Archive | November, 2008

Second day in Rio, part 9–Carnaval

After all the primitive natural glory of the dinosaurs, Grande Rio shifted gears abruptly as if to say, “Shit! We forgot that this was the anniversary of the Japanese migration of 1908! Better put something in. Quick!”

Don’t think they just whipped something up. This was a grand thing, complete with hot feathered woman and big-bellied scary whitefaced actor guy. Bonsai!


Grande Rio also seemed to be flush with feathery soloists–more any any of the other three groups we saw. This next little blonde number was energetic, sassy, and looked like the girl from next door. Provided you lived somewhere in Heaven.

And just as a fine restaurant serves a small dish of sherbet as a palate cleanser between courses (and really, what the hell is THAT all about?), G.R. erased the taste of Japan quickly with this young lady. And not by Occident, either.

Good thing, because hot on her heels was another incongruous, but necessary segment: the salute to the Portuguese Royal Family, due to the bicentennial status of their arrival and the love the Cariocas have for them and all.

The first two groups were incredibly adorned king and queen types, the women’s headdresses culminating in a sizable ball that cantilevered over their heads. How they held these aloft I’ll never know. Surely they worked out with neck weights during the year. This glamorous royalty did a fun little circle dance thing while the men toted torches, all under the glow of huge human street lamps. Could that be the energy tie-in? Did King John bring gas lamps to Rio? Anyone?   Anyone?   Marcelo?    Bueller?


The Royal opulence continued with a gigantic, beautifully embellished ball clock that came alive with a randy King and Queen who would make out on the chime of the hour. The display brought back big memories for me, since I broke a similar clock as a child. Well, not as ornate as this one, but the same principle with the balls and all. I cringe whenever I see one.


As you can see by the picture, this queen hasn’t missed many meals. And I’ll bet she just loves lobster!

And we know M’Lady will love a delicious stew. But WAIT! What are these bugs? They’re eating HRH’s veggies? What shall we do? Call an exterminator! An exterminator who makes his poisons from herbs indigenous to the Amazon, that’s who!

What’s with the trees, I wonder. Could this be the natural ingredient in a pesticide that’s safe and wonderful? I don’t know. These trees are marked with yellow ribbons like they were to be cut (or not cut). Did cutting these trees bring on the bugs? It’s such a mystery. Note that there are people on stilts inside. Sorry to ruin it for you if you thought they were real.

I love the expression on the grasshopper in the lower left corner, looking around in such a panic, like “Shit! Here comes Orkin!”  And clever irony there, G.R. designers, with the canisters carried by the grasshoppers!

The next group was by far the eeriest and saddest of all the things I had seen: a herd of what I would guess were the ghosts of extinct animals, represented by a pleasant-faced furry guy that looked a lot like Spike. Under each animal’s head was a human skull that obscured the face of the dancer. Only upon close inspection did these become visible. Almost like a whispering reminder to mankind that his abuse of nature will ultimately mean his own undoing.I was also beginning to notice that Grande Rio had taken extra pains to disguise its dancers. It meant for a more startling effect, when mobs of creatures were mobile under seemingly magical power.

The shift to Amazonian themes continued with these natives. It was good to see that Grande Rio was handicapped accessible, with participants in decorated wheelchairs.

The twirling group that followed was stellar. The skirts undulated with the turns, and it became a blinding mass of red, orange, yellow and brown punctuated with flashes of white that would appear when the skirt would catch air and fly up.

It had been entirely too long since we had seen a solo star. Not.
But here was another one! A cat tamer of the highest caliber. Your gorgeous introduction to the double-edged beauty of the Amazon.

These cats could really samba! It was crazy cool. Even the mother was grooving with her baby in her jaws. Right behind was what I have dubbed the Amazon Monster. This gigantic creature is made up of all the life that inhabits the jungle. Part snake, part cat, part foliage, part man, surrounded by protective virgin-white birds and topped with a jaguar-headed native, he spouted smoke while turning his head to glare at each person in the Sambódrome. And he wasn’t kidding, either.

Time to shake off the chills with a cute little bee girl celebrating the insect life in the jungle.

Right on her heels were a bunch of parrots that seem to have swallowed the humans that brought them to the parade.

This had begun to feel like a trek into the Amazon–a journey to find the gas deposits. But the dangers are plenty. The next float was led by an army of only about one millionth of the things that can kill a person in the jungle. It was headed up by a giant leering snake that swayed back and forth as if he were looking for just the right thing to bite. NOT ME!! And NOT ROBO!! We’re both scared shitless of snakes. Since childhood.

I looked over at him and he was mumbling to himself, “It’s not real. It’s not real. It’s not real.” Pettus was offering him sips of water and patting him on the back.



Once the intrepid explorer made it through the gauntlet of possible fatalities, he would be rewarded with energy. Lots of energy.

It was another case of people gyrating inside of globes. It was very ethereal, the way the wispy costumes would shimmer and flutter. They looked like mothmen.


The crazy thing about this and so many of Grande Rio’s floats was the lengths they went to to camouflage the participants. Just when you’re looking at a giant bug, thinking it’s a great prop, it starts to move, dance and then sing! Not this praying mantis above, but these spider guys fooled everybody. They would sit still for long periods of time, then begin to scramble furiously up and down their web, menacing everyone in sight range.

This lineup of beauties heralded the arrival of energy itself: the dancing guy.

This young man was phenomenal. He was in constant motion from the time he came into view until the time he left it. Tap dancing 16th-notes fast, he personified perpetual motion, and the crowd went apeshit for him. Us too.

Jean had already called Marcelo, and our 30 minute window was open. During the break before Beija-Flor, we took a few parting pictures. Flávia had told me how they were going to be in Santa Teresa the next day, and for us to come. “It will be a big party!” she said, writing the information down on another of her business cards.

I assured her we’d be there. It sounded great to me! And we would have Marcelo to translate for us providing maximum laughs.

Notice the two girls in the white body suits. They had just returned from one of the parades, this being the third year they had done it. I should have asked them more about it, but had no translator for a subject that would be possibly hard to grasp with my twelve-word vocabulary of Portuguese.


We said our goodbyes, passed out belezas and obrigados, and began making our way out of the Sambódromo. We figured we’d miss most of the crowd not staying till the end, and were pretty much right. Only the outer areas were glutted with half-costumed participants again, sweating, beaming, drinking, shouting, dancing, singing, and glowing with satisfaction.

We reversed directions to get to the pickup point, having no problems whatsoever. Both sides of the street had been glutted with vendors of all kinds awaiting the crowds to come out. We bought several waters and stood under the viaduct, our eyes bulging at the whole sight. I had my camera in duffel position 1 the whole time, though in retrospect, it probably would have been safe. We were in a crowded area. Or is that just the point?

Marcelo pulled up just about on the dot of 30 minutes, like a father picking up the kids at the dance. We piled in, laughing, all talking at once, chugging water, and elated to see our friend. He turned to us and asked “How was it?” just as a dad would do. Except, instead of replying with “Okay” the way a jaded kid would, we all exploded with superlatives. Marcelo just smiled and nodded.

“Did you get any sleep?” we asked.

“Yes. I stayed in my car,” he replied without a hint of the martyr in his voice. “I thought it would be smarter to sleep in my car than to drive back and forth to my home.” Sounded smart to me. It also sounded like one hell of a guy making sure he didn’t leave us all alone at the Sambódromo. Thanks, Dad, er brother, er pal. He was all of that.

The ride over the bridge to Niterói was pleasant, and we all began to unwind during that time. The only thing I remember about it was Marcelo turning through the median one block too soon, us laughing at him, him giving “the look” in the rear view mirror at the back seat group, and finally us pulling up to Mirante de São Francisco. It was around 5:00, and somebody was picking up the kids at 7:00. I hoped it was Marcelo, but Jean knew what was up. Thank God for that.

Third day in Rio–part 1

I really don’t know what the scene was with breakfast. Something in the back of my mind says that we scheduled it for 10:30–too early for me, but probably too late for everybody else. When I finally got up, Daniel and Patricia were there, already on the couch watching Brazilian music videos. Pettus was downstairs making use of our pool–the only one of us who did, but I don’t think she ever got in. That unused feature of the house doesn’t amortize well.

I must say, that’s a very unenthusiastic expression. If I didn’t know better, I’d swear that she wasn’t thrilled about me taking her picture. I don’t know what she was worried about. She always looks good. I, on the other hand, felt like I had been electrocuted the night before, then put in wet cement to sleep. People like me, we’re the photographers.

Daniel and Patricia got to experience the full impact of our breakfast, and were suitably impressed. I’m sure they told us about their flight over to Rio, but I was in La-La Land at the time. They could have been recounting a mugging or an airport luggage SNAFU; it didn’t matter. I responded with “That’s nice” to everything they told us, as my eyes glazed over the chocolate cake, morphing it into one of the African hotties in the Vila Isabel parade.

We didn’t want to waste any daylight, and Rio wasn’t getting any smaller, so Jean began the process of booking Marcelo for the day. It still would have been easier to call him directly, but we had to do everything through Sylvia, which added time to everything.

When Marcelo arrived, we all trudged out to the car. Well, not trudged, just didn’t have all that much spring in our step. Even Pettus. We didn’t have any set plan for the day, which is almost a detriment in a case like this. All I knew was that I had told Flávia we’d see them in Santa Teresa the next day. Marcelo asked what we wanted to do. “Let’s go to Santa Teresa,” I suggested. “We met a girl last night who said they were going to play there today.”

“Santa Teresa,” Marcelo replied. “Ees very nice.” He immediately took off, not forgetting the thumbs up to the guard.

On the way over the bridge, we marveled at all the cranes. I had noticed the day before how many there were that had been bent in half from a fatal load, appearing to be in the relaxed position until you saw the steel crumpled at the joint, the arm pointing straight down. They stood in the bay like poor old men in a nursing home.

Marcelo pointed out into the water and said, “That one is mine. I’ll sell it to you.” The whole off-the-wallness of the remark demanded more from me.

I indicated one of the bent ones and said, “Is that it? Good quality steel. Can’t you just see the advertising guys trying to come up with an ad campaign? Well, sir, we find that Butter Soft isn’t working for us as a tagline.

Then from the back, in the desert dry voice, Robo chimed in, “I can’t believe it’s not metal! ” while giving a slight shake of the head and an emphatic half smile, like he’d just thought of a good idea–the same way he delivers all his devastating bon mots. The same way he nearly got us mobbed at Carnaval the night before with the “I’ve seen better” comment. He never fails to get a hearty laugh out of me, but this time, the remark went straight for my humor G spot.

Once in a blue moon, due to unknown sets of circumstances, somebody can sneak in the back door of hilarity with something that will completely take me out of body and send me into paroxysms of violent tear-inducing laughter that won’t quit for several minutes. And then, like a mosquito bite, the image of the remark will pop back into my head and start me over again. It’s something that has to gradually subside, or wear itself out. I can’t stop it like the hiccups, and it always leaves me weak and feeling like I’ve just done 50 situps in two minutes. All that said, there is absolutely no other feeling like it in the world.

Of course this made Robo laugh, not boisterously, but more like an intermittent idling motor, which would make me laugh more. Marcelo just stared at us in bemusement and amusement. He had some really complex expressions in his bag.

Once we got into Rio, Marcelo showed us the ancient Carioca aqueduct, which I snapped through the windshield. It was built in the mid 1700s to bring water to Rio from the Carioca River. In the late 1800s, after the Carioca began to fail to deliver enough, other methods of getting water were used, and the aqueduct was converted into a bridge for the tram running up to Santa Teresa. The aqueduct also spanned the site of the Passeío Publico, built in the late 1700s over a lagoon that was landfilled to not only extend Rio’s real estate, but also to get rid of trash and mosquito breeding ground. Marcelo had shown us part of the excavation the day before. You see how there are two levels to this thing. It was beautiful and cool as dirt!

Ain’t nothing like a little graffiti on a mid-18th-century historic treasure is there? Sigh.

The streets were thick with people in various pockets all throughout Rio, even before we got to Santa Teresa. I could see what Marcelo meant about “They’d rather be having fun.”

Or making pretty pictures.

Third day in Rio–part 2, Santa Teresa


Mounting Santa Teresa

We began the climb up the mountain to Santa Teresa while Marcelo gave us a briefing. In the late 1800s and early 1900s, it was home to many of the swells in Rio, affording beautiful views from every angle. Like so many of the former glory neighborhoods in America, this one began to go to seed in the early 1900s (WHY??), leaving gorgeous mansions tucked in everywhere.

And just like in America, in recent years, Santa Teresa has been brought back to life in a laid back way as a home to artists and performers, who understand the value of being surrounded by both natural and man-made beauty. I’m sure the real estate is pricey now, but I’ll bet during the early days of the revival, you could have had yourself one of those incredible homes for nothing. I’m gonna go out on a limb and guess that in 1975, $10 to $25,000 American would have bought you some of the finest stuff on the hill. And it was fine.

Every turn in the narrow, curvy brick road offered a new angle on fine architecture and beautiful landscaping. But it by no means gave off any vibe of being an exclusive enclave. These grand old architectural dames were there for everyone’s enjoyment, and were mixed in with some downright meager dwellings and businesses. You’re asking, “Where are the pictures, Ben?” Well I DON’T KNOW, so GET OFF MY BACK! We were in the car. It was hard! LEAVE ME ALONE!    Sorry.

We passed several conclaves of revelers all the way up the mountain, and Marcelo casually remarked in his matter-of-fact deadpan, “Santa Teresa. Ees very popular for bars. People come up here to drink, then they go up to see The Christ.”

“Really?” I asked, not really doubting it. It’s close?

