I had heard of the softball team for years, Coral Gables' Young Viejos (which translates, "young old men"). I went to one of their games in 2010 and asked one of the players if I could join. He told me I was too young (you have to be at least 65). I went home and thought about it for six years.
Last fall I ventured to the Gables Youth Center ball park and asked again. The Viejos told me I could participate in pre-game practices until a spot on their 40-man roster opened up. The practice-after-practice experience was like pledging a fraternity.
My big break happened last Thursday. I was voted in, officially introduced to the team, and played in my first game.
After a five-decade hiatus I'm playing ball once more. Who knew growing old could be this much fun?
stat counter
Monday, February 27, 2017
Friday, February 24, 2017
COME SEE THE LUDLAM LIGHTS SATURDAY EVENING!
Our friends on the west side have spent years working to create a magnificent linear park, "The Ludlam Trail".
The 6-mile chunk of land used to be a train route. The Trail is 2/3 of
the way to becoming a reality but additional funding is needed.
Six miles of real estate doesn't come cheap.
Here's where you come in.
You've invited to trod the trail (still owned by the train company) this Saturday, February 25th.
Come, enjoy a walk on the Trail that will soon be a park.
Every year the good people working to create this new park stage a wonderful event, "Ludlam Lights". It enables you to visit the proposed park at twilight (5-7 pm), when it is aglow with hundreds of small lanterns. It even starts with a parade this year!
It's a lovely event where you get some exercise, see your friends, and enjoy the hundreds of luminaries lighting the trail. There will be a lantern contest and free beer as well.
This year, participants will help set out the lanterns to light things up. That, and the event itself, begin at 5 pm. There will be bands along the trail as well. Last year over 600 participants enjoying this family-friendly event and this year promises to be bigger.
The weather forecast for Saturday is good. There will be plenty of parking in the South Miami High School parking lot, 6856 SW 53 St.
Francesca and I are going when the sun sets. We hope to see you when the luminaries begin to glow.
________________
Six miles of real estate doesn't come cheap.
Here's where you come in.
You've invited to trod the trail (still owned by the train company) this Saturday, February 25th.
Come, enjoy a walk on the Trail that will soon be a park.
Every year the good people working to create this new park stage a wonderful event, "Ludlam Lights". It enables you to visit the proposed park at twilight (5-7 pm), when it is aglow with hundreds of small lanterns. It even starts with a parade this year!
It's a lovely event where you get some exercise, see your friends, and enjoy the hundreds of luminaries lighting the trail. There will be a lantern contest and free beer as well.
This year, participants will help set out the lanterns to light things up. That, and the event itself, begin at 5 pm. There will be bands along the trail as well. Last year over 600 participants enjoying this family-friendly event and this year promises to be bigger.
The weather forecast for Saturday is good. There will be plenty of parking in the South Miami High School parking lot, 6856 SW 53 St.
Francesca and I are going when the sun sets. We hope to see you when the luminaries begin to glow.
________________
Monday, February 20, 2017
IT BEGINS WITH A "7 " TODAY
It's my birthday. I tried to make the beginning of my 7Oth year special. Our family went on a camping expedition that extended into to the far reaches of the Florida Everglades. We found the
perfect spot to dwell by a lake and discovered it was site # "70"!
Yes, the mosquitoes
were huge but that made them easier to swat.
Dylan entertained me with the yoga I remembered from my youth. I go to "Yoga for Seniors" now where we stand on our feet (not heads).
Later, sitting around the campfire, the gang sang a spirited version of the Beatles' "Birthday" complete with the lines, "I would like you to dance, Take a cha-cha-cha chance...". It was incredible!
This morning the rising sun told the birds to begin their birthday songs. I don't believe there could have been a better way to start this special day.
___________________
This is a birthday card from the very talented Carlos who will soon be my son-in-law. That's me riding my birthday present to myself, a hot Honda Ruckus. Pi and Kerry are the two critters riding on the back. Here are two more original cards that came my way today,
____
perfect spot to dwell by a lake and discovered it was site # "70"!
Yes, the mosquitoes
were huge but that made them easier to swat.
Dylan entertained me with the yoga I remembered from my youth. I go to "Yoga for Seniors" now where we stand on our feet (not heads).
Later, sitting around the campfire, the gang sang a spirited version of the Beatles' "Birthday" complete with the lines, "I would like you to dance, Take a cha-cha-cha chance...". It was incredible!
This morning the rising sun told the birds to begin their birthday songs. I don't believe there could have been a better way to start this special day.
