Saturday, July 5

Bring Out Your Dead

I am fond of what Italians call the Campo Santo, the Holy Field. More prosaically in death-averse Anglo-Saxon idiom we call it a cemetery, and Key West's is in my opinion a particularly fine example of the type. I like to visit cemeteries when I travel and years ago I was smart enough to get a tour of this one by the Historical Society's Director George Born, who was well informed and armed with a dry wit. Thus it is he left earlier this year for Rhode Island, our loss their gain. Let's face it, a town like Key West, much of which is a 19th century architectural museum for the living would be hard pressed to create in its midst a holy field that didn't inspire flights of fancy in anyone taking a stroll through its avenues: I first got a taste for the cemetery when I worked one summer in the shipping department at Fast Buck Freddie's on Duval Street. It was a matter of a few moments to leap on my scooter and take myself off to a shady spot in the city's best park. I always figured the dead, had they any feelings at all, would appreciate a member of the community of the living hanging out in their midst eating a sandwich and drinking a con leche while perusing the day's news or a toothsome novel: Some of my colleagues wrinkled their noses when I told them where I spent my lunch breaks but I shouldn't have been surprised, most people prefer the company of the living to the peace and gossip free environment of the dead. The cemetery enjoys a central location on the island, where it was put after the original cemetery on Higgs Beach got badly messed up in a mid-19th century hurricane. This was originally on the edge of town but development naturally overtook it and now its in the middle. Indeed they are running out of space and the city recently demolished a condemned house on Olivia Street and is using the space to add a few more vaults. There are quite a few empty vaults scattered around the holy field but they are already sold under what undertakers delicately refer to as the "pre-need" program. And from time to time old vaults can get reused as the ancestors return to the format whence we all came. "Ashes to ashes, dust to dust," as my Catholic priest used to intone on Ash Wednesday:Key West isn't known as The Rock for nothing and digging isn't easy around here. Furthermore the water table is pretty high so people get buried above ground. It's common enough in many countries but the other well known US example is New Orleans where the same rising damp problem requires the same solution: The city comes in for some grief from time to time from Conch families upset that the place isn't in apple pie order. The city did surround the cemetery with a tall strong fence but that was a move designed to prevent people from sneaking into the cemetery to have sex or perform weird rituals, or simply to get stuck after hours. If you call 9-1-1 because you are locked in after hours, be prepared to wait, it usually takes a good long time to locate the sexton and the key and at the best of times the sexton can be a grumpy man. You'd be amazed how hysterical some people can become when they are trapped in the cemetery after dark. Personally I always liked the idea of a house on Frances Street with the dead for neighbors. Even now a two bed two bath cottage with pool and pool house is for sale for one point six million dollars. Peaceful neighbors at a price.

With all the history of the town to draw on there are well known names in evidence at the cemetery. Two photographs up we see an old Key West name familiar in the Bahamas also; Albury is a well known boat building name in the Abacos. Then there are the kings of fried chicken in the Keys: And Kemp's Riddley turtle had to be named after somebody didn't it? Rare as the turtle is the Kemp family has quite a few headstones around here: The Spottswood family is a solid and imposing a presence in the Keys developing anything not nailed down so it would be proper for them to have a large granitic mausoleum to get planted in:The family who first made their fortune pouring concrete for Mr Flagler's railway are still in town and the Toppino vault was I thought a little over the top in rococo style:
Chacun a son goute. And Higgs Beach had to be named for someone's family in Key West it stands to reason don't it?There are the well known parts of the cemetery, the Martyrs of Cuba, commemorating revolutionaries who died in one or other of the revolutions they kept coming up with, throughout the latter years of the 19th century.