“Yes, he is right above us,” Marcelo replied. “But it will take a good bit of time to go up there. Better to plan another day.” Indeed.

We kept driving up, crossing the tram tracks that are still in use, seeing bars, galleries, small arty shops, and a gaggle of cool looking people, all smiling, all enjoying life. I began to realize that the only way we would find Flávia and Co. would be to accidentally run into them.

At what seemed to be the summit, but wasn’t by any means, we found a small street party going on in an intersection. We decided to park and check it out. The cop in the above picture was friendly, and there to assure everyone they would have a safe experience. At least that’s what he looks like.

Daniel and Patricia had, of course, just flown in from Salvador (and BOY were their arms tired!), and they were about as fresh as we were, having been stimulated to death the night before at Carnaval. But Daniel can eat at the drop of a hat, and everybody enjoyed the baked cheese skewers that somebody was selling.

We took in all the participants at the gathering. Looked like a melange of cool people with fun on the brain. Nothing huge, just fun. Some kind of music and rhythm going on at the core. I noticed a bunch of little throw-on costumes that lent a real down-home tone to the whole thing. Everybody I held the camera up to responded with the secret sign and a smile.

And of course Robo honed in on my camera like a gol-durned bat finds a mosquito. It’s an amazing ability, one that I also happen to share. The results are never as good for me, however.

I noticed a bunch of costumettes that seemed to be derived from Carnaval outfits. I would like to know exactly how much of the costume you get to keep.

Look at Robo. He cracks me up.

Notice the ubiquitous video camera in Robo’s right hand. Once he figured out how to use it, he had it all the time. It was fun to walk up on him talking to himself as he narrated the scene he was shooting. It always made for a great inane exchange.

Above you see the results of Robo’s shooting of my big happy self. The
shirt was plenty big, I had plenty of water and beer interchangeably,
and I wasn’t sweating too badly. Did I mention water and beer? Plenty
of both? Yes. I had to pee. I got the first “hey old man” signals as we
passed under the aqueduct, and was delightfully reminded with every
bumpy inch of the road up there.There was a bar on the corner! Surely they had a bathroom. But they
weren’t open. WHAT? A bar not open during a street festival right
outside its doors? Only in Brazil. It really didn’t surprise me, as I
reflect on it. So of course a sanitário was out of the question, eh?Same story across the street at the bar there.”Oh, that’s okay,” I said. “Hey Robo, take my picture with Marcelo!”

I told Marcelo that I had to pee, and asked what he thought about the old Salvador trick. He indicated that probably nobody would care. I looked around everywhere, and there wasn’t a square inch that contained even the slightest nook for an old man to duck into. Especially an old man who requires more concentration and a zen-like state than to just “duck in” anywhere. It was particularly disappointing, being such a professional at the pissoir alfresco (along with my enthusiastic son Frank). “Naah,” I finally said. “I’ll be fine.” He looked at me like he expected me to say that.


The only thing that could make me smile when I had to pee like that was a bunch of friendly Santa Teresa partiers

and charming Brazilian girls

“Let’s go,” everybody said.

We got in the car, and headed down, never ceasing to marvel at the little architectural details that would pop out everywhere.

As we wound down, we encountered more people in larger spaces, but they were all in accommodation mode.

Further down, we passed a stellar view of a favela, which prompted Marcelo to say “You know the favelas?”

“Yes,” I replied.

“They can be very dangerous. Tourists come and think it will be fun to go see them, go in and can be robbed and put out on the street somewhere. Many are owned by drugs.”

“Well, I think it would be pretty presumptuous of somebody to take a tour of one just to go slumming in Brazil. These people need their dignity, too. It’s not a sideshow.” I don’t know how much of this Marcelo understood, because I had begun talking very fast with him, his being a pal and all.

He continued, “There are people that have tours of the favelas, and pay the drug people off to bring tourists in.”

“I don’t think that would be cool at all,” I said.

“It can be very dangerous,” Marcelo replied.

“I think they’re beautiful,” I answered, wistfully. I also realized that my earlier ideas about a potentially idyllic life there provided drugs and discontent didn’t set in now seemed quaint and naive.

I have since run into an interesting story by a British guy about his experience with favelas in Rio.

We ran into more beautiful graffiti as we flattened out in the city. These characters, if not licensed, could be. One thing I found out in Brazil is, they have no concept of intellectual rights. There were commercial ripoffs of American cartoons in several places. Robo had also told me horror stories of one of his companies’ software being pirated openly, freely and with an ingenuity that baffled everyone.

At the bottom, the view of the hillside was interesting. Especially through a foggy window.

Third day in Rio–part 3, Sugarloaf

 

Big mountain. Fun ride. Great view. Ready to go eat?

“What do you want to do now?” Marcelo asked us.

“Uhhh,” we all replied. “Is the Botanical Gardens open?” Jean asked.

“I don’t think so,” Marcelo replied. “It is still Carnaval.”

“What about Sugarloaf?” I asked. I had seen the cars going up there, so figured it was open. And surely it had a bathroom.

“Ees very close,” Marcelo replied, sealing the deal.

When we pulled up in the parking lot, there was a line that stretched down the steps to the ticket booths and around the perimeter. It looked long at first, but seemed to be moving fairly rapidly. What else were we gonna do? Ride around looking for something that had a shorter line? I don’t think so. We decided to gut it out.

I remember one trip Jean and I took with the boys to Magic Mountain in California. Roller coaster heaven! I was about to hyperventilate with expectation until I saw all the lines. So what did we do? Stand in each line for about 10 minutes, get antsy, then go try to find a shorter line. Which we never did. And we wasted a couple of good hours on this ridiculous maneuver. We finally settled down and stood in a few lines, and actually got to ride four big coasters that day. I hate crowds and lines. I also love theme parks. It’s like crushing the shell into the pecan meat. You have to pick it all apart gradually, separating out the shell, to get any meat. Or a plate of boiled crabs. It’s all a lot of work for a little pleasure.

We asked Marcelo if he wanted to come with us, but he said no, he’d stay in the car and read or go get something to eat. “Okay, we’ll meet you out here when we’re through, okay?” Jean was asking, as I hauled ass up the stairs to find the sanitário.

“I’ll meet y’all at the end of the line,” I hollered at them, noticing that Robo was coming up behind me. Inside the building I was met with various wall displays and a diorama of Rio, the bay and the various mountains that rise from it. There was a tiny little cable car mounting a tiny little Sugarloaf. Neat. There was also a gift shop, but it became a blur as I dashed past and up the stairs as fast as one like me can dash. Robo must have ridden my draft, because we appeared at the door to the sanitário simultaneously, and almost did a Three Stooges trying to get through it together.

Once we got back to the others, we saw that the line wrapped around by a memorial statue of a WWI or II Brazilian soldier. Maybe Marcelo can tell me who he is. While we were standing in the line, there was a vendor selling these little plastic bikini clad girls that you would clip on the edge of a beer can to make a handle. They were the perfect thing to bring back! I must say, though, it is a rather tacky juxtaposition with the statue.

And of course I began my photo onslaught on Daniel and Patricia with this pic in front of the stricken soldier.

We marveled at the people scaling the mountain behind the ticket booth. They were at least 100 feet in the air, clinging onto the face of the rock, looking like flies on a dark wall: hard to find at first. Watching them up there caused every orifice on my body to slam shut in fear. But I could hardly look away.

The line was indeed fast, and before we knew it, were up at the booth. Robo’s grant had included entertainment expenses for D & P, and this somehow translated into some clusterfuck at the ticket booth that took Patricia’s expertise (read “Portuguese”) to sort out for us. Of course we’d also be the very ones to hold up the line after we had worked that Yoruba curse on the people in front of us. Irony is so funny!

I was a tad fluttery about the whole thing of course, with the curse going awry, and my being so terrified of unsecured heights. In a machine or building I’m usually fine, but I have a special subsection in my book of fears for this. An air gondola is neither fish nor fowl. It’s a machine, but it’s on a stupid two inch cable. And there are 75 people in this thing supported by this long-ass wire that runs up to one huge mountain, stops, then goes up another slacky wire to Sugarloaf, 1299 feet above sea level.

So what do I do? As the car begins to magically, impossibly, lurch up to the first mountain, I say casually to Jean, “Look honey, we’re over all those trees. If the cable snaps they’ll be there to break our fall.”

“Stop that!” she hissed at me. Then we both started laughing nervously.

At this point, I had to ponder Robo and Pettus’ desire to hang glide while we were in Rio. Neither had ever done it or anything like it, and it sounded like fun to them. They had even asked Sylvia to look into it for them. Unfortunately, with the foggy weather we were still having, it was out of the question at the time. But there went my orifices again anyway, from just thinking about it.

We got to stage one quickly, disembarked easily, and began to gawk at the view. Though cloud-studded, it was still beautiful. I seemed to take a ton of pictures of The Christ through the haze, and some of them are pretty spiffy.

On the first level, there were benches everywhere, and people were lounging around like it was a park or something. I took a shot of the group, then Robo took one of Jean and me.


It’s totally amazing how much Jean looks like her mother.

Here’s another good shot of The Christ from this level

It was time to try to beat the rush to the tram up to Sugarloaf. Due to construction we had to follow a convoluted course over boards on scaffolding (fun) until we finally turned the corner to the next station. Here are a couple of cool shots of the convex mirror, the people in it, and the big mountain right behind.


In this closeup, it looks like Robo is pissed off about something. This could be the point in the trip where his sinuses began to revolt against him. The altitude may have been punching him in the forehead.

Once we had alighted the car, we were instantly hit with the unobstructed panorama that Sugarloaf affords. These shots of the harbor were very cool. Notice how the orange roofs of the chi-chi enclave below echo the favelas. Both ends of the money spectrum with similar visual impact. EYE ROW KNEE!


By this time, Daniel was hungry again. The grant included snacks, too! Robo handed him a bunch of Reais, and we walked up to the booth to order. I got a couple of agua com gaís (sparkling water), and then discovered that they had those cheese roll things! Daniel ordered that and a Coke. We all sat around, Daniel politely sharing his food, the rest of us like a bunch of dive bombers into the little paper tray. I chugged that agua com gaís pretty fast, then decided to go take another picture of The Christ ruling over Rio.

I also spent time taking pictures of other people with their cameras. There were a bunch of Australians there, and I did shots of 3 different Aussie couples.

The others were ready to go, and sent Daniel looking for me. “We’re ready to go,” he said “Are you?”

“Sure. I don’t think the view is gonna change.”

We saw a bunch of people heading for the tram station, so we hustled as fast as we could to beat them there without looking like we were trying to beat them there. That’s called “manners.”

Once inside, I took this shot of the group despite their protests. They all warned me that if we missed that tram they would kill me. Amazing they can look so pleasant and yet be so threatening.

We made the car without any trouble. But there was a counter that told how many could get on, and it was ticking madly toward the limit. And a few extra I noted, to my chagrin.

In order to divert herself, Jean began listening in on other conversations. There were enough English speakers there to have a little field day, and get her internal radio working again. She noticed a young American guy wearing an Ole Miss hat. He was with an Australian guy. Once we had gotten to the first station, she knew enough about him to say to him on the way out, “Are you from Mississippi?”

“Yes ma’am!” he said politely and enthusiastically. “How did you know?”

“Well first, your accent. And you have “Rebels” on the back of your hat. It was kind of a no-brainer.”

This brought on an advanced session of the “Do You Know? Game”. I believe he did know one of the Lee twins from Ole Miss, and had a bunch of friends that live in Mountain Brook that would know Frank’s friends from there. Ahh. Satisfying. That’s one of the beauties of being from the South. You can play “the game” for less than five minutes and have three connections. But to play it on level one of the Sugarloaf Experience was just pretty bizarre.

While they worked on the Rebel connections tapestry, I shot a couple of pictures of the gears and a beautiful hybiscus.

It turns out that the guy was here in Brazil on kind of an exploration trip. He had been to Argentina looking to buy property to set up a winery/fine restaurant/lodge and hunting deal for executives and jet setters. Being from the South, he was completely familiar with the hunting part. Having money, which he obviously did, would give him an edge with clientele.

He was with an Australian guy he had met at one of the hostels he had stayed in. So he was possibly short on money. But he was used to it, you could tell. Maybe just had a pedigree and not so much money now. I don’t know, but I kind of doubt it. He wielded the mantle of breeding easily, being pleasant, expansive, attentive to the girls and Patricia in particular, and willing to spend a little time with some fellow Southerners. His Aussie companion was also pleasant, but seemed completely disconnected with the conversation, especially when the young guy began to lapse into a definitive Mississippi drawl right before his eyes.

And don’t think for a minute that Mama Jean wasn’t trying to hook him up with Patricia. He had to promise that he would contact her if he came through Salvador on his travels before she would let him go. The thing is, I believed him when he said that he would.

None of us passed up the bathroom when we landed, and I got a chance to see a little more of what was in the gift shop. I’ll be switched if there weren’t several statues of Iemanjá on the shelf! I could tell because she was admiring herself in the mirror, and there were shells all around her. But only one who had felt her hot breath on his neck would recognize her with such clarity.

I rushed outside, only glancing at the diorama as I zoomed past. Fortunately, there was Marcelo waiting on us, to break the spell. I jumped in and took off my Crocs immediately, stuffing another water bottle into the side pockets on the door. I had quite a collection of half-drunk bottles going.

“Did you go eat?” I asked him.

“No. I read in the car,” he replied.

“Well I know for sure that I’m hungry, and I’m sure the rest of them will be by the time we get back home, so let’s go eat, okay? Surely y’all want to eat soon, don’t you?” I asked them.

