Posts Tagged With: South Beach

2019 Trip 3: South Florida: April 13-18

Taking the beach walk to the beach

Miami Beach, FL. April 18

Our old haunts awaited us as we returned to Miami Beach. We have been coming here almost every year since 2001-18 years. Some things change, Hurricane Irma closed down one hotel which had a restaurant we used to frequent. A new transit option appeared, free rides in an electric driven small open air van paid for by advertising. Some things are the same, Front Porch restaurant is still open after 25 years and just half a block north of our place as is La Sandwicherie, a famous hole in the wall sandwich shop we frequent.

At the beach: pelicans, cruise ship in background and parasailing, typical beach scene, and moon rising over the ocean.

The people watching continues of course. A better writer than I could keep you spellbound with anecdotes of the various antics one sees on the beach and on the sidewalks. The family whose dad is complaining how the teenage daughters are whining about the experience and how much the parents are paying. We only heard the father’s many whines, few from the daughters. The people trying to open their less expensive store-bought umbrellas that turn inside-out in the strong wind. The woman and child walking down the middle of the street. You will have to use your imagination or your own experiences to expand the number of anecdotes.

Monday was supposed to rain and it was the day for our room to be cleaned so we went walking down to South Pointe, next to the ship channel that is the means for boats, cargo ships, and cruise ships to reach the ocean. We passed two hotels where, when we were working, we used to spend a night or two to extend our vacation. When we stayed at those hotels, we never went to the beach, just stayed at the hotel pool.

Wolfsonian examples of Art Deco inspired furniture: oven, dressing table, hutch,and desk.

The Wolfsonian Museum is a favorite of ours. Usually we go to the Friday night free admission and docent tour. Once we heard James Dyson talk about his revolutionary new vacuum cleaners. That gives you an idea of how long we have been coming here also. Monday we went and actually had to pay the senior admission rate of $8 each. While various exhibits come and go, the heart of the exhibits are items from the Art Deco period.

Wolfsonian: Art Deco in everyday life: mail box, radio, movie ticket taker booth, toaster

Art Deco was highlighted at a 1925 exposition in Paris and took off in the U.S. in the 1930s. Art Deco architecture was the driving style in Miami Beach’s expansion. But Art Deco took over in design for many everyday experiences. There are connections between styles and ornamentation visible on hotels from that period and furnishings and appliances created in the 1930s.

New World Symphony wallcast

The New World Symphony, started by Michael Tilson Thomas, is a post-graduate school training academy for musicians. For Wednesday night’s activity, its outdoor wall is used to simulcast some of their concerts and to host weekly outdoor movies during the winter season. We ambled over last night and watched “Won’t You Be My Neighbor”, the story of Fred Rogers. Besides enjoying the movie tremendously, we saw a new (to us at least) form of outdoor seating. The Porch Couch is a piece of plastic like material, open at one end, and you simply wave it around to fill it with regular air. It provides a couch like seating that held up well for the two groups we saw using it. When the event is over, let out the air and pack it up. Neat.

An unexpected experience wraps up our trip. When walking along the Beach Walk, I came across large tents being erected. Nothing unusual there, Miami Beach is host to many conferences and events. Upon closer perusal, I realized that the tents were for the Longines Global Championship, an international horse jumping competition. It runs Thursday (today) through Saturday on the beach. And attendance was free.

Preparing for the event, Longines Global Championship

Chris and I went to the opening day afternoon competition. Horse and rider teams from the U.S., Great Britain, Qatar, Sri Lanka, Czechoslovakia, Netherlands, Germany and Switzerland were represented. Several different levels of competition were scheduled, we have no clue as to the rules which determine who can enter each round. After two and half hours, our event winner was from the U.S. Listening to the announcers, it was evident that the competitors were top-level. This Global Championship has 20 events in cities like Mexico City, Shanghai, Montreal, Prague, London, Monaco, Stockholm, etc.

During the event.

I was surprised the horses were jumping outside in the heat, 86 degree Fahrenheit at show time. But the views of the ocean and the horses made for great viewing for the spectators. Given the high cost of the horses and of travel, I am sure the horses would not be jumping if it would harm them.

This will be the last post for this trip unless something unexpected happens in the next 24 hours. Friday we fly home.