Then we should never forget the Maine, blown up in mysterious circumstances in Havana, creating a Tonkin-like excuse for the invasion of Cuba and the annexation of the Philippines and Puerto Rico in 1898. WMD's are nothing new, when it comes to invasions. This is simply a monument to the American and British sailors who died that day:

There are the famous tombstones of the not famous occupants. I couldn't find the "devoted fan of Julio Iglesias," but I never have been able to locate hers for all she is quoted in the guidebooks. Mr Roberts told everyone he was sick but his tombstone needs refreshing if tourists are going to get their giggle:
I like the private sentiments better and the cemetery is positively littered with those of course:From the sublimely heartfelt to the wildly intimate:The simplest epitaph tugs hardest at the heartstrings:I know the sentiments aren't totally personal on this one but I like the cri de coeur nonetheless. I like to imagine my wife, bereft, echoing these sentiments: Or this one, I'm guessing written to express serenity but it has overtones of hoping for the best:

And of course there is the kid's favorite toy, which always pops up in illustrations of the Key West cemetery, strapped down to deter forcible removal by hurricane or vandals:I came across one vault in the Catholic section set up for a kaffee klatsch, supporting my theory that at least some family members like to hang with their deceased:I was just an interloper in the cemetery, related to no one, vicariously wandering, but I was not entirely alone in my musings:The Key West cemetery is wide open to anyone who feels like checking it out but it does have some rules, as confusing as any I have read. Does one park a moped inside the cemetery and is running at more than five miles per hour outlawed?They banned mopeds and motorcycles after mourners got fed up with people racing through the cemetery using it as a short cut between Frances and Margaret Streets. The picture at the top of my blog I snapped the day before the city commission enacted the ban. Cyclists though still get to ride through: Motorcycles bad, cars good, go figure. Cars can't use the cemetery as a short cut because the Frances Street gate is too narrow, even for a Smart Car I'm pretty sure. That would be cool,"No Mopeds, Motorcycles or Smart Cars." Mitsubishi convertibles are OK, Bonnevilles aren't? Humph.In any event this isn't always a quiet spot for contemplation of one's mortality. It is, as I have pointed out, in the middle of town and that means the sounds of the living carry across it all. Key West is a noisy place to live; it has to be as there is no room at all to swing a sander or a drill without impacting a neighbor. And some bright spark lined up the runway at the airport so aircraft fly directly over Old Town when they come back to Earth:Cultural segregation is alive and well in the land of the Dead where people are planted according to their typecasting :It reminds me a bit of Bosnia Herzegovina where one could identify the sympathies of the villagers by the shape of their tombstones. As they had recently had a great deal of unpleasantness there, they had an abundance of tombstones to identify. My plan is cremation and scattering at sea, entirely ecumenical and anonymous. Though I enjoy cemeteries I do find their occupants' pursuit of graven immortality a little too hopeful. There was one headstone which carried the comment to know him was to love him, if that could have been said of me I might cheerfully submit to interment with a tombstone. However I think I am a little too astringent for such cloying sentiments, nevertheless I do enjoy the simple beauty of the cemetery with its inevitable decay and its flowered statements of loss and grief and remembrance:And as we celebrate Life Liberty and the Pursuit of Happiness this Independence Day Weekend, I shall spare a thought for those who are today what we will be tomorrow.

Friday, July 4

Pompei Emergency

I read on the BBC website today that the Italian Government has declared a state of emergency at Pompei saying neglect is causing the piecemeal destruction of one of Italy's most popular sites. The government estimates 150 square meters (1700 square feet roughly) of Roman stucco disappears each year, beaten down by neglect and the weather. I could have told them that, actually i did on my recent post about Pompei.

I'm glad they've noticed and they've admitted the problem in public to the news paper Corriere Della Sera. Now we wait and wonder what, if anything happens next. I will say that at a time when the rest of world finds much to criticize about this country our National Park Service does an outstanding job with not enough money. Perhaps we should export rangers and administrators and technical experts to shore up the world's great monuments.
(Sounds of Souza, off stage).

A History and Guide

Every place worth visiting anywhere in the world needs a guidebook like this. I know there are tons of books, good bad and indifferent written about the Keys and every one has a following but to come to the Keys without Joy Williams' book is to do yourself a disservice. In one area in particular Williams stands head and shoulders above the rest: she tells it like it is, and with a dry and piercing sense of the ridiculous. I have never lived in a place where the term local carried so much weight. When I lived in Santa Cruz, California no one ever made much of being a local, in part I am sure because locals and visitors never mixed. They drove down Ocean Street to the Boardwalk, we crossed on River and Water Streets and avoided them like the plague. In Key West such a separation of tourist from local is much harder to manage, the city is tiny, the attractions are everywhere and even residents of New Town are forced from time to time to cross paths with visitors.