___________________
This is a birthday card from the very talented Carlos who will soon be my son-in-law. That's me riding my birthday present to myself, a hot Honda Ruckus. Pi and Kerry are the two critters riding on the back. Here are two more original cards that came my way today,
____
Monday, February 13, 2017
RESISTING TRUMP IN COCONUT GROVE
Last month's WOMEN'S MARCH ON WASHINGTON was five times bigger than anyone imagined it would be.
1.2 million women, children (and yes, a few thousand men) stood up to the evil machine that occupies the White House. Twenty-seven thousand of them were from Florida.
The march's huge numbers and unstoppable energy is being channeled into state groups like "Women's March Florida" and our local "March" group led by Coral Gables attorney, Carrie Feit. People who attended the Washington March (and the rally in downtown Miami on the same day) were invited to the march's first "mobilization meeting" in the Grove yesterday.
Over 300 people packed St. Stephens Episcopal Church for the marathon 3-hour event. We heard from the state chairman, Emma Collum, Carrie, and Tallahassee's Lakey Love. Coconut Grove's Ava Seymour had a few words too. (right) Lakey introduces Ava
At one point we broke out into smaller groups so we could have discussions on threats to civil rights, gun control, immigration and eight other big issues.
The women attending (and the eighteen men) were encouraged to keep working with the Miami-Dade chapter of Women's March Florida as they continue with monthly meetings. Attendees were also asked to join one of the other local groups formed to resist Trump's agenda. Here are four nearby,
1) Progressive Miami- Grove-based, monthly meeting usually at St. Stephens Church (see their FB page). I started this one with a couple of friends and we now have 200 members.
2) Rise Up, Florida! Based in Coral Gables, they meet at Gables UCC monthly. They'll be picketing Rubio's office this week.
3) Downtown Dems, an off-shoot of the local Democratic Party, "the Dems" have their meetings in the Brickell area and sometimes at the Grove Spot restaurant.
4) Indivisible Miami, Meets monthly on the Grove Bookstore patio.
You can get information on any of these resistance groups (including Women's March Miami) by checking their Facebook pages. If you need more information drop me a line, bettermiami1@yahoo.com . I'll be happy to help.
As if a three-hour meeting wasn't enough, eight of us followed up the March gathering by going to another meeting. We learned Indivisible Miami was having its third meeting two blocks away, a few minutes after ours ended. This group is new but their enthusiasm is strong and contagious.
Are you unhappy with our country's new direction? You can help stem the tide by joining one of the groups listed above.
The March on Washington is long and
the campaign to "bring back the flame" will continue for years.
Resist!
The march's huge numbers and unstoppable energy is being channeled into state groups like "Women's March Florida" and our local "March" group led by Coral Gables attorney, Carrie Feit. People who attended the Washington March (and the rally in downtown Miami on the same day) were invited to the march's first "mobilization meeting" in the Grove yesterday.
Over 300 people packed St. Stephens Episcopal Church for the marathon 3-hour event. We heard from the state chairman, Emma Collum, Carrie, and Tallahassee's Lakey Love. Coconut Grove's Ava Seymour had a few words too. (right) Lakey introduces Ava
At one point we broke out into smaller groups so we could have discussions on threats to civil rights, gun control, immigration and eight other big issues.
The women attending (and the eighteen men) were encouraged to keep working with the Miami-Dade chapter of Women's March Florida as they continue with monthly meetings. Attendees were also asked to join one of the other local groups formed to resist Trump's agenda. Here are four nearby,
1) Progressive Miami- Grove-based, monthly meeting usually at St. Stephens Church (see their FB page). I started this one with a couple of friends and we now have 200 members.
2) Rise Up, Florida! Based in Coral Gables, they meet at Gables UCC monthly. They'll be picketing Rubio's office this week.
3) Downtown Dems, an off-shoot of the local Democratic Party, "the Dems" have their meetings in the Brickell area and sometimes at the Grove Spot restaurant.
4) Indivisible Miami, Meets monthly on the Grove Bookstore patio.
You can get information on any of these resistance groups (including Women's March Miami) by checking their Facebook pages. If you need more information drop me a line, bettermiami1@yahoo.com . I'll be happy to help.
As if a three-hour meeting wasn't enough, eight of us followed up the March gathering by going to another meeting. We learned Indivisible Miami was having its third meeting two blocks away, a few minutes after ours ended. This group is new but their enthusiasm is strong and contagious.
Are you unhappy with our country's new direction? You can help stem the tide by joining one of the groups listed above.
The March on Washington is long and
the campaign to "bring back the flame" will continue for years.
Resist!