Ed and Chris April 18 Miami Beach

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2018 Trip 3: April 1-3: KY and TN

Miami Beach, April 3

Miami Ship Channel

Sunday morning was Easter and we headed over to Miami proper to attend 11:30 AM Mass at the first Catholic church in Miami, Gesu Catholic Church. The current church building goes back 90 years. The first Jesuits landed here in 1568, said Mass, met with the Tequesta Indians (none remaining in the area today, any still alive accompanied the Spaniards to Cuba when Spain gave up Florida), performed a religious play for the settlers, and complained about the mosquitos. The service was long, with incense, blessings, over-talked homily, and the first free-for-all Communion service I have seen in years. Everyone just got up at once and started going forward; normally it is much more organized, going up row by row.

Gesu Catholic Church in Miami

We hightailed it over to the Miami History Museum, just a few blocks away. A 1 PM docent tour was our goal and we made it just in time. The docent wanted to wait for any last-minute attendees, so we did-to no avail. It was Chris and I and the docent. The gentleman appeared to be a college student who knew his history well. He gave us a forty minute talk as we toured the exhibits, starting with pre-historic times to current development. Paleo-Indians are thought to have arrived in Florida around 10,000 B.C. The Seminole Indians in Florida are descendants of Creek Indians of Georgia who refused to go on the Trail of Tears that President Jackson and Congress ordered beginning in 1830 removing all Native Americans from the southeast to what is now Oklahoma.

He seemed keen for us to recognize that the Everglades were once more vast than currently; the development of canals and drainage ditches for agriculture and later urban development resulting in a much reduced waterway with major negative environmental impacts. We had a general sense of Florida development, with boom and bust land sales in the 1920s and the big boom after WWII. It is now the 8th largest metro area in the U.S.

Pelicans getting their evening meal at South Beach

Sun and sand and surf were our late afternoon companions. We picked up some towels from the front desk, the blanket from our car and headed to the beach. Besides the normal people-watching, we were entertained by a flock of pelicans who demonstrated their aerial acrobatics as they dove for fish right in front of us. A dad and his four kids raced to build a combined dike and pool before the incoming tides destroyed it. It was a battle between late afternoon sun and increasing shade; and a battle between the sand fort and surging seas. Shade and seas were the victors. We stayed late enough to watch the four scheduled cruise ships departing the Port of Miami. Dinner was take-out from the local, uniquely Miami Beach sandwich shop two blocks away with dinner in our unit.

Monday was all day beach. We were there by 9:30 AM; this time renting an umbrella and two lounge chairs right by the ocean. We did not leave until 5 PM, watching two of the four scheduled cruise ships depart. Our memorable people-watching event of the day was a group of five who were at the beach as long as we were. Our constructed story for the five consists of Mom (Brazilian or French, recently divorced from her rich husband, and she has had some physical enhancements performed), her twin teen-age daughters, her teen-age son, and her much younger than her personal trainer/masseuse (PT/M). The PT/M must have rubbed several bottles of suntan lotion onto her body, along with some onto the three teenagers, although admittedly more on the daughters. Three couples from probably the Newark-New York area happened to move their chairs closer to the beach later in the afternoon. The three women turned their chairs back to the late afternoon sun and got an up close and personal view of the lotion application process. They had a great time watching and commenting. In contrast, Chris and I were much more restrained.

Several of the iconic Miaim Beach Lifeguard stations

We reminisced about past Miami Beach experiences: the severely ill or anorexic woman doing her yoga exercises; or the man who had obviously hired a woman for the day and was taking pictures of her in different poses; or the photo shoot (never did determine what the purpose of the shoot was) that involved both horses and bulls and young women; or the young men tossing bean bags at each other aiming for the other’s genitals; or the rainy weather that had us strolling the convention center looking for exhibits and vendors that did not involve us paying for admission; or the hours we used to spend at the library checking work emails (now that goes back a while); or the hucksters practicing age discrimination by visiting many young people on the beach to offer them free admission to night clubs but somehow never came over to us; or the young couple where the man spent the entire day on his cell phone talking to his investment advisor.

Dinner was at an Irish pub but we did not eat Irish. Instead, surprisingly good chicken and pork meals with excellent sauce provided enough food for last night’s dinner and a take-home container for later in the week.

Daytime views of Ocean Drive Miami Beach

Today, Tuesday, we went for a walk down to South Pointe, the southern end of Miami Beach that has developed remarkably in the last 5-8 years. The Miami Ship Channel is there with opportunities to obtain close views of the ships passing through. Nothing dramatic today though although we have been there previously when cruise ships have gone out. Several hotels, most notable being the Ritz-Carlton, the Tides, the Raleigh, are still closed and undergoing renovations from last fall’s hurricane.

