No Direction Home

This humble blog was started to document our travels around the country during the summer of 2006, We have opted to continue updating it due to the requests from family & friends. Enjoy!

Thursday, May 16, 2019

The Sky Rearranges


May 8, 2019



Michel

Russell Cave 


The Sky Rearranges

This has been a pretty busy week for us as there always seems to be a lot happening in Key West and I have been preparing for my annual journey to Indianapolis to attend the Indy 500. This year will mark my 48th consecutive year attending the race and for the first time in ages, I opted to drive up to Indiana – it what is mostly a cost saving choice, though it is also nice to be able to take some time and stop along the way to check out stuff. Since this is Kathy’s year off of attending, she will be staying back in Key West, attending the Key West Songwriter’s Festival and basically enjoying some peace and quiet around the house.


Prior to departing there were a few more Key West events to attend, including the opening of this month’s exhibition at the Studios of Key West featuring the art of our friends Michel Delgado and Alaina Plowdrey among others. I have known Michel almost since I moved to Key West almost 30 years ago and it has been an amazing journey watching him develop from selling t-shirts and artwork on Mallory Square to becoming a world class artist who exhibits his work around the world.

 


One of the nicest, most humble and talented artists around, Michel has earned every bit of his success and it is fantastic to see his amazing work back at the Studios. Speaking of amazing work, our friend Alaina produced her own body of fantastic work all focused on the subject of the US Navy base where she happens to work.

 



Completely different, exciting and in a totally unique direction from her past work, this show focuses on highlighting the people and work that goes on at the Navy base at Boca Chica. It is a remarkable vision of something that is mostly unfamiliar for the typical art loving cultural types that frequent the Studios and creates a cool crossover between seemingly divergent aspects of our community.



Another Key West evening was spent at the Key West Theater attending the new interview show, “Off the Record with Britt Myers.” This show has the local media personality interviewing interesting and well-known locals and this month included our friend the outrageous QMitch along with the owner of Rams Head, Bill Muehilhauser and retired Broadway legend Terry White.

Bill

Terry and Britt

QMitch


Next for me was the long solo drive to Indianapolis, something that I had not done in years and was sort of looking forward to, mostly because I wanted to make a few stops along the route and visit a few places that I had never been and revisit a few favorites.




 


Among my stops was an evening stop in Atlanta where I visited the famous Fox Brothers BBQ restaurant for dinner. I have been on a BBQ kick since visiting Texas earlier this year and Fox Brothers is a highly rated and that is well deserved as the food was spectacular. While in Atlanta, I also visited a couple of downtown breweries to sample their local brews. It made for a fun evening in Atlanta.






I also stopped at Russell Cave National Monument, which is located in Northeast Alabama. It was a random stop when I saw the sign while driving through the three state area of Georgia, Alabama and Tennessee. I had never been and it seemed like an interesting place. It is basically a beautiful hilly wooded area with a large historic cave as the central feature.




 


Russell Cave has an exceptionally large main entrance, which was used for thousands of years as a shelter by cultures of prehistoric Indians, from approximately 6500 BCE, the period of earliest-known human settlement in the southeastern United States, to 1650 CE and the period of European colonization. It is believed to have primarily served as a seasonal winter shelter. The people relied on the surrounding forest to gather produce and hunt for game and fish, stone and game for tools, and wood fuel for fires.


0 Comments:

Post a Comment

<< Home