Day 8: Bentonville, April 13
FOTD: The Fayetteville
Swampdogs are a collegiate summer baseball team playing in
the Coastal Plain League (Bentonville appears to be
professional team-less).
|
Pics: THB’s fave; FitCtr figure and equipment; CB
bike; 21C art on the wall; original Walmart; co-leaders and friend on the bus;
chapel by E. Fay Jones; a guy boosting a car in the chapel parking lot; the
never-sighted AK state bird; Doug Stowe boxes; lunch spot; George Stemos
sculpture; Prom
Weather:
Glorious, with just a hint of rain
FitCtr, granola and yogurt for DB,
eggs, grits, sausage and scone for THB (half of grits and sausage left on the
plate). Joining the group are two locals, one of whom is the daughter of the
man who sold Sam Walton the 40 acres that eventually became Crystal Bridges and
initiated a nursery in the 50s to try and save native plants that has become
the Compton Gardens, adjacent to CB.
Our first stop is a well-known chapel,
Thorncrown, about 30 minutes from Bentonville (see pics). Well worth a detour,
it is stunning: much glass in a pretty setting on the side of a hill with trees
surrounding the property.
From there, we visit several local
artists in around the extremely touristy town of Eureka Springs, with lunch in
between visits at Local Flavors Café: fish tacos, iced tea and a small slice of
chocolate decadence for THB.
The last visit of the day is at another
local artist, George Dombek, who has both a water color and a sculpture on
display at CB.
Tonight is the going away dinner at
Hive, the restaurant in 21C Museum Hotel. THB has pea soup, ribeye with crunchy
potatoes and salty kale, parsnip cake with cream cheese ice cream (cake
unfinished, ice cream just tasted), Malbec and a specialty drink. The tradition
at these meals is to pick one piece seen on the trip to “take home” and
normally THB jumps for some well-known and expensive artist that will never end
up in E-ville. Tonight he makes one obvious choice (the statue of George Brett
in deep centerfield at Kauffman Park…JUST KIDDING, DB!) and goes for an obscure
work by Allison Shulnik, seen in the JCCC (make up your own acronym here)
Nerman Museum of Contemporary Art that nobody in the group even remembers
seeing: skeletons chasing each other through lush and a broadly pastiche
meadow.
Day 9:
Bentonville to E-ville, April 13
FOTD: The Oakland Oaks were a minor league baseball team. After the 1912 season, the
Oaks opened their new stadium, named Oakland Ball Park (or simply Oaks Park) though it was located in the neighboring city of Emeryville at San Pablo and Park Avenues. In
their first season at Oaks Park the Acorns finished last, and were mired in
the second division for more than a decade.
|
Pics: None?
Weather:
Of course, since we’re heading home, this is
the best day of the trip! Clear, low 60s, light breeze.
THB and DB get up
early, dress warm, and head off to walk the art path around CB. Damn, it is
lovely out, take off those sweaters. Very pleasant 45 minute up and down walk.
Breakfast of yogurt and granola for both of us, coffee and biscuit for DB,
toast for THB (saved to go with leftover ribeye donated by fellow diners last
night for lunch on airplane).
Easy shuttle to the
Northwest AK Regional Airport, two hours do Denver, reasonable layover, a bit
of a delay caused by SFO runway maintenance, 3 hours to SFO, and a sort taxi
ride to the loft.
No comments:
Post a Comment