On the trail of towers

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IMG_3117Bologna, among other things, is a city of towers. In the 12th and 13th centuries, there was a tower building frenzy throughout Italy and Bologna participated fully. Most are remnants of their former selves but two remain as symbols of the city’s medieval glory, Asinelli and Garisenda.

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Of the twenty-one documented towers, a few are bell towers, some have clocks and many are truncated–except Asinelli which towers above the city and offers a magnificent view for those willing to climb 498 steps. Piano, piano and even an anziena can make it. Interestingly, there is no discount for the aged. Perhaps this is a deterrent so a rescue squad is not necessary. Whatever your age, go for it. It’s worth the effort.

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IMG_3445As for Garisenda, it no longer towers. It’s a symbol due to its proximity to Asinelli and what’s left of it leans. Yes, Bologna has its very own leaning tower. The surprise is that there are not more. Bologna’s river was covered over centuries ago but it still has the capability of creating unstable ground. Heavy tower, unstable ground, lean just a little too far and, voila, a leaning sort-of tower half the height of its neighbor. A photo-op, to be sure.

There is a tour devised by Provencia di Bologna that takes you on the trail of the towers. It’s a delightful way of discovering hidden gems and back alleys. Some of these towers you will see in your every day journeys through the city, others are quite obscure. Most have been incorporated into surrounding buildings and it’s only when you look up that you see the tower. There is a similarity in construction and materials and height. There must have been a level where the towers ceased to be sturdy enough to survive the centuries. Or, perhaps the breaking point was just at the level of cannon balls.

The only towers I didn’t find were three towers that are no longer standing. Supposedly, there is a plaque in an arcade marking the spot where they stood. I could find neither the arcade nor the plaque. Several U-turns and backtracks were unsuccessful so I gave up. A small flaw in an otherwise well plotted walk.

If you happen to be in Bologna in July, start early, stay within the shade of the arcades as much as possible and finish off your adventure with an Aperol spritz. Salute.

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About that bolt…

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For weeks I attempted to compensate for that lost tripod bolt. The one sucked into the vacuum just before my departure. There was the prolonged search for a replacement bolt beginning in Ghent. There was some hope in Bologna. At least the sales clerk knew what was needed and sent me to the better equipped partner store. Alas, bolts fit only for Italian makes. I am now dealing with that French/Italian thing again. I’m in Italy, the tripod is French and the French do things differently. Even, apparently, to the point of threading their bolts in a different gauge. Who would have thought?

IMG_3484Meanwhile, a fellow photographer has joined me eager to do a little night shooting. My accommodating exchanger has offered his tripod. Of course, my nifty grip head doesn’t fit so I am dealing with a totally foreign tripod but I make do for the evening. Sadly, nothing spectacular, only modest success from the experience, but the effort was made.

The following weekend entails a return trip to wonderful little Ceppato and another sagra sotto le stelle and a visit with Piero. If anyone can find a bolt, he is the one. The search almost becomes an obsession. Still, there is not an Italian bolt on earth that will fit that tripod. Finally, I am finished with the search. Enough is enough. Any night scenes will be blurred or I will just fix them in my memory. Not a bad thing.

In the final days of my summer adventure, Zurich is scheduled. The night photographer friend lives in Zurich. She has found a place where we are certain to find the perfect bolt. A successful search is no longer important to me. There is little time left and I am, frankly, bored with the search. Reluctantly, I agree to try. Just one more time.

Success! She’s right. The bolt is longish but the threads seem to work. Ah, Switzerland, that neutral country that tries to accommodate all.

Home with the new bolt. It goes through the disk. It fits into the head. Now for the tripod. The bolt won’t screw into the hole. It isn’t deep enough. The bolt is too long. Or is it? No, there is something in the hole. A bolt. The missing bolt. In the tripod hole. Not in the vacuum. With me all the time. Who thought to look down into the hole? How did it get down there? How do we get it out? Two types of tweezers and needle nose pliers will not extract the bolt. Unscrewing the top only lengthens the center pole. It’s stuck. Until I finally realize that one has to continue twisting and the very top eventually comes off and the bolt is dumped out onto the table. It appears to be laughing.

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One last evening, tripod in hand, bolt properly placed, we document both the use of the tripod and night in Zurich. Mission accomplished.

