Panama City Beach - Google images
When Kid Billy and I used to drive to visit relatives
in Florida, we made up this song, which delighted the youngster. “Oh, where
have you been, Billy-boy, Billy-boy…Arkansas and Mississip, Alabam and
Florida…” I thought of it driving home this past Sunday from Panama City Beach.
Twenty-one stories high in a Wyndham building, we
could see the sandy shore where gentle waves lapped incessantly. The small
balcony barely held four seats and the round table. Straight down was the pool
area.
I didn’t buy one book! In fact, only in the last
up-scale place did I even touch one.I didn’t buy one shell. I have a gallon jardinière
and a basket full from earlier visits to the panhandle. I didn’t buy one pear-motif piece, though some were
gifts.
What did I buy? A blue, fish-shaped ginger grater—not
to grate ginger, but to put on a stand and place on a shelf in my Blue
Room-cum-office-cum Mom’s sunroom.
I bought a blue glass buoy replica wrapped in roping
to hang from the pocket window in the same room. I bought a small blue-glass
shell (oops, I did buy one piece shaped like a shell), and a 2-piece set of
color drip candles for our New Year’s candle made many years ago in a wine
bottle.
At Ritzy Rags, I bought a blue glass ring, a gold billfold and 2 serving spoons in my silverplate pattern. At a Catholic charity warehouse, I bought two small
plant pots and a bunch of silk flowers “for my cemetery duties.”
We ate out several times—at the Saltwater Grill,
described by Wyndham as a must-do activity. After an expensive repast, a
perceived-by-one rude waitperson and a loud-mouthed man behind us, we
discovered the asterisk beside the entry meant “date night” meaning “expensive.”
However, the giant, wall-sized fish tank entertained us while we waited.
At Jimmy Buffet’s eatery, Margaritaville, fronting
Pier Park, a sister and I shared a “volcano-shaped” plate of nachos. Others in
our party of five ate fish, chicken and a cheeseburger. We shopped at
ubiquitous boutiques along a couple of blocks of Pier Park. I’d have bought a
shell-motif coffee mug, but the Chinese had made it non-microwaveable by
inserting a metal ring at the base of the handle. The clerk hadn’t noticed, she
said.
One night, we made arrangements with my son Gordon/wife
Karen to each drive halfway between Pensacola and Panama City Beach and meet in
Destin. Karen arranged the place and gave us directions. We ate at Acme’s
Oyster Bar in Baytowne Wharf for a delightful but short visit. They would head
down to Daytona for the car races later, and this was the only night we could
get together.
Our last-night eat-out venue was Sweet Basil’s
Bistro, an Italian food place. Several had lasagna; two of us had pizza; one,
pasta Alfredo with Polish sausage and a meatball.
Other meals we took at “home” with food brought from
Arkansas/Virginia.
Day activities besides shopping included the two
“northern” women plus an Arkansas sister (not me) playing pickle ball twice, others of us walking the beach, sitting/reading on the beach, sitting on
the balcony reading and napping (guess who?).
One day, two of us drove quite a
ways west to the Eden Gardens state park and toured a mansion and grounds that
included a 500- and 600-year-old Virginia live oak. We snacked on stuff we'd
brought along, and each bought a camellia from their “nursery.”
Evening activities included watching the Olympics,
playing cards, reading and scrapbooking (me).
All are now back in our
respective homes unpacking, washing clothes.
And
remembering.
2 comments:
Sounds relaxing.
'Twasn't. Oh, it was restful--and different, but I would have had to be by myself for it to be completely relaxing. The scenery from the balcony WAS soothing. Thanks for /reading & commenting.
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