Tag Archive | Southern Sojourn

Savannah

 Gracious Southern City

Savannah, when we visited, was like a beautiful mature actress who has liberally applied the theatrical makeup of a much younger starlet so that her chief temporary attraction lay in the youthfulness of her face. Everywhere we went, there was evidence of the Little Dublin to which the city is converted on St. Patrick’s Day—only two days away. Gigantic shamrocks, strings of emerald beads, cheery leprechauns and pots of gold glittered in shop-fronts and on the tables of street-side vendors. Little wonder that my younger travel companions adored the city. Armed with our guide book (Fodor’s The South) which advised us to park our car in the Visitors Center, we began our walking tour of this extraordinarily elegant city, passing by Scarborough House which today houses the Ships of the Sea Maritime Museum in whose gardens pink forsythia was blooming luxuriantly.

Our next port of call was the historical African-American Baptist Church, dating from 1777, where, since it was a Sunday, we decided to attend the 11 am service to take in the distinctive ambience of Southern Baptist worship. What a treat it was! I understood then what was meant by the term “Sunday best”, as African-Americans in droves, decked out in full church regalia (think three-piece suits for the men, ditto for the women but include elaborate hats and showy jewelry) made their way to the front pews and enthusiastically greeted their minister, a young jovial man, as he processed down the main aisle with his band of suited, booted and tied male choir singers. There could not have been more than a hundred people in that church, but when they raised their voices in prayer and song, one could quite easily imagine throngs of thousands crowding the space—they were so actively involved. Enthralled by not one but two choirs—a male and a female one—and two pianists, and the accompaniment of clapping, swaying, etc. we felt as if we were witnessing the full sound effects of a Broadway show! What a fabulous way to praise and worship, we thought, and how much nicer it would be to have such devotion in our churches rather than the quiet embarrassed murmurs of a handful of parishioners to which we are accustomed in our own Roman Catholic ones!

Leaving rollicking religion behind us, we walked towards lively City Market abuzz with art galleries, street-side trattorias and pubs. Once we entered the historic district, we passed by the gold-domed City Hall of Savannah and the Cotton Exchange Building—important because Savannah made its fortune through the shipments of cotton grown on vast plantations.

Strolling through Factor’s Walk, a maze of wrought iron balconies and cobbled streets, we arrived at the dazzling Riverfront where huge commercial barges slid quietly by on the Savannah River, companionably sharing untroubled waters with old-fashioned steamboats. Discovering an irresistible deal ($2 frozen margaritas) at One-Eyed Lizzie’s, a Mexican Restaurant on the waterfront, we feasted on enchiladas and burritos while overlooking the river on a brilliantly sunny day. I would not be lying if I said that this lunch was the highpoint of Menaka and Chriselle’s day but they sportingly indulged my love for mansions, museums and marketplaces as we continued our walking tour. Unable to resist the lure of Southern candy shops, however, we nibbled on samples of decadent chocolate fudge and sticky gophers, praline pecan clusters and chocolate dipped pecans as we covered more ground.

Laid out by the genius of General James Oglethorpe, founder of Savannah and Georgia, the city is punctuated every few blocks by parks, some tiny and sparse, others lush and crammed with impressive fountains and statuary as in the sprawling Forsyth Park. Known for the profusion of its azaleas, Savannah’s bushes were on the point of budding in wild abandon and early signs of the riot of color certain to paint the city in the next week were clearly evident.

We took pictures by the house that provided the inspiration for John Berendt’s 1994 runaway bestseller, Midnight in the Garden of Good and Evil and by the statue of the bird-girl who features in the book (left). Several historic homes dot the landscape of the city’s grid and the many eccentrically stocked antiques stores provided a welcome occasional diversion.

The next stops on our Southern Sojourn were  the gracious cities of Beaufort and Charleston. Please join us on our exploration of these bastions of Southern glamor.

Bon Voyage!

Raleigh, N.C.

Raleigh, N.C.