“Duh!” was the response.

“Of course, then,” Marcelo said. “There are many good places.”

“Well, I want one that will give me some food,” I told him. “But it can’t be too fancy if we’re not going home to change.”

“I know a place,” he assured me.

I relaxed, knowing that my newly interested belly was gonna get some attention.

As we headed over the bridge to Niterói and passed one of the impotent cranes, I had a sudden revival of my earlier laughing fit. But only enough to wake me up a little. Not a full blown attack.

The way home (and yes, Mirante de São Francisco felt like home, especially now that D&P were there with us) had become familiar, and there were several ways to get there ultimately, but they were all scenic. Once you had crossed under the toll booths, the roads began to feel narrower and more random than in Rio proper. Sometimes we’d go by the Niedermeyer-designed art museum, other times not. I guess it depended on whatever mood Marcelo was in.

We drove along restaurant row, passing Paludo, and Porcão, which prompted Marcelo to remark, “There you can eat when you have time and want it to be very nice. When you eat there, it is a party.” We all took note that Porcão was at the top of the food chain.

“La Verdanna,” Marcelo said, as he pulled into the portico. “Ees very good. Meats brought to your table.”

That was all any of us wanted to hear as we began to pile out. “You’re going to eat with us, aren’t you?” I asked.

“Yes, thank you,” Marcelo replied.

Jean loves having that ole picture made, doesn’t she?

La Verdanna was one of those places where the servers come by with skewers of all kinds of different meat. You are given a little card that has a green side reading “Sim” and a red side reading “Não”. If the green side is up, the guys keep coming by.

I think Marcelo knew some people there, because they seemed to buzz around us extra. Right out of the chute they came up with sausage on a skewer, filet, filet with garlic, roasted bananas, manioc flour, lobster puffs, French fries (Daniel got some), and three or four other things. I was saying “Sim” to everything, and before long, had a plateful of stuff.

They also brought out chicken hearts stacked neatly on a skewer. They really did look like little hearts. Daniel ate half the ones in the restaurant in addition to everything else they brought by. He was a marvelous, magical eating machine!  Oddly enough, I was already starting to get a little full from the rapid onslaught of skewer-to-plate-to-mouth that hits you the second you sit down, and the thought of the coraçãoes da frango kind of reminded me of stomach surfing in Salvador. So I politely flashed a “Não.”

Marcelo said “Don’t forget to try the food over there,” pointing to an elaborate buffet like the one at Paludo.

“Whaa??” I asked. “Is that included?”

“Yes,” he said. “Ees very good.”

I took his picture as a reward for this information.

Look at that noble face! A native Niteróian, just like Sergio Mendes! What’s not to love? Right in the middle of my waxing philosophic about Marcelo and his importance, he interrupted with “What about my image rights for the picture? Are you going to pay me image rights?” I responded with a big laugh, and then another picture. This time Daniel sniffed out the camera, joining the exclusive club that Robo and I are members of.

Looks like one of them gol-durned Jonas Brothers, doesn’t he? If he didn’t have that zit, he could be a star.

This next shot is funny, especially if you know Pettus. Every now and then she gets this look, especially if Robo is hammering her with some kind of information. I never have been able to tell if she is actually taking anything in, or is just mentally going, “La la la la la la la la.”

Despite the mass of food, we all decided to share a dessert. And managed to eat it all.

We headed out, all about to bust. I obrigado’ed the shit out of everybody, and so did Jean. “It’s obrigadA,” I told her on the way out. “You said obrigadO.”

“Yeah?” she answered.

“Well, I’m so much cooler than you.”

“Yeah?” she answered.

I responded by making them line up for a picture.

And then, just to make sure I wasn’t a total idiot about my hatred of flash, one with the flash.
I am right to hate it. And so is Pettus.

The valet pulled up with Marcelo’s car, and we all wedged ourselves in and headed home, which was by now a familiar thing.

When we were getting out of the car, Jean asked Marcelo, “Can you take us out tomorrow?” expecting an answer of “Yes, but you must call Sylvia.”

“No, I can’t,” Marcelo said. “I have someone else I have to pick up.” Inside my head, I heard the sound of screeching brakes.

“WHAT?” I blurted out? “What do you mean ‘have someone else to pick up’?”

“Yes, I’m sorry,” Marcelo said.

“Well what will we do?” I pleaded.

“There are a lot of cabs, and the ferry is good to get to Rio,” he said.

“We’ll try that,” the others said.

“Okay then,” I pouted. “I hope you have a great time with your new little friends.”

Marcelo laughed and said, “You will be fine. I will see you the next day.”

“You better,” we all said, getting the gate code right the first time and trudging in to watch Brazilian TV and plan the next day without The Man.

Fourth day in Rio, part 1–ferry to nowhere

Cut adrift to fend for ourselves in crappy weather

This day looked like it had fang marks on it already due to Marcelo’s having to take somebody else and leaving us to our own and Sylvia’s devices. Sob. Jean and Pettus had investigated the ferries thoroughly, and had originally wanted to take the fast boat from the station that Oscar Niemeyer had designed. But it was closed. Oh really? Closed? You don’t say!

They found out that the big ferry leaves every twenty minutes from the station on the bay in downtown Niterói. From the station in Rio we could get a cab, or try the metro, or any number of things. Oh joy! It sounded so organized. Actually, I didn’t give a rip what happened as long as I didn’t have to plan it, and could just sit around with my churren and watch Brazilian music videos and rag on things and cut the fool together. It was so easy to make Patricia laugh, which doubled the fun. Dry, understated Daniel and rip-roarin’ cousin Ben would gang up on her for lengthy hilarity-fests. My favorite new imitation was the host of Brazilian Covernation’s “muthafuckkah!”

We had finally eaten all of the chocolate cake, so Maria had baked a scrumptious pound cake to take its place. She had also gotten a feel on our eating needs, and cooked the requisite amount of bacon, loaded Pettus with cheese ball things, especially with D & P on board, and had cooked the fried eggs to perfection. We didn’t see much of Robson. I think he sat out on the deck and sang most of the time.

After breakfast, Jean got on the phone with Sylvia to get us transportation to the ferry station.
We also didn’t realize how much we had it made with Marcelo, because we all fit in his car together. This time, we were gonna have to get two cabs. Sylvia assured us that they would know what to do: take us to the ferry station. That was fine, because each car would have the advantage of a slightly used Cerqueira Translating Device aboard. We thought.

Jean was still getting her stuff together, and given the size of her MawMaw purse and the stuff she puts in it, that can be a considerable amount of time. The first cab was already there, and before we knew it, Robo, Pettus, Daniel and Patricia had taken off in it. Holy shit! What were we gonna do?
Call Sylvia and ask if she was sure she got two cabs, and where was the other cab if that were so. She assured us that everything was fine. The “tax” would be there any minute. He had had a problem. Sure. Likely story, we thought.

We were standing by the door with all our stuff together, when we heard a honk outside. Well that’s good. Stage one is complete. We headed out to the car to greet a grizzled little Brazilian guy with a cigarette stub in his teeth and a mole the size of a cherry on his cheek. He graciously opened the door for Jean, and I got in the front. “We want to go to the ferry station,” I told him, feeling sure he didn’t speak English. He didn’t. He just looked at me, smiled and spewed Portuguese from around the cigarette stub, did a quickie three-point turn, honked at the guard, and roared off down the street.

“Sylvia called you for us?” Jean asked from the back seat.

“Sylvia,” he said. That was all.

He had no trouble finding his way back out, and we were on the main boulevard by the McDonald’s presently. He took a right. That was good. He was on roads I knew. That was good. Then he took a turn I wasn’t familiar with. And started whistling. Not just “whistling,” but making beautiful bird-like tones in a melody that wasn’t really a melody, but was beautiful nevertheless.

It began to have shadings of some kind of noir film, where the hideous kidnapper has the hidden depth to possess a talent such as singing or knitting, that will bring tears to the eyes. Naah. He knew where he was supposed to be going. Didn’t he? Jean and I looked at each other like, “WTF?”

“One of the kids is gonna be in each taxi from now on,” Jean said firmly from the back seat,  clutching that big purse like the grandmother in Flannery O’Connor’s chilling “A Good Man is Hard to Find.” I nodded dumbly. The beautiful whistling continued. Possibly the cigarette butt was acting as a reed of sorts. It was all so bizarre and unsettling enough for me to only glance at the beautiful downtown buildings before we rounded a corner and came to a halt at the curb of the ferry terminal.

Jean and I both exhaled with joy and began blurting our obrigadoes to the driver. He smiled broadly, shook my hand as I gave him the money Jean shoved at me, got in his cab and didn’t roar off like I expected. He kind of hunched off. The car lurched repeatedly as he made his way down the road and out of sight. Jean and I looked at each other quizzically, and both said, “Maybe Sylvia wasn’t kidding.”

We turned toward the ticket booth, still not seeing the others. There was nothing else to do but get tickets. Surely they hadn’t taken the ferry without us. Naaaah.  Naaaah???

Naaaah! There they were! We rushed up to them and Jean spouted her previous “last words” verbatim to everybody. “We were scared shitless!” we said in unison. “I thought we were gonna be fuckin’ KIDNAPPED!” I shouted quietly, loving to drop the F-bomb around D & P. The hyperbole was just an extra fun way to illustrate a point.

And here was the ferry! We all got on together, finding seats with no problem. It was a big, modern thing, with a refreshment counter in the center, airplane-like seats with way more leg room, and big, clean windows. I wondered at the food amenities aboard, knowing this was a short little hop. But after gradually getting the picture that just because we were on vacation didn’t mean everybody else was, I realized that if you did this
every day going to and from work, the snack counter may be just what you would need.

We got seated easily, me next to a cute Brazilian girl with sexy high heels on. In my relief at not being currently held for ransom, I began to gush to her about my standard topics: the beauty of Brazil, the beauty of Brazilian women, and the sexiness of her shoes. She was very nice, and spoke enough English, when combined with my Spaniguese, to have a brief exchange.

When the ferry landed (quickly, I thought), we headed up the gangplank with the masses like people coming onto Ellis Island. Once we were out there, what did we do?

Get two cabs.

Where were we going to go?

The art museum?

Okay.

So Patricia directed one, and Daniel the other cab driver to the art museum in downtown Rio.
Our driver was faster than the other one, because he let us off, took the money, and screeched off before we could catch our breath. We turned around to look at the big modern concrete structure. There wasn’t a soul in sight. If there had been tumbleweeds in Rio, they would have been blowing. Just then, the other cab pulled up.

The others got out, and paid their guy before we could stop them.

“This place may be closed,” we told them as they came over to join us.

“Great. Well, let’s go in here. There’s a guy in here,” somebody said.

We went through the double glass doors into a small lobby decorated with some great sculpture from the collection and a guard behind the desk. This was a real guard, with a uniform and everything. Patricia began the discourse, finding out quickly that the place was closed.

Since the museum was out, we decided to go on to the marina early. The afternoon’s activities were the only thing planned, as we had decided to take a bay cruise on one of the public boats at 30 bucks each. A private excursion would have cost the 6 of us over 1400 dollars, according to Sylvia, so a public cruise it was. We needed to get to the marina. “Ask him if we can walk to the marina,” Pettus said. “We can just go on there. Surely there’s stuff we can do. And we can find out about the boat.”

Patricia laid her delicious Portuguese on the guy, a large, dark man. He replied in emphatic tones, causing her to back up slightly as he spoke to her. She returned something shyly to him, then led us out the door. The guy half-smiled as I threw an obrigado over my shoulder.

When we got outside, Patricia said, “He told me that we would be unwise to try to walk to the marina. And I mean, he said it in terms like, in English would be ‘you guys would be F-in’ idiots to walk to the marina.’ I think he meant it.”

“Really?” Pettus was almost incredulous.

“He wasn’t kidding,” Patricia continued. “He said they’ll pull a knife on you.”

“Well I ain’t walkin’ to no marina anyway,” I stated. “Don’t tell me you’re gonna have to call Sylvia to get us a tax.”

“The guy said there were some down the street somewhere,” Patricia said.

I was loving the idea of wandering around looking for a gol-durned “tax”. Just loving it. I clutched my camera so tightly that I almost absorbed it. But fortunately, we saw a gaggle of cabs down the street a ways, and began a beeline toward them. I had the rotating head on high as we sped down the street. We passed some incredibly beautiful and exotic flowers growing from some trees, but I dared not take a picture. Besides, I was going to need surgery to remove the camera from my abdomen.

We were fortunate enough to find a cab van which accommodated Daniel in the very back with the propane tank. Nobody cared. We wanted to go to the marina. Before we all piled in the giant yellow cab/van, I took this shot of a cool tree. Things were looking up.

Fourth day in Rio, part 2–bay cruise

What if they took out a party boat and nobody came? Except us?

With Patricia’s expert Portuguese, we managed to convey where we wanted to go to the driver. He took off fast, slinging gravel as he went. It seemed to say to the other cabbies hanging around there, “So long, losers! I’ve got me a REAL fare!”

We drove for a good long way before even coming close to the marina, which made us wonder who thought we’d be able to walk there, with or without the threat of knives. The driver pulled into the parking lot and straight up to a gate where he did the thumb thing, yelled a few sassy one-liners back and forth with the gate guys and drove straight through as it opened seemingly on his command. He’s been here before, I thought.

All I cared about was seeing some people. That must sound like crazy talk from the guy who just told you he hated crowds. I was just talking about some kind of life in general. Nothing that would get in my way, maybe just an ambient crowd to show that the earth was still on its axis. We had yet to see any sunshine in Rio, and the grey skies along with the empty stores and attractions had taken on entirely too much of an apocalyptic sheen. It was downright depressing.