This is a guide book that devotes pages to fascinating history through personal observations and favors harsh reality over the trite platitudes of the glossy guides. Like every other book written about the Keys details go out of date before the book hits the streets. However Williams sticks to tried and true restaurants and places to stay and the likelihood that they will be around for a while, makes her observations more trustworthy than most. Anyone know what Sloppy Joe's was called before it became Sloppy Joe's? There are exceptions to the longevity rule: the original Dennis Pharmacy, The Deli and Flaming Maggie's are all gone, among others.

Williams is a well known and respected novelist which gives her prose more than usual appeal in a guide but the drawings that illustrate the book are divine and penned by someone credited only as Robert Carawan. His illustration of the Point gives this modest symbol strength that is generally only visible to people unlucky enough to be hanging around waiting for a hurricane to hit: I wonder who he is because his talent is prodigious, and all I have of his are the beautiful drawings throughout this wonderful book.
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In 275 pages packed full of information like this one it's hard to pick out a passage to illustrate the quality of the writing. For me her off hand comments ("no commercial activity on North Roosevelt before 1952" or the notion that the Park and Ride was so underused it became, briefly, a wedding venue) give the book its special flavor. Not being one to believe in ghosts her description of the weird events at the Little White House reported by the Citizen, are entirely intriguing. Do you have any idea what sound a goatsucker makes at dusk when it is hunting down mosquitoes? Or who described Florida as "the poorest postcard of itself"? I could go on and on and I am tempted, believe me.
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If you are contemplating a trip to the Keys and have some spare time between now and then this Guide will enrich your trip immensely. Keep it in the bathroom and throw out the fashion and motorcycling magazines it's $16 US well spent. Oh and do yourself a favor, order it through your local independent bookstore...

ISBN:0-8129-6842-5 Published by Random House

And we close of course with another in a series of gratuitous Triumph Bonneville photographs, lifted from the Olivia Street rejects:

Thursday, July 3

Olivia Street

I always enjoy riding my Bonneville out of downtown Key West along Olivia Street. It's both a scenic route and an easy way to escape the suffocation of pedestrians, pedicabs and touts on Duval Street. In winter it's narrow confines are more likely to be blocked by wandering snowbirds, but in summer the visitors don't seemed to have twigged what a useful street this is and they leave it to those that know it. Sublime:

The longer one lives in Key West the more one navigates by landmarks. Because I am compulsive I can name the back street access I use to get to the Police station where I work; that would be Leon Street. The easiest way to spot Leon on Flagler Avenue is by the big white wall that appears immediately after you pass the overhanging trees on Thompson Street. And so it is on Olivia. You will know to turn east off Whitehead Street when you spot the distinctive brick wall of the Hemingway House. Follow that red scooter!The next block up is marked by Bogart's the Irish pub on Duval. This was slated for destruction a few years ago to be replaced by a gigantic entertainment complex. A neighborhood revolt ensued and miraculously Bogart's reopened the same as before, I'm told. You see Bogart's distinctive green awning and you know you are at Olivia.It used to be that across from Bogart's there was a gallery and an Alfa Romeo decorated with shards of glass and pottery. Admittedly the car was a bit of a dusty mess but when the property owner suggested that the tenant move it to the dump there was an outcry, another sentimental piece of key West vanishing etc... etc... so I was quite surprised to see a crisp clean inconvenience store and a gym in the same spot yesterday:Very clean, very modern, but who would have guessed the city needed one more place to buy water and chips. Another block east one comes to Simonton Street, a shady section with overhanging trees and a distinctive Dade pine house:If one is rolling south on Simonton one also spots the muriel glued to the wall of Bobby's Monkey Bar a gay hangout eccentrically located not on the 700 block of Duval. Wilhelmina Harvey was an outspoken representative of the county at all levels of government here portrayed in Revolutionary pose in front of the old seven mile bridge accompanied by a few select locals of the era: Harvey was a tireless self promoter, known as a "character" but a canny politician for all that, claiming many firsts- female member of the county commission, female county Mayor and she died in 2005 with the title of Mayor Emeritus attached to her name. There is a better likeness of her hanging in the Historical Museum in the Customs House.
After Simonton Street Olivia gets narrower if that's possible and more residential: And speaking of residential there is the old fashioned Conch style of living with everything chaotically hanging out:Or there is the modern middle class as exemplified by these Conch homes, both renovated with nice landscaping and trees and stuff but one is clearly superior to the other: And the winner is number two. Indeed, the second home has off street parking, and that is something it is easy to be blase about until you can't find anywhere to put the thing. I know the snowbirds are back in town when people flood the police department switchboard with complaints all night long about "their" parking space on the street in front of their house (!) being occupied, or worse some bozo is blocking their driveway (instant tow! Don't do it! $200+!!). Next to off street parking I am a fan of mature trees:Goofy mail boxes are not exactly my cup of tea, though I confess our box has modest decorative artwork on it. Not quite as outre as this:Speaking of fish there are seven of them at the corner of Elizabeth Street and I like to eat there from time to time:Why they named it Seven Fish I have no idea, but a restaurant by any other name might not be so appealing. Or do I have that quotation backwards? And if the struggle to get to Windsor Lane has quite worn out the urban traveler, do not despair there is another inconvenience store and grocery on the corner filled to the brim with food and drink:And so one comes to the final stretch of Olivia Street which soon crosses Frances and then White Street before disappearing into the bowels of The Meadows, a neighborhood that got an essay all its own a couple of months ago. Between Windsor and Frances Streets Olivia becomes a 20mph lane with a tiny sidewalk on the cemetery side and a cramped parking lot on the side with the little houses:Undistinguished but oh-so-useful Olivia Street. A street by any other name would not smell as sweet. Or something like that.

