Wrapping Up in KC

When we last left our hero, he was galavanting around Kansas City after writing a non-chronological entry about ramen soup noodles in San Mateo.  After my colleagues left KC, I was able to properly focus on my holidays, spending time with family and friends and just enjoying a different setting and schedule than usual.

One evening, I met up with Jack.  He’s a Thai expat now living in the Kansas City area and we connected through airliners.net.  Recently, he bought a 70-year old house in the Waldo neighborhood, a funky little area south of the Country Club Plaza.  This was my first chance to see his new home, a typical two-story cookie cutter that has four small bedrooms on the second story, all sharing one bathroom!

Since there are just two of them living in the house, the single upstairs bathroom is hardly a problem.  And, liking clothes every bit as much as Tawn, Jack wisely converted one of the bedrooms into a walk-in closet, below. 

P1080448

Of course, the “closet” has two of its own closets.  There is a small one to the left (which you can’t see in the above picture), which holds the off-season clothes.  Then there is the dormer attic space, which Jack uses as a shoe closet, below.  I had to take pictures because I know that if we had the space, Tawn would love something like this.

P1080447

We’ve talked about buying the 32-square meter (330 square foot) studio condo next to ours, tearing a door into the wall between the unites, and turning the whole thing into a closet for Tawn.

After showing off his house and introducing me to his pair of very outgoing cats, Jack suggested we head to the aforementioned Country Club Plaza.  The Plaza, the first shopping center in the world to be designed specifically for people arriving by car, is a landmark of Kansas City and really is one of the nicer outdoor shopping developments in the US.  While you are seeing these kind of developments more commonly these days, you have to remember that the origins of the Plaza date back to 1907 and it opened in 1923, years before malls and other shopping centers.

The architectural style is very much based on a Spanish/Moorish motif.  There is beautiful tile work and many fountains and while those on the coasts may scoff at “flyover country”, the Plaza is a good example of what makes the quality of living in Kansas City quite decent.

Here are some photos, taken later in the day so apologies for the long shadows:

P1080449

P1080451

P1080454

P1080455

P1080459 Jack and I ended up eating at Houston’s, one of my favorite chain restaurants.  I had one thing on my mind: steak. 

Steaks are expensive and imported here in Thailand, and Kansas City is cattle country so I wasn’t about to pass up the opportunity to try a good steak.  Houston’s delivered with a very nicely marbled rib-eye, tender and flavorful.  Combine that with their excellent cous cous and a glass of very nice cabernet, and it was a pleasant meal.

The only thing Houston’s lacks is proper dessert choices.  There are only two items: the key lime pie and the apple walnut cobbler.  The pie isn’t all that great, in my opinion, and they were out of the cobbler, which actually is worth ordering.  Of course, most of the time I haven’t enough room for dessert after having eaten there, so that’s okay.

After dinner, we walked around the Plaza for a while, visiting.  The weather was a little cooler than normal, still in the low 80s, but just ideal for a summer evening.  Wish that Tawn could have been there to enjoy his Houston’s favorite (knife-and-fork ribs) as well as the good conversation.

 

Tuesday morning I was tasked with taking Emily to swim lessons so Jenn could get some things done and have a little time without youngsters around the house.  The morning started oddly cool, breezy and humid, the chance of rain lending a pronounced “fullness” to the air.  Jenn decided to try and get the lawn mowed and no sooner had she started then the first big drops started to fall.  But they remained very intermittent, so she powered on, moving so fast that she was no more than a blur in the photo below.

P1080462

 

Emily and I were unsure whether the weather would force a cancelation of lessons.  I called the pool’s recorded line and the last weather alert was for a month ago, so we went with the assumption that lessons were on.  I grabbed an umbrella and a magazine and we loaded into the minivan.

We must have arrived very early – ten minutes before class didn’t seem early to me – as there were no other students around.  Emily assured me that this was normal and an instructor, a young lady in her late teens, told me that class was still on.  Unsure of where I was supposed to go, Emily told me to sit in the waiting area and she headed out to find her teacher.

Below, Emily jumps up and down, trying to make it difficult for me to get a good picture.

P1080465

Sure enough, about sixty seconds before lesson time a fleet of minivans arrived, divulging several dozen young swimmers.  The mothers, a veritable cast of Desperate Housewives, brought their folding chairs and novels and set up shop.  Some read (the lady in front of me was reading Michael Pollan’s excellent The Omnivore’s Dilemma) while most gossiped.  You would be shocked with what’s going on amongst neighbors in suburban Kansas City!

Since it was raining, the instructors decided it was Safety Day.  This is the day when the children at each level learn various safety skills.  In the picture below, you can see Emily holding the safety flotation device, about to throw it to “save” one of her classmates.

P1080470-1

To avoid distractions, the adults were forced to sit in a confined area away from their children, so I had to use the telephoto feature on my camera.  Not too bad, actually, considering how far away I was.

