Apr 30, 2010

May Day

Mysterious signs appear in our neighborhood again.







Somehow, I don't think this is what they have in mind...


...or this...



...but I will be watching and waiting, just in case.


A few hours later.....


PS. Just received this information by email:

Ansley Park Civic Association E-News
May Day
Sunday, May 2, 4-6 p.m.

Join us in McClatchey Park on Sunday, May 2nd from 4 to 6 p.m. for some dancing around the Maypole for the May Day Celebration! We'll have face painting, sack races, tug-of-war, prizes, bracelet making, three-legged races and other activities enjoyed by the children of the neighborhood. Ice cream and fun are provided by the Ansley Park Civic Association.



Well, why didn't they just say that in the first place?

Ice cream!!

Apr 25, 2010

Neither Rain, nor Tornadoes...

What wonderful weather for a yard sale! 

Last weekend, I mean. 

This Saturday, the actual date of the Ansley Park Yard Sale, the weather outside was frightful, but with some last minute maneuvers, The Villa's lobby was delightful as the yard sale became an indoor event--at least, for us.

After the pre-dawn rain, and before the late morning downpours, a few brave souls set up shop in front of the building.







Some brought pots of lavender...



...and others contributed hardware scavenged from the building's basement.




Eventually, even these brave souls fled to the lobby to escape the coming danger...





...and found that brave yard sale shoppers continued to come...







Old friends stopped by to say hello (Ray M., this is you), and we found surprise customers among our own neighbors at The Villa.

(Who knew that K. had those beautiful shoes and purses, or that E. had those silver picture frames, or that S. had the beautiful copper bowl? )

In the end, we were wet and tired, but had a little more money for the Beautification Fund, a little more room at home, and a lot of fun.



Not a bad way to spend a Saturday, after all!



Apr 23, 2010

Ansley Park Neighborhood Yard Sale

Come to the Ansley Park Yard Sale 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. Saturday morning (April 24)!

The Villa is # 31 on this Map.

See you there!

Apr 20, 2010

Spring's in Bloom

Nothing says "Spring in Atlanta" like azaleas

It's the same here at The Villa. 

From snowy white....











...to shades of pink...













...all the way to flame...






...and back to white again.





Apr 14, 2010

Atlanta Dogwood Festival

Join the parade from The Villa as we walk on over to Piedmont Park and the Atlanta Dogwood Festival, this Friday through Sunday (April 16-18). 

It's a juried arts festival, with more than 250 artists from around the country exhibiting in painting, glass, clay, wood, mixed media, and more.






There's music, dance, stand-up comedy, and other performances...




...food and drink (that's a funnel cake below, tastes much better than it looks)...



...stuff to buy...





...and 9:00 Saturday night, there's a free Movie on the Meadow.


(hint...it's Psycho.)

Apr 10, 2010

Signs...interpreted

The signs are still there at the end of the bridge that is next to our building, their purpose and message unclear. 

This one reminds me of Close Encounters of the Third Kind, in which the visiting aliens (friendly) communicated through a series of tones. 


Could this be a similar type of message, in shades of color instead of sound?
Or, something more sinister?

This sign features wheels with lines inside -- Earth with its magnetic lines?  Starburst within a circle?

Or a color wheel?


Wait a minute...

The words "bike" scattered on the sign could be clues...

Oh.

Those are bicycle wheels on the sign.

I look over the side of the bridge, where the wooden ties of the abandoned rail line have been pulled up and stacked for removal.



Suddenly all is clear.  The signs must be markers for the new Atlanta Beltline, a 22-mile loop around intown Atlanta---walking and biking trails, linear park, light rail transit lines, and even an urban arboretum.

 It will pass near our property, just across Golf Circle and part of the Ansley Golf Club golf course.



Now I feel silly.


I start Googling, and find the article below, from the AJC.  I guess I missed it the first time around.



Watch for those BeltLine signs

Atlanta Journal Constitution, June 29, 2009, by Jamie Gumbrecht


WonderRoot co-founder Alex West, 25, of Atlanta
 paints a plywood sign.