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So what was that kerthunk? What was swooped into the vacuum? A coin? A different, less important bolt? It is a great relief to know that I won’t have to search through the filth of my vacuum for the bolt and I’m not curious enough about other possibilities to delve into the muck. But I now know that a logical assumption is not necessarily a logical answer. Two and two do not always end up being a bolt.

That laundry thing again

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I’m a big proponent of home exchanges. They allow me to travel much more frequently and for longer periods of time than would be possible paying hotel bills. Even the new AirB&B sites pale by comparison. Exchanges have also taken me to places not on my radar or wish list. I receive a request for an exchange, perhaps I’ve never been there or only briefly, and my first response is, “Why wouldn’t I want to do that?”

This method of travel has been my primary mode for the last eight years taking me to such disparate places as Berlin, Ghent, Marseille, Istanbul and, now, Bologna. Forgive me if I have failed to mention your city. I’m not a fan of long lists. Many cities, many excellent exchanges.

On to Bologna and that laundry. A crucial factor in exchanges is to leave a place the way you found it. This is one of the beauties of the exchange. You are in someone’s home while they are in yours. There is an assumed respect and I have never been disappointed. Only with a neighbor’s cat but that’s another story. Requirements vary to achieve that “as you found it.” Some people have cleaning services and just ask for broom clean, others ask that the laundry is done and shower doors are cleaned. It’s free lodging. You do it.

Oh, yes, the laundry. I am stunned to discover that my delightful exchanger in Bologna irons his sheets! I have done a lot of ironing in my life beginning with the handkerchiefs of my father but I have never ironed a sheet. This lovely man irons fitted sheets. I thought that’s why people owned fitted sheets–they fit, tight, no ironing. I was wrong.

The task is magnified by the fact that two additional people joined me on this exchange and had the foresight to leave before the iron-in. I am a third of the way through the sheets. I still have six days so I am not rushing plus it’s in the mid-90’s in Bologna this July.

I’m hoping my exchanger isn’t appalled by my efforts. His are clearly better ironed. I have tried, they seem flat enough and there are no scorch marks. I’m not advertising my ironing prowess. Next time, I find a laundry.

Driving in Bologna II

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Curbs in many Italian cities are quite high, perhaps dating back to the days of horse drawn carriages and less sophisticated drainage systems. The high curbs of Bologna play an important part in this story. Exhausted by the day’s experience in “Driving in Bologna I,” we made our way to our hotel, finding a parking spot in a perfect location, near the hotel and not in an isolated area. It was a small space but with a little effort the car just fit, a little close to the curb but no matter. We were happy to be rid of the car for the evening. The hotel was pleasant enough. We checked in, dropped our bags and went in search of an osteria. Over a nice carafe of house wine and a meal of the delicious cuisine of Emilia Romagna, we recapped the adventures of the day and marveled that we escaped with nothing more than the cost of a new tire and a good story.

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Bright and early the next morning, we approached the car, bags in hand, and were relieved to find it intact. We loaded the trunk with our bags and climbed in prepared to continue our journey. That high curb had other ideas as it grabbed the underside of the rear fender in a death grip. By the time I got the car off the curb, there was a large piece of the wheel well dragging on the ground, its molded form impossible to bend back to its original place, leaving the car impossible to drive. A small crowd gathered offering the usual spectators’ advice, none of it useful, but the consensus was that nothing would work. The only possible solution was to somehow tie up the hanging part so it wouldn’t scrape the tire and try to find a repair shop. No rope, no stores open, no help from the spectators. But, in her luggage, my well-prepared friend had a bungee cord. Far from a perfect solution, it offered some hope. As we began manipulating the stretchable cord, one gentleman observer just grinned, shook his head and left. A bungee cord can be very useful but it is not a rope and its stretchable nature does not make for a secure lashing. But we made it work after a fashion and, with fingers crossed, slowly made our way through the quiet streets back to the only place we knew that was open and worked on cars, the tire garage.

Their expertise did not extend beyond tires, but they just happened to know two brothers who did body work, they were close and they were open. Off we went in our bungee-wrapped car looking for the place we couldn’t miss. Many wrong turns later and still no garage, we finally called for directions and, with minimal English on one end and minimal Italian on the other, finally figured out guideposts. We were looking for a garage. This was more like a junkyard behind high cement block walls. We were understandably skeptical.

