Wednesday 12 September 2012

The Final Instalment


Checca Lodge was fantastic, great location great service and an all round good place to be but unfortunately we had just one more night on this wonderful trip. Our final stop was in Key West at the Ambrosia Inn on Fleming Street.

We set off along the Sea Highway on an overcast and humid day. Traffic, as with almost all the trip, was light so we bowled along enjoying the views and wondering at the changing landscape since Boston all those weeks ago.

Ambrosia Inn was just fantastic, a clapboard house a couple of small pools for keeping the temprature down - very much needed, and slap bang in the middle of Town for an easy stroll to all possible points of interest.

We unpacked - Philip taking the upstairs and me downstairs in our quaint (that word again) one up one down cabin. Then went off in search of lunch. We ended up in the Lighthouse on the Boardwalk where the waitress looked mightly relieved when we said we'd take a table in the airconditioned bar. It was dripping humid outside and 90 in old money.
The seafood and burgers arrived and we looked out across the harour with its mix of professional and day tripper fishing boats - lovely and busy. Groups of folks having a rest from the heat were hovering over their beers prolonging the need to go back outside - indeed so did we. Great spot for doing nothing in particular.

Eventually we strolled back through the subtripical gardens of Key West to our Inn. Philip to sit in air conditioning and read. Me to sit in the pool and read. Here's a helpful hint - it takes three of those long thin foam inflatables looped together in a pretsel like arrangement to support your head and upper back in such a way that if you then rest your feet on the pool steps you can float all day and read a book without it getting too wet.

As evening came it cooled just a little. We strolled to the southern most point in the USA admired some very strange architecture and strolled the length of Duval Street which still manages to retain some of the frontier style and spirit even though some of the chain stores are trying to turn it into yet another high street.  I just hope it manages to hang on in there, it would be a real shame to loose it's spirit to political correctness.

We went to Mallory Square for the pagan celebration of watching the sun set - unfortunately the oppressive cloud cover that had been with us all day rather blocked the idea of a setting sun but never mind, the conjourers and unicyclists were fun.

A pleasent meal of more burgers and seafood and a stroll back to the Inn. Both of us being rather sad that the trip was drawing to its close and in the morning we had to hand back the car and board our flight from Key West to Miami and then on to London.

After a deep and peaceful sleep we awoke to a splendid al-fresco breakfast by the pool. Bamboo and palm trees with the rustic clapboard houses all around us gave a truely relaxing start to the day.

We packed for the final time and set out to drop the hire car off.

We sort of liked the car in the way one sort of likes an old sofa. It was a Chrysler 200 drop top. It rode rather like a barge which meant all roads came over as smooth and comfortable. I had no idea what its turning circle was officially but Ark Royal could have given it a run for its money. As for acceleration it never gave me the impression that it had any but get it to its cruising speed and it would sit soundlessly, sip petrol (I don't think we spent more than USD 200 covering 2,103 miles) and swallow all bumps as it rode in a dead straight line even if you turned the steering wheel through half a lock. With the top down we could just get our minimal baggage into the boot. There was enought room when the hood was up for golf bags et-al but roof down - no chance. Would we buy one definitely not - would we hire one to cruise to the West Coast 'fraid not - it's got to be a Mustang.

Dropping the hire car off gave us a chance to drive around the back streets of Key West. For some reason - which can only be money related, Alamo decided to have its drop off point on the opposite side of the airport to all the other car hire firms. Luckily the competition was happy to advise us of this fact with knowing smiles. It was by pure luck that we spotted the tiny sign sitting back from the road for the drop off lot and was able to say goodbye to our trusty steed. There were fond glances back as we said goodbye after all she had delivered us safely through a horrible rain storm and done all that was asked of her.

Key West airport is perfect everything is 20 yards from one place to another and you stroll out to your plane parked on the pavement outside - once all are on-board and the door is closed it's 30 seconds until you are in the air. What was more pleasing however ,was that the barman in the terminal was doing a roaring trade in last minute Mojitos at 10 am in the morning. 

The flight to Miami was short and a much better way to retrace steps ather than turning back on one's self. It also gave us a chance to admire the Keys - they will be revisited.

Miami airport was rather like our impression of Miami - not a place we would go out of our way to revisit. Virgin did their bit taking us to London where with the absolute minimum of fuss we were through passport control and parting our ways, Philip in the hands of the local cab firm and I on to Istanbul.

It was a great drive - smooth and uncomplicated. The great American public treated us extremely well the entire length of our trip from ticket touts in Boston to diner waitresses in Florida it was fun.

The country is proud of what it's achieved and where it thinks it's going. It's proud of its armed forces in a way that I think is lacking in the UK. It is sometimes horribly schizophrenic with 50 yard billbords advertising the next church and sex supermarket jostling for space on the same stretch of highway. 

The radio stations are a scream just for the adverts that cary more legal waivers than the product information especially for medical stuff. The guys that read out the legal stuff must have the fittest tounges in the business!

The weather can be momentous, the storm we passed through on the way to Savannah was just extraordinary. The heavily wooded Eastern Seaboard was lovely to see with cities like Philedelphia almost dissappearing into the trees. The subtle change in vegitation from Boston to Key West was a slow story of how nature adapts to climate.

The bald eagle nest at Kennedy Space Centre was just extraordinary as were the olive green aligators resting in their creek but for me the most spectacular of all were the great lumbering pelicans of Bal Harbour. They were just the greatest reminder that flight is not easy.

We saw some extraodinary structures. Fenway Park, The Empire State Building, The Chrysler Building, Brooklyn Bridge, The USS Intrepid, The Statue of Liberty, The Vehcle Assembly Building, Saturn 5 rocket, The Capitol, St Augustine in general though Philip will dissagree, Savannah and 2,000 miles of I95.

The greatest surprise on the trip was the Police Museum at Cape Canaveral - it was thoughtful and had some truely magnificent exhibits such as Nixon's resignation letter and the 30's ganster memrobilia when the idea of gansters was still a little romantic.

The sprit of America is difficult to capture in a few lines or for any special place or event beause it's just so huge but the two places that capture a big chunk of this 'spirit' for me are Cape Canaveral for its engineering and 'can do' attitude overriden by the stupendous bravery of the astronauts and Duval Street for its ability to still be independent and a place of fun.

Great trip with great cmpany, wonderful sights, places and people. We will be back...