The afternoon was back on the beach, nothing dramatic to report. Dinner was our splurge for the week, eating next door at the LT Steak House in the Betsy Hotel. Live jazz was the inducement to spend a bit more than usual.

Ed and Chris April 3

Epilogue: Snippets on life in America from Chris
Day 19: When did leisure time develop in our society? Many communities that we visit depend on big and small tourism. The railroads moved, manufacturing closed, farming changed. Towns that wanted to continue vibrant latched on to a tourist niche-art, nature, music, a unique experience. Come visit and spend your money here.

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2017 Trip Two: Tour of Texas March 20-21

Miami Beach Florida March 21. Tuesday

Today will be a photo post primarily. We took an urban hike of five miles along the boardwalk today and spent much of yesterday on the beach. Today would have been a good beach day but we decided to get exercise and re-explore the area.

There is an alternating paver sidewalk/raised boardwalk system that extends from much of the area from 46th St to around SouthPoint at the Miami Ship Channel (down to 1st St.) except for a few blocks from about 3rd to 5th. It is a fantastic way to get exercise and view both ocean and the high rises as it runs between the buildings and the dunes. Other than feral cats and bike riders on the boardwalk portion (where they hadn’t oughta be), there is little hassle.

The various condos/hotels/apartments have their own booth where people get umbrellas and beach chairs. Some of the booths are color coordinated with the color or style of the hotel.

South Beach is known for the unique lifeguard stands lining the beach. No two are the same. Bright colors and styles differentiate them.

Cruise ships go out Thursday through Monday so nothing today but here is a shot from Monday.

Ed and Chris. March 21

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2017 Trip Two: Tour of Texas March 18-19

Miami Beach Florida, March 19

Panoramic view of South Beach at the end of the day on Sunday March 19

“Toto, I have a feeling we are not in Kansas anymore.” How true that it is. Crowds throng along the sidewalks. Mopeds, roller bladers, cars, bikes and people all seem to compete for the same space on the streets, with little regard for traffic lights or lanes. That last is actually somewhat reasonable given that traffic moves so slowly at crowded times. U-turns, double parking, stopping to chat from car to sidewalk, all are constant occurrences. Coming across the causeway from the mainland, there are skyscrapers lined up along the shore as far as the eye can see.

Sidewalks are always busy. Some walkers wait for the lights, most do not. Many forget that the sidewalk has to be shared with people going in the opposite direction. Of course, with restaurants taking up more than half of the sidewalk for al fresco dining, walking is even more of a challenge but people watching is enhanced.

The Beach was jammed today (Sunday). Normally we arrive around 10:30 as we did today and get an umbrella and beach chairs in the front row. Today we were in row three. Sat next to a nice family from Vancouver BC that are heading out for a 4 day cruise tomorrow. Six cruise ships departed between 4:15 PM and 5:10 PM. Numerous foreign languages heard on the beach; I thought Trump was scaring foreign tourists away? There were a lot more selfie sticks being used than I remember from previous years.

La Sandwicherie, a hole-in-the-wall frequent stop for take-out dinner (salads and sandwiches) is open from 8 AM to 5 AM, closing only for three hours. The closest Walagreens is only two blocks away but has no pharmacy. It is basically a convenience store. It is relatively new, much cleaner and better prices than the old, run-down grocery we used to frequent. I had to ask three staff members before I found one who knew the closest Walgreens that had a pharmacy. That Walgreens is three blocks in the other direction. We went there tonight but the pharmacy closed at 5 PM on Sunday. We got used to 24 hours pharmacy back home. Suntan lotion and food seemed to be the big sellers; this Walgreen also sold beer, wine, and alcohol.

Several of our favorite places are being renovated. This happens constantly down here. It is amazing how long it takes to complete the work, we can go several yearly trips before a place re-opens. The hotel next to us, the Betsy, has taken over an old hotel across the alley and is renovating the old hotel and connecting the two buildings. Another hotel and restaurant a block away is wrapped in plastic with workers going in and out. No idea what is happening.

Our place, the Hilton Grand Vacation Club timeshare looked different to us as we walked back tonight. Then we realized, the two building comprising the HGVC property were both bathed in green LED light. Previously each building had its own color in neon lights.