History in the Midst of Technolgy

Our visit to Raleigh, North Carolina, was an opportunity for us to connect again with relatives and to explore the significant buildings of this capital. Alas, our spell of good luck with the weather ended here and while it came down in sheets on a dreadfully gray day, we popped into Woody’s of City Market for apple cider and hearty barbecued pulled pork, another Southern specialty, apart from the ubiquitous fried chicken. The rain had held out long enough, however, to allow us to explore the quaint Victorian Oakwood district with its gingerbread-trimmed homes and gardens in which, miraculously, rosemary bushes are a perennial and the adjoining Oakwood Cemetery where thousands of confederate soldiers lie buried. We also took in the Greek Revival architecture of the Capitol building, the Museum of North Carolina and Exploris, a science museum.

Before deciding to call it a day and head back to the warmth and dryness of home, we took pictures of the Executive Mansion, home of the Governor (above left) , not open to the public, and of the ornamental pear trees that were in full glorious bloom on the streets (left).

We left Raleigh the next day to begin our long drive homewards to Connecticut, but not before driving through Shenandoah National Park in the midst of the beautiful Blue Ridge Mountains of Virginia.

Please join us on the last leg of our tour.

Bon Voyage!

Myrtle Beach

Myrtle Beach

Coney Island of the South Atlantic

 Later that afternoon, we drove further north arriving at the commercial strip that comprises a number of beaches that make up the Myrtle Beach area of North Carolina. A wondrous place for kids, this is a family vacation paradise. The many amusement parks held little interest for us, however, though we did cruise along Ocean Boulevard getting occasional glimpses of the Atlantic’s thunderous waters. Since it was St. Patrick’s Day, Chriselle insisted upon our visiting an Irish pub for lunch and search out one we did. At The Blarney’s Stone, we watched middle-aged Irish couples dance the Irish jig while an Irish band fiddled live tunes. Emerald green was the color of the day, evidenced in the headgear, jewelry and garb of the general public. Even the beer that flowed endlessly from bottomless vats was green while the Shepherd’s Pie and Meatloaf we devoured for lunch was better than anything Llew and I tasted on our culinary journey through Ireland last summer. Having satisfied our urge for a typically Gaelic repast, we made our way up north to Raleigh, capital of North Carolina, where our digs for the next two evenings was Cary, the suburb in which Menaka’s cousin Jose lives with his wife Nimmi and their son Alex.

Do join us as we continue our exploration in Raleigh, capital of North Carolina.

Bon Voyage!

 

Hilton Head

Upscale Playground for Golfers, Shoppers and Sun-Worshippers

 (Chriselle, Menaka and I rented bikes to explore Hilton Head Island)
Inching further up the coast, we arrived in the upscale beach resort of Hilton Head Island, long revered among Wall Street yuppies as the vacation destination of choice. And I could see why! Long before we arrived at the island itself, we passed by scores of outlet stores and designer boutiques, all captivatingly constructed to blend unobtrusively with the natural beauty of the island. Grove after grove of swaying palmetto trees, the state tree of South Carolina, reminded me of Mangalore, Chriselle of Goa and Menaka of Kerala, so that we felt deeply nostalgic for the more rural environs of our native country, India. Exquisite landscaping, endless golf courses, each manicured more lovingly than the next, Waspy vacationers attired in biker shorts, Birkenstocks and Brooks Brother T-shirts, oozing sun block in the warm mid-March air, made us feel as if summer days would never cease. As the mighty Atlantic Ocean’s waves broke over one of the broadest beaches I have ever seen, we dunked our toes in foamy surf. Unable to resist the urge, we stopped for fruity daiquiris at The Frosty Frog, a young hangout on the beach. Then replete with our heady aperitifs, we rented bikes and pedaled all the way to the Harbor town Lighthouse where enticing shops offered opportunities for endless shopping sprees. We could not have prayed for a more gorgeous day than the one we had at the beach. Thoughtfully endowed with special bikers’ pathways, Hilton Head is best explored with the convenience of a two-wheeler and we cycled to our heart’s content. At the Sea Pines Resort, I understood for the first time, why northeastern “Snowbirds” flock to the warm south during the winter months. Here is where one can enjoy the good life after a lifetime’s acquisition of executive stress. As we watched former corporate tycoons tee off over the emerald-green links, I vowed to return someday with Llew and try our own amateur hands at a few rounds.