Wednesday, July 2

Little Torch Key

Little Torch Key, the smaller of the inhabited Torch Keys which lie just west of Big Pine Key, is on the outer edges of the commuter drive to Key West. There is a little road sign on the north side of the Overseas Highway at about Mile Marker 29 that says simply SR4A, and down the rabbit hole one goes.
This old conch cruiser locked to the pole near the Overseas Highway looks abandoned underneath a hopeful For Rent sign, but it is just waiting for its rider to come home on the evening bus from Key West. Its quite a ride into "downtown" Little Torch Key on a Triumph, made more fun by the twisty state road. Why this road is known as State Road 4A, I have no idea and where the other three might be I don't know either:
The speed limit is a sedate thirty not observed from what I could see by local residents, and a quick squirt of the gas showed the road is smooth and wide enough to take these series of s-bends at twice the legal limit quite easily. One takes one's motorcycling fun where one finds it in the Lower Keys. Little Torch ain't quite Manhattan but it apparently has pretensions:The right fork of the main road runs out soon enough, and ends with the inevitable view of the water, wedged tightly between mangroves:Little Torch Key, like Middle Torch and Big Torch, is named for an undistinguished looking tree that apparently burns like a ...torch when it is ignited. I have no idea what torch wood looks like, nor have I ever seen anyone wandering the back roads of the Lower keys holding aloft a burning spar, so I am forced to believe this piece of folklore is about vanished from the real world in which most of us here live. On the other hand there are things to be seen on Little Torch that come as a welcome surprise to the world weary traveler. Take mobile homes for example and this island is littered with them. many are winter homes shuttered up for the summer and protected by severe sounding notices:Posted indeed. This next one appears to be appealing to Neptune for coverage in uncertain times:It would have been nice had I noticed the lens was still a bit fogged from recent captivity in air conditioning but I'm trying not to sweat the small stuff. I am trying to remember to allow more open air time for the camera after each spell indoors. I also came across a mobile home that was decorated in a style I have never previously seen, all stuccoed and everything:

And I also found a swimming canal similar in all respects to the one I photographed in Geiger Key last week. This canal had a cute little floating platform in the middle. That was a first:

And similarly here I also came across a coral rock wall, this time protecting a waterfront Tiki hut. We know how to live well in the Keys, it would seem:

Keys Energy, the public utility is doing it's bit, planting brand new cement poles up and down the islands, leaving the old wooden poles to carry just cable and phone lines. They put them in on my street too, and I've read grumbles from people who think they are more likely to snap in a hurricane. Some people just need to bitch about everything:

It was a bight sunny afternoon yesterday, with a high near 90 degrees and a deep blue sky that made me feel good to be out under it, puttering around on my Bonneville.