So, yes, we have left the prairies of Kansas and Nebraska behind. The forests and farm fields of Mississippi, Georgia, and Alabama are gone. Concrete, asphalt and steel have replaced it, along with sand beaches and blue oceans.

Speaker at the National Weather Service National Hurricane Center tour

Saturday was projected to still be a little too cool and breezy for the beach. I was reading the Miami Herald and there was a short blurb that the National Weather Service and National Hurricane Center were having an open house. What the hey, why not go? So we did. It was a 45 minute drive out there which included two wrong turns. Only two was pretty good. We were using Google directions but sometimes the spoken direction was different from the wording on the freeway traffic signs. Even at 70 mph we guessed correctly on several of the differences but did miss two of them.

The two agencies are part of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration and share one concrete and steel hardened facility west of the Miami airport. A guided tour was offered in groups of about 25. The two missions collaborate and support each other while still being distinct. The Hurricane Center focuses on tracking severe storms in the Atlantic and eastern Pacific. They will also provide weather and wave information to mariners, like cruise ships and freighters. There is a room that converts into an emergency weather media center during hurricanes.

The National Weather Service will take the broad hurricane forecasts prepared by the Hurricane Center and localize the impact. They deal with local emergency management teams to inform them which communities will be spared and which will likely be struck by the storm.

One of the speakers had piloted the planes that fly directly into the storms when they are occurring. Another guy, not a pilot, recalled being onboard one of the planes as it flew through the storm and admitted he had gotten sick. We did ask if they could address climate change and they answered “No”. On the issue of budget cuts, they just said they were awaiting details.

This place is open 24/7, 365 days a year. The data they collect helps prepare for emergencies from hurricanes to fires and floods. Our reading indicates the NOAA is proposed to be cut 17% in Trump’s budget. How penny wise and pound foolish.

The Weather Service sends up two Weather balloons each day to gather weather data. The balloon goes up 100,000 feet before disintegrating and releasing an instrument package tethered to a parachute which brings it slowly back to earth. THe data is relayed back here. If I heard correctly, there are 1000 locations around the world that release a balloon at the same time. During severe weather, the Weather Service will release four balloons a day. For this open house, a third balloon was released at 1 PM. We all got to do the countdown and watch the balloon float off into the atmosphere.


Video of balloon launch

Ed and Chris. March 19

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2015 Trip 1, March 22-27, Florida in Winter

Miami Beach, FL Wednesday, March 25

The blog has been quiet since we have been quiet, not doing much of any major notice. Not that Miami Beach (South Beach) has been quiet; that would really be unusual. No, Chris and I are in our laid back mode, letting the party goers and expense account people have a good time. Miami is host to a major tennis tournament now and a music festival, the Ultra Music festival, and the Winter Music Conference is also underway in Miami. There is tremendous spill-over to Miami Beach. The Ultra Music festival is for electronic music by DJs, etc. If you know what I am talking about, great. If not, I don’t understand it any better and can’t explain it more. But while it is not my style of music, it certainly keeps the place hopping.

View from our room at Marriott Stanton

View from our room at Marriott Stanton

Tonight (March 25) we are at our second lodging in Miami Beach, the Marriott Stanton at about 2nd and Ocean Drive. The Marriott is on the beach and has an outdoor pool. After checking in this afternoon, we just lazed at the pool. We are likely to be doing the same thing Thursday during the day. Just a half block south of us is Nikki Beach, an outdoor party/event place that is rocking away and will probably be blasting through the night. No tickets needed for us to get the vibe.

HGVC on Ocean Drive

HGVC on Ocean Drive

Miami Beach life guard stand

Miami Beach life guard stand

We spent Saturday through this morning (March 21-25) at the Hilton Grand Vacations Club (HGVC) at about 14th and Ocean, about 12 blocks north of the Marriott. HGVC is across the street from the beach, there is a park across the street between us and the ocean. HGVC has no pool, we have spent the last four days at the beach under an umbrella. The days have been glorious, mid-80s with a slight breeze.