The language barrier was obvious from the start. My Italian was limited, their English non-existent. They called an English speaking friend. His English was less than my Italian. He called another friend to try to help translate on the phone. That was worse. We were getting nowhere and it was getting late, near that magical mid-day hour when everything shuts down for three hours. I finally decided to go with my Italian and my hands to explain what was needed.

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At first, the repair was going to take several days. They would have to order a new piece. It would be very expensive. Then, maybe it could somehow be repaired without a new piece but still expensive and not today. Suddenly, my Italian got better and I got the message across that this was a rental car, I didn’t want to spend a lot of money and the car was due for return in two days at the Milan airport. It was a French car going back to France.

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At that precise moment of comprehension, the brothers looked at each other, threw their hands up into the air and cried “capiamo!” we get it. Go, eat. Come back later this afternoon. Your car will be ready. So we did what the Italians do, had a leisurely three-hour lunch and returned to find the car finished with no noticeable damage. Bravo. Now, for the bill. This is where the French/Italian rivalry really works in our favor. The brothers are not great admirers of French engineering and think their cars are poorly made. For them this was an opportunity to get the French by cutting off the offending piece, leaving the car looking like new, guessing that the absence would never be noticed. No charge for putting one over on the French.

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So, about that bottle of wine, it went to the brothers. As predicted, the car repair went unnoticed and now I always carry a bungee cord.

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I have since returned to the lovely, exciting city of Bologna– by train.

Not so sweet

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Not many things stump me. Perhaps that is a gross exaggeration. Let me say that I can usually figure out how things work–except when it comes to Italian washing machines. There is a clever little machine called Candy. The most recent experience was with a Candy named “Smart.” That should have been the first and most telling clue. But I blithely loaded the machine with clothes and soap only to discover that Candy was smarter than I yet not smart enough to just do the laundry. The home exchanger left instructions, select “N” for the quickest wash and start. Earlier experiences with Italian washing machines made that choice appealing as they can take an unbearably long time. First they fill with water, the water sits there long enough to heat up then the machine sloshes for a spell. Stops, sits, sloshes some more and can take upwards of three hours to complete its cycles of slosh and wait, slosh and wait.

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There was no “N” on the dial–anywhere. Cotone, known for the long wait, delicati, the obvious and something with a Tutto on it. I selected Tutto, pushed a couple of other buttons that looked necessary including what looked like temperature but turned out to be time and another the velocity of the spin. Pushed start. Nothing. Pushed start again. Still nothing. Pushed really hard on start until a sort of click. Nothing. Started over again. Nothing worked. Candy won. Later that evening, the exchanger, who fortunately lives in the building, came to the rescue. What he did looked like what I did except when he pushed start, Candy began her little sloshing. I watched, really carefully. I swear I did. His push was a simple push with his thumb, the steps seemed simple enough, took thirty minutes. Laundry in the future should be a cinch.

It was not to be. This morning I set and reset that little devil a minimum of ten times. Every time, after a push of start, nothing happened. The laundry, soap and all, sits there waiting until the return of the exchanger. A sweet-sounding little machine called Candy has truly outsmarted me and I am not pleased. An Aperol spritz is helping but I’m having trouble letting the defeat go.

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Perhaps I need a new thumb.

Driving in Bologna

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Everyone in Italy goes on holiday August 15. Everyone, that is, except scoundrels who prey on tourists who forget that everyone goes on holiday August 15. Realizing that this is a gross overstatement, my story begins on this premise. It was August 15, I was a tourist and the scoundrels did find me.

My friend and I arrived in Bologna late morning. The city was quiet and we had no trouble finding a parking spot on the street. Bologna is one of those cities where you buy parking time at a machine and leave the time-stamped ticket in your window. This makes it easy for the traffic police to see if you have overstayed your time. It also makes it easy for the scoundrels to know how much time they have to wreak havoc. Our first concern was avoiding a fine so we bought our ticket and set off to explore the city.

