Sunday, August 15, 2010
PEBBLE BEACH CONCOURS: CAR CRAZY WEEK PART-3
GRAND PRIZE WINNER, BEST OF THE SHOW 1937 DELAGE D-8-120S POURTOUT AERO COUPE
PULLING AWAY ONE OF A KIND CONTINENTAL PARK WARD ROLLS ROYCE STREAMLINER SALON
BEST OF CLASS PREWAR...A 1938 MERCEDES BENZ 540 K TOURENWAGEN
BEST OF CLASS AMERICAN 1925-1941 A 1934 PACKARD 1108 DIETRICH COUPE
CLASS A ANTIQUE THROUGH 1915 A 1904 POPE-TOLEDO TYPE IV, REAR ENTRANCE TONNEAU
Today, being the third Sunday in August, is Pebble Beach Concours d'Elegance Sunday. In honor of that occasion I am posting some photographs I have taken at previous events.
Saturday, August 14, 2010
PEBBLE BEACH COUNCOURS: CAR CRAZY WEEK-PART 2
PARK THAT ROLLS RIGHT HERE SIR!
A STUNNING 1938 MERCEDES BENZ 540 SSK
THE CHP ESCORTS THE TOUR INTO DOWNTOWN CARMEL
Excerpted from my book :OUR SUMMER IN CARMEL- Amazon.com
(This posting covers my visit to the PB Councours in 2005)
Late Thursday morning found me walking up into Carmel’s central
business district, or to be more precise, Ocean Avenue, the main
thoroughfare. This avenue is about a five minute walk from where we
rented our house for the summer. I was on my way to witness a stopover
on the eighth annual Pebble Beach Tour d’Elegance. This fifty-plus mile
road rally brings Sunday’s Pebble Beach Concours d’Elegance cars out
of the “garage” and demonstrates that they are not just “hanger queens”
only to be ogled at and photographed. They are also to be driven and
enjoyed as they were a long time ago. In that sense, this touring event is
what the Concours d’Elegance is all about, not only preserving great cars,
but honoring them as well by driving them.
This year the rally would take the cars through Carmel Valley, down
magnificent Highway 1 roadway towards Big Sur, over the famous
Bixby Bridge, and then turning back to stop for lunch in Carmel, before
returning to Pebble Beach. It happened to be a beautiful day for the
event with the perennial fog lifting, allowing the sunlight to glisten off
the polished chrome and exquisite finish of these fine automobiles.
Ocean Avenue, that was previously declared a no parking zone for this
event, began to fill with the rally cars at about 11 am. The entrants were
skillfully escorted by the California Highway Patrol. The cars were all
parked facing the ocean on both sides of the divided avenue. Crowds
began to gather, and soon swelled: they “oohed” and “aahed” with
the arrival of each automobile, swarming around their favorites and
snapping pictures.
Meanwhile the owner/drivers, if even for only two
hours, mingled with the general public, which is what this event is all
about anyway. The owners even left their cars unattended while they
ate lunch in Carmel’s welcoming restaurants
Wednesday, August 11, 2010
PEBBLE BEACH CONCOURS: CAR CRAZY WEEK
Phil Hill's legendary 1955 Mercedes Benz 300 SLR overlooking Carmel Bay from the 18th green at Pebble Beach
Excerpted from my book: OUR SUMMER IN CARMEL Amazon.com
(This narrative is about the 2005 Councours d'Elegance)
On the third Sunday in August, the center of the automobile universe
is a tiny piece of golf-sacred land, the finishing hole on the famous
Pebble Beach Golf Course, alongside beautiful Carmel Bay, California.
Isn’t the 18th at Pebble an unusual place for such a boastful automotive
claim? Here’s the background. Since 1950, when the inaugural Pebble
Beach Concours d’Elegance and Road Race was conducted, the now
week-long, peninsula-wide festival has grown to achieve an unparalleled
status as the premier international celebration of the automobile. It
began simply enough with a road race inside gated and private Pebble
Beach, which in that first year was won by legendary driver Phil Hill. The
accompanying Concours of about 30 cars at the Beach and Tennis Club,
was largely a chance to have a picnic, show off, and parade elegant and
expensive automobiles, many of which were new models. In fact the best
of show for the first five years was a new, or nearly new, car. It was not
until 1955 that the same Phil Hill, who won the road race again that year
(now removed from Pebble beach to the Del Monte track), also won the
Concours Best of Show with a meticulously restored 1931 Pierce-Arrow.
Since then, the Concours d’Elegance was forever changed to focus on the
preservation of classic and historic automobiles. The most sought after
and prestigious award in the motoring world is the simple ribbon given
as a Best of Class award. For this 55th year of the Pebble Beach gathering,
227 cars will be judged by experts and divided among 24 classes, a select
9 or 10 cars per class. They are the finest representations of their class in
the world. More on the Pebble Beach event, the centerpiece of the weeklong
festival, later.