It was a really cool morning and I had on my sweatshirt and was still shivering.  The pool is in an exposed area and the wind blew sharply across the deck.  When Emily finished lessons she was quite chilly, too, so we decided a stop at the neighborhood Starbucks for some hot cocoa would be a good idea.

That afternoon we had BLTs for lunch.  Bacon, lettuce and tomato – what a perfect combination.  I should have this in Thailand as all three ingredients are available.  But the tomatoes here are just not the same.  We don’t do beefsteak tomatoes.

Many insist that mayonnaise is the correct condiment, although I prefer peanut butter.  Everything is better with peanut butter.  Well, not scrambled eggs, but most things.

P1080478

 

I spent a fair amount of time my final few days in KC working on a photo scanning project.  My grandmother made the effort several years ago to organize their thousands of photos into binders, usually by child.  Many of the photos have names, dates and locations, which is a good start.

A few years ago, I decided to start scanning these photos and collecting them digitally.  Then I can post them to the family and ask people to add more details: stories and memories that will bring the photos to life.  Eventually, I’d like to create and print photo albums for the various grandchildren and, eventually, great-grandchildren like Emily and Ava.

During this week, I managed to scan and document about four hundred photos, just a scratch in the surface.  Future trips will have to include more scanning, so I know what I’ll be doing this Christmas.

In a future post, I’ll include some of those family photos, to see if you can trace any family resemblances.

P1080487

After one day of scanning, Jennifer and Emily stopped by to pick my up at my grandparents’ house.  While there, Emily went upstairs to check on the progress of my grandmother’s sewing projects.  Among other things, she wanted to take measurements to make a dress for Emily.  Amazing that my grandmother is still working on projects like this at her age.  But then, both my grandparents keep incredibly busy.  They have more on their schedules than I do!

P1080483

Finally, on one of my final evenings in Kansas City, Jenn, Emily and Ava tried on the matching pink pajamas that Tawn bought for them.  There was an evening of peace and calm as we read bedtime books together, no fussing, crying, or tumult.  What a perfect evening!

 

25 thoughts on “Wrapping Up in KC

  1. Looks like Jack is having a cloth store and a shoe store in his house.  They must enjoy shopping.   πŸ™‚  Actually quite genius, and out-of-the-box idea to convert a bedroom into huge, huge closets.
    I am also thinking to convert old family pictures into digital form.  When I was in Hong Kong earlier this year, I gathered a lot of pictures from mom, but have not  converted them yet. I started by using a regular scanner, but the resolution is not good enough.  Do you suggestions?

  2. You made me think of childhood peanutbutter and bacon sandwiches! Yum. My Momwas the swer in our family. She had a tailor shop when I was young. Thanks for the tour of KC.

  3. BLt and peanut butter?! What?! goodness, Chris. I can’t believe that combination? Everyone knows it is peanut butter, mayonnaise and sweet onions!

  4. Never in my life have I heard of PB on a BLT!  I had to read the sentence twice πŸ™‚   The photo of your sister in her front yard reminds me very much of the neighborhood in the South Suburbs of Chicago where I grew up & my parents presently live….and your retelling of her trying to mow before the rain is something my father struggles with all summer long.
    As for the gossiping at swim lessons…I experienced the same thing here in San Jose when I took my boys to swim lessons.  It was a regular Peyton Place!
    So glad you had a great visit home πŸ™‚

  5. You should tell me all about your photo scanning project. I think its a magnificent idea! You need to tell me everything and how I can get one started as well. My grandfather turns 95 this weekend and it would be nice to get something done like that for him. And if I run out of time, no better time than now to get one started for my parents. Will remember to bring my notebook when I see you guys in a few weeks!

  6. 1.  LOVE the closets!  2.  What a magnificent Poseidon statue!–didn’t know he rode a two-headed horse but need to look that one up.  3.  The lovely house and lawn make me miss the East Coast.  4.  How lucky these kiddies get to hang out with their granndmother in her sewing room.  So cozy.  5.  What’s better than being in one’s jammies! 

  7. @Fongster8 – It really is a lot of clothes and shoes, isn’t it?  I’m not the sort of person to really understand why you would need so many clothes, but then I guess other people don’t understand why I need to take so many pictures!

  8. Thanks!  Also for the Wikipedia link, which I should have gone to in the first place, duh!  πŸ™‚  A friend of my also suggested that he’s associated with horses because waves look like horses’ manes when they crash.  I love that image. 

  9. @christao408 – Well, I think not as much as they used to. It used to be cheaper to sew your own clothes, which would be why my Mom sewed almost all our clothes. Now it’s so expensive for the fabric and notions that it’s cheaper to buy off the rack most of the time. I sew to create something unique. I quilt also, but haven’t for a long time now.

Leave a reply to UFFda_oyVEY Cancel reply