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Bologna is a beautiful city with wide, arched, covered walkways to protect from the weather. An August sun calls for such protection and the walkways made a mid-day stroll possible. There were very few people about and shops were closed, but our wandering finally led us to an open trattoria where we settled into a long lunch—long enough to find us rushing back to the car past our allotted time. To our great relief, there was no ticket. What we did have was a flat tire. We had been in Italy enough to know that a flat tire on August 15 is not a good thing and we also knew that the strange donut of a tire that passes for a spare these days was not a good thing. As we stood discussing our options, we were saved by a passing English-speaking gentleman. Our good fortune, he knew of a service station just two blocks away; a quick left turn and we would find it. We did not invite him into the car to show us the way. We were not that trusting. However, we were desperate so we did follow his advice and crept along the two blocks and made the left turn.

There was no station in sight. Instead, we were on a quiet, tree-lined street, mostly residential. It appeared deserted until we spotted a shoe store with the metal grating half raised and someone inside. Surely he would know of this mysterious service station. We approached the store and called the man out. Of course, we were in the right place. Two men in blue work shirts materialized, eager to help. We opened the trunk, they pulled out the jack and spare and went to work while we watched.

It is common, in Italy, to engage many people in such an event, the workers and the commentators. The shoe store owner was a lively participant, the workers friendly and engaging. A man, smartly dressed in summer white, wandered over and joined the scene. Speaking English as impeccably as he was dressed, he asked lots of questions—where we lived, how we liked Italy, what had happened to our car? It was all very spirited with everyone eager to help. Until I noticed a movement out of the corner of my eye, low and by the driver’s side of the car. In four giant steps, I was around the car and screaming at the small man who had his hand inside reaching for a bag between the seats. No need to speak Italian here. My screaming was enough to stop him mid-grab. I knew enough Italian to understand his quivering excuse—un gatto sotto la machina! So, if your cat is under the car, why is your hand in the car?

The cat lover ran, the man in white mysteriously disappeared and the tire-changers began apologizing profusely citing recent problems with immigrants. The tire was quickly changed, the shoe store owner provided us with the name and address of a tire man who would be open and, quite shaken, we left. We offered to pay but they refused and continued to apologize for the bad immigrants. Was there too much apologizing? As I rethink the series of events, the apology seemed more a claim of innocence, the innocence not plausible. Consider: a sliced tire, two foreign women, a stranger who happens to know a service station that doesn’t exist but two men are conveniently on the spot to help, the English speaker arrives to engage us in conversation and the cat chaser appears with his hand in the car. There was a tire man although he did insist that we needed two new tires but our innocence was long gone so he settled for one. We planned to return to the scene of the almost-crime with a bottle of wine as a thank you, but the saga of the car continued and the wine had a different destiny.

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Lost necessities

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Just coming off teaching a four-week course in night photography, I was excited to continue my rejuvenated interest in the subject. For a travel-light person, adding a tripod and a pistol-grip head is a big decision but the two items fit into my carry-on luggage so along they came.

Several days into the trip beginning in Brussels, moving on to Ghent, the time and weather were right for night shooting. The tripod was pulled out, the connecting disk was floating around in the bottom of the bag but of no concern, pistol-grip head ready to go. Put it all together. Not quite. A floating around disk is a concern. Where is the connecting bolt? Everything out of the bag. Shoe bags shaken. Clothes separated. Under the hair dryer? Caught in the hair brush? In the side pocket? No sign of the all-important bolt without ends. This “without ends” becomes the operative phrase as I go in search of a replacement.

imageBrico City, that wondrous Belgian hardware store where everything comes in a package of ten and nothing is quite right. Can a bolt with an end be cut? Yes. Here? Yes, but you will have to finish it yourself. What does that mean? The person in the store can cut the end off, but I will have to use my tools to finish it so it can be used. That’s what everyone who buys things in Brico does. Tools. How could I have forgotten my tools? He thinks someone in a bigger, suburban store might be able to help but he doesn’t know for sure. It’s very hard to explain how to get there and he is much too busy to call. Service. A dying art.

Off to the tourist information center to see if they know of a camera shop. At least a camera shop would know what I needed. Alas, the camera shop is a bit like the hardware store. A place to buy things, not fix things. Nothing in the store. It could be ordered from the manufacturer but not available immediately. My interest is not so rejuvenated as to purchase a new tripod!

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So, I resort to the very unsatisfactory method of putting the lens against the window, holding my breath and trying not to move for eight seconds. Limited, certainly, and not my best work. Perhaps in Bologna where I will stay longer. Maybe I can borrow some tools.
As for that missing bolt, while lying in bed, I remembered a kerthunk sound. Vacuuming the floor before my departure, something was swooped up into the vacuum cleaner. A penny? A bolt! At the very least, I know where to find the original. Now if I can just create a temporary…

New packing list: bolt cutter, metal file, extra bolts.

