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Sunday, November 9, 2025

SUNDAY REVIEW / HONEYMOON AT SEA, PART 2


SAILING THE CALI COAST BETWEEN GIANTS GAMES

By Jennifer Silva Redmond, pictured above.

When Russel and I got married, there weren’t many big things we didn’t know about each other. We’d known each other for 14 years before we got hitched, after all, and though we’d only dated for a year during that time, we had all the basics down—we shared a philosophy of life that pretty much boiled down to “seize the day,” we were liberal democrats, we grew up in California (though Russel was born in Iowa, his family moved to Oceanside when he was 5) and we both loved the ocean. 

We also shared a fondness for live theater, movie musicals, big dogs, and seventies rock music. What we did not have in common was sports. Russel liked baseball and I loved baseball. And I especially loved the San Francisco Giants, even though I never lived in San Francisco, and my hometown was San Diego. That’s a long story which I won’t go into, but suffice to say that I was a pretty rabid Giants fan. 

Russel was happy to indulge my passion but he was a bit worried when I came running out to the dock shouting when I couldn’t get game 2 of the 1989 World Series to come in on his little tv on the boat. 

I was pissed off, to hear him tell it, and it took finding out there’d been a devastating earthquake to shut me up. 

In 2002, Russel started to get pretty excited when the Giants won the Pennant and went to lose the World Series. By the time 2010 rolled around, he was almost as big a fan as I was and we got even more crazy when the Giants did it again in 2012. 

That fall was a magical one, with the Giants winning the World Series and Barack Obama winning a second term. 

Then, in 2014, my beloved husband came up with an idea to celebrate our 25th anniversary—why not take the boat up to San Francisco, stay a few weeks, and see the Giants in person at their ballpark? I was over the moon, of course, and we proceeded to put his plan into action. 

We sailed north up the coast, stopping at Santa Cruz Island and Santa Barbara and then jumped up to Morro Bay for our actual anniversary in late May. We planned to cruise on up to SF and catch some games in June or July, before heading south in early August. But Monterey was as far as we got by sailboat. 

Stillwater Cove daytime
It happened like this: we left the gorgeous, protected anchorage at San Simeon in the late afternoon, as we often do when making a long passage. There’s nowhere for a sailboat to safely stop in the miles north of San Simeon, until you reach Stillwater Cove, the lovely bay that the Pebble Beach golf course and resort wraps around so scenically. 

The 92 miles would take us about 18 hours, but we’d take turns being on watch, so the other could sleep. We waved goodbye to Hearst Castle as the afternoon sun warmed the rolling golden hills of San Simeon, a place we’d come to love on previous visits. 

The Pacific swell was only moderate, coming as always from the northwest along the coast, meaning right on our nose, and we settled in for a long spell of motoring. 

At seven o’clock, our dinner eaten, I volunteered for the first watch, knowing there was a Giants game coming on that I could tune in to on Sirius Radio—listening to that would keep me awake while looking around and staying alert to any potential problems. 

 Russel went below and tried to rest, but two hours later, off Big Sur, he popped up saying he was “too interested to sleep.” We both watched awhile as the boat crept along the towering rock cliffs, then we took turns going below and lying in the v-berth, but sleep eluded us both. I took my turns in the warm bed but couldn’t shut down my mind, and Russel had the same problem; we each slept an hour or two out of the 14 we’d allowed for sleep and watches. 

The motoring went better than the sleeping and we got to Stillwater Cove before it was light, not a good time to come into a shallow, rocky, kelp-filled cove that we’d never entered before. We decided to press on to Monterey, knowing we could anchor off the marina and not have to deal with docking in our sleep-deprived state. 

 I have always been able to “maintain” pretty well on little or no sleep, thanks to many years of working long shifts in restaurants and bars, followed by doing acting rehearsals, classes, or performances. But I was pretty tired by the time we rounded the big peninsula that wraps around the big bay of Monterey to the west and south. 

Russel was lying quietly below and, hoping he was sleeping, I kept steering through the quirky but beautiful approach to the harbor. The houses along those few miles are some of the most beautiful in the world, and their waterfront settings are world-class too. 