The Concours d’Elegance, meaning a meeting of the finest and
highest style, has grown over the years from a small group of friends an aficionados gathering for a one day drive-by and picnic to admire what
were, at the beginning, essentially new cars, to today, where, for an entire
week, the whole Monterey peninsula is given over to the automobile.
This is really a BIG DEAL. You cannot get a room within fifty miles.
Many attendees return every year and assure their accommodation by
booking the next year before they leave. The Village is clogged with very
expensive cars. Just the cars strewn about the 18th fairway (by the way
closing the hole for play that day) of the Pebble Beach Golf Course on
Sunday are estimated to have a value in excess of $300,000,000. Yes,
$300 million or about $1.3 million each. Not your average parking lot on
a Sunday afternoon.
Sunday, May 16, 2010
CARMEL SUMMER RENTAL-OUR LOVE NEST. PART TWO
THE UPTOWN MARTINI TRAVELING BAR IS OPEN THE DAY OF ARRIVAL
BONUS ROOM LOFT SUN SETTING IN THE OCEAN WITH A PEEK OF CARMEL BAY
EXCERPTED FROM MY BOOK: OUR SUMMER IN CARMEL, AMAZON.COM
Okay, here are the facts about our love nest. It consists of two
bedrooms and two baths, a living room-dining room combination with a
wood burning fireplace, which comes in handy even in August, a narrow
railroad car style kitchen, fully equipped, serviceable but outdated, and a
washer/dryer in a separate room outside the kitchen door. A large sliding
door opens to a central courtyard, built around a live oak, where there is
a small grill and where Tom was banished when he smoked an occasional
cigar. Accessible by a sliding glass door from the guest bedroom is a
large backyard, which was somewhat unusable since it was overgrown. A
gardener, Dave, who fittingly originated from England, has been caring
for the place for thirty-three years and comes every other week to tend
to the plants, trim the bushes, and sweep up the pine needles. A bonus
in this house that provides added value is the library loft. Perched atop
the house, it is glass- enclosed on three sides, giving tree filtered views
of the ocean and Pebble Beach. It became my quiet retreat to write and
read. A neutral corner, a place detached, where one can be alone for a
while, which is sometimes useful when spending so much time away
from family and friends, with only each other. Parking is in the driveway
(the owners keep the garage for themselves) and there is storage inside
the front door for golf clubs and luggage. Local phone hookup, gas heat,
and daily newspaper delivery were all arranged within a day or two of our
arrival. I pay the electric bill. The rent averages about $85 a day and we
took the place for 99 days. A modest one room B&B in Carmel will cost
about $200 a night, provided there are no major events such as the Bach
Festival or the Pebble Beach Concours d’elegance; it is usually double the
rate at those times. Having a house to live in, we take most of our meals
at home, allowing us to schedule and pick our dining out choices from a
wide selection of very good restaurants.
The day after we arrived, our cocktail bar was open for business. I had
also purchased two cases of wine, which would last a month. In a matter
of only a few days we were comfortably settled, maybe feeling even a little
pampered. If we were cats, we would be purring with contentment.
Thursday, April 29, 2010
CARMEL SUMMER RENTAL-OUR LOVE NEST
OUR OVER BURDENED SUV IN FRONT OF OUR SUMMER HOME. THE BONUS ROOM LOFT ON TOP SERVED AS MY OFFICE FROM WHICH I HAD A PEEK OF THE OCEAN AND PEBBLE BEACH.
LIVING ROOM LOOKING OUT ON INTERIOR SUN-FILLED PATIO WHERE I WAS ALLOWED TO SMOKE AN AFTER DINNER CIGAR.
OUR LIVING ROOM WHERE ELYSEE HAS SET FLOWERS ABOUT AND IN THE CORNER I HAVE ORGANIZED OUR COCKTAIL BAR.
EXTRACTED FROM MY BOOK: OUR SUMMER IN CARMEL, AMAZON.COM
There is a lot of information in the next two posts for those who might want to consider adopting our "No Second Home" wanderlust lifestyle.
OUR CARMEL LOVE NEST
Since beginning our annual escapades away from Florida’s abysmal
summer climate, Elysee and I have had several cozy “Love Nests.” A town house in Kinsale, Ireland, a beach cottage on the Pacific Ocean south of Ensenada, Mexico, a first floor in a two-story villa overlooking the Pacific Ocean in Coogee Beach, Australia, and an apartment in view of the Karavanke
Alps in Bled, Slovenia, and last summer a town house in Boothbay Harbor, Maine.
