all angles to get to the window. Each, it seemed, had a special situation until I realized that they all wanted to buy tickets just as I did. With that realization, the bony elbows leapt from my side and became knives cutting through the crowd as I allowed no others to push past me until I reached the window, shouted my request and thumped my money on the counter. Success. I had the ticket and the body was intact. I boarded my third bus of the day and positioned myself nicely in the front seat with plenty of leg room only to discover that we had assigned seats and mine was in the back of the bus amongst the vendors and their overflowing bundles taking up the aisles. Knees pressed against the seat, onward, bus!

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The ultimate in strings.

18 Sunday Nov 2012


I first began playing the violin when I was ten.  It was my grandfather’s violin, fiddle, actually.  He lost his arm in a train accident so couldn’t play anymore.  I remember his pulling it out from under the bed in the farm’s guest bedroom and handing it to me.  All I had to do to earn it was learn to play “The Irish Washerwoman.”  I played that song for him for years. 

Where am I going with this? Just a brief background on why I was intrigued by an apartment exchange offer in the town of Cremona, Italy.  Why wouldn’t I want to do that?  Of course, that’s my usual response to an offer of a visit to Italy but Cremona is particularly special. It is the birthplace of the modern violin, the home of the brilliant luthiers Amati and Stradivari.  Still home to over one hundred violin makers and two stupendous collections of priceless instruments.

The Civic Collection is housed in the beautiful Palazzo Comunale,and contains violins, a viola and a cello ranging in creation dates from 1566 to 1941. The Stradivari Museum is found in the Civic Museum Ala Ponzone, and includes not only another wonderful collection of instruments, but also includes tools, patterns, molds and other paraphernalia used in making stringed instruments, some used by Stradivari.

I know this will seem melodramatic to those who have never picked up a violin, drawn a bow over the strings, made that first attempt at playing “At Pierrot’s Door.”  But when I stood alone with the Civic Collection, the room empty except for the chattering guards, in the company of twelve of the world’s most famous instruments, I cried.

These instruments are still played, every day. A stringed instrument needs to be played. Playing keeps it alive, vibrant. These instruments are still very much alive. There are only two men in Cremona who are allowed to play them on a regular basis. They alternate days and, if you are lucky, you can attend a brief but glorious concert in the large hall outside the collection room. Up close, if you are early. Bach on Il Cremonese, Stradivari, circa 1715, is climbing to the top of the mountain.

Posted by jwpenley | Filed under Travel

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