March 1st, 2006.

I’m sitting in the Smelly Cat Coffeehouse in Charlotte, NC amidst old painted doors and desk lamps and hanging metal foil biplanes. It seems a very cool place though the strawberry banana smoothie is perhaps not as lush as I would’ve liked.

We went on a wandering with Chris and discovered candy stores down by the river in Savannah, GA. Scary gloves for making the brittle. We had something so spectacular… oh… oh… what WAS it called? As soon as I remember I’m going to write it here and then go salivate for a bit. This was amaaaazing!
African Claw Frogs that you can buy. They are NOT in the box, apparently. Very interesting conversation over all of that. I talked to the guy behind the cunter about that for a while – he’s an artist as well – check out Zack’s paintings at –

The last couple of days in Wilmington have been beautiful – the weather’s been nice, and we’re among lots of friends there, with the only angst coming from the fact that we don’t have enough time to share among all of them.

Santa dressing up as a Leprechaun makes for just a frightening visage stalking us on the streets of Savannah, GA. Chris tells me that they take Saint Patrick’s Day pretty damned seriously, which they must since it’s like… February. Personally, I think there need to be more Santa’s floating around in drag. A good Queen Claus would amuse me greatly.
Heather went and shot this man out and about down by the river in Savannah, painting a beautiful likeness of this building.

It’s places like Wilmington where I sort of realize how thin I’m spread. I think we’re finally to the point where we’re not really interested in spreading a whole week in one town – we’ve done a lot of “show up, play gig, play gig, leave town” sort of scheduling this time around, and though it makes us feel more accomplished, and perhaps it’s a bit more lucrative (not to mention all those different town names sure look better on the back of the postcards), but it means that we’re a little neglectful. I was really glad we got to go out to lunch with Bambi and all of her friends on Sunday afternoon – out to Flaming Amy’s Burrito Barn – the only biker burrito place I’ve ever been to with an Elvis motif. Great food, in-house salsas… I’m very happy with the feasting right now. Not a REALLY good trait for someone who’s trying to lose some road-weight, but I’m a special brand of at-the-moment-abstinant hedonist.

Chris wants to take this yellow-shirted man home with him. I felt this was a challenge to my newfound home. In any case, these guys were doing an awesome, awesome version of Brown-Eyed Girl. Great voices, and he was a pretty good picker. What was funny is that when we crossed the street, the restaraunt on the corner had the same song coming through their house speakers. The original definitely suffered by comparison.
The sun sets behind one of the numerous squares in Savannah, GA.

Meaning – damn but that was a good burrito… and then we got Deanne’s cooking in the deal? More “damn”.

In any case, I’m wondering what we’re about to get into with the Evening Muse. The NoDa arts district seems strangely quiet and maybe even run-down for an area that I’ve heard SO much about. Despite a penchant for purple buildings, I have yet to build up much of an opinion of the area. The art galleries are closed, we were some of the only customers at Cabo Fish Taco (where Katie suggested we have linner) and we are the solitary souls inhabiting the entity that is the Smelly Cat.

I’m sure it must REALLY come alive at night.

Thursday, Pamela takes us on another tour of Savannah. We start off in one of the local cemetaries with old gravestones dating back from the 1700s. A lot of the stones are mounted on the surrounding wall, but I unfortunately didn’t find out the story behind that – I haven’t seen that done anywhere else.

From there we wandered into the Cathedral of Saint John the Baptist. This has been recently renovated in 1999 with a price tag of $11,700,000. I was pretty overwhelmed by that amount of money. They have collection boxes all around the church. What blows my mind is that today, in 2006, they have repaid over $10 million. I wonder how the finances on something like that work. $10 million is 6 years? That’s a whole lot of dollars slipped into those little boxes.

During my spare time, I try to write or call people that I haven’t talked to in a while, with the idea that keeping connections with other people is a good thing, and with the concept behind THAT that renewing old friendships can be good too – if only for the educational value. Myspace has made that easier, makes it all too easy, perhaps. I’ve been startled by the sheer number of old high school friends are out there and floating around. Going through the high school searchy thing, a surprising number of my old classmates had at one point joined the circus. Odd. I guess we all craved departure. And like myself, most of them have never quite made the leap of actually Living outside our home state. I’m glad I’m not the only one making contact here and there. It sometimes makes me feel like a stalker.

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