We move furnishings about our temporary home to suit ourselves, and within a few days our several months-long rental becomes our home. Carmel was no different. Our SUV, aided by a large car top carrier, jammed full of clothes and belongings including golf clubs and pull carts, was unpacked by the afternoon we arrived, our
“stuff ” put in its proper place. The kitchen was decoded, appliances
checked, and, by the next day, our cupboards were stocked. A corner in
the living area was set aside to mix our evening cocktails. Fresh flowers
were placed about the house. Nothing like fresh flowers to say, “We are
here for awhile” this is not just a weekend diversion. People do not buy
fresh flowers for a weekender. A workspace was designated for each of
us. For Elysee, a place to attend to her voluminous correspondence, and
for me, a place to write. We also carry framed photographs of our family and place them about the place, storing away any similar owner items. Should you have visited a week after our arrival the impression we hoped you would get was the two of us comfortably at home, as though we had been living there a long while.
I began planning for our Carmel summer eight months ahead of time, and even then, because Carmel is so popular, I had some difficulty finding a suitable place.
Despite the late start I found a place, in a good location, that was the right size, and priced at what I was willing to pay. We always rent two bedroom-two bath homes. This not only assures our guests are comfortably accommodated, but when it is only the two of us we can spread out more, each of us with our own bath
and dressing area. The second bedroom can also function as an office
and/or golf club and baggage storage. More reasonably though, I have
found that limiting the search to at least two bedrooms screens out the
marginal one-bedroom offerings, such as Mother-in-Law suites,
rooms over the garage, or junior’s basement hideaway.
Our Carmel Love Nest, although functional, need some redecoration. Elysee observed that the cocktail hour snacks kept getting lost in the 1960s style shag carpet. In the kitchen, the Formica counter tops were “quaint” and the cookware was left over from Wagon Train.
Compensating for the furnishings being out of style, the location was
ideal. We could walk to the village shops, post office, library, restaurants,
and theaters. Being two blocks from the beach provided the steady,
gentle sound of the usually placid surf in Carmel Bay, and I could look
out to see the ocean from the library loft. The Carmel gate into Pebble
Beach was only a few minutes walk. A little further on down
the path the Pebble Beach Lodge awaits with a fine meal or an evening
cocktail. Walking there gives us the promise of an even more pleasant
return walk to our Carmel home, especially on moonlit nights, the golf
course slumbering, and the gentle, silent swell of Carmel Bay beyond.
(More in part wto.)
Friday, March 12, 2010
PEBBLE BEACH AT and T
SUNDAY #4 AT PEBBLE NEAR THE BOAT CLUB
LOOKING TOWARDS FAMED #7 AT PEBBLE ON SUNDAY
FRIDAY #7 MPCC...ELYSEE SMOOZING THE CROWD BETWEEN FOURSOMES
ELYSEE GIVING BALL DIRECTIONS AFTER PRO DRIVES FROM #7
ARE WE HAVING A GREAT TIME. WX COULD NOT HAVE BEEN BETTER.
We enjoyed ourselves being Marshals at the AT&T. Weather was great, especially for that time of the year. Long days with an early start and you're on the course all day. Final match at Pebble we were stationed on #4. That meant that after the last foursome we were released and we say the last three groups at 18. Carmel and the crowd at Pebble treated us very well, and of course we enjoy Carmel a great deal. Ate at three of my favorite restaurants. Want to know what they are? Email me!
Tuesday, February 9, 2010
THE AT&T PEBBLE BEACH
ELYSEE IS HAUNTING #18 AT PEBBLE BEACH ( You have to read the book.)
4th of JULY AT BLACKHORSE, FT.ORD. NOTE FLAG IN TOM'S HAT
ELYSEE TAKING A LESSON FROM BEN ALEXANDER PRO AT POPPY HILLS
LONE CYPRESS PEBBLE BEACH
Elysee and I leave tomorrow for Carmel where we are staying during the AT&T Pro-Am at Pebble Beach. We are Marshals at the tournament, yes I know, Marshall Marshals, or is it Marshal Marshalls. Anyway, I thought it fitting before we left to post some golf photos taken for my book about Carmel Our Summer in Carmel, Amazon.com
We have stayed three summers in Carmel and thoroughly enjoyed ourselves, but never playing Pebble Beach. Number one it is too expensive for my humble game and secondly, Pebble is very difficult to get on. You don't just call up a few days before and ask for a tee time. They are booked a year ahead, mostly for business events.
We have played many area courses though, getting special break at Ft. Ord's two very difficult tracks, a BIG break at the Navy course, Monterey Pines, as well as Pacific Grove, Carmel Valley Ranch, Rancho Canada and others.
We won't know our assignments until reporting in, but I;ll pass them on in case you want to see us shivering and wet on TV.
Here are a few pictures from the book.
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