The next day, we headed off to Myrtle Beach where we joined Irish revellers at a traditional pub to celebrate St. Patrick’s Day. Please join  us in our revels.

(At the lighthouse on Hilton Head Island)

Columbia, S.C.

Columbia, S.C.

(A horse drawn carriage on the streets reflects the spirit of the Old South in America)

Our need to visit to Columbia, South Carolina, was the catalyst that triggered off a multi-state travel reaction!  Pearl Fernandes, a relative, was to wed Markus Reiter. This happy occasion became the springboard for our vacation.

All went well, on a glorious day, at the mass and reception where we danced the evening away. The gracious charm of the American South was not lost on us as we mingled with local residents at this happy event. The bride was radiant in a sari, the groom in a tux. I was given the privilege of conducting the Indian style Wedding March (the Bridal Special, as we call it in India) as Pearl was eager to re-live some of the fun of our Bombay-style celebrations. The buffet table was laden with delicious finger foods and the wedding cake was a mouthwatering confection with its cascades of fresh fruit.

When the excitement of the wedding had passed, the next day, we attempted to discover the city on a walking tour. Arriving in “Downtown Columbia”, we discovered it to be a beautifully laid-out city constructed in a perfect grid pattern. If one has a map, it is difficult to get lost.

Our itinerary allowed us to reserve a few hours to take in a tour of the State Capitol, a fittingly grand building whose dome dominates the city’s skyline. Beautifully moving sculptures on the front lawn brilliantly detail the troubled history of the State and the suffering of the days of slavery. Inside, the superb marble interiors were engulfed by students from the various local schools, out on field-trips. The day was gorgeous and they could not have lucked out better with the weather. Joining a conducted tour, we were taken through the various public rooms that comprise the administrative hub of the building.

Our next stop was  Trinity Church, the oldest Episcopalian Church in the South. We thoroughly enjoyed the tour of the church conducted by an old-fashioned Southern gentleman, the very epitome of the legendary graciousness of the Old South. In showing us the lovely stained glass windows of his church, he also exposed us to Jim Crow laws that prevailed prior to the Civil Rights Movement in America when Blacks were allowed to worship only from the gallery of the church. We realized just how difficult life must have been in the Old South for African-Americans and we were grateful that we no longer live in such an era of blatant raical discrimination.

We also visited the courtyard of the historic Baptist Church where the Ordinance of Secession (that triggered off “the War for the Rights of the Southern States” as the American Civil War is euphemistically called in the South) was signed. Peppered by granite and marble gravestones of eminent South Carolina lineage, the graveyard is a quiet, peaceful spot in the midst of the bustling traffic on the main streets.  All of Columbia’s main tourist landmarks are within walking distance of each other which makes it very convenient to explore the mian sights in a single morning. Walking through the streets, we realized just how wide they are. Indeed, Columbia’s neat grid has some of the widest streets in the country—constructed, we discovered, in accordance with a contemporary belief that such urban planning would discourage the spread of respiratory diseases such as consumption!

Apart from these historic buildings, however, the city could be Anywhere, USA. There is little distinctive character to make the city unqiue. In fact, there is nothing to hold the interest of younger tourists, not even a mall at which to hang out over a cup of Starbucks! Not surprisingly, Menaka and Chriselle were quickly bored by its banal urban ambience.

A day later, we were making our way further south on our crowded itinerary and driving towards Savannah, Georgia. But not before we stopped to visit relatives en route.

(The South is full of beautiful courtyard gardens such as this one attached to a gracious manion in Charleston) 

Gilbert, South Carolina

Forty-five minutes away, in Gilbert, South Carolina, live Llew’s nephew David Almeida, his wife Sherri and their daughter, Elyse. Their home, a simple farmhouse, was moved about five years ago from its original location about five miles down the road on the payment of a dollar to the original owner! David and Sherri have spent the better part of half a decade refurbishing and renovating their home.

