While I've shared several of my favorite places to visit in the Palm Beach area, there is a favorite event taking place several times weekly that I absolutely love: Shelly Isaac's Cafe Cinematheque.
I've always enjoyed foreign language films, but Isaac's weekly selections and presentations at two local movie houses: The Movies of Lake Worth and The Movies of Delray, have so enriched my understanding of the depth and vision of this genre that I've become a foreign language film groupie. Even my husband has become a convert to what he used to think of as "women's films."
One of South Florida's best-known foreign-language film experts, Shelly introduces us to the film by sharing it's history, the director's vision in producing it, and whatever else he believes will enrich our viewing experience (brief sketches of the actors, awards, music, and the like.) After viewing the film, he encourages the audience to share their reactions and ask questions. Most everyone (and the theater is usually packed) stays for these lively discussions. During the past four months he's shown films from South Korea, Italy, Mongolia, France, Bosnia, Spain, Burkina Fasso, and Denmark, films mostly unknown in the US but that have won many prestigious international awards.
Send an E-mail to Shelly (cinematheque1@aol.com) asking to be added to his mailing list and he'll send weekly updates on the films being shown that week.Several years ago, he launched Cinematheque At Sea, a film appreciation series on cruise ships. This September the 5th such program will take place aboard a Princess Line cruise to Alaska.
Thursday, April 5, 2012
Sunday, March 18, 2012
The View from Palm Beach Part 2
I promised more short favorite sites to visit in Palm Beach, so here they are. Part 2
Morikami
Japanese Gardens in Del Ray Beach, provides an aura of beauty and quiet in
Florida’s otherwise hectic environment. Perhaps it’s the influence of all the
New Yorkers that now make the county home, but I’ve never heard such loud
voices and dreadful drivers as I’ve encountered down here. But in Morikami
Gardens, even the children move slowly down pathways leading from one
century-style gardens to the next. Small lakes, waterfalls, trees groomed into
bonsai shapes, colorful turtles and Koi passing under arched bridges soothe
even the most garrulous of visitors. We also met several iguanas in the pond
next to the tea house. A young fellow and a really spikey granddaddy.
Green Cay in
Boynton Beach and Wakodahatchee in
Del Ray Beach are water thrill me each time I visit. Both are part of the
Palm Beach water reclamation wetlands that offer that allow the visitor close
access to hundreds of nesting egrets, herons, anhingas, cormorants,
gallinules and myriad wetland creatures and plants. Make sure to bring your
camera as the avian wonders you will see there will amaze you.
Thursday, March 15, 2012
The view from Palm Beach part 1
Aside from bouts of homesickness for our northern home, my
husband Bill and I have found respite for our aging bones, strength for our
muscles and perfect tans in Palm
Beach County Florida where we've been spending the winter.
Among its many lovely parks, beaches, and other attractions, Bill and I
discovered two more favorites just last week. We've already returned once even
though it takes close to an hour to get there from Lake Worth.
MacArthur State Park in North Palm Beach protects a very rare and spectacularly
beautiful piece of Florida’s southeast coast. It offers walking and kayak tours
through various terrains: The Satinleaf Trail winds through a mixed maritime
hammock. The Dune Hammock Trail runs through a forest of gumbo limbo,
cabbage palm, strangler fig and other tropical and subtropical forest
species. Just last week, the Park opened a wonderful interpretive center
that promises to keep expanding its offerings. You can rent a kayak and
paddle the estuary into Lake Worth Lagoon. Manatees, snooks, rays, dolphins and
a wide variety of other fish inhabit its waters and can often be seen while
paddling or walking the 1,600 foot boardwalk over the estuary.
A two-mile pristine beach with few sunbathers with whom to contend
for space rewards the traveler who makes it to the end of the boardwalk. A free
tram can help transport young children and beach equipment if you are so
burdened. The beach also holds sea-glass galore and though shells are abundant,
most are too small to warrant collecting unless making jewelry. Take a
plastic bag along in case you find something wonderful to take home.