I thought this old Jeep by the side of the road looked evocative of an earlier time in the Keys when people had a tougher time getting around and roads weren't so smooth, and as I took the picture a neighbor popped out of his trailer and we chatted about the change in the weather. He puffed about the heat but I told him I liked it, and I do. I like heat that comes with the clarity and brightness of a summer afternoon:

I could actually stand to see a bit more rain still, but even though the clouds mass, they don't yet seem ready to dump. My wife and I went swimming yesterday evening and there was a huge thunderhead building over Summerland Key with spectacular lightning and everything but it never seemed to get close and we didn't get a sniff of rain either. Looking among the mangroves it is obvious that to some degree this is the wet season:

I wandered for a while down the back roads on Little Torch, coasting alongside canals and suburban homes on stilts, some quite big too. I liked the "Adult Section" sign of this trailer park. One could imagine all sorts of debauchery but its probably just a haven from noisy youth: Away from the salt water is where one finds the bigger homes on bigger lots and they end up looking like discreet hunting lodges in the forest. I hit up a couple of dirt roads, made friends with a nervous dog: and found a whole new subdivision I want to come back to for some in depth exploration:Back on the paved road, civilization and a straight ride home to tea and a properly behaving lap top, at last:Not much gas burned for an afternoon out in the sun.

Tuesday, July 1

All The News

The Key West Citizen continues to delight and confound and today we had three stories of note that did just that. The first is about the airport terminal under construction. Had you read Madding's Musings lately you would know that some visitors to Key West find the current modest little terminal a bit cramped. There are no loos beyond the security barrier and the security checkpoint itself is outdoors under the overhang. Some travelers find this state of affairs less charming and more crappy. The county decided to build a new Taj Mahal, I mean terminal and in the process so far the 28 million dollar upgrade has cost one (Guatemalan) construction worker his life in a ramp collapse and now apparently $40 million dollars won't be enough to finish the job. An audit has uncovered irregularities. And we are shocked, shocked I tell you. The McCoy/Saenz new terminal is being named for the living and dead members of the McCoy family, movers and shakers of course. I prefer the terminal be named for the dead nobody who was under the parking lot ramp when it fell on him. His family had to pay to have his body flown back to Guatemala. Irony, where is thy sting?).
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One point seven billion dollars is the sweet deal for the Keys, with the demise of US Sugar Corporation over the next few years as the State of Florida takes over it's 300 square miles of sugarcane land south of lake Okeechobee and returns it to its natural state. The idea is that the swamps of the Everglades will return to their natural function of not spewing phosphate laden water into Florida Bay thus screwing up the waters covering the delicate and dying coral reefs along the Keys. This change and the introduction of proper sewage treatment facilities in the keys after 20 years of dithering gives us hope that our coral reefs may be preserved in some degree. By then only people with endless fuel tanks and billion dollar homes will be here to enjoy them.

When I was a radio reporter years ago for a station in Tampa (WMNF) we all got a burr up our butts about the sugar industry after a superb book, aptly titled Big Sugar exposed the sugar industry for the extraordinary waste of public money it has always been. I was astonished to learn back then, in 1990, that every US candy bar had 5 cents of tax payer subsidy to the sugar industry contained within its wrapper. God knows what the subsidy is today, 11 billion dollars overall I believe. The beauty of this settlement with US Sugar (one of the more decent and humane employers in the industry) is that few people will get laid off as most cane workers come from the Caribbean and live in atrocious conditions for a few months doing a job no US citizen would dream of doing. I figured back then it made more sense to shut down the sugar industry and let the Caribbean islands develop their own agricultural industry and keep their workers at home with their families. I guess I was just a couple of decades ahead of my time.

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As of today Florida requires new motorcyclists, people applying for their first motorcycle endorsement, to take a two-day motorcycle instruction course. This is news to warm the cockles of any one's heart that likes the idea of training for riders. Irondad leaps to mind, of course. Great news even though the number of last minute applicants for endorsements before the new law doubled in June 2008 over the numbers for June 2007 (14,000 vs 6,000!). However the Citizen points out that the new course will only be available in Homestead, 120 miles from Key West and will require an overnight stay. Two big moped dealers in Key West are quoted in the story wringing their hands at government "intervention" saying the courses should be voluntary and that they used to "steer" new riders to training courses when they bought motorcycles. A plunge in motorcycle sales is predicted in Key West. The sky falleth precipitously.

