Category Archives: travel

Words and Photos: The Tearoom

On my first visit to St. Andrews in Scotland, my friend, Susan, and I stumbled upon a charming tearoom located on the edge of the sea.  The name of the establishment made me laugh: Crumbs Pavilion Tearoom.  When I returned home, I wrote this photo essay sparked by the photo I took that afternoon in St. Andrews.

Photo by L. LeVasseur, 1995

Photo by L. LeVasseur, 1995

As soon as she spies the tearoom from the crest of the hill, Sage can’t help smiling.  The compact building sits squarely on the edge of the cliff above the calm, clear ocean.  The summer sun shines down from the azure sky bathing its coral-colored walls in curtains of golden light.  The murmur of voices and the clatter of china and silverware blend with the steady hum of the surf on the beach below.

For her, Crumbs Pavilion Tearoom is a favorite old haunt from her childhood.  She and her pen pal, Linda, who lived on the Isle of Skye, met face-to-face for the very first time at the tearoom.  Shy with each other after their initial greeting, the girls exchanged curious glances as they stood silently at the counter waiting to order Wall’s ice cream bars. Sage asked for a Magnum White and Linda chose almond.  Finally, as they sat side by side on the sea wall, swinging their legs and biting into the thick chocolate that coated the rich vanilla ice cream, they began to talk.  For years, Sage continued to meet Linda at Crumbs each summer.  As they moved from college to first careers and then to marriage, they somehow had let the tradition go.  Until now.  

Linda waits for her at the doorway of the tearoom.  She holds the hand of a young girl, who has straw-colored braids and sports a pair of glamorous white sunglasses.  Catching her breath, Sage feels like she has stepped back in time.  The child is the spitting image of Linda at the same age.  Swept away on a wave of fond memories, Sage laughs like a carefree girl and runs down the hill.

Vicarious Travel Through Summer Reading

Summer is an ideal time to vacation and catch up on my joy reading.  Why not combine the two by traveling somewhere new with the characters of a great summer read?  As Emily Dickinson so astutely observed, a book can take you worlds away.  Since June, I have taken a vicarious trip to Florence, Italy with Robert Langdon in Dan Brown’s Inferno and another journey to London in the pages of A Conspiracy of Friends by Alexander McCall Smith.

Photo Credit: Flickr.com

Photo Credit: Flickr.com

Right from the opening pages of Inferno, Robert Langdon is on the run, desperately trying to solve a life or death puzzle. Quickly turning page after page, I experienced the wonders of Florence as I followed in the Harvard professor’s footsteps in his race against time.  His chase takes him to Venice and Istanbul as well, but I was particularly captivated by the scenes set among the the iconic museums, churches and gardens of Florence.  Thanks to Professor Langdon’s hurried travelogue, I now have a sense of the bucolic beauty of the Boboli Gardens, the grandeur of the Pitti Palace and the sanctity of the Baptistry of San Giovanni.

Photo Credit: Pixabay.com

Photo Credit: Pixabay.com

After my breakneck, hurtling journey through Florence, I was happy to meander more slowly through the neighborhoods of London with the residents of Corduroy Mansions.  In A Conspiracy of Friends, the third volume of the wise and witty series, William, Caroline, Barbara and even Freddie de la Hay are confronted with the sometimes puzzling nature of friendship.  William receives a surprising revelation from the wife of his oldest friend.  Caroline and Barbara struggle to distinguish the fine line between friendship and true love,  Freddie, through no fault of his own, is parted from his devoted master.  The intrepid terrier accepts his comfortable new home with philosophical resignation, while William laments his loss, almost giving up hope of ever reuniting with his beloved pet.  At the end of their individual days fraught with worries, these Londoners gladly return to their respective Pimlico flats, happy to be home.

At this moment, I am between books.  Where shall I travel next?  Lisa See’s novel Shanghai Girls beckons to me from my bookshelf.  Perhaps a trip to China is in order. . .

