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Thursday, February 21, 2013
Box Stores In Key West
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Wednesday, February 20, 2013
Key West Architecture
Key West is a small island filled with wildly varied home designs. In my walks around town I happened to photograph an assortment which I then decided to set out here without comment as I have nothing much to say. Some I like, usually the more traditional designs, but over the years I have also developed a taste for the less obviously Key West Conch architecture. I have come to enjoy the clean spare lines of the almost art deco style like that seen in the fourth picture. The following two homes depicted are its neighbors in the Casa Marina neighborhood, and they couldn't be more different!
Ugly utilitarian hurricane fencing is almost a required accessory, unfortunately, for many of these homes.
Tuesday, February 19, 2013
Peary Court Redux
What the Navy giveth the Navy, from time to time, taketh away... There are a lot contradictions in the relationship in the US between the military and civilians and it doesn't always seem that both groups are pulling in the same direction. Sentimentally speaking everyone cheers the people in uniform and some think that putting a magnet ribbon on their car signifies support for the troops but when it come's down to the almighty dollar, all bets are off. When the Navy announced the closure of the Outer Mole basin to civilian vessels the first thought wasn't support the troops by helping them complete their mission; no, the first thought was this will have a negative impact on tourism dollars in Key West. The almighty dollar is now interfering at the former Navy housing at Peary Court.
If you ever saw the movie CrissCross, arguably one of the best movies set in Key West, there is a scene showing a baseball game in an open space YouTube caught momentarily in this preview, which shows Peary Court as it once was. I used to walk across Peary Court from the informal dinghy landing on North Roosevelt to downtown Key West before the 29 acres were built up. I didn't feel as strongly as the protestor Molly Logan who fought the Navy by chaining herself to a tree for five days. The Navy prevailed. And now things are changing again, however a return to open space is not in the planning.
City planners recently rejected the latest proposal from civilian developers to turn the former Navy Housing into 200 civilian homes. The idea is that fifty of them should be "low income" affordable whatever that means in this crazy real estate market, but city representatives who saw the plans told the newspaper they didn't like what they saw because the houses were too cookie cutter for Key West. As though developers suddenly sould be able t recreate the genteel chaos of say Shavers Lane to order...
However Peary Court's status as a trouble maker is secure for the time being as there is also a dispute going on between the Monroe County property appraiser's office and the civilian company managing the land since 2007. Navy property is exempt form property taxes but Monroe County argues civilian management isn't. However it just so happens there's a state legislator from Pensacola who happens to agree, quite by coincidence you understand, with the the British owned management company.
It seems weird doesn't it, for a Florida legislator to be in the pocket of a foreign corporation and opposed to legitimate claims of Florida County Official. The claims are legitimate because the lawmaker wants to change the law to give Balfour Beatty a retroactive tax break to 2007... And thus deny Monroe County more than eleven million bucks in tax money. So much for working for the people of Florida! With lawmakers like these we need to start printing magnet ribbons saying we support local communities.
So the open space was transformed into crappy housing that it turns out the Navy never really did need. Imagine this: the navy is now building new housing on their own land on a piece of Fleming Key overlooking Garrison Bight. Why they couldn't have built there in the first place who knows.
But the city says a gated community look created in Truman Annex and similar to this Key West Style at the Golf Course is not appropriate for the future Peary Court. Why? I haven't a clue. Apparently it doesn't look real enough or something.
I was wandering Simonton Street last week with Cheyenne, and we got an eyeful of the real Key West, not, most likely what anyone wants to see in the new housing
I have to say I was quite ashamed of the passed out bundles of abandoned human wrecks lying like post apocalyptic victims of some plague lying on the beach. The Asian tourists who were fascinated by my furry bundle of joy and wanted to pet her, as indifferent as she was, took it in good part, affecting not to notice the shambles of passed out drunks looking like basking sea lions on a California strand.
I am so confused. I hope someone out there has the vision thing sorted for the future of this town on the cusp of some new reincarnation of itself.
Monday, February 18, 2013
...Into Dust Thou Shalt Return.
I saw this proudly illuminated sign on Truman Avenue reflecting the new status of the Catholic church at Windsor and Truman. A minor basilica is a big deal it seems in a faith that eschews the value of the temporal over the value of the spiritual.
It's funny how hard it is to throw over the allure of the physical in favor of self abnegation, even among the pros who are supposed to show us the way. And yet on Center Street there is a small church that lives in the shadow of the minor basilica on Truman and the massive white wedding cake that's St Paul's on Duval Street.
This church is usually open when I wander by on Center Street and I like to take a pause in the shadows, especially in the heat of summer when I'm not walking my soul-free hound downtown.
This is Lent, the time of self denial and purification in the Catholic and Anglican traditions. The Good Book says Jesus rode a donkey into Jerusalem to much acclaim and waving of palm fronds to sweep the path of the insurgent "king." Tradition requires the fronds be burned and used as ashes to mark the foreheads of the faithful on Ash Wednesday as a reminder that we are made of dust and into dust we shall return. Lent is a somber time, a remembrance of inevitable death.
I doubt the Anglicans have all this fussing about minor and major basilicas and badges of rank favored by the religion I grew up in. Too bad really, I'd like to see this quiet decent little church made big. It seems everything has to be given a badge of rank to get attention in this world before we leave it, begging oddly enough for more time.
Fish For Breakfast
It's called The Stuffed Pig and it's on Highway One in the City of Marathon and they make a pretty decent breakfast there in the diner tradition. It's where we go from time to time when we find ourselves north of the Seven Mile Bridge looking for an eggy way to break our fast.