Monday, June 30

Dawn Ride

It's cold inside the KWPD building all night. My wife calls me a polar bear because I survive the air conditioned chill in my shirt sleeves, but when I step out into the lobby a few minutes before six its a hot muggy rainless morning in Key West. The Police Department Communications Center has windows and I can look out into the parking lot during our twelve hour shift but there are those nights I miss the occasional passing squall because I'm too focused on the computer screen and aren't I surprised to find the Triumph wet when I step out of the building? I took the beach route out of town this morning, passing by a colleague's house to make sure she had sorted out the car trouble she had reported was going to make her late for work. "Ride safe!" she urged me and I suppose to her I must have looked vulnerable perched on the green machine swaddled in Kevlar and plastic. I felt like a God, sweeping through the barely lit streets empty of people and traffic and light, unstoppable and free of obligations and constraints.

The camera thought Smathers Beach was roiling with fog when I switched it on. That was just the effect of sudden exposure to the warm damp breath of morning after a night in the dry sub arctic office. While the picture looked evocative I had to stand around for ten minutes enjoying the dawn and waiting impatiently for the Camera to adjust to conditions. Testing, 1,2,3:The mass of humanity jogging by on the sidewalk didn't even notice me standing there peering into the black box and grumbling. I have a lot of patience to learn as we go in to the Peak Oil period and high energy tasks start to take longer and longer. Waiting for a camera to get ready to take a picture will require the same patience as waiting for a bus. Good things come to them as wait:Above is Smathers Beach looking west towards the harbor and not a soul in sight, while below the view is east towards the Airport. These pictures make Key West look like a beachy resort town. It's amazing how easy the illusion is to foster with just a couple of pictures. The ride out of town was easy this morning, not much traffic, not much headwinds and an open dry highway. The Bonneville has hit 13,000 miles since I bought it last October and I have slipped into the groove of familiarity with it. The handlebars fall right to hand, my feet fit comfortably tucked up on the foot pegs, the engine response is smooth and full of torque, the clutch light, the gearbox smooth. The engine with stock exhaust purrs quietly at sixty miles per hour across the Saddlebunch Keys. I manage to offend a dawdling Debonaire Air Conditioning van by passing him easily and quickly where the speed limit increases to 55mph, and he eventually puts down his cellphone or his sandwich or his newspaper, whatever the distraction was, and floors his boss's accelerator, damn all expense in a mad effort to catch me up so when he does manage to grow big in my mirror, I use him as an excuse to pull over and take a picture of this castle in the air:I miss riding in Italy, where most drivers pull to the shoulder to let motorcycles go by, and pause at stop signs to give right of way to let the bikers disappear ahead of them. Here instead passing is a comment on manhood and even women drivers get upset because they want to dawdle and you don't, so as you pull past they speed up as though to deny my 865cc twin the open road? Days when I want to dawdle I pull over when vehicles catch up to me, days when I want to go faster people hunker down and block my way. People are weird. The clouds are fascinating by contrast, all bunched and black and full of empty threats of rain.As dawns go today's was a bit of a bust, some mornings the sun rises all angry and red illuminating the horizon from end to end with white rays of light bursting from the edges of the clouds like a renaissance painting of the Transfiguration. Though I'm not religious there are mornings when I am surprised God in a white beard doesn't appear from behind these stunning arrays of light and cloud to descend onto the Overseas Highways and present me the Ten Commandments, or in a fit of absentmindedness to demand the life of my eldest (and non existent) son. The burning bush by comparison to these light shows was but a feeble ember. I ride with awe on my face and wonder why everybody doesn't pause in their commute to drink in the beauty of it all. But they don't, they're too busy, and on a pale colorless morning like this I hardly blame them, but I stop anyway to enjoy the gray and steely views and force myself to take a picture:It costs me a few pennies more to fill my three point two gallons of fuel at my neighborhood Chevron, since they don't give me the five percent rebate I get with my Shell credit card . Nevertheless I like to patronize my local business. Three point two gallons of 89 octane with 141 miles on the trip odometer equals...um...forty three miles per gallon? All this open amazing road all 27 milesof it from my workplace, enjoyed for less than the cost of a con leche. Why do they commute by car?