Our last blog posted mentioned that Miami Beach was founded 100 years ago so this is a new town. This was a slender sand spit, with New Jersey Quakers trying to grow coconuts and avocados. That failed and years of dredging up muck from Biscayne Bay to build up the island and the construction of a bridge from the mainland began the land rush of the 1920s. A 1926 hurricane and the 1929 stock market crash put an end to that. The advent of WWII with its Florida training camps for the military brought another boom after the war-aided by the advent of air-conditioning. The late 1960s and 70s brought another crash but its re-birth is credited to historic preservation of the old hotels, aided by artists and gays. Now it is a very hip place, a hub for many people from Europe and South America.

Tuesday night we attended two of the birthday celebratory events being held. The first was a Jackie Gleason marathon. Okay, just like I don’t understand electronic music, many of you may not have heard of Jackie Gleason. He was a comedian, radio, movie and TV show personality in the 1950s and early 1960s. Some of his shows were based out of Miami Beach and he helped publicize Miami Beach as a travel location. Obviously many of the people in Miami Beach don’t remember Jackie Gleason either. There were only about 25 people in attendance.

The wall cast at New World Symphony. We chose a spot with a back rest, even though it meant looking through the leaves

The wall cast at New World Symphony. We chose a spot with a back rest, even though it meant looking through the leaves

So, we went across the street to the New World Symphony. I won’t go into details about the Symphony but it has an 7,000 square foot outdoor wall that is used as a super sized movie screen. This evening the 90 minute pilot episode for the TV show “Miami Vice” was broadcast. At least this showing was slightly better attended, possibly 200 people. Miami Vice was a police show running from 1984 to 1989 that influenced popular music, dress, etc. Based in Miami Beach, the TV show actually primarily used South Beach locations which helped again to popularize South Beach.

Continued, Thursday March 26

Our beach view of the music concert

Our beach view of the music concert

Ocean Drive street scene

Ocean Drive street scene

Tonight’s birthday celebration was a major music concert held on the beach at 8th and Ocean Drive from 5 pm to midnight. A huge music shell and seating was constructed on the beach; tickets ranged from $79 to over $1,000. We went early and just listened from the beach way far away where the sitting was free. A very few of the 40 musicians we had heard of (Gloria Estefan, Andrea Boccelli); most we had not (Afrobeta, DJ Zog). After 30-60 minutes we decided it was not worth it. We walked back along Ocean Drive, watching the people; the street had been closed for the event.

We have been coming to Miami Beach for 14 years, usually spending 7-10 days here in mid-March. It is impossible to say we know the Miami area (population 400,000, metro Miami going up to Palm Beach is 5.5 million) but we are comfortable knowing Miami Beach (population 90,000).

Beach scene

Beach scene

We have certain places we go most years, adding in some new places. Actually you have to try new places, changeover in restaurants is high. Property values have skyrocketed, forcing out most Mom and Pop restaurants. This year we discovered that Jerry’s Deli, just two blocks from HGVC, closed last summer. It’s old-fashioned, deli-style menu must not have resonated with the new crowds.

New construction is constant, to a degree. Year one a building is shuttered. Year two a sign is up listing some new condo or hotel will be built on the site. Year three some construction is underway. Year four, construction is almost done. Year five (if all has gone well), the building may be open and operating. Magazines and newspapers are advertising the newest and fanciest condos and apartments. Condos usually start at over $1,000,000. I saw one advertisement this time for condos in a new building priced from $5,000,000 to $40,000,000. Supposedly foreign buyers are providing much of the impetus.

Sunrise on the beach

Sunrise on the beach

But all of that is moot for us. We come, sit on the beach, walk a bit, go to some cultural events depending on the weather, and go back home. Which is what is happening this year. The weather has been great so it has been pretty much all beach and pool time, practically no walking around. Trip 1 draws to a close tomorrow as we fly home. It has been a pleasant two month excursion through a varied Florida landscape.

Ed and Chris March 26 10 pm

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2014 Trip Two, March 28, Deep South

Friday, March 28, Miami Beach

Another windy day but we invested in an umbrella which was used to block the wind, not the sun. Nothing too unusual on the beach today, just a formation of five planes pulling large banners advertising Las Vegas locations and events.

planes pulling banners over South Beach

planes pulling banners over South Beach

The scene in South Beach is eclectic. Of course there is the usual mix of residents, flavored by its international mystique. The Sony Tennis Open is being played so you have tennis fans. Business people are here on expense accounts. Northerners and retirees like us. Spring breakers, although they do not predominate or overwhelm. For the first time in memory, we have seen a number of Buddhist monks-or at least guys who dress that way. In this town, who knows if they are or not. Plus the people attending the Miami Music festival.