They draw quite a crowd with their indoor or outdoor seating under the tiki in back. It's also dog friendly outside and as I was seeing my wife off bound for the airport and a frozen teaching conference Up North she was in the mood to eat breakfast with Cheyenne in attendance.
She was perfectly behaved of course and the server did pretty well too, bringing her cookies in a container that served as a water bowl as well.
The tables were fully equipped but my wife's complaint was no butter as she doesn't much like being served previously buttered toast or muffins. I really like the insulated coffee pot which allows one like me, who drinks copiously of coffee at breakfast, to help myself.
The food was unremarkable to look at but what I really like about The Stuffed Pig is the fish offerings on the menu, including grunt and grits where grunt is a mild white fish, shrimp and grits or fish benedict as ordered by my wife. I Indulged myself with an order that surprised my wife who finds me predictable sometimes in that department.
Instead of grunts and grits as usual I went with the over-the-top lobster and cheese omelette seen above. My wife's benedict hit the spot.
It was all an indulgence, especially as we rarely eat breakfast out and indeed with my nighttime schedule I rarely eat breakfast at all. It wasn't cheap but worth every penny of the thirty two dollars for the most expensive items on the very reasonably priced main menu.
Marathon is not picturesque, far from it, but is a fishing town, witness the lobster pots above, just a few of the miles of pots stored in the surrounding streets, so fish for breakfast seemed appropriate. My wife drove her rental car north and I took Cheyenne for a walk before I went home stuffed to the gills with nourishment.
Sunday, February 17, 2013
Captain Maurice Seddon
time, about some retired English chap who heated himself, not his house. He
wore a suit of some sort with an electric umbilical that gently heated him."
Well off the FF subject but...
His name was Captain Maurice Seddon: not just an electrically heated
man but a motorcyclist of distinction.
He was once a captain in the Royal Engineers and liked to use the
rank. I knew him when we were both despatch riders at Security
Despatch In Covent Garden in the late '70's; he must have been
heading towards 60 then, so I don't know if he is still with us. He
used to wear tight black one-piece leathers (full leathers were
pretty rare on the road at that time) and spoke in a piercing Patrick
Moore accent; he also used to lapse into German from time to time, as
he was proud of being half German.
He rode a fantastically filthy and oily BSA 500 single with a mass of
extra wiring. The dynamo was replaced by a big car alternator, driven
by an exposed belt that ran off an extra pulley fitted on the end of
the mainshaft, through a hole carved in the primary chaincase.
He tuned his own radio set; whenever he changed jobs (because the
money was better elsewhere, or he objected to some petty rule) he
wouldn't take the new firm's radio like the rest of us; he just asked
what frequency they were on, and then opened his top box and swapped
the crystals around.
Also in the top box, powered by the big alternator, there was a
pressure cooker with a 12volt element. He filled it up with cold
goulash before leaving home so that he would have a hot vegetarian
meal by lunchtime.
Other features of the bike included a 100watt headlamp and a prop
stand made of scaffolding pole that hinged from just under the seat -
he didn't trust ordinary feeble prop stands. Also a tow ball welded
to the carrier, which he used to tow other more expensive bikes back
from ralles when they broke down; the BSA never broke down.
He wore heated gloves, heated socks, heated long johns and a heated
waistcoat. He designed these things and had a team of ladies
assembling them; he sold them mail order, but this business was not
hugely profitable which is why he also went despatch riding.
His house was wired in 12volt throughout. There was a windmill on the
roof driving a dynamo, and lots of batteries in the basement; he also
stored sulphuric acid in the back garden, in containers that leaked
and did some damage to plant and animal life. The house was not
heated in the conventional sense; he wore a 12volt dressing gown with
a long flex and plugged himself in as he moved from room to room; he
also had a 12volt electric blanket.
Among other things he made his own telephone; it was less effective
than an ordinary phone because it was single channel; you pressed a
button to talk (like a single channel radio) and as a result you
couldn't listen and speak at the same time. My wife phoned him once
and thought he was deaf in some way, as you couldn't interrupt him
while he was talking, until he explained that he had his finger on
the transmit button the whole time.
PNB might have known him; Paul was a hot shot at Mercury Despatch at
about the same time that I was getting fired for crashing too often.
However Maurice would not have worked at Mercury: you had to clean
the bike.
Captain Maurice Seddon, 86, lived in his Datchet home for more than 50 years. But the numerous barking dogs he kept in his back garden led the Royal Borough to get a court order against him.
Captain Seddon always claimed he needed the dogs for protection against intruders who harassed him.
This week his friend and supporter Datchet parish councillor Ewan Larcombe - who has criticised the Royal Borough in the past for getting the court order - praised the authority's handling of the situation since the captain became ill.
The borough sent men to help friends and supporters of Captain Seddon as they worked for 15 months clearing his house of decades of debris.
The captain's vintage 1932 Rolls Royce Phantom is due to go under the hammer at Bourne End auctioneers at Station Approach, Bourne End on May 2 and the money will go towards meeting his needs at the care home.
Councillor Larcombe said that many of the captain's dogs had now died but that three were still living at the house to guard against trespassers. He said they were being looked after by wellwishers.
He said the captain had adapted well to life in the care home, adding: "He seems very bright. His friends are visiting him regularly."
Councillor Larcombe who has lived in the village all his life said: "Captain Seddon has had an amazing life. Many will remember him fitting top quality televisions and audio systems in their homes, travelling round the village in his gas fuelled Rolls with a working television in the back.
"He pioneered electrically heated clothes used by everyone from hillwalkers to spacemen and travelled the world promoting the idea.
"He is an electronics genius, a tremendous guy, a one-off."











































