My friend Laura, recently retired and hence the object of much
envy, has long wanted me to come visit her in West Seattle, instead of her
always visiting on this side of the water. But, alas, the drive across that awful bridge is just too
daunting unless I have Rebecca along for moral support. So, wanting to get
together with Laura and to explore some of fabulous West Seattle, I rode the bus
across the even more terrifying Alaska Way viaduct. The danger there is earthquakes, as the viaduct is reputed
to be on its last legs. The least
tremor and it will go crashing to the ground, crushing all within crushing
distance. Awful indeed, but less
immediate than the horror of changing lanes on that frightful bridge. The bus was a pretty yellow and red,
super fast, direct one and got me there in minutes. We started our adventure at Mexican restaurant where I
ordered a too giant burrito that I was unable to finish (and hence felt guilty
about – I am such a good Catholic – always feeling guilty about
something.) But I had no trouble
gulping down the yummy horchata, a most delightful Mexican summer treat.
Our true intent was not really lunch, but a walk in Lincoln
Park, through the forest and along
the beach. The first thing I did was to lose my glasses, but Laura and St.
Anthony worked together as we retraced our steps, and Laura found them. Had she
not, it would have been particularly distressing as it would have been the
second pair of glasses I had lost in two days – the first pair having gone
missing in my premier glasses-losing place, the Cathedral.
Laura found my glasses by this rose bush |
I believe that the last time I visited a West Seattle beach was an
evening when I was about eleven years old. I came with my grandmother, several great aunts – her
sisters - and a then youthful Aunt Dakki. The beach was a narrow one,
surrounded by deep forest, and reached by a dirt road, and in its remote
position, quite deserted, except for us. There was the huge trailer of a
logging truck parked nearby, and logs floating along the water’s edge. I fancied myself a mighty lumberjack as I
danced from log to log, risking a splash and a salty dip. Everyone was certain
that I would fall in and get wet and dirty. Then - Oh dear! My grandmother, had to go to the
bathroom. The only private place seemed to be under the logging truck. So under it she crept. When she emerged, the back of her coat
had the greasy imprint of the underbelly of a logging truck on it. This adventure remained a family story
for years, and Dakki still occasionally refers to it. Everyone, including my grandmother, thought it was funny,
but if it had been my coat, I would have been sad. I was relieved, however, not to be the one to have gotten
dirty, despite their dire predictions.
Afterward, we had tea and coffee at this adorable person's coffee shop. She waited vigilantly under our table for a crumb of biscotti to drop, |
8 comments:
What a lovely day. I looked up "horchata" and learned from Wikipedia that in Spain it is often served with "fartons" which somehow don't sound quite as delicious.
Since St. Anthony has interceded on your behalf in the past perhaps someone will turn your first pair of lost glasses in to the Lost and Found at the Cathedral.
One can only hope. But in the past, Lost and Found departments have not been his forte. He specializes in amazing you by letting you find it in a place you have already looked six times, or in some obscure spot like among the pebbles under this rose bush.
Great photos of West Seattle. Lincoln Park is so beautiful and so close.
You will find your glasses!
Love your beautiful photos of our very fun day! It was especially fun with such great company.
You captured that black lab's sweetness..
I've been drinking horchata's all this time and didn't know it. I was just thinking of their yumminess.
I absolutely can't believe you've gone all these years without visiting West Seattle!!
I meant that I hadn't been to beaches in West Seattle for years, but I was forgetting Alki where I have been many times, or course. I guess what I really meant was that I hadn't been to beaches in west West Seattle, Alki being in east West Seattle.
So glad st. Laura found your glasses.
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