Words and Photos

After school in my library, I host a creative writing club.  At our meetings, I often use photos or illustrations as the weekly writing prompt.  I love words and photographs and I think they go together like peanut butter and chocolate or like fireflies and summer evenings.  For years, I have traveled with my camera in my hand, capturing memories and moments as I roamed the streets of Edinburgh, traipsed across the sands of Miami Beach or floated down a river in Costa Rica.  I have collected all of these pictures in albums and used some of them as inspiration for a selection of photo essays.

On a trip to Scotland, I visited the Victorian seaport of Oban.  From there, I ferried over to the Isle of Mull to tour Duart Castle.  One of the pictures I took on that bright and beautiful day inspired this photo essay:

The Garden Steps

Gardens at Duart Castle, 1995.  Photo by L. A. LeVasseur

Gardens at Duart Castle, 1995. Photo by L. A. LeVasseur

“Oh, wow,” she sighs, her voice echoing against the stone archway as she descends the stairs into the garden.

Pausing on the last step, she lifts her face to the summer sky and breathes in the romantic scent of the roses, which have wandered rampantly up and over the garden walls.  The lawn opens out before her like a velvety green carpet.  Stepping out from the shadow of the imposing castle edifice behind her, she can’t contain her smile as she takes in the vibrant flower beds that border the lawn and the dancing cupid balanced atop an ornamental stone fountain in the middle of the lawn.  The distant tolling of church bells blends harmoniously with the soothing splash of the fountain.

She lifts her camera and takes a careful snapshot.  Then, standing perfectly still, she holds her breath and imagines other voices that have echoed up and down the garden steps.  The authoritative tones of the laird of Clan Maclean.  The respectful replies of the head gardener.  The shouts and laughter of generations of children.  The whispered vows of secret lovers.  And finally, the awed exclamations of tourists like herself.

 

 

When in Rome . . .

The VaticanIn Elizabeth von Arnim’s delightful novel, The Enchanted April, four London women find a soothing respite from the rain and cold of the British winter by taking up residence in a small Italian castle.  Feeling a bit like Mrs. Wilkins or Mrs. Arbuthnot, I too traveled to Italy this February.  My niece, is studying in Rome for the semester, and my husband and I simply could not pass up the wonderful opportunity to visit her.

View from the Spanish Steps On our first morning in the Eternal City, we were treated to a warm and sunny day.  Walking through the quiet streets of our hotel’s neighborhood, I was happy to have escaped the bleak, relentless winter weather at home.  As we strolled toward the Spanish Steps to meet my niece, I couldn’t believe our plane had taken off the night before in a near blizzard and now were basking in the gentle spring-like sunshine of Italy. Vatican MuseumsDuring our five-day visit, we eagerly played tourist, crossing the city by metro and by bus to experience as many of those can’t-be-missed sights as possible.  We viewed the Colosseum and the Forum by night.  We said a prayer in the Pantheon and stood in awe in front of Michelangelo’s Pietà in St. Peter’s Basilica.  We toured the Vatican Museums and gazed up at the ceiling of the Sistine Chapel.  We had dinner on a restaurant terrace in the Piazza Navona and sampled “the best” gelato in Rome at the Frigidarium.  However, the highlight of the trip for me, was the morning we spent at the Keats-Shelley House. Keats-Shelley MuseumIn 1820, diagnosed with tuberculosis, poet John Keats traveled to the warmer climate of Rome to convalesce.  He lived at 26 Piazza di Spagna, just at the foot of the Spanish Steps.  Sadly, he never recovered his health, and passed away there in February 1821.  Today, the house is preserved as a museum dedicated to the British Romantic Poets.  The collection features, portraits, correspondence, manuscripts and other memorabilia of literary notables like Percy Shelley, Mary Shelley and Lord Byron, as well as Keats.  We spent a fascinating morning learning about these writers and their connection to Rome. Piazza di Spagna mapThe neighborhood surrounding the Spanish Steps was a haven for writers, artists and architects during the nineteenth century.  John Keats and many others found great creative inspiration during their time in Rome.  Perhaps I should follow in their footsteps.  Right now, I am writing a series of short stories chronicling the travels of a food critic named Elizabeth Ann Martini.  She (and I) might enjoy a trip to Rome in her next story . . .