It was January. We'd left the cold behind by day two of our drive, but even so the balminess of the Florida air was a surprise. It was nighttime when we finally pulled into our motel near Biscayne Bay, and the combination of darkness and sultriness has stayed with me all these years, potent memories of a place different from any other I'd visited.
Florida has changed drastically since then, but it retains that other-worldliness. Like the lush Northwest, Florida is its own place, and it's a privilege to spend a week a year savoring its big sky, palm trees and sugar-sand beach. It's a combination I've come to think of as scenic hospitality, and this morning, back in Virginia, I'm appreciating it all the more.
(A picket fence I walked by every morning on my way to the beach. It's decorated with pineapples, the symbol of hospitality.)