Only a few miles from MacArthur State Park is a
place no child or adult should miss visiting. The Loggerhead Park and Marine Life Center is
one of several facilities in the state dedicated to the preservation of
endangered sea-turtles. A child-friendly interpretive center and turtle yard
where injured or ailing hatchlings and injured juvenile to adult sea-turtles
can be viewed are of special interest. Each tank posts information on the
turtle being rehabilitated. Poseidon, one of the larger turtles currently
being treated has lost two flippers with a third flipper severely compromised
by fishing-line filament. Two others have severely cracked shells held
together with special staples and still require feeding tubes to nourish
them. Check out their website the Center's website (link above) which
offers updates on each of the turtles being nursed back to health.
There's more I'd like to share with you, but I'll do so in
separate posts. I don't know about you, but I much prefer short compact blogs
to long complex posts
Thursday, October 20, 2011
Finding wild and out-of-season blueberries on the trail
Blueberries.
Wild, ripe, luscious, copious, untouched. Not the tiny wild blueberries we have
in Minnesota ,
but big blueberries. The size of deluxe cultivated blueberries. We blundered
into them while on a grueling hike along the Casque Isle Trail near Rossport Ontario on Lake Superior .
The season was already well over in Minnesota
but this was blueberry paradise and we’d beaten the bears to it. We gorged on them until, unable to stuff
another berry into our mouths, we slogged on. Our yearning to filch great
amounts of the berries dissolved as we tackled the next section of trail. We
needed both hands to haul ourselves up the inclines we encountered.
One
of our favorite places on the Circle Drive is Rossport, a tiny fishermen’s
village at the northernmost section of Lake Superior. We discovered Rossport
years ago while making the first of four Circle tours around Lake Superior. There’s
not a lot to do in Rossport if you want a commercial holiday. Bill and I have
gone every September to celebrate his birthday. Besides catching up on reading,
we love hiking the Casque Isle Trail. This September we hiked a new section,
and as has happened several times in the past, we lost the trail. We’d hauled
ourselves to the top of a particularly challenging section, and lost the trail.
We didn’t think we’d lost it. We started down a well-worn section that looked
like the trail but as we descended, we discovered that it was actually a ravine
and what we were following was a ravine. Having made it safely to the bottom,
we scoured the woods looking for the continuation of the trail. With relief, we
saw a hiking trail sign and followed it … to the exact same spot where we’d
lost the trail an hour earlier.
The
view was great the first time, the second time it was not as welcome. On the
small spiral notebook left for hikers, I added a postscript to the gushing note
I’d penned earlier. “Do something about your signs.” Of course, with a bit more
careful searching we soon found the actual trail. The last mile or so, my knees
began to give out. Shaky legs, shaky arms, shaky mind. Thoughts of an ice-cold
beer pushed us through the final few miles. We enjoyed that beer at The
Voyageur, a small, family owned restaurant connected with the Esso station in
Schreiber. We downed those beers with big bowls of pasta: homemade noodles and
sauce! What could be finer? Well, maybe some blueberries for dessert.
Monday, March 29, 2010
A pick-pocket in Rome
Arriving in Rome from Siena in the early afternoon, we settled in at the Marriott on the Via Vittorio Veneto, then headed to the rental agency to return the car. Throughout our trip, we’d worried periodically about how we’d explain the scratch that mysteriously appeared on the passenger's door in Naples. After leaving the car with the attendant for inspection, and headed to the office to await the final charges and explain the scratch. The manager waived away our concerns. The contract remained as originally quoted and additional charges never appeared on our credit card statements. Apparently, scratches are expected or covered.
We visited the Pantheon after St. Peter’s and the difference was almost shocking. Despite signs asking for silence in that “sacred place,” the Pantheon’s walls ricocheted with the voices of hundreds of tourists and tour guides, even the audio guides we’d rented were difficult to hear in the surrounding din.