When we got out of the cab, I noticed that the marina was not exactly teeming with humanoids. The first thing we needed to do was find the office for the boat trip. This was one of those big party schooners that holds about 30 people, and takes a fun, music and beer-filled cruise around the bay. It cost 30 bucks American per person, so we decided to try it. It’s not like it was going to be packed.

That is such an understatement. We were the only people who signed up for the 2:00 sailing. I’m sure the captain and mate were sitting in the office going “SHIT! We almost got us a bye!” But maybe not. They could have been glad anybody showed up at all, being as they were getting 360 Reais from us to be split by them. It’s not like it was that expensive for them to run the thing. As a matter of fact, it was probably easy money for them. We had checked in at 1:15, and the guys told Jean and Robo for us to check back about 1:45 or so for the trip.

What were we gonna do? There was a cafe, but it was closed. The Marina Restaurant, however, was not. We decided to go in and check it out, not necessarily to eat, but maybe get a snack or something. This place was where the nautical elite of Rio eat, obviously, given the old wood walls, low ceiling, pleasantly deferential waiters in black and white, artwork and antique sailing gew gaws aplenty. The prices were absurdly high for eating, but there WAS a nice little cozy bar right to the left, with a very nice, competent bartender at the helm.


Jean and I ordered a couple of drinks. I think she got a salty dog. I can’t remember what I got, but I know that I scoured the bar selection shelf for Meyers’s Rum with no luck. I was beginning to smell an anti-Jamaican conspiracy. Pettus and the kids got soft drinks, and I think Robo did, too, because he was feeling afflictions of his sinuses. Whatever it was I got was great! It kind of knocked the grey weather blues aside. With the free mixed nuts (lotta Brazil nuts!) and the laughs, it was just the ticket.

I asked D&P if they had ever seen Anaconda. Of course they hadn’t. And of course WE have! It has become one of Jean’s (inexplicably) and my favorite movies.  Jon Voight is so over the top in the film that it gives it the needed character punch to go along with the giant snakes that are just a little too big to scare me properly. But still enough to chill me good. There’s a line in the movie when Jon Voight’s character, Paul Serone, is strangling one of the hapless pretty girls on the boat to nowhere. He says to her, “Little Bird, do not look into the eyes of those you keel.” as he snaps her neck and throws her in the water to the giant anaconda. His leering expressions are a staple of mine, and I felt it was time to introduce Mr. Voight to D&P.

It was time to get on the boat! We paid the waiter, obrigadoed them all properly, and then did not pass up the bathrooms on the way out.

When we got to the boat, it turns out that we were, indeed the only 6 people sailing! So the 180 bucks American versus the 1400 bucks it would have cost us to charter. . .let me see. . . I think we did good.

The Captain was an Asian/Brazilian guy, possibly descended from the original 1908 migration from Japan! His mate was a small dark guy with a blank, but friendly face. Neither one of them seemed the least bit pissed off that it was just us going.

Some party cruise! Here’s Robo with a W.C. Fields-red nose from his sinal malaise, me helping Jean and her purse over the gangplank since she had enjoyed a pair of salty dogs, Daniel and Patricia not interested in drinking beer or dancing with any of us, and Pettus, who would have been game for a party if it were there. But it wasn’t by any means.

Even in this nice picture of him and Pettus, you can tell he was afflicted.

Here’s the standard take a picture of taking a picture, featuring D&P:

The ride through the little harbor was pretty. We got close to the boats, but our guy knew what for.

Pettus took this interesting shot of Jean and me with our peeps sitting on our cushions of delight.

I didn’t know if he was ready yet, but Daniel decided he wanted to give his first photographic Jon Voight. I must say, he did a great job, and being such a camera whore, it makes it even more of a beautiful thing.

I rewarded him by posing for a picture. My hair looks like one of the Lollipop Guild from The Wizard of Oz.

It was slightly misting when we boarded, so we wiped the water off the vinyl mats in the center and hopped up there. It was cozy, comfortable, and the breeze was incredible. A couple were wearing jackets, but not me! I was really totally cool for the first time on the trip. Some trade-off between the joy of sun and the comfort of clouds and mist. We sailed by all kind of stuff, mainly beautiful shoreline.

About halfway out of the harbor, the mate had put on a CD of Brazilian
party music. It was kind of like Salvador Carnaval music, more so than
the Samba music we had heard in Rio. The volume was more than any of us
wanted, and we immediately got Patricia to ask them to turn it down.
PAR-TEE!!! Whoooo!!!!

Once we had rounded Guanabara Bay toward Niterói, the sights changed. We passed the old church on the hill, one of the oldest in the area. I will find out more about it. Our Captain told Patricia and Patricia told us about it, and so did Marcelo, but damned if I can remember.

These were some of the very beaches that we passed on the way in. The same ones where Marcelo told us he wouldn’t swim.

By this time, we had found out exactly what he meant by “The water isn’t very clean.” There was detritus of all manner floating past us the closer we got to shore. We passed a long fluorescent tube, numerous bottles of Guarana soda, clothes, and even condoms. (Probably thrown from this very boat!) It was funny and pitiful at the same time. Poor Mother Earth. We suck.

The party CD played on. And given the sparse turnout, the grey skies, and our lack of activity beyond the occasional chuckle or picture, the music sounded like a revved up soundtrack of some kind. And it couldn’t have been more than an EP. There weren’t but four songs on it, and we heard them over and over. One particularly zesty song featured a cell phone ringing, to represent some kind of Brazilian booty call. The first twelve times I heard it, I thought I would turn around to see O Capitão talking to somebody. But he would only give me a pleasant smile and nod of the head as if to indicate the vastness and beauty. I think Daniel knew the song, and it became a cause for mild hilarity. In reality, I would have liked some Sergio Mendes.

Now that you know the secret of Robo’s sinus problem, these pictures show clearly what the professional model in him couldn’t hide. What a trouper.

Yessiree, we were partying our asses off! I was gonna see if the Captain wanted to buy some of our pictures for the brochure. Of course, after you’ve given Jean two salty dogs and a smooth boat ride, there is no other outcome. I don’t know what Patricia’s excuse was.

Daniel decided to do the floor show despite lack of audience interest. Afterwards we were gonna work on his Jon Voight.

Fourth day in Rio, part 3–Confeitaria Colombo

Samba winners and confections galore–even a fancy liquor store!

There was so much more to see from the Bay than I had expected. Besides the plethora of flotsam and jetsam, the buildings took on a more spectacular appearance when viewed from the water. We came up on a beautiful mint green structure that looked more like a fairytale castle than anything else. It was in actuality another museum, but had before that been the last government building in use before Brazil became a republic.

With all the naval accessories and cranes in the background, the magic wasn’t as visible. But a good tight shot makes a world of difference.

So does a different angle.

Patricia had woken up during Daniel’s and my ribald laughter at the floating condoms, but Jean managed to rack through it all. I dragged the kids together for an atmospheric shot with the castle in the background. Just for their Mom! Too bad Daniel has his eyes closed. Maybe I could Photoshop them open.

We plowed through all the trash back toward the marina, passing by one of the airports, and getting to see planes take off over us. That was very cool, except they were both TAM, so I involuntarily flinched each time.

We were back. I don’t know what I had expected at the beginning, but it was great to have that boat to ourselves, regardless of the weather or non-festive conditions. It was relaxing, pretty, and atmospheric. I think we lucked out in this case, considering the crappy foundation of the day.

The harbor was beautiful and placid. Where were the people? I guess clouds drive them inside. We disembarked over the planks, me making sure rack-scar-riddled Jean got across safely. It was time for the sanitário!

There were several interesting signs in the bathroom, all in Portuguese, but I got the drift. In addition to the one about not flushing toilet paper, the one on the wall when you first entered said something like “We know there are drains in the floor, but you are not supposed to pee there regardless of whatever compulsions you may have. The urinals are for you to pee in.” You must admit, my translating skills had really gotten good!

Robo came in behind me, and I reminded him not to use the drains. He appreciated the heads up.

When we came out, there was Jean at an ATM trying to get cash again. This was the third one she had tried that day, having two unsuccessful encounters at the ferry terminal. Still no luck. She decided it was time to call the credit card company. I began to fog over and headed for the exit.

Somebody was hungry. Guess who. Anyone?     Anyone?   Daniel. That’s right. Daniel. We were fortunate to walk two doors down and find a little store with three or four guys hanging around fast talking in the their native tongue. We all got what we wanted, me getting another agua com gaís, Daniel getting whatever food they had in the case.

We had really timed this perfectly, though, because on a little TV with a snowy picture standing in the corner, they were giving the final scores of Samba Carnaval! Of course I was rooting for Tijuca and Grande Rio, being as they were two of the only four I had seen. Everybody agreed that Grande Rio was fantastic, and they were in the top winners, as was Tijuca. The guys had a spirited conversation going that Patricia translated as their discussion of the scores. The Rioans take their Carnaval seriously. Every inhabitant seems to have a school that he roots for, and these guys were pissed off because they thought Beija-Flor was going to win, like they had five out of the last six years.

Which they did. And we JUST MISSED THEM! Arrrrghhhh!

Beija-Flor has been rather controversial with whispered rumors of “too much corporate sponsorship” and the like. Their director and carnavalesco, Laíla (one name) was also in the news frequently. Many loved him, but just as many hated him. I ran across this item about Laíla that I found very interesting. It’s interesting that the “thugs” in the story would be dedicated enough to one school to commit felony. It also amazes me that the “thugs” or any of the macho inhabitants of Rio wouldn’t be casting anti-male slurs against half the costumes. Curiouser and curiouser.

We expressed our condolences to the guys in the bodega about Beija-Flor’s win, then headed to the gate to get a cab.

Robo looks like he’s feeling a little better in this picture.

Jean had her trusty travel books with her in the MawMaw purse, and we set about looking for something to do that would combine food and fun. She zeroed in on an entry about Confeitaria Colombo, a 100+ year old confectionary that is world famous, and a Rio staple. Jean had said two things that interested me: 100+ years and confectionary. That’s like, food, right?  We were all down with it. I took these pictures of a neat bird while we alternately sat on the curb, wandered around, made Patricia laugh, and eyed the other cabbie who was parked several spaces down. He didn’t have enough room for all of us, but knew somebody who did, and he called him for us. But then he just sat there looking at us like “Thanks for screwing me out of the fare, ya’ bastards!” I think Robo tipped him with a finder’s fee, and his attitude cleared right up.

The cab pulled up, knew exactly where we wanted to go, and then proceeded to try to screw us on the fare. But P & D were on top of the matter and alerted us. The guy then came up with some kind of “addendum” to the fare code that we didn’t know about. Rather than argue, we paid him, glad that we were at least in one car. I envisioned Marcelo with his new friends out at Porcão, rattling off things like “nothing is too good for these wonderful people!” and toasting wildly with one hand while he waved a skewer of filet mignon with the other.

Confeitaria Colombo was on a side street, almost like an alley. I guess being as old as it is, things built up around it, sometimes in an unexpected way. There were doors rolled closed all around the place, but being a tourist mecca, and obviously still important to Rioans, it was open.

The impact upon coming in was devastating, like walking into some kind of jewelry box with tiny people in it, and even tinier treats everywhere. The stained glass on the dome ceiling over the balcony was incredible. It reminded me of the glass that the people on The Poseidon Adventure crashed through when the boat turned over. There were gigantic mirrors lining the walls, each framed in hand carved wood. All the swells in Rio and all the royalty made this place a tradition. The hoi polloi is always quick to follow the rich. And the tourists will go wherever they’re told. But this place still held onto enough real atmosphere to make me feel like I was being treated.


We nosed around, looking at all the stuff in the cases, actually too much to take in, then got in line for a table. There was an old lady in front of us who began to bitch up a storm to a maitre d’. He immediately sat her at a table which she quickly deemed unsatisfactory. The last I saw of them, they were deep into the place, she pointing out various tables, many occupied, and screeching in Portuguese. Patricia encapsulated her rant for us: “You are treating me like a beggar.” I began to look at the champagne and get ideas.

We got seated presently, and began to examine the huge menu. Patricia was totally in charge of Jean and me. Daniel was going to eat anything he could. I began to look around at the decor. It was certainly lush, and looked more like something European, but then I suppose it was their influence on the upper class of Rio that was being emulated. The mirrors were stunning, all about twelve feet high with intricate carved wood frames.

And juxtaposed nicely around the room with these antique treasures were a ton of potted poinsettias. Plastic poinsettias. With dust on them. WTF? Surely they were put there to make the less fortunate feel at home. It was somewhat akin to going into Queen Elizabeth’s bathroom and finding a big can of Glade and a book of matches on the toilet seat.

We settled on a melange of flavors, some savory, some sweet. I also ordered a bottle of Califonia Chandon champagne, which was weird. It was more expensive here than in the U.S., but it was a known value, and not that much more given the 2 to 1 nature of the dollar. Robo, meanwhile, seemed to be do
ing bad. Jean offered him the entire array of her apothecary, but he politely declined, having issues that prevent him from taking stuff willy nilly like so many people do. I looked up and he was on the phone. To whom? Doctor? Who knows. He’s such an international sort, there’s no telling.

It took a long time to get our food, but at least we had the champagne to enjoy. D&P got a couple of Cokes. We noticed several tables having a hell of a time getting their checks or paying them, and that didn’t bode well for us. But what would we do? The wait staff seemed to be “confident” enough to let the customers stew in their own juices just long enough to show the upper hand, but not long enough to keep them from coming back.

