New Orleans is not the only place where people love Halloween...Jennifer's watermelon costume is pretty damned spectacular!
Herbie Hancock would love it.
An occasionally successful attempt at using my inside voice
New Orleans is not the only place where people love Halloween...
In about an hour the first day of VooDoo Fest begins out at Audobon Park. B.K. this festival was scheduled to take place all weekend and friends and family from California were planning on coming to see Billy Idol, Nine Inch Nails, and loads of other groups (including loads of New Orleans groups )but A.K. the fest was moved to Memphis. Now... it's been split. The first day (today) is happening in New Orleans, primarily as a free concert for rescue workers and residents. The second day is remaining (as rescheduled) in Memphis. Another great thing is that my friend Tom Morgan is going to be broadcasting the fest LIVE on WWOZ as an incredible symbol of the rebirth of THAT great organization. You can listen live at the link above and get a taste of the party.
Not much to say here, except that Fat Harry's appears to have WiFi.
Even though the camera at Fat Harry's shows people eating outside most of the day, there is very little traffic that passes in the background and I have so far seen no sign of the St. Charles Streetcar (my primary mode of transportation) passing by on the neutral ground. I have a definite need to hit town and find out things for myself. As of now, I am planning on staying for several weeks and then coming back to California, but those plans could change at any time.
Last night I watched Benny & Joon for the first time in years. One of my favorite movies with one of my favorite songs. At the beginning of the film, Joon's "housekeeper" Mrs. Schmiel, explains her leaving by relaying an old Irish saying that, "When a ship runs aground... the sea has spoken." I think that the last 90 days of my life have been a process of listening, over and over again, to what the sea has been trying to tell me.
What would Fred do now? As we hit mid-October there's a new tropical depression brewing in the Cayman's, just south of Cuba.
They're saying on The Weather Channel that this tropical depression is likely to become Tropical Storm Wilma before the end of the day and the five day prediction cone from the hurricane center in Miami has it heading straight up into the Gulf of Mexico over the coming week.
I've been back in Northern California for exactly a month and with the exception of the kindnesses I have experienced from the Red Cross people (mostly recently on the phone this afternoon), the ever so patient, friendly and steadfast folks at the Quality Inn where I have been staying over the last two weeks, and the delightful moments that I have been able to catch with my kid, it has been a frustrating, disillusioning and really kind of sad. 
With a couple of cups of Cafe American (espresso mixed with a little hot water) in me and a taste of the best pastry I have ever had (Della Fattoria Pan au Chocolate) I am wired and ready to go.
After the competition was over I popped back over to Sonoma where I spent that night at my friend Jim Callahan's. He was pouring bronze the next morning, and while I have filmed this process for a documentary about Jim that I have been working on for the past three years, I have always wanted to actually assist but have never had the opportunity.
The wind was wild and the waves were in complete chaos. The surf was raging in from across the Pacific with a force that was a reminder of some of what mother nature can do in her beautiful fury when she has a mind to. It brought back memories of a month ago, but from a safe, respectful place that was awe inspiring in the way that the Pacific (which is always in such opposition to her name), especially in wintertime, always is.
And speaking of what humans can do... Check out how a 9 year old San Francisco kid spent his Columbus Day holiday!
I took this photo (it's a little blurry because I still can't figure out my little digital camera) as I was walking across the bridge in downtown Petlauma last night.
For the first time since August 29 when the camera went dark (probably blown off the wall), the web cam at Fat Harry's, just two blocks from my house at the corner of Napolean and St. Charles, is actually working. This means there is power and some kind of internet access. The presence of the Budweiser truck (standing in front of the bar when I first discovered the camera working) would indicate something to drink!
He suggested to me that perhaps my experience was a lot like the training of a horse.
This past weekend I traveled into The City to attend The Hardly Strictly Bluegrass Festival, the height of which came at the end of the day on Sunday when Emmylou Harris and Buddy Miller were joined onstage by Gillian Welch and David Rawlings after a set that covered the whole range of Emmylou's music, and more. The weekend also included incredible sets by Rodney Crowell, Roseanne Cash, Guy Clark, Jimmie Dale Gilmore and others spread out over 5 stages and two days, all FOR FREE.