Odds and ends

I am feeling somewhat miserable with a sore throat and general achiness after returning back from D.C. I guess all of that traversing around in the rain throughout the week, plus a five hour bus ride, complete with a Lincoln Tunnel back-up, wasn’t what the doctor ordered.

I found out the bus passenger next to me  is a pastry chef for a living. Not only that, he is a freelance pastry chef. I asked whether he went to culinary school, and he said he did not. Apparently a freelance pastry chef works in restaurants that do not have full time pastry chefs. He said he specialized in flavors as opposed to sugar sculptures. He also said he is working on an organic ice cream cone for one of his clients right now, because there aren’t too many cones on the market. I started listing the cones I knew of–”let’s see, there’s sugar, there is that dipped waffle cone with sprinkles, there’s that safety cone”–and we both chortled knowingly at the safety cone’s silliness. “Like cardboard!” the chef said.

I have changed my sidebar a bit. I deleted a bunch of stuff and am trying to mainly link to websites that I actually read. Check out Dan Baum in particular. I also added a few more of my friends’ blogs to the roll and will possibly delete those that haven’t been updated in awhile. Please let me know if you have a blog you’d like me to add, especially yours.

Oh, and my siblings and I will be taking a trip out to the Pacific Northwest! We fly out in August and drive down from Seattle to San Francisco for a two week span. Please send me tips. We’re still working out lodging and rental car logistics.

As of this evening, I have seen a Tony Award-winning play. God of Carnage, starring Jeff Daniels, Hope Davis, James Gandolfini, and Marcia Gay Harden won the award. My mom took me to the play a few weeks ago, when she was in town for graduation. The acting was great. I especially liked James Gandolfini’s reluctantly civilized ruffian jokester character, but everyone was excellent.

Pac-NW road trip update

As I wrote in my last post, I was growing doubtful that I could get things together in time to plan a roadtrip in August to the Pacific Northwest. A premature anxiety about big but nonetheless manageable undertakings is something that defines me, and other neurotics, against the more go with the flow types. I find especially that guys tend to be much more okay with playing it by ear than us women. That’s another blog post, though. (And a few more studies I would have to look through in order to actually make a valid point. Maybe some of my science reporting friends or academic friends can point me to some good psychological journals? I’d love to write “men are from mars, women are from venus” type articles. Those never get old!).

Anyway, a few things came into place that have made this trip likely to happen. One is that my sister, like me, has no plans in life after July 31, 2009. A second thing is, my busy comedian brother appears to be free around that time as well. And my dad actually gave me his blessings for this trip. We can’t borrow one of the family cars, he said, but we might as well rent one. This is the same guy who was trepidatious throughout my teenage years of having us kids drive on the expressways in our area. Actually, my mom was more worried about that.

Flights right now are  as low as I have seen them in awhile. My sister found a flight from New York to Seattle, where we want to begin our trip, for $300. If anyone knows how to find relatively cheap rental cars, please let me know. So far I’m finding the best rates at carrentals.com.

Road trip?

Neurotic people like me plan many things in advance, but one thing we are not so good at planning is vacations. This is in part because we feel like we do not deserve them and therefore don’t prioritize them ahead of time. And yet, after a 9.5 month journalism school program and two years of working before that almost since the day I graduated college in 2006 (with a 6 week break of sorts in the summer of 2008), I could really use a vacation.

At some point this past spring, I got it in my head that it might be nice to take a road trip, because it is something I would not have commandeered in my younger, more workaholic days and because I saw photos from a road trip my cousin took across the United States that looked absolutely beautiful.

So I started to consider going to the Pacific Coast. I have been there before but mostly to its cities and certianly not enough for all there is to see. I loved my cousin’s photos of Hearst Castle along the coast in Central California and figured it might be neat to see the home of a newspaper magnate of yore. I had all sorts of thoughts about hiking through Redwoods and camping on beaches. Mind you, I have camped about twice. But 26 is the age to try new things, I thought. Why not start in Vancouver, Canada, I thought, and work my way down through all of the Pacific Coast cities, as far as San Diego?

The indoor pool at Hearst Castle. Credits: The Mosaic Art Source Blog

The indoor pool at Hearst Castle. Credits: The Mosaic Art Source Blog

As school ended last week and Memorial Day, the marker of summer’s coming was suddenly upon us, it became more necessary to start planning this trip. However, some unwieldy variables occurred to me, like recruiting trip participants, paying for a rental car and anticipating gas costs, and planning the trip’s scale.

For one, the many places to go on the West Coast are all very far from each other. Recently, someone was making a joke about how East Coasters assume the cities on the West are as near each other as the cities out here, which cluster in one amazing and kind of scary when you think about it megalopolis , from D.C. to Boston. San Francisco, it turns out, is ten hours from Portland. I realized I would have to allot a lot of time for an ambitious coastal trip (word play intended!).

This sheer distance combined with the fact that I have never headed up a road trip myself but just been the passenger was starting to make the trip a bit improbable.

So tonight, determined not to fail quite yet, I went to the Borders in Penn Station after dinner with some friends in Korea Town and looked at some travel books. While doing so, a small old man approached me and whispered. I couldn’t hear him, but I immediately looked into his dark eyes and said “I’m sorry,” knowing what he wanted. Suddenly he growled back at me, his voice had astonishingly lowered by octaves, “Sorry for what?” Startled, I let him go on with his pitch. He unrolled a yellow strip of plastic on which was written “Funeral” in black letters and asked, again in a whisper, if I could spare him some money to fund a funeral for his dead father. In his other hand, he clutched chocolates. “I’m sorry,” I said firmly, now that I had something specific to refuse. “Some change?” he pleaded. “Sorry.” Unlike my earlier refusal, he was okay with that and walked away. I turned back to my book and thought, as fun as the people are here, I need a long vacation from New York.

I had impeded my own progress in road trip planning, however, when a book called Don’t Go There caught my eye. The subtitle made it impossible to pass up: “The Travel Detective’s Essential Guide to the Must-Miss Places of the World.” I learned that there is a city in Nigeria (if I recall correctly) that was built for 500,000 people but today holds 14 million; that Port-au-Prince, Haiti, has just about everything wrong with it possible, from crime to pollution; and that you have no good reason to visit Bakersfield California.

Finally, after about an hour of skimming Don’t Go There cover to cover, I turned to my thick Lonely Planet California book. Too big. I turned to my smaller Pacific Northwest book. The first thing that caught my eye was a blurb about coffee. The Pacific Northwest prizes their coffee, it said. My expansive road trip suddenly turned into a vacation of hanging out in Portland and Seattle and enjoying good coffee. Contrary to what one might expect, New York is not a city where high coffee standards prevail, so the coffee meccas out there would be a vacation for me.

To conclude this ramble, my goal is to make some aspect of this trip a reality. Hopefully my siblings will join me on it, but if that doesn’t work, I’d like to go with a friend or two. I’ll provide updates about my progress, and for anyone who has trip planning/Pacific Coast/camping/driving advice, please comment!

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