We arrived at their home in mid-afternoon after a huge brunch held at Pearl and Markus’ new home in Columbia. The drive took us over highways that cut through extensive southern plantations.  Over lemonade and cookies and several photo albums, the Almeidas took us on a pictorial tour of their fascinating home from barest shell to the lived-in habitation it has become. Located in the midst of soybean fields and peach orchards, the Almeidas live in the heart of rural South Carolina, Sherri’s family having made their living as farmers for generations. After we had marveled at their unique home and the many renovations they have made since moving in a few years ago, it was time to bid them goodbye.

Leaving Gilbert behind us, we drove about three hours further south to Savannah, Georgia, passing by sweet grass swamps, and endless cotton plantations, to arrive in the Peach State with enough time to take showers and settle down to a comedy on TV.

Bon Voyage!

Blue Ridge Mountain

Blue Ridge Mountains

“Almost Heaven, West Virginia, Blue Ridge Mountains, Shenandoah River…”

Since all good things must come to an end, we rose early to start our long drive back to Connecticut, but not quite yet. We still had to go through the Shenandoah Valley National Park, tucked in the folds of the Blue Ridge Mountains in West Virginia. While it is clear that we did not choose the most propitious season in which to explore these vast acres of natural beauty, we were frequently rewarded by glimpses of white-tailed deer, herds of which crowded in front of our car and made us feel like intruders in their natural habitat. Not illogically, John Denver’s song “Country Roads” was uppermost in our minds as our car swerved and glided through those endless vistas of valley, sky and misty mountain peak on the snaking Skyline Drive. It was indeed, as Denver had put it, “Almost Heaven”.

Leaving the idyllic environs of the mountains behind us, we continued our drive back home to Connecticut.

Thank you for taking this tour in our company. This Girls Week Out was indeed a memorable bonding opportunity for Chriselle, my god-child Menaka and myself. We hope you will traverse this route someday in reality. For the moment, though, hopefully, virtual reality took you there and back safely.

Bon Voyage!

Beaufort and Charleston

(Menaka and Chriselle on the classy streets of Charleston)O

The next day, we drove about an hour north, glimpsing water frequently in patches all along the intra-coastal highway, to Beaufort, a charming town halfway between Savannah and Charleston.

Here too, our walking tour of the city (left) and the riverfront allowed us to view double-storied plantation style mansions with wide porches (since square footage covered by porches are not taxed in the state!). Our quest for a typical Southern pecan pie did not bring very productive results but we settled for satisfyingly warm wedges of snickers pie and apple pie in a snazzy café called Muddy Waters as we overlooked the river. Full of ritzy stores offering decorative home accessories, Beaufort’s main street and the few old side streets that comprise its downtown area were very appealing and beautifully preserved. Knowing that Beaufort was settled by plantation owners in the same manner that Charleston was, I experienced quiet excitement as I awaited the charms of this enchanting city yet to come.

And Charleston did not disappoint. The city wove its irresistible spells around me so that I felt transported to a magical world and wished never to be brought back to reality. Parking our car, once again, in the Visitors Center as advised, we followed the route suggested by our trusty guidebook into the historic quarter where the ambience is decidedly French. And little wonder since it was the French Huguenots who, escaping religious persecution in France, first arrived as settlers on Charleston’s waterfront. The English followed suit, of course, naming the city “Charles Town” after their own monarch but the French stamp of cultural dominance was already branded upon the city by the time of the French arrival so that the English made little dent in its atmosphere. Roughly broken into two halves, designated by Broad Street (“The Broad”, to locals), locations are mentioned as being “North of the Broad” or “South of the Broad”. Indeed as one crosses the Broad and arrives closer to the sea front, the antebellum mansions get fancier, their dimensions growing breathtakingly more commodious, their embellishments far more ornate and the gardens much more ravishing. It was with the gardens that I was chiefly enraptured as I used my camera liberally to capture the artful arrangement of gravel pathways and rippling waters vomited by ornate stone lion’s heads, neatly-clipped English boxwood edges and concrete parterres, beds of flowering tulips and occasional benches in the style of Sir Edwin Lutyens, all enclosed within mossy brick walls and ornamental wrought-iron gates. Charleston is a garden lover’s Paradise, a city in which even the narrowest strip of soil separating two buildings is used skillfully to create a natural vignette oozing with appeal.