Thursday, February 9, 2017
SOUVENIRS From The Life of Charlie Cinnamon
Grove legend and publicity maven, Charlie Cinnamon, died last November surrounded by beautiful things. There were his friends, members of his family, and hundreds of souvenirs from his past. Two weeks later I began helping his nephews and nieces sort out the things he'd picked up in his ninety-four years.
Everything out and displayed, his South Grove cottage took on the air of a Charlie Cinnamon Museum. Here is the leather-bound book he had his sixth grade friends sign in 1933. They attended "PS 48"
in the Bronx.
I came across his high school year book, diploma and beneath that, the things he brought back from serving with Patton's Third Army in World War II.
Charlie and his big brother, 1945
The bayonet he brought back from Germany where he participated in the liberation a concentration camp.
On the back of this photograph he wrote "Willy, Len and myself, Meisbach, Germany, July, 1945"
Private First Class Cinnamon served as a radio operator and editor of his battery's newspaper, "The Coffee Grind".
On a nearby shelf stood his first typewriter waiting for him to knock out the next press release.
Charlie loved to write and he always had something to hold his words nearby.
He love the theater even more and he spent sixty years working as South Florida's premiere publicist and promoter.
Theaters and actors depended on him to get the word out and Charlie never let them down.
Everyone in the business loved him. The piles of photos we sifted through showed it.
In many of the photographs he is with members of his family and friends long forgotten.
In the late 50's Charlie was the publicity director for the Coconut Grove Playhouse when they staged the world premiere of "Waiting for Godot".
In 1963, to help publicize another show, he put together the first Coconut Grove Art Festival.
The inside of Charlie's cottage looks like miniature art festival. There are paintings all over.
Many are by his friend, Ronni Bogaev
Her bathtub painting (1980) is one of my favorites.
The paintings will find new homes but the dozens of awards Charlie received? I doubt it.
Charlie's love and his legacy live on in the hearts of his many, many friends. It will also continue in the new Charlie Cinnamon Scholarship Fund.
Charlie was a longtime board member of the Florida Theatrical Association. The "FTA" just created a fund -in Charlie's honor- to help Florida
high school students to participate in summer
theater programs. From their press release,
__________________________________________________________
Everything out and displayed, his South Grove cottage took on the air of a Charlie Cinnamon Museum. Here is the leather-bound book he had his sixth grade friends sign in 1933. They attended "PS 48"
in the Bronx.
Charlie must have known he was going to spend most of his life in Miami. On his "My Favorite"page the eleven-year-old noted his favorite musical piece, "Cuban Love Song".
I came across his high school year book, diploma and beneath that, the things he brought back from serving with Patton's Third Army in World War II.
Charlie and his big brother, 1945
The bayonet he brought back from Germany where he participated in the liberation a concentration camp.
On the back of this photograph he wrote "Willy, Len and myself, Meisbach, Germany, July, 1945"
Private First Class Cinnamon served as a radio operator and editor of his battery's newspaper, "The Coffee Grind".
On a nearby shelf stood his first typewriter waiting for him to knock out the next press release.
Charlie loved to write and he always had something to hold his words nearby.
He love the theater even more and he spent sixty years working as South Florida's premiere publicist and promoter.
Theaters and actors depended on him to get the word out and Charlie never let them down.
Everyone in the business loved him. The piles of photos we sifted through showed it.
In many of the photographs he is with members of his family and friends long forgotten.
In the late 50's Charlie was the publicity director for the Coconut Grove Playhouse when they staged the world premiere of "Waiting for Godot".
In 1963, to help publicize another show, he put together the first Coconut Grove Art Festival.
The inside of Charlie's cottage looks like miniature art festival. There are paintings all over.
Her bathtub painting (1980) is one of my favorites.
Charlie was a longtime board member of the Florida Theatrical Association. The "FTA" just created a fund -in Charlie's honor- to help Florida
high school students to participate in summer
theater programs. From their press release,
“Charlie’s
heart and passion for the arts community, especially in his home of
South Florida, was unmatched and it was a true gift to
have him serve on our board of directors,” said FTA’s Executive
Director Larry Watchorn. “He was devoted to education for all,
especially in the area of performing arts, and we could think of no
better way to honor his name and legacy than setting up this
scholarship fund to engage and empower young talent.”
Did you love Charlie too? Why not contribute to the fund? Donations to his scholarship fund can be made at:
www.FloridaTheatrical.org
or by mail to
Florida Theatrical Association, Attn: Education Department at 100 South
Eola Drive, Suite 200, Orlando, FL 32801. For more information, visit
www.FloridaTheatrical.org.
Out of all the "souvenirs" Charlie left us, I think he might like this one the best.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)