Returning to the hotel, foot sore and weary, we phoned Teresa, my deceased husband Vittorio’s niece, and made plans to meet with her and her companion Giulio for supper. We rested for a while, then showered and went down to the lobby to await their arrival. Giulio was strangely subdued in the beginning, not at all the flamboyant persona we’d met during our first days in Rome. He was probably wondering why we had to get together once more, having spent two full evenings with us when we first arrived in Rome. As the evening wore on, however, he grew more loquacious and by the end of the evening he and Bill were both singing German drinking songs, leaning into each other and belting out “Ein prosit zur gemütlichkeit” as we headed back to the hotel.
Despite broken luggage, an unexplained dent in our rental car, difficulties with the cell phone we’d bought to use in Italy, getting lost more often than we cared to admit, and Bill’s wallet being pick-pocketed somewhere in Rome, we’d visited places rife with memory and created memories of our own. And, though I’d returned to Italy without Vittorio’s children as I’d promised 30 years earlier, his family had embraced both Bill and me with gratitude, laughter, and tears.
That night, as we prepared for bed and our 3 am departure the next morning, Bill took me in his arms and praised my efforts in planning our journey. “You my beautiful Beryl have given me the trip of a lifetime. You are the best and the most brilliant tour guide I could have ever imagined.”
Loathing to end the re-creation of that momentous journey of return, I have taken a year and a half to narrate the highlights of a journey lasting only five weeks. But here this story ends to make way for the telling of other stories.
Thursday, January 28, 2010
Visions in Siena
We left Sirmione on Lago di Garda, and headed back toward Rome through Tuscany with its terraced vineyards and olive groves, stone farmhouses, and hilltops crowned with castles and churches arriving finally at Hotel Montaperti in Casserta, an art filled, architecturally pleasing residence among ancient farmhouses and cypress clad hillsides.
After indulging in a swim beneath huge papier-mâché fish painted with brilliant rainbow and circus colors that spun in the breeze, we set out on foot to find something to eat. The Jolly Café and Bar surprised us by hiding a small restaurant where we dined on a delicious risotto with artichokes, paper thin veal cutlets, and salad accompanied with the ubiquitous effervescent water and, of course, house wine. The Italians drink wine so modestly, filling the glass only a tad with an occasional splash for seconds that we almost felt deprived during meals shared in common. On our own, we indulged: one carafe per meal.
At Trattoria Dino, a pleasingly simple restaurant presided over by a handsome young man and several women family members who did all the cooking, a customer -- whose square chin and dark eyes resembled Vittorio’s – looked directly at me. Fearful of wild imaginings, I focused on Bill’s dear face, reminding myself that the dead don’t return in other’s bodies and that Vittorio would delight in the love that led Bill to suggest a return to Italy.
Thursday, November 19, 2009
Juliet's Breast in Verona
Perhaps it was the presence of the Sicilian faction that added the spice to our visit, making it one of the most memorable; perhaps it was the four women in Livio’ s life. Whatever the seasoning, the arguments, laughter, and singing that punctuated the time we spent in Verona that made it the day Bill and I recall with the greatest delight.
How Livio’ s family loved their “discussions.” Livio’ s women argued with Livio about what to see and how to get there with as much determination as Livio insisted on a different itinerary. Meanwhile, Bill’s camera panned from one event to the next, capturing the human interactions that so delight him. They continued to wrangle as we walked from cathedral to square – Livio proudly pointing out the restoration projects on which his son Alessandro (Catharina’s husband) was working – the women suggesting other routes. Arriving at the Casa de Giulietta. Livio insisted that Bill should pose for a photo with his hand placed strategically on the breast of her well polished statue, while I joined him. Note the dubious smile. Men and breasts. From babyhood to old age do they ever get over their love of the female breast?
Lunch at Livio’s was punctuated by more exuberant discussion about what to see next, Marilena—knowing exactly what he was up to with his camera--peeped over our heads, grinned at him and waved. With Torricelli as our destination, we headed off in separate cars: the men in one, we women in the other, both groups certain that they knew the way best. While climbing the steeply cobbled streets we met and, amicable that we’d both done “good,” proceeded to the top. From under the balustrades of the old Austrian castle at the summit, we viewed the city of Verona shimmering below us against a backdrop of golden dusk, lights twinkling from windows along the quay and bouncing in brightly colored streamers over the River Adige.
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