Sidewalks and streets are crowded. Taxi drivers do their usual pull over and stop anywhere. So do all other drivers. So do delivery trucks. Scooters weave in and out of traffic. There is a new dimension this year as bike rental programs have proliferated adding more undisciplined drivers to the mix. Pedestrians cross against traffic and do not understand the concept of not taking up the entire sidewalk whether walking fast or slow. Sidewalk cafes are everywhere which also reduces the space for walking. People are dressed in suits and fancy dresses with stiletto heels, or swim wear, or mundane shirts and shorts with some place or cause plastered on them.

So back to the Music Festival. We saw 5 or 6 fancy sports cars driving around with the words “Afrojack” on them. Thank goodness for Wikipedia. I now know that EDM is Electronic Dance Music. Afrojack is a Dutch DJ performing a headlining act. Avicii is a Swedish DJ set to perform here except he had a gall bladder attack. Laidback Luke is here too, along with Dada Life. Over 150,000 people are expected for the festival over in Miami’s Bayfront park. South Beach hosts a number of parties that start at 11 pm or midnight and run until 5 AM or so. The cost is $60 to $80 so we decided to pass on going to them.

New World Symphony

New World Symphony

Instead we walked over to the New World Symphony. We usually manage to fit in one of their performances. This was titled “Ohlsson Plays Rachmanioff” (Concerto #2 in C minor). It was fantastic. We sat behind the musicians, a location we have preferred since the first time their new Frank Gehry designed building opened three years ago. We get to see the conductor face on. The musicians are very close, although we see more of their hair styles than their faces.

Two males had Mohawk cuts, one with the Mohawk portion colored red. One of the percussionists had a very minor role in the second piece, hitting the drum 4 or 5 times. Each time he got up from his chair to do his bit, he took a blanket-like cloth and placed it over his knee and then placed his knee against the drum. After he banged the drum, he carefully removed the “blanket”, folded it and replaced it on top of the drum.

New World Symphony

New World Symphony

The musicians are entirely in black except for one female violinist who had a white cloth over her shoulder where she placed the violin. Not sure how she got away with that spot of white. The other two pieces were Mikhail Glinka’s “Overture to Ruslan and Ludmilla” and Ottorino Respighi’s “The Pines of Rome”.

We have made some changes to our schedule. We had planned to visit some of Chris’ relatives on Sunday. Due to changes in their situation, they won’t be able to see us. So we are spending one more night in Miami Beach. Our HGVC timeshare is booked up Sunday night and we are moving half a block down to the Winterhaven. Monday we will continue our plans and drive 400 miles to the Stephen Foster Folk Culture Center State Park in White Springs, FL.

Ed and Chris March 28 11:35 pm

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2014 Trip Two, March 26, Deep South

Wednesday, March 26, Miami Beach

Our Hilton time share

Our Hilton time share

Our time share at night

Our time share at night

Windy day in paradise but we made the best of it. Sleeping late was the first priority. We followed up with a long walk along the boardwalk. The boardwalk is wide and populated by walkers, joggers, bikers, Segway riders, etc. It is a popular place to exercise and people watch. It runs between the ocean/beach/sand dunes and the hotels.

Miami Beach boardwalk

Miami Beach boardwalk

As we headed north along the boardwalk, we detoured over onto the beach. We thought we saw two horses, probably mounted police. Instead we saw bulls. Brahman bulls. Well, of course, we had to check it out. While I took pictures, safely behind the line the security people were trying to maintain, Chris chatted up a beach chair attendant. Evidently the city of Miami Beach was filming a commercial. Not quite sure what for, but the scene was interesting. It is not unusual for us to come across one or more photo shoots during our visits to South Beach but this was our first bulls on the beach.

beach photo shoot

beach photo shoot

bulls on the beach

bulls on the beach

bulls on the beach

bulls on the beach

After lunch, we headed for the beach. Today was cooler and the wind was strong, strong enough to blow sand as you are laying on the beach. Usually we go to the beach around 11, a later arrival made sense today. So a shorter beach time meant less sand blasting and the beach time was enjoyable. We will try tomorrow for a longer spell.

Wind-kite surfing

Wind-kite surfing

Dinner was down the street at one of the many restaurants with live music lining Ocean Drive.

Ed and Chris at the beach

Ed and Chris at the beach

Ed and Chris March 26 10:30 pm

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