It was in Charleston that I met my French friend, former Metropolitan Museum docent, Martine Dulles and her lovely daughter Emelie. Recently relocated from Manhattan to this delightful city, Martine runs a custom-designed stationary business from a shop front in the heart of the historical district, cheek by jowl with a well-visited antebellum mansion called the Heywood-Washington House. Upon her advice, Menaka and I took an interior tour of the home and emerged both awed and edified by the lifestyle of erstwhile Colonial plantation owners. In the hands of a superbly informed guide, we toured the rooms, noticed their rich accoutrements and finely-wrought furniture. We even saw the most priceless piece of Colonial furniture in America today, a vast tall-boy used as a bookcase that has withstood the booming canons of the American Revolution and the Civil War, countless hurricanes and thunderstorms to remain intact with not even a single glass panel ever replaced. We learned in this home that the Colonial English ate at quite ordinary dining tables but adorned them with tablecloths in luscious fabrics such as damask and linen, changing each cloth with the china and silverware for each course so that dessert was eventually served upon the bald tabletop. We saw the chamber pots in the bedrooms, inserted into the “Chair of Necessity” that each room boasted, since the “Necessity Rooms” or toilets were outhouses, reached by walking through the backdoor and into the garden. And, of course, it was with the garden that I found myself most preoccupied. Here, giant boxwood topiaries, naughty cherubs spouting waters over their plump limbs and gravel pathways led one to the bottom of the garden where a bench was thoughtfully provided for quiet contemplation.

With sustenance sought at the Smokestack Brewery amidst gargantuan copper burnished vats brewing potent beers, we renewed our quest for the city’s jewels, rambling at leisure through the thickly canopied streets created by the conjoining of ancient live oaks from whose mighty limbs Spanish moss hung like bunches of mauve wisteria. This natural phenomenon is seen all over the South and became for us an unending curiosity. We even asked a passerby what the tree was called; only to have him mishear us into thinking we wished to inquire about the name of the street.
“Jones Street”, he said.
“Jones Tree?” I replied.

When the confusion was cleared, these quiet handsome live oak trees, dripping with moss, became known to us as “Jones Trees”, much to our private amusement. As we neared the water’s edge, we passed by umpteen horse-drawn carriages, the periodic clip-clop of the horse’s hooves adding to the romantic old-world ambience of this fascinating city. In the endless maze that comprises Charleston’s classy shopping district, I was reminded very much of the chic ambience of the French Riviera and in the vivid awnings that protected the opening of every boutique and designer store, I recalled the pleasures I had once taken in the exclusively moneyed atmosphere of Nice and Monte Carlo. Each street was lined with buildings whose facades were painted in ice-cream shades of creamy vanilla and mouthwatering strawberry. I could gladly live in Charleston, I thought, convincing myself yet again that it was in an earlier epoch that I most certainly belonged. There, on East Battery Street, with the horizon before us and sprawling antebellum mansions in frosty pastels behind us, we soaked in Charleston’s special appeal. Later, at Rainbow Row, appropriately named for the vibrant hues that color the facades of the gabled row houses, I took more pictures. Charleston allowed me to nurse my love of architecture and gardens with unashamed zeal and I thrilled at the opportunity to behold its splendor.

One couldn’t leave this bastion of Old Southern culture without visiting a plantation and at the advise of the personnel at the Visitor’s Center, we drove a few miles outside of Charleston, stopping en route to partake of a humongous Lowcountry Breakfast (eggs, sausage, bacon, grits, orange juice, coffee) at a local diner, to Boone Hall Plantation.

 

 

 

 