Didn’t seem to bother Pettus and me. After the champagne, especially. And the food was delicious. The chicken and meat pies were a great complement to the champagne and chocolate that came with it.

While we were waiting on the check, I decided to scout out the bathroom. Duh. The walls were covered with 70s wood paneling and small framed pictures of Old Rio that were fascinating. Once again, there were signs everywhere. A new one to me, which I then saw throughout the rest of the trip, entailed asking you to use both hands to get the towel out of the dispenser. And I don’t mean as a “serving suggestion,” because these messages were taped on there extra.

Maybe they have crappy towel dispensers that don’t go through the rigorous inspection we have in the U.S. Here, you can read the instructions about “both hands” on the dispenser, ignore it, and have it work anyway. The towel dispenser people know that they could be sued if somebody gets a crooked towel, even if they don’t follow the directions printed on the dispenser. It’s a good thing, because stupid people need to live, too!

The toilet stall contained a large lidded garbage can and a fervent plea on the wall to use it. I can’t imagine how old the plumbing may have been, but I CAN see how much fun a sewage backup in this place would be. It might be the only thing that would get the wait staff to step lively.

The whole thing was a real high-tea-style treat, and with the exchange rate, cost about what a breakfast at the Original Pancake House would. Except for the champagne, which was about as expensive there as it is here–about 22 bucks American.

Once outside, I insisted on a picture of the group showcasing one of the famous Brazilian sidewalks. I don’t know how many designs there are in Rio, but they are in other cities as well, such as Manaus, which you will see later.

This picture is perfectly balanced: Jean and the MawMaw purse and Daniel make great bookends for poor sick Estado Coco Robo and his girls.

We decided that since we were downtown, we’d try to find Robo some relief for his sinuses, and Jean wanted to buy whatever over the counter stuff they had that required a prescription in the U.S. She likes to get antibiotics and Lomotil and stuff like that. And as you can see, the purse had room for more!

We got what we wanted at the pharmacy (one of the only things open), and began walking toward the ferry when we saw a real attractive liquor and gourmet foods store open in an old building. It was like walking into the library of some shipping baron: kind of dusty; with beautiful wood walls, floors and counters; and an overwhelming selection of bottles stacked ceiling high, all labeled meticulously, many very pricey. I immediately looked for Meyers’s Rum, but THEY DIDN’T HAVE IT! They DID, however, have a very nice bottle of Appleton Estate Xtra Reserve Black Label, which cost a little more than in the U.S.: about 50 bucks. But I decided to get it anyway, and Jean doesn’t care. She wants me to be happy. Ain’t that sweet?

Once I had made my request known to the man, he pulled over a rolling
ladder and climbed to the rum shelf, all the while looking down at me
quizzically as he pointed to various bottles, until he landed on the
Appleton. I was excited to have anything other than the ubiquitous Barcardi Gold, and Robo was going to be delighted as well once he tasted it. He had been pretty well indoctrinated into the ways of dark rum, lime and club soda, and the Appleton is delicious.

The liquor proprietor and the ladies on the food side were very nice, given our sizable purchases and on-board translators. We needed to haul ass, however, because it was getting dark, and we wanted to get to the ferry. The museum guard’s translated words came back to mind for me, and I’m sure the others as well. I could already feel my duffeled camera trying to burrow into my body, and the bottle of Appleton’s was almost as precious. It’s odd how once dusk hits, people walk faster, more resolutely, looking straight ahead. I was doing all that, except for the straight ahead part. My head was set on “rotate.”

Everything in downtown Rio proper seemed to be in a good proximity to the ferry terminal. We found it easily, especially with Pettus the homing pigeon’s surefire directions. She has an uncanny directional chip in her head that allows her to remember how to get places after going there only once. We tested her more than once, and her rating was over 90%. Simply amazing. I couldn’t find my way out of a pill bottle.

We arrived at the terminal just as the departure clock was ticking down to 3 minutes. Surely we could get tickets in time to make that ferry. Well, not really. Jean got our tickets without any trouble, but Robo and Pettus had all kinds of trouble since D&P were on their bill. The lady managed to give them two tickets and then just stood there. Patricia explained that they needed two more. The lady got the idea and began to process the order, taking Robo’s money. He handed the tickets to D&P, and Jean gave me one. We hurried over to the turnstiles, all marked with a green “x,” and got our passes through. The clock was ticking down to 20 seconds when Jean, Robo and Pettus all tried to get through the turnstiles. They repeatedly put their tickets through the reader, but they were returned every time. The friendly green “x” had been replaced by an uncooperative red one.

There was no way the three of us were gonna take the ferry by ourselves, so we sauntered over to them to chat, kind of like visiting loved ones in prison. They were locked out until the ferry had left. It’s a pretty good system, actually.

Once they got inside, we sat under a fan as much as we could, and Jean tried unsuccessfully  AGAIN to get money out of the ATM. Since she had time to hang around, she began the calls to the credit card company right there. I was fogging over again.

The next ferry was there quickly, and we all dashed aboard like we were gonna miss it. But in the endless cycle of admittance and blockage, there were gonna be people just like Jean, Robo and Pettus, who were left standing outside staring at a red “x” for this very ferry.

The trip over was rather silent due to our semi-exhaustion and mass of infirmities. We boarded two cabs and got home with no difficulty, since we had the Cerqueirabots 2000 aboard.

We decided to get Sylvia to order us a few Queen Pizzas, since D&P hadn’t had them yet. Fine with me. I was ready to eat anything, and it was time to deflower that pretty little bottle of Appleton. It was delightful, and Robo heartily agreed. We spent the time waiting on the tax to bring the pizzas by taking turns on the computer, looking at the view, and watching Brazilian TV. It was such a wonderful scene of domesticity.

Jean’s books had yielded information on a great day trip to Petrópolis, the summer home of the Portuguese royalty and their sycophants, er, friends. We would get Marcelo to take us there. Back on the phone to Sylvia to book Marcelo for. . . “What time do we want to leave tomorrow?” Jean hollered at us.

“10:00,” Pettus hollered back.

“10:00,” Jean said to Sylvia. “Uh huh. Uh huh. Yeah, the pizzas got here, and they’re delicious. Okay, thanks! We’ll look for Marcella at 10.”

“It’s MarcelO,” I corrected her. “You’re calling him Marcella, which is feminine. You’re gonna make him mad. MAR-CEL-O.”

“What?” she asked.

Fifth day in Rio, part 1–Petrópolis, The Imperial City

Getting there is half the fun.

 

The Blackberry announced the day with its usual style and grace. This time, rather than turn it off, I got up, went in the bathroom and left it going, just to see how long Jean would let it ring.

By the time I had gotten out of the shower, it was still shrilly singing, and showed no signs of stopping. I finally turned it off and woke her up just in time to show her my clown face galding. As I mentioned earlier, in confidence of course, my resultant rashes were stranger than ever in Brazil, and had actually begun to resemble a big red clown mouth. We both had a hearty laugh over it, and she got moving in time for us to be upstairs in time for Maria’s scheduled 9:00 breakfast.

More deliciousness that would last us well into the day. The pound cake was on its second outing, but was as good as when it was first baked. Maria kept a sparkling kitchen, and all the food was placed neatly on the refrigerator shelves, we the guests having our own shelf. We weren’t supposed to get stuff from the other sections, because that’s what Maria used for our breakfast. If we did, there would be a charge for it and Maria would be bummed out, or so the sign on the refrigerator said.

I could imagine a bunch of rowdies coming in from a big night, ripping into the goods and eating all the rolled ham and cheese, then burning every one of the cheese ball things, then passing out. Bad guests!  Well, not us. We never touched anything on the other shelves. Oh all right, I ate a piece of ham one afternoon, but I put the Saran Wrap back exactly like I found it, and unless Maria was counting, I was gonna get off scot free. But there was always Robson. HE would be the one to rat me out.

Jean called Sylvia to confirm our 10:00 with Marcelo. All was on track. We were a lot brisker today, all except for Robo. He seemed to be feeling even worse. But ever the stalwart, he never complained, and said nothing about it except “HNKONNNNHHHHHH,” and then he was usually talking to a Kleenex.

Marcelo pulled up on the dot of 10:00. Okay, maybe he was late. I don’t know or care. We were just glad it was him pulling up, whenever he did it. He honked for us, and we all filed out the gate. As he got out of the car to let us in, we all heard that little “ahhhhhhhh” sound of the glowing choir and harps. He looked so good to us in his business casual outfit, mole free, smoke free, with a head full of knowledge and fun, standing next to his relentless car that would accommodate us all.

Did I mention the weather? No? Cloudy. Misty. And we were headed up into the Serra de Orgãos mountains, like way up, right into those clouds. Cool?

We had barely passed the McDonald’s when I turned to Marcelo and asked snidely, “So, how were your new friends?”

“It was an Australian guy,” he replied, saying nothing more, as if waiting on me to ask.

“Well?”

“The first thing he did when he got in the car was ask me (in an Australian imitation) ‘So mate, ya’ know where I can get some ka-kaine (cocaine)?’
I said, ‘What?’
‘Ka-kaine. Ya’ know. . . blow.’
‘No, I am sorry,’ I said.”

His little mini-drama, complete with voices, was hilarious. It was particularly funny to hear a Brazilian guy speaking English while affecting an Australian accent.

But really, what kind of idiot was this guy? Marcelo would be the last person on earth that looked like a cocaine connection. I was kind of insulted on his behalf, but still managed to spit out, “Well, it’s what you get for leaving us.”

The regular citizens are not too hot on cocaine in Brazil, from what I could tell, with the violent crime associations and all. The instruction book that came with our house had a whole section about it. It was written in stern, scare-tactic style, but it made perfect sense. According to the manual, if you even make contact with someone to buy drugs, they will immediately target you, the visitor, who is probably carrying cash and has access to other assets. They watch you, and where you’re staying as well. Then they’ll come in and rob you when you’re out. . .or still at home, which would be worse. These are the people that carry knives and guns.

But then, it can be even worse if you get busted by the police, who are sometimes less than above board. They’ll strip you of all your money, then kick you out of the country naked.

Ka-kaine? Uh, no thanks, mate.

We crossed the bridge heading in a direction new to us, marveling at the changing landscape, which was suddenly becoming more industrial. It was dotted here and there with new enterprises such as car repair and building supply, even pre-fab pools, but it was mainly kind of sad looking. There were several places that sold the brick that is used in all the favelas. I don’t know if it is of an inferior quality (probably), but it could certainly be used creatively in many building applications to stunning result. It is the thing that gives the favelas their terra cotta spark.

“I must get gas to make it to Petrópolis,” Marcelo said, beginning an exit onto a service road. Suddenly, a giant truck came from nowhere, nearly blowing us back into traffic as he barged ahead of us. I almost dropped a load in the front seat, and looked at Marcelo in alarm. There was not an iota of change in his expression.

“Did you see that?” I hollered at him.

“Yes. Are you hurt?” he asked, with just enough sarcasm under his deadpan to smack it home.

Totally unflappable. That’s what he was.

We pulled into a gas station that had a little mart inside. I wasn’t about to pass up a bathroom or a chance to get my new favorite thirst quencher: agua com gaís. While Marcelo filled up, I went into the store to talk to the ladies inside.

I put on my very best expression of international love and told them how thirsty and sweaty I was, and how I loved agua com gaís. Then I held out my hand with money in it and let the cashier take what she needed, beaming at her in the process. She giggled, took the money, I obrigadoed them both and went to find the sanitário.

Sanitário? A misnomer for sure. This place was so totally foul, like a gas station bathroom on the highway to the Bates Motel. These places test your dexterity with the backs of your hands, your feet, and your elbows doing everything. And you want to breathe through your mouth to avoid smelling anything, but then begin to think of the molecules you may be swallowing. Challenging! Fun! I couldn’t wait to get to the car to tell the others! It kept running through my mind how to say in Portuguese, “Sanitário is a bad name for that place.”

Nobody had gotten out but Marcelo and me, and it was funny to come back and see them stuffed in there, D&P in the backback lounging all over each other, Jean half hidden by her purse, Robo looking miserable, and Pettus content and complacent. Through the car windows, it was like looking at some kind of exhibit.

I had cleaned out my water bottles before Marcelo’s new fare came, and felt smug as I filled the pockets again.

The road through the mountain was gorgeous, with different flora peeking out sporadically everywhere. The large view was punctuated by trees that flashed silver among all the green. Marcelo told us that they are
not flowering trees, but showing the underside of their leaves.

We continued higher and impossibly higher, with more to climb. We passed numerous small stands where fruits and vegetables would normally be sold, but THEY WERE CLOSED, of course. Now and again, there would be a place selling colorful rugs made out of recycled cloth. They were kitschy cool, but nobody was interested in stopping and looking at any of it.

Who would expect to pass a horse just standing on the side of the road grazing? Not me.


It seemed that every turn we took in the extremely curvy road yielded another view, partially and beautifully obscured by clouds at times, and crystal clear at others. The onset of Petrópolis was very gradual, until we were hit with the visage of this monstrous German structure.

Marcelo told us the name of the place: The Palácio Quitandinha (named for one of the rivers in Petrópolis). He also said that it was formerly a swanky casino resort with ballrooms, restaurants, luxury rooms, and a lake in the front in the shape of Brazil. The abolition of gambling in the 40s and a fire or two put it in lesser stead for a while, as it became apartments. It had now been renovated and is used as a convention center/hotel, and condominiums, too I think Marcelo told us. The lake was still shaped like Brazil, but it was impossible to get the full view, so we had to take their word for it. We went in to gawk at the foyer, and one of the public rooms (roped off to non-owners). The floors were intricately laid local wood. I found this link with other pictures of this marvelous beast.