Encounters

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Encounters color the perspective of a country. A bad encounter on the first visit can lead to a bad decision regarding the next visit. Take Istanbul. I briefly broke away from the safety of the group to wander a bit and take photographs, a passion that is best fulfilled on my own. With my eye focused through the lens, I was oblivious to my surroundings. This is not my usual state as I am a big city dweller, but Istanbul can mesmerize so I took no notice of the man following me. Almost. The excellent peripheral vision made note. I would walk, stop, lift camera, shoot, move on. Oddly, every time I stopped, so did that subtle little flicker. Two times, then three and it was time to stop shooting and move out. As I speeded, so did the man. My Turkish is non-existent but all the warnings I had ever heard about women traveling alone made me wish I had learned, at the very least, the phrase telling someone to leave me alone. So, as we stood side-by-side at the street crossing, in my very loudest voice, and my friends and family will tell you it’s a very loud voice, I shouted “Buzz off!” the emphasis on those zzzzz’s. Shocked, the man looked up, as I am quite tall, hastily veered left and out of sight. The rest of that trip was spent in the company of others and my opinion of Istanbul was formed.

Years later, I received a request for an apartment exchange in Istanbul. This is a wonderful new way of seeing the world and I have had many successful exchanges but that’s another story. My immediate reaction to the request was, “Why wouldn’t I want to do that?” The deal was made and, remembering that first encounter, I went in search of a travel mate for extra safety. Few of my friends have the time or desire to travel the way I do so the search had to extend beyond my circle. The internet. A like-minded individual, we spoke and planned for several months, seemed a perfect match, ready and able to go. Only an occasional reddish flag but nothing major and usually centered around finding places to stay in the other cities on the itinerary. Mostly the plans were mine and she was tagging along. So I thought.

I would have been quite content to travel on my own to all the other places we were to visit except Istanbul. That first visit again. By the time we finally reached Istanbul, it was clear that we were not the perfect match. There are other stories here in all those cities but this is about Istanbul and I was not happy with my choice. Throwing fear aside, I began leaving the apartment early, before she woke, and returning late. We rarely spoke, food purchased together I left for her to eat and went out to explore, solo.

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What a brilliant decision. Istanbul is a vibrant, exciting city filled with the possibility of friendly, positive encounters. I am a wanderer by nature and this is paradise. The apartment was in “new” Istanbul, a mere 500 years old, with a view across the Bosphorus of Topkapi, Haghia Sofia, all the major sites of the city. New Istanbul has few of the tourist destinations but it does have Istiklal Caddesi, the lively shopping, eating, everyone eventually gets here street, making it ideal for changing that earlier perspective.

IMG_5886I joined the table of two young men playing backgammon, a national past time. Drank coffee and smoked. Heard their stories. Moved on. Totally turned around and confused by my map, a man offered to assist. I told him where I was headed and, rather than try to find it on the map, he volunteered to walk with me as it was on his way and he wanted to practice his English. He was getting married in two weeks and moving to the Black Sea. I wished him luck and a good life. He said I should come visit him and his family on the sea when I returned.

IMG_5992On a visit to one of the Princes’ Islands, three old friends invited me to join them for a cup of tea. We told jokes, laughed, I told them about America, they told me about island living and their friendship. I almost missed the ferry.

 

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But my favorite encounter was brought about by the camera. A picnic on the shores of the Golden Horn, three chador and scarf-clad women barbecuing with families nearby. I couldn’t resist so I shot the scene. The women looked up, startled, not happy. I apologized and, in sign language, asked if I could photograph the children. That was agreeable and the children lined up one-by-one, then in groups for their photos. The men, who spoke English, joined us and asked if I could e-mail them the photos. I agreed. The women offered me a piece of their exceptionally delicious chicken.  I ate it, thanked them and moved on.

My color of Istanbul is different now.

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The Importance of Shoes

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I have had issues with shoes since I was young. Not Imelda Marcos issues, just no-shoe-really-fits issues. Long, skinny, duck-like feet without the webs. In all of New York, only two stores carried my size. San Francisco, one. Tokyo? What was I thinking?

