FILOLI - a day trip
After living in the bay area for ten years, we found a place this week that we have driven past over the years, but never checked out.
Somehow we did not even register the sign on Highway 280 that says "FILOLI - next exit. National Historic Landmark Site".
Thanks to Anu.P and K. we knew about the existance of this wonderful place called FILOLI.
It is a mansion named for FIght LOve LIve. You can read more at their website.
We had a blast. It was a really hot day, but some of the gardens in the place were extremely cool and refreshing. We also went on a self tour of the mansion. Wow!! It was just amazing. The whole family had a blast. The added bonus was that we were joined by the cousins and a host of friends!
The best part was that daddy got to dance with his daughters in a beautiful ballroom and there was a lady playing wonderful waltzes on a piano in the corner.
Here is the trip in pictures.
Posing with the kids and the MIL at the garden entrance...
Have no idea what this flower was, but it was inviting the camera. Missed my Tamron for a few seconds there!
The wonderful Allium. We have this in our house as well. The ones in our front yard never got to this size!
A wall of flowers!
A beautiful shot of San with the kids in front of the garden!
Jr. in front of the pool and clock tower.
This was a beautiful arrangement at the end of the rose garden
The rose garden. Really well maintained. Jr. though had a big issue with the "buggies" aka bees and wasps!
Another fantastic garden with tall well pruned hedges. When you have 654 Acres of land at your disposal, you can have many such gardens each visually more enchanting than the previous one!
The rose garden
A sample of the roses (there are lots of rose portraits, liked this one the best)
Note the dark pink looking plant on the right of this photo...
It is full of a rose looking miniature!
One of the coolest places at FILOLI outside the gardens
One of the majestic rooms at the Estate mansion! Gives you some idea of what half a million dollars can get you in the mid 1800's!
The ladies of the estate used to have tea ceremonies where they would gather and discuss the matters of the day. So says the informational video! When you put two Madrasi granny's in the same location a 150 years later, they still have a discussion alright, tea or otherwise! The two grannies were busy discussing anything under the sun (or shade) while the younger generation was busy running after the youngest generation!
One of the murals on the walls of the ballroom. Apparently made in the artists studio in New York. How they got it to this place in the mid 1800's is beyond me! Ship? Road? Did they break it in sections?
Finally a picture of daddy with the little one. A little blurry but you can still make out the happiness in the little one's face when she is dancing. She has this divine smile!
It was a memorable trip. If you happen to live in the bay area or you are visiting in spring or early summer, this is guranteed to be a good day of fun!
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The have's and the have nots!
In a strange dream concocted by lingering memories from the previous day, I may have found some correlations, which may not be worth much. It does make one question the law of averages!
In many companies that I know (personal experience or through friends and relatives), they tend to have an evaluation of employees (or ranking) and based on the ranking the top performers, the average and the bottom lists, are generated. The top get rewarded during the good times and the bottom get shafted during the bad times.
Imagine this being extrapolated to every company, every employee, be it the public or private sector, across countries. In a way this happens wherever there is capitalism. (Socialist, communist people may not be going through this. Guessing that based on my two month stint in a Durgapur Steel Plant two decades ago!)
Then no wonder there is a shortage of basic amenities in poor countries while there is wastage in other nations.
In a simple boolean representation of the three basic amenities aka food, clothing and shelter (my mom taught me that they are the 3 basic ones when I was a little kid, she did not teach me boolean stuff)
case shelter clothing food have
1 0 0 0 havenot
2 0 0 1 havesome
3 0 1 0 havesome
4 0 1 1 average
5 1 0 0 havesome
6 1 0 1 average
7 1 1 0 average
8 1 1 1 have
In companies it is usually the top and bottom 10% or in some cases top and bottom 15% that is considered as the people to be rewarded or reprimanded.
It looks like in the real world case also the top 12.5% are the haves, the bottom 12.5% are the havenots and in between we have the average folks who have 2/3 and the havesomes which are closer to the havenots who make up another 37.5%.
This kind of explains why the poor countries cannot afford to buy food and feed their people or provide shelter for the disaster hit! They have been given poor performance reviews in a capitalistic world! while the rich countries waste food, buy clothes they dont need because it is on bargain sale, and keep remodeling their shelters at exhorbitant costs!
This may not be profound or anything, but the world seems to be running much like a large corporation and not much can be done about it.As a people, as a country, as a group, you are better off if you are in the top 1/8th as long as the world runs on moolah!
The hamster in my head is overheating. Time to catch some sleep!
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