Old World/New World Plaza Duarte, Santo Domingo DR Fundraiser

    The old and new world co-exist, sometimes shake hands, but more often ignore one another. These kids are fundraising for a trip to Phoenix, Arizona for an International Hip-Hop Competition. These seniors,sitting on green crates in the park,close to them, are seeing their peace and quiet taken over by the new world crashing in like rapping waves, The Indians that saw Columbus might have felt the same way this old generation might be feeling right now. In this world, there is room for everybody, but we need plenty of benches with some space between them.  
 

Plaza for a Poet Pellerano Castro

    This little plaza is dedicated to an important poet with a simple stone inscription. Pellerano was a man who moved to the Dominican Republic from Curacao, stayed, and also raised a daughter, Luisa Castro, who was one of the most influential woman writers of Latin America. ” La Nuestra, ” is a glowing statue in the plaza of a Dominican born poet and activist, Judith Burgos, who died of pneumonia in Harlem at the age of 39 who was, likewise, a shooting star. Little niches pop up in the Colonial Zone as you walk, with simple signs on walls saying this was the residence of a past President, this was where a playwright wrote his searing social criticism, this was where a priest was martyred for his beliefs, this was where the first hospital in the New World was established. Poets use few words but the words they use must fit exactly, contain enough punch to outlast time with time’s changes of culture, etiquette and politics. Poets write about grand things as well as things as minor as a cup of tea, a morning walk, or a cat sitting on a window sash as the sun rises on a bougainvilla bush outside the front porch. This is a quiet little plaza towards the south of the Zona Colonia. on the same street as the Larimer Museo and the Cathedral at Parque Colon. Societies recognize their fleeting spirits, the ones who touch clouds, see deeper and farther than the rest of us. This plaza is a small intimate poem you read out loud to yourself on a warm March morning as you stroll the shaded walkways.  
  

Street Music-Parque Colon-Santo Domingo Parmenio Diaz, Alto Sax

    Playing Alto Sax is no easy affair. Playing solo, in public, with no supporting team, is similar to shooting a game winning basketball free throw, in a championship series, with everything on the wire. Parmenio plays with spirit. There is room, in music, for all of us. Even though our two playing styles and melodies are different, we alto sax addicts have to deal with intonation, technique, and what goes on between our ears when we throw sheet music away and play from our hearts. Hearing another alto sax player who plays because he wants to is a joy. We all play because we love it, but there are times I want to put my horn up for sale. Melodies, like words, don’t always come easy.  
 

Police Band Zona Colonial Plaza Santo Domingo Event

    The last police band i saw was in Cuenca, at a celebration for ex-pats and foreign business development in that Ecuadorian city. This Santo Domingo events aim is to support women and fight domestic violence in Latin America.This police band provides some of the entertainment. There are uniformed officers patrolling all the tourist destinations in this ” old City.”. and, except for getting hustled to buy things you don’t want or solicited to take a guided tour from one of the many guides in the area, the Zone is very safe. The police band’s music is contagious, in a good way. It is good for the police to show their gentle side since most of their job deals with locking up family, friends, and strangers who choose not to follow rules. Police are still humans, we sometimes forget, who wear guns, handcuffs, badges, drive official vehicles. play in the police band, and put people in jail. They can never lose their humanity no matter how much bad they have to clean up. When public servants and institutions lose their humanity, we all lose.      

Talking Man Newerk Airport

    We listen to a lot of talking heads but this guy actually makes sense. As an employer, you don’t have to pay his wages, retirement, medical benefits or deal with his personal issues that cost you money. Fred stays where you put him and does as he is programmed. He won’t steal from you, misrepresent what your business does, and always dresses appropriately. As a traveler, Fred gives me information I can use, and, he is easy to walk away from. As a watcher of trends, Fred  seems, to me, to be a harbinger of our coming dystopian future. When we listen to ” fake people ” we have already been positioned where someone else wants us.    
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Dominican Republic Getting ready for Santo Domingo

