I am really failing at the butterfly photos this year so far. They just won't sit still for me! But here we have a Gulf Fritillary, in deep communion with a zinnia in the same color range.
I'll try to do better and I will have the opportunity as both the zinnias and the phlox are big butterfly attractors.
Glen's been talking about us going up to Bainbridge for an outing and today we went. I was reluctant for several reasons, one being that going to Bainbridge is not part of my routine. Sad, I know.
The other main reason was that I felt as if he was trying to placate me for all the time he's been gone in the past few weeks. Sort of like a mercy date, I guess.
Anyway, I really could not say no and we drove up to Georgia which is not that far and to Bainbridge we went. What a pretty little town! The downtown area is just charming as all get out and it's surrounded by a square of old brick buildings in good repair and almost all occupied by different businesses that look to be thriving. There are beautiful old houses and the smaller funkier ones that call to me, massive churches, tiny churches, many trees, and brick streets.
We wanted to go to lunch which was also a little anxiety-producing for me. So much of the food in little town southern restaurants is fried and/or highly sugared or barbecued or smothered in something delicious. But we found a place that was a tiny bit classy on the Flint river and the menu offered a few things that wouldn't hurt me much. Today was a Zepbound injection day but I was hungry. I ordered a Caesar salad with grilled salmon and it was absolutely fabulous. Well, the salmon was. The rest of it was just romaine lettuce and some shaved cheese that purported to be parmesan and quite a few croutons that may have once been crisp but weren't anymore and some very decent dressing. That doesn't sound so great, does it? And yet, the salmon was as good as any I ever ate and that made up for everything.
I ate half the salmon and a lot of the lettuce and a little of the dressing and a not-crispy crouton or so and I was absolutely satisfied. I have brought the rest home.
The Zepbound kicked in. Phew! A thing I am really beginning to understand about this drug is that in my case, at least, it calms my appetite enough for me to make the better choices when I eat.
Lord, it's a beautiful thing. Glen's po'boy came with fried onion rings which, as we all know, are the food of the gods and I just didn't have much interest in them. I could have eaten one but given the choice, I just as soon would not. Weird but wonderful. I feel free in ways I never have before.
Bainbridge has many antique stores and we went to one as a first stop after lunch that was also a gift shop and a place to find new furniture and sorta classy home decor accessories and so forth. When we first walked in, I saw a pillow that I really liked and I checked the price.
One hundred and seventy dollars.
Oh my.
I'm surprised I didn't turn around and walk out. But what the hell, looking is free.
And then, I found my dream sofa.
Sigh, sigh, sigh.
I sat down on it and the cushions were soft, yet supportive. They were...dreamy.
Glen asked the very sweet store lady how much my dream sofa was and well, let's just say we did not buy it. Perhaps I should have told him that if we did buy it and put it in the cabin, I'd be far more apt to spend a great deal of time there.
The smell of despair and defeat dripped from the very walls and ceiling.
They were really into Elvis though!
We opened the door to find a shop with less junk in it, but no less existential darkness. The proprietor there was a younger man than the one next door but I know without a shadow of a doubt, this man has many, many stories, none of them with happy endings.
But. He was so pleasant and I had to give him a great deal of credit for being there, for having a business which seemed to be his own, and for just goddamned trying. If I judged him for anything, it was his courage and strength to not give up.
It was a cement block building. The back room had no windows and no air conditioning. It was over 95 degrees outside and he had not lied. The heat hit like an NFL tackle.
Don't ask me why I said that. But I can only imagine an NFL tackle hits real hard.
We knew immediately we were not going to be spending much time back there and we didn't. We did a quick walk through and there was more sad stuff but on our way back out the door, I saw such a pretty little drop leaf table. It called to me.
I stopped and checked it out. It was very solid, seemingly pretty old, and in good condition. The drop leafs worked with a metal hinge that clicked satisfactorily in place.
It cost $45 dollars.
If it had been at an antique store in Monticello, it would have been given a good wood treatment and priced at $150. At least.
It came home with us.
I'm not sure whether it will stay here or go to the cabin. I am thinking to the cabin. Something there for me to love.
I almost bought a set of china. The Franciscan Desert Rose pattern which I have always loved and it was a decent price. The entire set wasn't there but plenty for us. The cabin needs dishes and at this point, has none but paper and plastic plates.
I am not sure I've ever bought a matching set of china in my life. And I probably should have bought this one. For those of you who do not know, this is what the pattern looks like.
Beautiful plates! Maybe they’ll be there when next you visit.I find that dishes are slow sellers, these days. Young people, younger than 60, don’t seem to want that stuff. It sounds like you had a wonderful date with your beloved!
ReplyDeleteIn the end it seems you had a good trip to Bainbridge in spite of your initial anxiety. Co-incidentaly, I have a vintage Coca Cola bottle in our house that was manufactured in Bainbridge GA.
ReplyDeleteYou should have bought the plates! Love the little table ... might be perfect on that front porch at the "cabin!"
ReplyDeleteMy son was on the Bainbridge nuclear cruiser in the Navy!
I knew that piece by piece you would start to make that place your own! That is a sweet little table. Perhaps a second date is required to go back and get those plates. Quite ironically, a neighbor was moving into assisted living with his wife. He was having quite a sale to downsize. I didn't go. I was working, but didn't my husband come home with like a 12 place setting of those very dishes. Harry was most insistent that Tim buy them. He did. I had no place to put them in my kitchen. They ended up in the attic, which was a shame. At his funeral months later,we met the son from his first marriage (that wife had died). The son was quite distant from his father. But he was very nice. In talking, he said, 'you know, the only thing I ever asked him for was my mother's china. His new wife didn't want it. So he got rid of all of it. I don't understand why he didn't offer them to me. Those dishes had a lot of memories.' Tim and I looked at him and said 'uh...were those dishes Franciscan Desert Rose, like 12 place settings w/ serving dishes?' Oh...the look on his face! His father had not gotten rid of them years back. He had sold them to us just a few months prior! He followed us home.and was so happy to see them again he cried. He paid us the $100, and left with what was rightfully his to begin with.
ReplyDeleteYour trip to Bainbridge made a great day. The various shops have a lot to see, and the table, dishes and sofa are all very lovely. I agree, that is a dream velvet sofa. It might not sell at the current price. If you go back to buy the dishes, the sofa might be an option too.
ReplyDeleteThat table was a good buy and those dishes are lovely. Could you drive back tomorrow and get them?
ReplyDeleteThe football reference must have come from your evil twin... You Must control her! I do love the table very much, perfect size and just lovely! You could drive back tomorrow to pick up the dishes, I love that pattern! Get it, girl! Good to know that Zep is working for you.
ReplyDeleteI agree you should have bought those dishes, the pattern is lovely. The drop leaf table is very nice too, my dad had a similar one but never took care of it, the wood dried out and became splintery. I love the STYLE of the green velvet sofa, and it looks wonderfully soft and cushiony, but I'd go nuts trying to keep cat hair off it. I prefer things I can wipe down with a damp cloth.
ReplyDeleteI love that drop leaf table and, oh yes, I would have fallen in love with that sofa, too.. When I was in college, one of my roommates found a sofa and a comfy chair being given away by a neighbor. That exact vintage, in dark blue velvet. He rented a furniture shampooer and they looked like new. They‘re probably still in that house. I loved that furniture and would have loved it more in the green. If a pillow was $170, I don’t even want to think what the sofa price was.
ReplyDelete$170 for a pillow????? Oh my word!!!
ReplyDelete