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Except for the fact that I had to wear crepe sole nurses’ shoes in junior high, the real story begins in Tokyo. I was a very lucky junior in college selected to go to the “Far East” with the State Department and the USO with a performance of Brigadoon. My first trip abroad, what to pack? This was before I knew the importance of shoes and I brought one pair of heels for special occasions, one pair of flats for all that walking. I did realize that shoes should be comfortable so the flats were old. I recollect that my toe was making a small hole but the trip was only for six weeks. They should last that long. Didn’t. The pale blue flats needed to be replaced. A shopping trip on the Ginza was in order.

IMG_6328This is a 9 1/2 narrow foot. I am in Tokyo. There is no such thing. When I walked into the shoe store, four charming young women in kimonos greeted me. What did I need? What type? What color? What size? My downfall. After much searching in the stockroom and much tittering behind fans (really, this was 1960!)their conclusion was that the only thing in the store that might fit would be the shoe box. Sadly, not an option and I left the store without the necessary shoes. Fortunately, I was able to shop at the military base stores so found something serviceable. Not stylish like my little blue flats, but shoes that almost fit.  So the flats were tossed into the trash basket, new shoes were on my feet.

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End of Tokyo shoe story? Not quite. As the group was boarding the bus preparing to leave, I looked out the window and spotted the little man who cleaned our rooms. He was happily running across the parking lot, blue flats flapping at his heels as he ran.

Recycled.

402I now know that shoes largely determine the success of the holiday.  Uncomfortable and you are always seeking the next bench.  The right shoes and you can walk forever.  The search for the perfect travel shoe has continued throughout the world. Forget Asia, too large. A travel mate in Vietnam ordered ten pair of shoes because her feet were so tiny. Sigh. Forget Europe, too skinny. Even the Ferragamo shoes don’t fit when I am in Italy.

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So, now I just take photographs of shoes, wherever I find them. I am constantly amazed at how many lost shoes are out there. Who wore them last? Why were they left? Where is the mate?

IMG_4866Where is the happy little man running across the parking lot in my discarded, fantastic, not-so-little blue flats?

Traveling with Flat Stanley

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My companion in the Middle East was a small paper cutout of Flat Stanley. For those who have never encountered Flat Stanley, he is a character in a delightful children’s book who travels the world through the mail enabled by his flatness. Creative teachers assign their young students the task of sending Flat Stanley to someone, preferably out of state, so that Stanley can have adventures and report back to his owner. My then second-grade grandchild, Eleanor, lucked out as I was about to embark upon an extensive tour of the Middle East and Stanley, flat, small, light, taking up very little room in my fanatically lightweight luggage, was welcomed to join me.

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He proved invaluable as a door-opener, ice breaker. Who could resist holding a small, paper doll in front of a pyramid, outside a souk, at the top of a mountain. Many encounters were with people who had no idea why they were being asked to hold him and pose for a photograph but were quite willing to do so. It was a bit like traveling with a small child except that he was hassle-free, never crying or shrinking in fear of strangers, never hungry and, that essential requirement, light.

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Early into the trip, my group was visiting the Great Sphinx of Giza. I whipped Stanley out of my backpack for the duty photo in front of the famous statue. Much to my surprise, a fellow traveler whipped out his Stanley and a friendship was formed. Six degrees of separation in action. We had many joint photos with our charges. They seemed to enjoy having a partner and I felt less ridiculous.

The two Stanleys journeyed through Egypt, sailing on the Nile, visiting Karnak, riding through the dunes on a camel, taking the early morning convoy to Abu Simbel and wandering through the rebuilt-stone-by-stone temples. They also climbed Mt. Sinai, basked in the sun on the Red Sea. I had to draw the line at snorkeling. My Stanley was already showing signs of wear and adding water was out of the question. The last photo of the two Stanleys was taken in Petra, Jordan looking down upon the Treasury (popularized in the third Indiana Jones movie.) It was the perfect time of day, sunrise, and they were the first pair into the site.

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Eleanor’s Stanley went on to Syria, a safari in Uganda and Kenya, played with the baby elephants in Nairobi, sat on the beaches of Zanzibar, but those are different tales for another time. Both made it safely back to their owners and into their classrooms laden with amazing tales of exotic places. Best friends forever.