Sometime Wednesday morning, you might notice a little something different along your commute.

About 60 people gathered at Eyedrum last weekend to paint signs that will mark the 22-mile BeltLine loop around Atlanta. About 100 plywood pieces measuring 1-by-4 feet, 2-by-4 feet and 4-by-4 feet will go up where Atlanta’s neighborhood transit project crosses public rights of way.

This isn’t a project of the Georgia Department of Transportation, or even BeltLine organizers. It’s the idea of “BeltLine cheerleader” Angel Poventud, who cooked up the plan about a year ago when he realized just how much traffic crossed the BeltLine’s path. When the official channels took too long for his taste, he went to WonderRoot, a Reynoldstown-based community arts organization, for help.

WonderRoot leaders spent about $600 on supplies and gathered artists, activists, students and transit fans to make the signs. They hope to post them Tuesday night. Most of the signs don’t mention the word “BeltLine,” but organizers hope they’ll signal that something special is coming to that location.

“It’s pretty simple, pretty quick and grassroots,” Poventud said. “I don’t want to say ‘Let’s take the BeltLine back.’ It’s kind of nice to take part of it back, to say ‘Let us do this from the community.’”

Of course, because this is all to be unofficial signage held up by nails and plastic ties, it could come down pretty quickly at the hand of vandals or transportation officials.

Poventud’s take: “They’ll be taken down, not because they’re not supposed to be there, but because they’re badass.”

—Jamie Gumbrecht






Apr 9, 2010

A sign of the times

One day they weren't there.  The next they were.

The signs.

I was intrigued.  Maybe it's a street art installation, like the amazing work done by my friend's son.

These signs appeared just across the bridge that is next to my home.  Who sent this message to us?

I was reminded of another type of unexplained art.....crop circles.  Could these signs also be the work of aliens?

I must investigate.

To be continued.....

Apr 4, 2010

Magic

The Villa is a magical place, but not for the reason my son once thought.  

When he was little, he believed our home was on "Fairy Street," which made a lot more sense to him than the actual street name:  "Montgomery Ferry Drive."

Atlanta once depended on ferries, since it's located just east of the Chattahoochee River.  The ferries were named for the men who owned them.



Today the ferries are gone, but the names remain on the roads that once led to them.  The Villa sits on the road that ran from the city of Decatur to Major Montgomery's ferry.  Here's what history records:
   





After serving in the War of 1812, Major James McConnell Montgomery built Fort Peachtree in 1814 on a site that overlooks the Chattahoochee River.  Montgomery worked under the supervision of Colonel George Gilmer, who later became Governor. 




After leaving the army, Montgomery operated a flat raft ferry to cross the Chattahoochee River near Fort Peachtree.  It became known as Montgomery's Ferry

Early ferries charged on a sliding scale, from a man or horse (5 cents each) to a loaded wagon (a dollar for wagon, horse and driver).

By 1822, Montgomery owned more than 1000 acres of land that had been ceded by the Creek Indians a year earlier.  Because he thought it was such a beautiful area, he moved his family there and they became the first permanent white settlers in the region that was to become Atlanta. Montgomery built a house at the intersection of what is now Moores Mill Road and Bolton Road and continued to run the ferry.






Montgomery died in 1842.  In 1853, the ferry was taken over by Martin DeFoor and became known as DeFoor's Ferry.

Eventually the ferries were replaced by bridges.  Horses and wagons didn't travel along Montgomery Ferry Road to cross the river any more.

But maybe one night, if I sit quietly on the front steps of the building, I can catch a ghostly glimpse of the people who walked and rode here long before my family and I arrived.


Thanks to Ferries of Cobb County, DAR Fort Peachtree Chapter, Fort Peachtree - Buckhead, and Riverside: Atlanta's Upper West Side.

Apr 2, 2010

How many can you find?


It's the Easter Egg Hunt in Ansley Park!



I bet these Polo Drive neighbors will be looking for Easter eggs.








See you there!