    Trips start with me saying the name of a country three times while hopping up and down on my left foot, twice. There are 195 countries in the world, according to Wikipedia. I can’t see them all, in this lifetime, so I usually choose countries to visit that look warm and friendly, have good pictures from people who have been there, and good reviews by fellow travelers. Sometimes friends and family give me their dream vacations. Pat, who keeps Scotttreks.com flying with tech genius, suggested the Dolphin Fountain in Mazatlan, all the five star restaurants in Paris, the Great Barrier Reef for diving. In the Dominican Republic he likes LaRamada, the north side beaches, the grave of Christopher Columbus, Altos de Chavon and Casa de Campo. To celebrate my ninth travel ring, I buy myself a brand new Dominican Republic guide book at Barnes and Noble, full of places to see, foods to sample, music to tap my foot too, places to hang my hat. There are 195 perfect countries on this planet to visit, thousands of cool places to explore, and friendly hospitable people in all of them.. Scott is getting ready to ramble, once again, but hopping three times is getting difficult I wish I had a magic carpet to make getting there and back home as easy as Mom’s apple pie with a big scoop of ala mode.  
   

Tumbling Tumbleweed looking for home





 




 

” Tumbling Tumbleweeds” is a Roy Rodgers cowboy song, sung around the campfire with fellow cowhands on a starry night, with a crackling fire, when the herd is quiet and coyotes are howling harmony. 

The song’s lyrics are plaintive as the western landscapes shared by cowboys, Indians, outlaws, and cattle.

” See them tumbling down/Pledging their love to the ground/Lonely, but free, I’ll be found/Drifting along with the tumbling tumbleweeds.

Cares of the past are behind/Nowhere to go, but I’ll find/Just where the trail will wind/Drifting along with the tumbling tumbleweeds.

I know when night has gone/That a new world’s born at dawn/I’ll keep rolling along/Deep in my heart is a song/Here on the range I belong/Drifting along with the tumbling tumbleweeds… ”

The last lines of the song crawl into my tent and bite me.

We all have songs to sing, but tumbling is what I like to do the most.

   

Blues Jam Girls Night Out

    Girls like to sing the blues too. Their blues are mostly about guys that don’t leave quick enough or stay long enough, guys who can’t make up their minds and stick with what they finally decide on, guys who drink too much or not enough, guys who are running around looking for thrills when thrills are right there at home. Blues seem to come with human territory and the girls, tonight, are putting on a good show for friends and guests at the jam. When the place closes down and everyone goes home, some here will meet the blues first hand, and probably have a drink in their hand. Meeting our own and other’s expectations is often difficult. For things to work out, a whole lot of tangibles and intangibles have to be rowing in the same direction  
 

Talking with a Man of Bones Glenn Kostur plays the blues

    My last conversation with a skeleton was at an Albuquerque Starbucks, on Halloween. Before that, I shared a sidewalk bench one sunny afternoon, with a man of bones in Tulum, Mexico. Today, outside the Kaktus Brewing Company in Bernalillo, New Mexico, another set of bones greets me.  I wouldn’t swear to it but I believe this skeletons right toe is tapping to the music in perfect four four time. Good blues can bring back the dead, but they often make us feel like we want to die first.  It’s always bad luck to walk past a skeleton without tipping your hat.    
 

Playing for the crowd Nosotros,Valentines Day, 2019

    If you want to know what people are looking for, count the cars in the parking lot. Tonight, the parking lot is packed. The dance floor is also packed,dancers barely having enough room to stand. The band is hitting their notes, ladies are dressed to kill,  the audience rocks with the steady booming salsa rhythm and yell when a tune is done for another one just like it. Latin music has hot harmony, high note trumpet playing, fluid solos and  tight, intricate, group ensembles. When Ladies get dressed up to dance salsa, they light up the dance floor and have smiles that are contagious. Tonight, this is a party to be at, especially if you are a little kid on the bandstand. I thought, at first,the little boy on the band stand was the son of a band member but was told his parents have been bringing him to sing and be on the stage since he was three. Watching the little boy sing with the band is worth the price of admission. It never hurts to start any passion early, before you are told you can’t do it and you best find something more serious to do with your time and energy.  
   
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