Driving under another allee of ancient, moss-festooned live oaks, we encountered the Georgian-style brick facade of the mansion. A far cry from the legendary Tara of Gone With the Wind (which was, after all, a film set dismantled after the movie was shot), Boone Hall  (above left) offered a glimpse into the South’s antebellum past when the wealthy lived a charmed life served by their loyal black slaves. While we enjoyed the gardens, ablaze with camellias in every shade of pink, rose bushes that, no doubt, later in the season would sweetly scent the air, Icelandic poppy borders that glowed with electric colors, we were disappointed by the house simply because the tour was given by a guide who seemed completely disinterested in the task at hand. Clearly routine had returned to her work for she mouthed her monologue in a manner that would most certainly have failed to make the grade at the Met where, thankfully, the standards are far more exacting. We did make our way through a spacious living room and library, a stone paved loggia and garden room cozied up with wicker; but details that one so desperately desired about the provenance of the priceless antique furniture displayed within remained mysteriously unavailable. Satisfaction came in exploring the slave cabins (above right) on “Slave Street”, also on the plantation grounds, where aspects of the lives of slaves owned and regulated by their aristocratic masters kept us enthralled. We saw African-Americans, the probable descendants of erstwhile slaves, still weave sweet grass baskets in the manner in which slaves once did, in brick cabins that were made on the plantation grounds by the slaves themselves from silt that washed up against the creek that bordered the plantation. It was truly an interesting excursion but one that could have been made far more enjoyable by the efforts of a more assiduous guide.

Our head port of call was Hilton Head Island, a truly glamorous place stacked with manicured golf courses and trendy boutiques.

Southern Sojourn

(In the gardens of the Heywood-Washington Mansion in Charleston, South Carolina)

Spring break of 2004 saw me do exactly what one is primarily intended to do—flee the winter doldrums of the northeast to bask in the more genial temperatures of the South. And how marvelously pleasurable our rambles turned out to be! Several latitudes below Connecticut, spring had already burst in with customary gusto and Nature wore the palest pastel shades of the season. Allees of ornamental pear trees bloomed in quietest whites, soft pinks of magnolia blossoms, palest yellows in exuberant daffodils and baby blue in hyacinth fronds fought for our attention in Southern gardens. With Chriselle and me sharing three-hourly stints behind the wheel of our Subaru Outback and Menaka, my niece, a doctoral student at Boston University, bringing up the rear, we left Southport at the crack of dawn to launch out on a tour of the South Atlantic states that will forever remain indelible. Dodging peak-hour traffic adroitly as we edged around metropolitan cities such as New York, Philadelphia, Baltimore and Washington DC, our car gobbled up the miles and entering the vast expanses of Virginia, we passed through barren tobacco fields and big tobacco factories (Phillip Morris), with its appropriately fuming smoke-stacks–once the mainstay of Colonial economy—as we arrived in the capital city of South Carolina, Columbia, which was to be the first stop on our travels.

From Columbia, we made our way south, stopping frequently either to visit relatives (we saw some in Gilbert, South Carolina) or to explore cities steeped in Southern gentility such as Savannah, Beaufort and Charleston. In the heart of the Gullah (“Low Country”), we passed by cotton fields (as in the old negro spirituals), tidal marshes full of wispy reeds and roadside shacks selling peach cider and bags of pecans. On Hilton Head Island, we rented bikes to explore the haven that wealthy retirees now call home year-round, at Myrtle Beach we frolicked with cheerful visitors at an Irish pub on St. Paddy’s Day, at Raleigh we toured the stately homes and gardens of the historic district and ended our travels in the Blue Ridge Mountains of the Shenandoah Valley among herds of deer who seemed indignant that we tresspassed in the national park out of season!

Traffic did assault us on our way home, in the Washington-Baltimore corridor, where we were delayed for a couple of hours in peak evening rush. When we did eventually get back home after fifteen hours of driving, we were exhausted, not just physically but intellectually and visually as well for our travels had exposed us to a wealth of history and culture and to a region that is unique. We became accustomed to having our questions answered by locals with “Yes, M’am”, or “No M’am” and were actually called “Yankees” once by a waitress in a Waffle House where pecans were the favorite ingredient. Overall, Chriselle and I drove through 2, 725 miles (yes, that is 2,725 miles, almost double the distance that Llew had driven in Ireland). Yet, we’re convinced that driving tours are simply the best way to travel for there is so much ground one can cover (literally and figuratively) through such trips. How wonderful, I thought, to live in the United States, where the vastness of this country gives each portion its distinctive “regionalism”. The South was strongly reminiscent of Mediterranean Europe and in soaking it up to the point of saturation, we were left with memories of a truly marvelous time.

Do browse through the individual pages for more information on each venue and to follow us on our Tour of the South. Please join us now in  exploring Columbia, South Carolina.