Park fence in Ridgeway, SC. |
As it happens, my memory of Paris, USA was jogged the other day, when I spent five hours with Danielle in a town called Ridgeway. We drove to the postcard-stamp-sized hamlet on a rural, two-lane highway. It's just a few minutes from the capital city where we live, but short as the drive was, we felt a hundred miles from home. It also seemed like going back in time as we strolled the historic downtown (which is only a block long). I've since learned that Ridgeway was settled by Scotch-Irish Presbyterians in 1799 along the "ridge way" of the newly proposed railroad.
Danielle and I spent two full hours in the Cotton Yard Market, browsing antiques and collectibles. I don't normally spend two hours on my feet looking at infinite numbers of unrelated, tiny objects that I didn't know I wanted or needed, but there was something deliciously, lazily dreamlike about it, so I just went with it.
Handwritten receipt. |
Danielle and I, having set aside the entire afternoon for meandering, loved every minute as the minutes ticked on by. The couple behind us was not so amused. Exasperated, they were, and as they roughly pushed open the door to exit, the woman fumed, "We don't have time for this, we have somewhere to be." My friend and I looked at each other, then at the clerk. I said something like, "Well, they don't have the right attitude for a place like this." The clerk shrugged and said, "They'll be back. They shop here all the time."
We went for lunch at the recommended deli/tea room. It's the only place in town to eat, and I drank rhubarb cream tea and we enjoyed a similarly lengthy chat with the deli's proprietor. Then we walked around and witnessed the mating of what might have been hundreds of grasshoppers in the front yard of one of the historic homes. Lastly, we visited the New York City-esque shop and its neighbor, where a woman sold Avon products and her own crocheted creations. She had a Princess Kate bride doll on display and hastened to tell us it wasn't for sale. "You can get your own on the web, though. Five easy installments."
There's a kind of magic to days like these, and it needs a special alchemy. The ingredients must include: a very small, particular place; that place's unique residents; hot, steamy weather; plenty of free time; the sweetest of sweet tea; and just the right person to share it with.
1 comment:
Oh Deb, beautiful post. I felt myself there with you meandering through the store, chatting with the locals, drinking tea, and falling in love all over again with the sweet memories of a lazy, slow day in the south with a great friend, savoring everything about such a day. We need a road trip! Can't believe its been 5 years... Joyeaux Anniversaire, mon amie! Thank you for the memory.
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