Florence – Piazza Santissima Annunziata

Piazza with the Loggia dei Servi di Maria (now the Loggiato dei Serviti Hotel) in the background.

I worked in Geneva, Switzerland for eight years and during that time I had regional responsibilities covering to various degrees offices in Western Europe, Eastern Europe, as well as some former Soviet Union countries in the Caucasus and Central Asia. One of the offices that fell into my domain was in Florence, Italy. It’s located in a renaissance palace (some say the original renaissance palace) on the Piazza Santissima Annunziata, a short walk from the famous Duomo. I had the onerous task of going down to Florence a couple of times per year to work on common projects and to generally review what was going on in my area. It was a tough job but someone had to do it. Twelve years after leaving Geneva I found myself back on Florence for my final trip before retirement. These pictures came from that visit. They are of the Piazza itself. A second post will provide some interior shots of our office.

Facade of the Loggia dei Servi.

Giambologna’s equestrian statue of Ferdinando I de’ Medici

Piazza at night with bicycles – Santissima Annunziata church in the background and Brunelleschi’s Spedale degli Innocenti on the right.

Throwback Thursday – Javea, Spain

The view north.

Taken during a vacation in Spain. We’d rented this amazing house on a cliff overlooking the sea. It was in Javea between Valencia and Alicante. We flew to Valencia, rented a car an drove down to the house. We ended up on a gravel road that seemed to lead nowhere. As we continued it got closer and closer to the edge of the cliffs and we started to fear that we had taken the wrong turning (this was in pre GPS days). Eventually we saw a short flight of steps and at the bottom a house. The view was amazing. This was one of my favorite vacations: a nice mix of lazing around the house/pool and visiting local attractions.

The pictures were most likely taken with a Canon AE-1.

View from the house looking out over the pool.

View South.

View from Guadalest

Algar Waterfalls.

The house from down by the pool.

Croton Dam Revisited

I’ve posted pictures of the Croton Dam before but the earlier pictures were in black and white and taken from a different position so I thought I’d post this one too. I also happen to prefer this one to the others.

I decided to take Harley for a walk along the Old Croton Aqueduct trail in Croton Gorge so we parked by the dam. I’ve mentioned in earlier posts that I suspect that Harley is a town dog and isn’t too familiar with the countryside. He’s fascinated by water, particularly the small waterfalls along the streams that run into our lake. So I was curious to see how he would react to a much larger one. Although excited by the sound of the water he was at first somewhat timid. After a while his curiosity got the better of him and he slowly walked right up to the edge and peered over. After standing there for a while peering at the falls he lost interest and wandered off.

Stone Barns

According to Wikipedia:

Stone Barns Center for Food & Agriculture is a non-profit farm and educational center with a partner restaurant, Blue Hill at Stone Barns, located in Pocantico Hills, New York. The Center was created on 80 acres (320,000 m2) formerly belonging to the Rockefeller estate in Pocantico Hills by David Rockefeller and his daughter, Peggy Dulany. Stone Barns promotes sustainable agriculture, local food, and community-supported agriculture. Stone Barns is a four-season operation.

Stone Barns Center is also home to Blue Hill at Stone Barns, a restaurant that serves contemporary cuisine using local ingredients, with an emphasis on produce from the Center’s farm. Blue Hill staff also participate in the Center’s education programs.

It’s quite close to our house in Briarcliff Manor and is connected to the Rockefeller Preserve, a pleasant place for hiking with numerous trails to chose from. The area around Stone Barns always reminded me of where I grew up in the north of England: rolling fields enclosed by stone walls containing browsing cows. Stone Barns itself always makes me think of French medieval manor houses with its turrets, interior courtyard and stone walls. The description of “Blue Hills” in Wikipedia really doesn’t do it justice. It’s one of the best (and most expensive) restaurants in the Hudson Valley. We’ve been there a few times and it’s excellent. The setting is magnificent.

I’ve spent many pleasant hours wandering around Stone Barns and the Rockefeller State Park.

Close up of turrets.

Entrance to the Interior Courtyard.

Inside the Courtyard.

Rear View.

RIP Bob Mawson

Our friend Robert Mawson passed away on November 22. RIP Bob we’ll miss you.

The text below is liberally paraphrased from his obituary.

Born in County Durham in the northeast of England in August 1943 he became a boy soldier in the British Army to escape work in the coalmine. He was stationed in Menden, Germany with the British Army of the Rhine from 1961 to 1968. He subsequently returned to the U.K. and, as Regimental Sergeant Major taught cadets at the Royal Military Academy at Sandhurst.

Unable to advance in the army for health reasons he left and began a career as a salesperson for a Danish company, Hugo Kragh Design. He and his Danish wife Karen Lassen had one daughter, Katia. In 1974, at the age of 31, he was rushed to the hospital for open-heart surgery, where the Danish doctors installed two synthetic heart valves and gave him five years to live if he lived a sedentary life. Bob ignored their predictions and set about living his life – often travelling extensively.

Divorced from his first wife, in 1984 he met and married our friend and colleague Marcia Brewster and they had twin sons, Matthew and Marshall. In 1986 their Thai nanny introduced him to a form of meditation.

After transfers to Thailand and back to NY Robert continued working as a salesperson and taking care of his sons. He also continued his interest in meditation. While studying and completing various meditation retreats, he was discovered as someone who exceptionally excelled in an advanced form of meditation, known in the Buddhist meditation world as Dhammakaya. He became the first westerner to be invited by the Abbot of the largest temple in Thailand to be taught meditation one-on-one directly by the Abbot himself. After passing many tests to prove his proficiency, in 1998 he became the first western lay person authorized to teach this form of meditation. Three years later he was ordained as a Buddhist monk (on a short-term basis), where he instructed many people in meditation while wearing the sacred saffron robes. Since then, he has been a meditation instructor all over the world, and has taught tens of thousands of people the power of unifying their body, mind and spirit through proper meditation and life.

He faced a number of health challenges throughout his life, mainly in the last 15 years, and he came to be known as the “Medical Miracle Man”. Following a number of operations and cardiac arrests, he received a heart transplant in 2003. The operation was performed by Dr. Mehmet Oz and was filmed by the Discovery Channel for “Second Opinion with Dr. Oz”.

A celebration of his life was held at Grace Episcopal Church in Hastings-on-Hudson on Sunday December 21, 2014 at 4:00pm.