The German styling of the hotel was a nod to their large population and influence in the early days of Petrópolis, which was founded by Dom Pedro II in the mid 1800s as a summer home. His father, Dom Pedro I had found the place coolly refreshing and charming, and in 1822 bought a huge farm, planning to put his summer home there. It was never finished, as he abdicated the throne to his five-year-old son, Dom Pedro II and returned to Portugal for an entirely different royal fight.

“What about King John VI?” you’re asking.

Well, we remember that King John VI came to Rio from Portugal in 1808 to escape Napoleon. He set up a great life in Brazil and ruled successfully for over 10 years in Rio, making it the capital of Portugal during that time–the only non-resident capital in the world. He brought innumerable benefits and advances to the country, and they are rightly proud of him.

John left Brazil in 1821 to secure his place in Portugal, because the people there were hacked off about his being out of town all the time. I mean, imagine how the Portuguese felt. Here was old Kingy hauling ass from the Napoleonic threat and leaving them to take care of it themselves, and then returning with all this Brazil nonsense in his background.

He left Brazil in charge of his son, Dom Pedro I, who declared it independent from Portugal and himself Emperor almost
instantly after his father left the country. It was a move espoused by the King to keep Brazil under family rule of some sort before any usurpers came along to claim her.

Eventually the Portuguese got pissed off at DPI, and like his father he decided to go back home to save HIS spot in Portugal. When he abdicated to DPII at his tender age, he had a bunch of regents watching him until he was 15 and deemed fit to rule as the second and last Emperor of Brazil.

Dom Pedro II founded Petrópolis on his father’s land in 1843 when he was about 17. He wanted his summer palace to be surrounded by farms, so he encouraged Rhineland Germans to settle there and have farming outskirts to his new city. Hence all the German influence. The swells and hangers-on followed, and Petrópolis became the hottest place in the mountains. It was even the capital of the state of Rio de Janeiro for several years.

Wow! Head-filling information!

When we were back in the car, Marcelo told us that there was an old Colonial house somewhere around there that was now a little museum we could go look at. Sounded good to us. We were a very placid crowd. He drove around a little bit, missing it a few times, stopping to ask various locals a few times, and then triumphantly pulled up in front. “Here it is,” he said. It was a tiny little thing. Kind of like seeing the Alamo in the flesh.

It was small, but cozy, and you could feel the old vibes in it. There was a cute Brazilian girl that told Patricia about the grants they get to keep the house up, and asked us to sign the book. She never said anything about any money from us.

The first thing that struck me was a shadow box with the Virgin and Baby in it. It was beautiful, being simple, yet ornate at the same time, with the trompe l’oeil columns and millwork. The composition of the figures in the box was dramatic, with their diminutive size failing to fill the frame; the cross loomed high above, a harbinger of huge events.

A-HA! The origin of the toilet paper custom must have begun with this chamber pot holder. I don’t see any flusher on it. And of course I was fascinated with it. I like the little shelf for “accessories.”

Here’s another good juxtaposition of photos. The chamber pot doohickey with a portrait of Robo, who feels like a resident of said pot.

This old sewing machine and victrola were both cool. I always like to imagine the people actually using the stuff that you’re looking at. What kind of music was it?


Okay, that was fun. And it was free. Time to go see something else. Marcelo turned around and headed back toward downtown, passing a house on a hill behind a large hedge. “My sister lives there,” he said. I was surprised and pleased that he was telling us about his personal self. “She has a sport camp for kids.”

“How did she get up here? I thought y’all were from Niterói,” I asked him.

“She thought it would be a good business. Only for about two years has she been doing it. It seems to be doing better,” he said.

Downtown was glutted with traffic and beautiful old buildings. It was obvious that Petrópolis was bursting at the seams and trying to accommodate a more modernized city center while not sacrificing any of the history. They seemed to be doing a pretty good, albeit slow job of it.

It was strange, because after a couple of turns, over picturesque streams and walkovers, we were in a residential area populated with luxurious old homes, some fully restored, some still awaiting the kiss of a dedicated owner.


We even passed The Count d’Eu’s home, the rapscallion who was married to Dom Pedro’s daughter, Isabel. I say “rapscallion” because he obviously had streaks of extreme vanity and heartlessness. His reputation was sullied in the late 1860s from his behavior as a late-coming General in the War of Triple Alliance. Briefly, this little war broke out when the president of Paraguay attacked Brazil in 1864. Tiny little Paraguay! Brazil linked up with Argentina and Uruguay to fight this pest, and had him quashed by the late 1860s. Count d’Eu had been bugging his father-in-law, DPII, to make him a general in the war ever since it began, but DPII didn’t think his son-in-law had the right qualifications. The Count continued pestering the old man until he finally relented. By the time the Count got to the war, Argentina and Uruguay had stopped fighting, declaring that they had beaten Paraguay to a bloody pulp, which they had. The Count refused to stop, and forced one of his underlings to participate in what is now called genocide on the Paraguayans. Marcelo seemed rather disgusted by the Count as he told us about his shortcomings.

His house was large, and occupied a corner lot, but needed more renovation. I believe it was being made into a museum as well.

Right across the street from some of these charming homes was The Crystal Palace, a performance and celebration spot in the center of town, built by Count d’Eu and Isabel to beautify the city for their pals. It was originally deeded to the Horticulture Society of Petrópolis, of which Count d’Eu was head. The pieces to the Palace were begun in 1870 in France, but it took until 1884 to finish the structure. It had now been taken over by the historic trust, and was redone with plexiglas instead of glass, but it was still redolent of luxury and royalty.

This royal feeling was also for sale, as the Crystal Palace could be rented for private events. There was even a stage there. If Chevy 6 ever played in Petrópolis, I hoped it would be right there. Jean took my picture with an air microphone doing just that. And looking like a gol-durned whale in that white shirt with my tiny head.



I think it would be kind of weirdly neat to live across the street from The Crystal Palace like these people do. The homes were probably originally owned by friends of the crown, though at the time, the crown was heinously unpopular, due to Dom Pedro II’s daughter, Isabel’s freeing of the slaves in Brazil. You heard me right. DPII went out of town a few times, leaving Isabel as Regent in charge. On one of the trips he took in the late 1880s, Isabel up and freed the slaves while he was gone. Of course, she and her father had shared the idea before, so it’s not like she totally surprised Daddy with her bold move.

The reaction was mixed. Pope Leo gave her the Golden Rose, and enlightened people began to call her Isabel the Redeemer. But there was still a very conventional and rich stratum of Brazilian society that supported slavery, and it caused for some damaging discontent with DPII.

In 1889, Dom Pedro II was deposed in a military coup, and his whole family sent packing to Europe: his wife Teresa, his daughters Isabel and Leopoldina, and their husbands and children. It was odd, because most people still loved DPII, and he was a good ruler. Nevertheless, the royal family was banished from Brazil until 1922, the centennial celebration of Brazil’s becoming an empire under DPI. By then, Brazilians felt comfortable in their new Federalist Republic skin since the Constitution of 1891, and also maintained warm feelings for the Doms, who brought more to Brazil than they could have generated themselves. So, in a rather ironic move, the Royal Family was allowed back in the country on their anniversary, by people that had initially kicked them out because of their royalness in the first place.

Fifth day in Rio, part 2–Petrópolis, The Imperial City

Laughing WITH royalty, not AT them.


After we had worn out our welcome at The Crystal Palace, and Jean had bought a souvenir demitasse set for her boss’ sister-in-law, Marcelo suggested we go look at Alberto Santos-Dumont’s little house.
WHO?
Alberto Santos-Dumont, the father of aviation, that’s who.

“Whoa now, what about the Wright brothers?” you protest.

Well, I’m sorry to tell you, there are a bunch of historians and how-ever-many-billion Brazilians that will tell you differently. According to studies, the Wrights never documented the Kitty Hawk thing properly when asked to. Dumont has witnesses that saw his little box plane, called the 14bis, launch, fly and land, all unaided. The skeptics say that the Wrights didn’t launch unaided.

Whatever. Marcelo let us off to walk up the tiny narrow stairs to the little house. Smashed against the wall was a vendor selling souvenirs and postcards. Robo told me how he always wanted to take a trip and only snap closeup pictures of the postcards instead of buying them, then passing the pictures off as his own. It sounded good to me.

There was a slight glare on the plastic, but it’s a valid idea, I’ll have to say. The guy running the booth looked at me like I was an idiot cheapskate, so I hit him with an “obrigado” and tried to zoom up the little steps after Robo, but tripped on one of the uneven and unusually tall risers on the way up.

Dumont’s hideaway was indeed tiny, and looked like a dollhouse. He was extremely superstitious, and thought that each journey should start on the right foot. Therefore, the stairs in his house were all half-runged, and started with the right half. I can see OSHA’s reaction to something like this.

His house was nothing more than one room with a loft. There was no kitchen, because he always ordered from the hotel across the street (which is now the Catholic University of Petrópolis). His bed doubled as his storage, and it was painfully short–about 5 feet 3 inches. Dumont was a short man. There was a tiny little bathroom with hot water rigged up in there somehow, and a giant jug above the toilet for ease of flushing.

The house looks like something in Disney World, doesn’t it? Robo is walking into the loft from the upper yard, which was beautifully landscaped to further hide and beautify the house.

Fun! Interesting! What’s next?

The navigation of the narrow stairs back to Marcelo’s car. We were either going to the museum or the cathedral, depending on which was open first. I got a nice shot of the Catholic University, former hotel and food dispensary for Alberto Santos-Dumont.

The cathedral wasn’t open yet, and we weren’t ready for lunch, so Marcelo suggested we go to the  Imperial Museum, which was the former summer home of Dom Pedro II. He pointed out the group of horse-drawn carriages parked in front and said, “I was the driver for Amazing Race Brazil a few years ago.”

“What?” Jean and I exclaimed.

“You know the show?” Marcelo asked, eyebrows almost to the ceiling.

“We LOVE that show!” we said in unison. “You got to be involved?”

“Yes. The people had to get in the carriages and do something. I drove the camera people  and the producers here. It was very interesting and fun.”

“How totally cool!” I said, like I was talking to Phil Keoghan himself.

We pulled into the gate for Marcelo to let us out into the light rain.

“Are you coming?” I asked.

“No,” he said. “You will enjoy it. Ees very good.”

I had finally figured out that Marcelo had probably seen the sights enough to suit him, and why pay the admission fee to see them again?

The Palace was a beautiful Bermuda pink color with white accents. It was big and impressive, but not any larger than some regular old private mansions. It was, after all, just a summer home. Beyond the big wrought iron gate was a lush garden filled with myriad varieties of exotic plants cultivated by DPII himself. Marcelo said the whole family were avid gardeners. The green space provided a stunning view from the front, and privacy from the curious citizens that may want a peek.

Here’s a nice shot of the Palace I found on Wiki.

It had started to rain as we walked up the long driveway to the house. Tender hothouse flower Robo covered up immediately with Jean’s help.

Can you see the raindrops on my lens? I put that camera through its paces, but I want it to be safe.

The porte cochére was pretty, and looked like something at a Southern country club. I like this shot of P,D&J. It looks like some kind of album cover. What sort of band would it be? Daniel as lead singer with Pettus and Jean on backup? I think it could sell!

Jean had read that you put on these oversized slippers with buffers on the bottom of them in order for you to be able to walk on the floor. I was looking forward to that, since I like the slidey feel of being in my sock feet. As we got our shoes, I started to take a picture of Jean’s feet in them. The guy at the front zoomed in to stop me immediately. “No pictures,” he said, not in an unfriendly tone, but matter of fact.

“I just want to take a picture of the shoes,” I protested.

“No pictures, please,” the guy repeated. “You will leave your camera inside.”

“Oh, all right,” I pouted, putting it aside and skulking to the counter where they would take it and put it in a locker. They wanted everything we had: umbrellas, cameras, the MawMaw purse. . .EVERYTHING. I wondered how the purse was gonna fit in the locker, but they managed, once one docent got behind the other to help her shove it in.

The foyer was grand and lovely, with doors opening to both of the first rooms in each wing. We shuffled down the hall to the dining room, which had the dinner table set with the finest china. It was beautiful and elegant, but once again, not any larger than many dining rooms I had seen. It was then that we all heard a strange noise and turned to each other to ask what it was. We promptly found out. Beyond the plexiglas that blocked the door, there was a mechanical thing, about the size of a sofa lamp, topped with a little video screen that played jerky, intermittent images of faces. The robot thing clicked and whirred, moving in stereotypical fashion, though it was rooted to the ground.

None of us got it at first. What the hell was going on? Was it a security camera of some kind? We then read the sign on the wall. This was just one of the installations by emerging, or prominent, or student artists designed just for the Imperial Museum. This robot thing was supposed to represent the servants that habited the palace, and how their slavery and/or servitude reduced them to their mechanical roots. The ever-changing faces were self-explanatory. I’ve gotta say, they started off with a bang as far as installations go, because the rest of them sucked, and were contrived and pretty stupid. And don’t tell me I don’t understand “statement” art, because I do. All too well, sometimes.

We skated to the next room, which was the Empress’ sewing parlor. She was fond of needlework, and would entertain ladies for hours as they sewed and gossiped. The feminine room was populated by about 8 matching chairs with tapestry covers. There were small tables all around, with the centerpiece being Her Highness’ sewing kit made out of all kind of weird imported ivory and stuff.

The art installation gag in this room nearly made us do just that: gag. It consisted of a gigantic pink intestine-looking thing that wormed its way through the chairs and around the room. The card said that it represented the thread that sewing provided to these ladies. Bah! It looked like an attempt to pull a Cristo in a tiny space by wrapping and decorating it. But it lacked the enormous scale and effort of a Cristo, and came off as distracting and stupid. I was in full gear and riding my aesthetic high horse proudly by this time. Daniel and Patricia and I had managed to end up in a clump together, so I entertained them with my hyperbolic criticisms and creative use of cuss words.

We had gotten separated from the others because Daniel and I decided to go find the bathroom, which was not in the house (duh). We had to shuffle across the floor, leave our overshoes, and head down stone steps into the garden to find it. The roof was very low, and it was still raining, so Daniel and I were ducking under the eaves to find our sanitário. I had turned around to say something clever to him when I ran right into a beam hanging under the eave. “Sheisskopf!” I shouted.

“What?” Daniel laughed, probably most at the injury.

“Sheisskopf,” I said. “It means ‘shit head’ in German.”

“I’ll have to remember that,” Daniel said. And he will, too. It’s probably already part of his vernacular. He latched onto “surreptitious” the first time I said it. It became our code word. But now, “sheisskopf” was coming up fast.

We found most of the others and continued rambling through the museum. The music room was on the end of the right wing, being a late addition, as a birthday present to DPII. The instruments were exquisite, including a gold harp that begged to be played. DPII and his family were all music lovers and many of them accomplished musicians themselves. The installation in this room involved giant backlit photos of a favela put over all the windows. The artist stated that, rather than see the beautiful garden of the rich when one looked out the room, he would see the pitiful poverty of a favela. It was kind of neat, and looked very strange when we first peered into the room.

This was when we started spotting the family portraits. Woo! These were some dog-ugly folks! And portraiture is supposed to be flattering. I’d hate to see what they really looked like. D,P& I had a blast running the royals down. I was riding a different high horse at this time: the superior saddle of the unrich and unwashed looking down on the cushy lifestyle of the royals.
Of course, it’s nothing but an elaborate ruse to cover some serious sour grapes, but who cares? It’s so much fun! By the time we had gotten out of the place and met Marcelo, I was blasting him with a diatribe that was just this side of communist. I assure
d him that I was no communist, and that I work my ass off, and that capitalism is the best, but I still couldn’t reconcile the favelas, or poverty in general, and can’t to this day.

We passed one of the formal sitting rooms, by now looking for the art gag first. Here we were met by a little sand castle sitting like a dog turd on a gorgeous rug. We all did a double take at first, then read the sign. It was some tripe about the temporary nature of sand castles, and just because you are so powerful, everything eventually deteriorates. I wondered how much of a grant these artists had received.

The crown jewels were appropriately impressive, and served to rev me up like a proletarian chainsaw. There was a jewelry box that Robo was fascinated with, marveling at how it got across the sea without being broken, due to its incredible delicacy.

Dom Pedro’s study was nice, but the most impressive item was on the desk: the first telephone in Brazil, installed by DPII after he had seen Edison’s display at the International Exposition of 1876. He couldn’t call many places. Well, one, actually. The lines ran only to his farm on the outside of town.

The upstairs featured a plethora of bedrooms with stupid art displays in them. The beds were all hugely austere and uncomfortable looking, and in the nursery, the two massive wood cribs looked like either one would comfortably house Rosemary’s baby. Cree-PEE!

On this floor, in a location that looked more like an afterthought, was a tiny little chapel, filled with religious artifacts. If people could get to heaven from an inventory like this one had, DP and Co. would be sitting at the Right Hand of the Father. Well, NEXT TO the Right Hand of the Father. I began a schtick about DP coming up there after having beaten or killed a servant, and how he would duck into the little chapel, give a little “Oops!” prayer and be good for the rest of the day. I’m sure he was a benevolent man, but he was the only one around to pick on at the time.

As we all headed back down the stairs, we were almost garroted by a bunch of strings that ran from the upstairs ceiling down through the stairwell. This near-lethal display represented the streams of light that come in the upstairs windows and spill down the stairs. Oh yeah.

In the diplomatic dining room, there were massive, ornate sideboards on each end of the room, and a plain but beautiful table about 20 feet long, with 20 or so chairs around it. Looking at the ceiling above the table was a giant image of the table and chairs as if reflected from a giant mirror. I don’t think the artist could even bullshit his way through this one.

In the serving pantry, we were met with shelves of serving pieces and odd, weird pieces of furniture with no apparent function. When we walked in, we kept hearing a tiny chorus of high pitched electronic chimes, to discover that there were little speakers placed all around the room, each one emitting a sound at a different interval. This was in conjunction with some blinking Christmas lights, also strewn haphazardly around. FASCINATING! I think this represented the servants again, as their lives were run by the various bells rung by the royals.

“Oh! I see what’s making the noise,” Robo said suddenly, picking up one of the speakers. Daniel, Patricia and I were still gawking at the absurdity. Suddenly the chiming stopped. Robo had obviously shorted out the music circuit. He carefully placed the speaker back down on the cabinet, and we gigglingly headed out the door, where we met Pettus and Jean.

They were about burned out on the place, so we began to peek quickly in the remaining rooms. They insisted on my looking at one of the royal portraits in one room closely. The woman looked like she had a harelip. But not really. But kind of. Did she?

One of the sitting rooms across the hall was nice, but like the girls said, an overload of elegant antique furnishings will wear you out, so I can’t describe the room much or what it was for, but I do remember Robo and me laughing at the art gag: four pots of white flowers that looked artificial but harmless, until all the flowers would begin to rotate furiously in the pots for about 10 seconds, then stop. Cool. Arty. Meaningful. WTF??

On that note, we headed to the locker room to get our stuff and glided to the front door. We doffed our overshoes, gave a round of obrigadoes, and met Marcelo, who was outside waiting on us. He pointed out that there was a little refreshment place inside the garages that housed DP’s carriages.

This was for royal occasions. I could imagine the ambivalent feelings of the people as the royals paraded through the streets of Petrópolis. Given that there were so many upper class living there, I’m sure they didn’t receive anything more than public platitudes. . .until they screwed up.

The everyday carriage was really nice. And they also had the engine of the Leopodina on a section of track next to the refreshment center. The train was named after Dom Pedro II’s second daughter, and once ran a vital route.

I sent this picture to Marcelo with what I Babel Fished as “I hope this train doesn’t start to move.” It’s surely wrong. When you feed it back in to check it, it sure as hell doesn’t say that.

Of course, Daniel got something to eat at the snack bar, then we headed out into the spitting rain to the car, bypassing the magnetic pull of the souvenir booths at the entrance. It was time to see the cathedral.

Fifth day in Rio, part 3–Petrópolis, The Imperial City

A little religion, a little food, and shopping for that which cannot be found

We piled into Marcelo’s car, still hee-hawing about the facially challenged royals. In retrospect, I feel kind of like a stupid American turd for my ridicule at their expense, particularly after learning more about them and how they contributed so much to their beloved Brazil. Ennnhhhh. They’re dead. And I’m in the “no prize” category myself, so it gives me license to laugh WITH them. Well. Vanquished that guilt quite neatly, eh?

I don’t know if Marcelo was offended at me dogging his predecessors. I tried to put myself in his place by imagining a Brazilian goofball coming here and ripping on the likes of Mary Todd Lincoln (dog) or Martha Washington (clock-stopper), but it just couldn’t conjure up any indignation. Alas, our forebears usually don’t look like Laura Linney as Abigail Adams.

Everything in Petrópolis was pretty close together, so the trip from the museum to the cathedral took only a couple of minutes. On the way over, Marcelo pointed out one of the flamboyants that grow all over the country. This one was a brilliant yellow color, but they range into the bright reds as well, depending on the variety. Poinciana is in the same family. With the German-style house in the foreground, this certainly looks like anywhere but Brazil.

After a couple more turns, we entered the circle that housed the Catedral de São Pedro de Alcântara. This gorgeous structure was commissioned in 1843 by DPII upon the founding of Petrópolis. Work stalled on the project for years due to financial and other setbacks, and it didn’t finally open until 1929. The actual completion of the cathedral wasn’t until 1969. 1969?? That’s so “modern!” This place looks like something from 18th century France.

Once again, I fail to realize that Brazil is one of the Americas, and we’re mighty young over here compared to all the oldsters in Europe.

Dom Pedro II and his beloved Teresa lie in state here since their relocation in 1939. After the royals were allowed back into Brazil in 1922, they brought DPII and Teresa home, but didn’t bury them in the cathedral until 1939. Their daughter Isabel and her husband Count d’Eu are buried behind them, to their left and right. The chapel is beautiful, with incredible stained glass and a bunch of DPII’s favorite relics–many from the famous martyrs.

I guess the Count didn’t totally piss everybody off, because there he is, right next to his in-laws, like he never did anything wrong. Oh. I think that’s the point.

There was a really neat statue of St. Anthony holding a poor child that prompted the hyper-reverent Robo to create a great photo gag for me. He seems to be immune to any kind of retribution from goddesses, saints and the like. What is it?

There were people inside doing something. I couldn’t tell if it was a service or not. Maybe a tour of some kind.

Beautiful! What’s next? A picture of my international family. Robo looks like he’s feeling a little stricken again. St. Anthony? Is that you? Jean looks great wearing one of my pairs of Crocs.

On the way to the car, Marcelo pointed out a nice shot of the cathedral through the trees.

I countered with an equally beautiful shot of a pair of teal panties stuffed amongst the decorative stonework. I pointed it out to Marcelo, and asked him what kind of people attended mass here. Or were the sermons THAT fiery?

We were hungry. Marcelo didn’t know of anywhere particular to eat, so we kind of cruised around till we came back to the parking lot that led to Dumont’s house. Across from it was a row of “shoppes” and a restaurant through a courtyard that looked promising.

I can’t remember the name of the place, but it was situated in an old house that gave it a good old country cooking meat-and-three appeal. The tiled back porch had been converted into a bar on one end, and a serving line that began on the other and ran the width of the house. There was a buffet set out that had been picked through pretty well, especially considering our late arrival. No matter. It looked fine, and if we spent all our time driving around looking for food, there was a chance we’d miss it altogether.

We lined up and found that there was all kinds of stuff to eat, and the hairnetted replenishment girl was right behind us with a panful of chicken thighs. Jean found her favorite thing in the line: hard-boiled pickled quail eggs. She went apeshit for those, while Daniel and Patricia ate french fries, black beans and rice, and any other starch in the area.

We got our plates and wormed our way into the middle room crammed with long tables and small wooden chairs, me having to turn sideways and let out half of my air to be able to squeeze by. A quickie dash for either fresh food being put out or the sanitário would have been out of the question, being as it would involve about twenty “licença”s waiting on the other sprawling diners to scoot up for you.

Robo was miserable, and spent most of the lunch sneezing and blowing his nose. I’ve never seen quite a look like the one on Daniel’s face. It reminds me of the expression on Frederic March’s face as he begins the change from Dr. Jekyll to Mr. Hyde; Pettus looks like she’s wiping off some extraneous spray of some kind.

It was time to find the sanitário and split. The bathrooms were right next to the bar. And I mean RIGHT NEXT TO. Like, you could hear the blender in the bathroom, and I’m sure some sort of vice-versa would be applied as well.

The back porch had a small table with free coffee cuplets, and some sort of sweet thing that was weird. I got me a tiny coffee and headed out the door to the courtyard, which was ringed with shops, some “upscale” and some real handicrafty. At that moment, everybody behind me began to laugh hysterically. “What?” I asked. “What?”

Apparently, a local Dom Pedro-lovin’ pigeon had decided to take an airborne grunt right on my white whale shirt! Wasn’t THAT fun? It was the caliber equivalent to a huge goiter on a tiny neck, and I was sure everybody in Petrópolis would notice it. They didn’t, but Marcelo certainly did. And told me about it. I have no idea what Petrópolin birds eat, but it goes through them fast and comes out in mass quantities.

I had asked if we could go to some kind of computer store and find me a reader for my flash card. I had stupidly not packed one of the four that I have (three bought under similar circumstances), thinking that I’d never have access to any kind of computer to dump the pictures onto, much less storage to take them home. I didn’t take into account: a) the house computer at Mirante de São Francisco, or my iPod, which would neatly store all the pictures I wanted. Stupid! Stupid! Stupid!

But I was running out of flash card space at an alarming rate, and as we’ve already seen, I missed a ton of shots already. What a revoltin’ predicament! Surely the little metropolis of Petrópolis would have a camera/computer store that would remedy my problem quickly for less than 30 bucks American (allowing a healthy markup rate for “technology”).

Petrópolis is an unusual little city in that it has so many faces, and they’re all turned in and staring at each other. Start with the outskirts, which blend quickly into little streams, bridges, and neighborhoods that could have been yanked from a high-rent Leave it to Beaver, to a giant cathedral, a palace, and suddenly a little downtown area that consisted of stores lining a horseshoe that began at the bottom of a big hill, ran all the way to the top, then back down again.

The sidewalks were packed with people, who ran the gamut from very light to very dark; very  atttractive to very plain; and very rich to very poor. They had obviously relaxed the standards of elitism that exited in Petrópolis in the early days. The way all the businesses were individually owned and not real “chainy” looking, and with the plethora of department-type stores, it reminded me a lot of downtown Birmingham when I was growing up. Daniel and I were the ones who left the car to scout out the card reader, and we passed many a place that looked just like J.J. Newberry’s on 19th Street–sundries for living right there in the front window, and goods piled high on shelves lining both walls and glutting the middle.

I saw three stores on the first visual sweep that had “camera” in the name. It looked very encouraging!

First store. Nothing but digital developing.

Second store. Blank stare.

Third store. A glimmer of hope. Two nerds behind the counter! Computers on stands! But weirdness in that the recordable CDs were in a locked cabinet behind them, and they only had two sleeves of them; everything else was strewn all around the desk. The other cabinets had random things like headphones in them, and other stuff that I certainly didn’t need. Daniel told the guys what I was looking for. I held up the card. They conferred excitedly, and then one of them held up a finger while the other guy rummaged through a drawer, bringing out an input bay with a Medusan tangle of cords coming out of it
. In the first place, it would have to be hard-wired to the computer. But it also had nothing resembling a card reader, even if we did feel like dismantling Steve’s PC and putting it in. They both looked at us, then it, berated each other in fast Portuguese, then threw it back in the drawer. “Não,” they finally told Daniel. I got the message.

Marcelo and the rest of them sat patiently in the car for us, but I finally had to give up. It blew my mind how the things that we even have in some gas stations here are nowhere to be found in Brazil. Another thing that contributes to their happiness?

I was bummed out, and starting to panic a little about the flash card situation. Marcelo assured me that we would find something the closer we got to Rio. He was like a parent assuring a child that he wouldn’t start the first day of school without a book bag. I had to believe him.

We began the descent back down the mountain. There were spectacular views everywhere, and the fog had lifted enough from the morning to put heavily textured skies front and center in the whole spectacle. Marcelo was amenable to stopping for pictures whenever I asked him to, but I tried not to do it too much as a courtesy to the others. This view forced me to ask him. We were coming up on a hairpin curve that jutted out over the mountain, looking like it was floating above the valley below. Cool. Cool. Cool. Robo, Pettus and I got out. This was one of the cases where I walked up on Robo as he was narrating his footage. I think I said something about there maybe being snakes in the tall grass we were standing in. It gave us both a little jolt, me especially, because I started high steppin’ as a reflex.



Woo! Pretty! We passed all the rug, empty vegetable and favelette places on the way down, until we spotted this crazy spaceship thing up the next hill on the right.

“Can we stop?” I asked excitedly.

Everybody agreed, and Marcelo pulled into a parking lot that led to this interesting structure. So this was just a roadside park, eh? Where was the sanitário? Apparently these gents didn’t find one either.

This thing was cool as grits! And of course it immediately put us in mind of the Niedermeyer Modern Art Museum in Niterói. But it was just sitting here, overlooking this incredible valley, like something straight from an apocalyptic Jetsons. So very, very neat. I was convinced at this time that Rio had been visited by extraterrestrials more than once. I mean, really. Deny it, okay?

Is this George Jetson’s bombed out living room? Of COURSE it is! There was graffiti everywhere, and a busload of obnoxious tourists from what we deemed was Israel, so the idyllic nature was somewhat tainted. On the way back to the car, we encountered a group of locals who were playing ball on the pavement beneath the spaceship. This thing was on a steep hill, with sparse population that met the eye going either direction. So these kids walked however far, up or down a huge hill, and met here to play. They must have been in incredible shape. They were aloof to my uplifted camera and quizzical expression at first, but the longer I stood there and snapped other things, the more they warmed up. Cute. Look for the secret thumb in there. Also a good old peace sign.

We hopped in the car to continue on back to Niterói. The ride back was quieter even than the ride up, which was plenty quiet. Robo, Pettus and Jean dozed in the back seat, with Daniel and Patricia comatose in the backback.

robopettussleepcar.jpgRobo felt bad, bad, bad, but the only effect it had on our time was the decrease in bone dry witticisms from that incredible brain of his.

Marcelo didn’t forget me and my card reader, and before we got to the bridge, he pointed out a huge Wal-Mart-like store off of the right service road. We wound our way into the huge parking lot, which looked just like any giant Wal-Mart parking lot in Florida. This chain’s name started with an “F,” and was something like “Fourier.” The logo was a very nicely selected green “F.” I can’t remember the name, but Marcelo will tell me.

We all went inside except Robo, who said he was gonna lie down in the back seat. The HOT back seat in a stopped car with no air conditioning. Sounded delightful to me, but probably served the purpose for him.

Upon entering the store, there was still nothing to dissuade me that this was just a Wal-Mart in a samba suit. The signage was totally American looking, except for the words on it.  All the departments looked just like they do here, except there was just a slight disconnect with the majority of brands, labels and logos being unfamiliar to me. Immediately to the right was a huge stereo/computer section with a guy at the counter that knew exactly what I needed. He pulled one from behind the glass within a half minute–one of those readers that accepts all the cards, with a price that was surprisingly great, considering the high cost of technology in Brazil. It was about 15 bucks American. Marcelo thought it was such a good deal he got himself one.

I left Jean, Pettus and Marcelo there to get whatever else they needed, and for Jean to try to get money from their ATM and deal in tandem with Marcelo at the Customer Service desk. I had to flee. My goal was to get us several big bottles of agua com gaís for the house, because cocktail hour was a threat to decimate our supply.

The last couple of nights, I had begun a new ritual: tromp down two flights of stairs to the PMS 361 green rumpus room; grab as many limão as I could, stuffing them into my pockets; grab the cachaça and sugar bowl; and finally get the wooden mortar and pestle; get back upstairs as quickly and painlessly as possible; then begin to cut and smash enough limes to make drinks for Jean, Robo and Pettus. Whatever liquor I used, I always topped it with a healthy splash of agua com gaís, making the caipirinha or roska less lethal and longer lasting.

So here I go trotting down the aisles by myself. Patricia and Daniel were in the stereo department looking at stuff, and I felt confident to try the mission solo. Strutting happily in my slue footed gait, my head was like a sprinkler, going left to right and back again, stopping to gape at an unfamiliar product or smile broadly at fellow shoppers. I even threw the thumb in there a couple of times and got one in return with nary a hitch.

I found the drink aisle, which was dominated by the usual American suspects and Brazil’s favorite energy drink: Guaraná Antarctica (pronounced “Gwa-RAHN-ah Ont-ARCH-tee-ka”). Guarana is one of those natural energy herbs that has been around for centuries. It was sold in the U.S. as a substitute for speed back in the day, and with today’s youth’s fixation on rev-me-up drinks, it’s a natural. And very popular. I had one on the plane from São Paulo to Salvador. It wanted to taste like a Mountain Dew, but didn’t. It was something else. I’m sure you could get used to it easily, though, and spend your days zooming around Brazil.

All well and good, but where the hell was the agua com gaís? Suddenly, a cute Brazilian girl appeared, ignoring the bird shit stain on my white whale shirt, and asked in Portuguese if I needed help. I was bursting with excitement over my card reader, and brimming with love for Brazil and her people. My response was a blinding smile and the words “agua com gaís” and “grande” (pronounced “GRON-gee”). She smiled back at my hapless Americanness and led me over two aisles. There were the waters! But the gaís was another matter. We couldn’t find any for the longest time. But she persisted, looking through every bottle there until we found three big ones. The only ones they had. CRAZY. Wal-Mart, but NOT Wal-Mart. Something else entirely. I don’t know what in the hell was in those other bottles, but it was certainly not agua com gaís, which is sold in every bodega in Rio, and consumed enthusiastically by all. Curiouser and curiouser.

Jean and them were God-knows-where, so I got in a checkout line with no translator or anything, just like every other outer-Rioan that was there with me. I felt so very powerful, having money in my pocket, recognizing the denominations of the coins (when given time), and knowing that all I had to do was scream “Marcelo” like a girl and he would eventually come and rescue me, after finishing whatever it was he was doing at the time, and walking as slowly as he could, stopping to look at everything on the way.

There was a young couple ahead of me who had a small cartful of stuff. When I appeared behind them, clumsily wielding the three bottles of ACG, they immediately let me in front of them. Wow! Just like in Alabama! I thought surely I could make the transaction speedily and then give them a perfectly pronounced “obrigado” and a smile, leaving with dignity.

Uh, no. “Price check on this Ag-wa com GAis” was what I heard. Somebody in a vest rushed over and she and the checker looked at the water, turning it over and over. The girl in the vest looked at the cashier with an expression that said, “Whatever,” and she rang it up. My big plan to rip the money off and hand it to her in exact change was shot to hell after all this. I had crumbled long before, and babbled all kinds of shit to the young couple in my Portuguese-cum-Spaniguese. They were happily accommodating of me and my bird stain. I held out my hand with all the money I had, the checker picked out what she needed, smiled broadly while she sacked my ACGs, and we all had a nice goodbye, me loving Brazilians more than ever at that point. I am so very easy.

I met the others just about as I emerged from the line. When we got to the car, Robo was roasting inside, but at least had a door open with his legs sticking out.

Marcelo managed to find his way out of the labyrinth that was the parking lot. Then the service road, then the bridge. He commented that we had really missed the traffic for some reason. He had been expecting more. All I knew was that I wanted to get home with my new card reader and ACG, make the trek down 2 and up 2, and get the evening going. Food would be whatever it was.

We passed more incredible graffiti. The whole public art concept continued to gnaw at me. This was beautiful. But is it ALL beautiful? Who decides? And who is this guy? I see the word “Mafia.” Is that a good thing in Rio? I hate to say it, but he kind of looks like Fred “Rerun” Berry from What’s Happenin’?

This was a poignant shot, I thought.

The section of Niterói we were in was characterized by small winding roads with a melange of structures ranging from small houses to restaurants to larger homes hidden by fences and landscaping. Marcelo pointed to the left at a wall topped by an iron fence and backed by lush foliage. “My parents live there,” he said.

To me, that was tantamount to taking us home to meet them. I was very flattered. It looked like a nice piece of property, too. Little by little Marcelo had begun to reveal himself. With the information about his sister in Petrópolis and his parents in what appeared to be cushy digs in Niterói, combined with his immense knowledge of history, botany and such, I had figured that he was well brought up, with an appreciation of knowledge, beauty and history. There was nobody better that we could have gotten to shepherd us through Rio. How did we luck into that?

We took route B home, I noticed–the one via beach road that went by Niedermeyer’s spaceship–more fantastic juxtaposition. It was a spectacular ride, and as we approached it, Marcelo told us how the mayor had bought all the property opposite the museum years ago, even though there was a ban on building there. A massive, elegant condo development stood there now.

“Ees very funny. This land was to stay as it was. No building. The mayor buys the land, and suddenly there are condos here.”

“Well, DUH!” I replied. Here we were, international brothers both being screwed by the elected.

The views of the bay we had sailed the day before were spectacular. I couldn’t help but correlate the value of the real estate in Niterói with that in the U.S.–in Destin, for example. I just couldn’t comprehend the whole thing.


We passed the Jesuit church of São Lourenço dos Indios on the hill of São Lourenáo. The church was started in 1560 and construction continued for a couple of hundred years afterwards. It is named after another church in Portugal, and if I’m not mistaken, Marcelo told us it is the oldest church in the area.


Before we knew it, we were at the McDonald’s. Mirante was only a blink away. We got out, Marcelo getting out as well, like a boy with some good manners.

“Can you take us out tomorrow?” we asked.

“Yes,” he replied.

“Hoo-HAH!” I exclaimed. “Okay den! I’ll see you tomorrow, Marcelo! Thanks for a great day! Honey, y’all are gonna work it all out, okay?” With that, I wriggled into the house after a staggering Robo, dropped the ACG on Steve’s lovely hand-made dining room table (which was our “kitchen counter”), threw the bag with the card reader at the computter, and headed down to PMS 361 for cocktail fixins. Daniel and Patricia had decided they wanted McDonald’s, and none of us argued a bit. It actually sounded good to me. What a conundrum it all is.

All I cared about was getting my cards emptied and safe. The reader plugged right into the PC. And at that point, Daniel and I both discovered that there were CARD READERS ALREADY ON THE FRONT OF THE PC, with mine FRONT and CENTER! Stupid! Stupid! Stupid!

I had to take a break, and shoot the last picture on the current card before I made it disgorge all its loveliness into Steve’s computer.

We gave our orders to D&P, who were gonna walk down the hill and possibly back up. Fine with us. It was all safe. It wasn’t dark yet. Down they went. We cocktailed, and I began to wrestle with the heinous PC operating system, trying to download my pictures with en
ough confidence to erase a flash card. TOUGH THINKING. Required much agua com gaís and everything under it.

I hate to be a dick, but I HATE PCs. I’m a Mac boy, and have been long enough to know that my hatred is well founded. A task that would have taken 1 minute to set up plus download time on my Mac, suddenly became an “adventure” of window after window with cryptic questions that, if answered incorrectly, could result in massive amounts of calculation time on the computer’s behalf, plus the erasure of all digital information in a half mile radius. Robo walked by a couple of times, shook his head and said, “My programmers won’t use anything but a Mac.”

When Daniel and Patricia got back (via tax–it was too much for them to walk up the hill), we all rushed the bag to get our food out. Suddenly everybody was starving. And, in true form all across the world, THEY SCREWED UP OUR ORDER and I’M THE ONE WHO GOT SCREWED! No matter. I had business to attend to.

I snagged Daniel and made him help me wade through the tangle of PC-speak to get what I needed done. I thought I’d be able to just plug in my iPod and put the pictures there. But NO! My iPod was formatted for Mac, and in order to even smell a PC’s out port, it has to be re-formatted for PC. So, basically, I was saying that my pictures were more important than the music on my iPod. No question. The decision was instantly made to reformat. Why was it such an ordeal after that? I don’t know. I fogged over again and let Daniel do the big nasty for me.

Tomorrow’s itinerary was gonna be aladsasvafbu0u0uasn and probablymaybeseeingtheChrist Botanical gardenswhatever Maybehang glidingforRobo andPettuswhoknewbut at least Marcelo was taking us.