Monterey Bay
When Russel came up, he was happy to see we’d arrived, but we were both unhappy to see that the swell was also wrapping around and heading into the bay, making the anchorage as full of swells as the open ocean. Admitting defeat, beaten by the elements, we called the marina office and they said they had a slip for us, so we powered to the dock, exhausted and with the stress working on our final nerves. 

Once we’d pulled into the slip and safely tied up, I walked up to the office to check us in and pay for the slip, and Russel got the boat straightened up—passages always cause things you thought were fastened to come loose and by the end of 18 hours, there were plenty of things strewn about or hastily stuck in odd places. 

The rest of the day was spent in the v-berth where, even though I still couldn’t fall asleep, I was more than content to read and relax in the still and quiet boat while Russel napped. 

The next day we looked at the charts for the next leg of our passage up to San Francisco and decided that we’d “prefer not to.” Better to stay put in Monterey and go up by car. We rented a slip in Monterey’s marina for a month, enjoying daily walks filled with sightseeing around the historic city. In late June, almost a month after my birthday, we rented a car in Monterey and drove up to SF for a couple of days, planning to eat some great seafood, see some baseball, and do a little city-by-the-bay tourism. 

The cioppino at the renowned Tadich Grill was delicious—it always is—and we enjoyed walking around the city as we always do, but a few little things got in the way of us having our dream vacation. I’d chosen our hotel based purely on the fact that it wasn’t too expensive and was right on the train line to AT&T Park (we’d decided that public transport was the smart way to get to the ballpark, which is still true). 

That night we took the train over to the ballpark, taking in the sights at the glittering Embarcadero. Unfortunately, the Giants got soundly beat by our hometown Padres and we got back to the hotel late and bummed out. We were asleep at midnight when the loud partying started next door, and the noise kept us tossing and turning for hours. 

At dawn I got up to take a morning walk and found a nearby cafe that served excellent coffee and buttermilk donuts. Russel was able to sleep in once the party animals retired at four, so he wasn’t feeling too bad. The fresh donuts and strong coffee (and a full refund from Hotels.com) made us both feel much better. 

That day we drove over to Sausalito, the charming village just over the Golden Gate from SF. We’d been advised to try The Spinnaker for lunch, which lived up to its billing on waterfront views as well as great food, plus the Bloody Marys were spicy and strong. 

Full as a tick, I wandered back from the ladies room past a bar where the Wednesday afternoon Giants game was on. I stopped to watch a moment, only to discover that Tim Lincecum was pitching a no-hitter against the Padres. I called Russel over and we spent the after-lunch hour watching baseball history be made, just a few miles away. I tried to take it well, but of course I was kicking myself. Why hadn’t I chosen the day game? 

Luckily, it was a gorgeous afternoon to enjoy Sausalito, so we wandered the streets and happily window shopped before heading home, worn out from the ups and downs of our long-awaited Giants visit to the big city. 

Notes: 
An earlier version of this essay was originally published in Womancake Magazine in 2024; it is reprinted here with the permission of that publication. 

Enjoy Womancake Magazine at: https://www.womancake.com/ 

Follow Jennifer’s Substack at https://honeymoonatsea.substack.com/ 

"Honeymoon at Sea: How I Found Myself Living on a Small Boat" can be purchased online or please feel free to order it at your favorite bookstore.

                                                                ***

Author just missed this game. Candlestick Park, San Francisco after Earthquake World Series Game 3 October 17, 1989 vs. Oakland Athletics.


Saturday, November 8, 2025

COFFEE BEANS & BEINGS / WALKING CAFFE TOUR OF TREVISO, ITALY

 


Where Water, Light, and Espresso Flow Together
 Few Italian towns blend café culture and canal charm as gracefully as Treviso—a walled city of about 94,000 residents, just half an hour north of Venice. Locals call it Piccola Venezia, “Little Venice,” not out of rivalry, but affection. The River Sile and the Canale dei Buranelli wind through its heart, their slow waters mirroring ochre facades, flowered balconies, and bicycles leaning against stone parapets. 

Treviso rewards the walker. 

The best way to experience it is cup in hand, pausing at the city’s classic coffeehouses—each within a pleasant few minutes’ stroll of the next. Here’s a self-guided circuit that invites lingering, reflection, and a deep sip of northern Italian life. 


Casa del Caffè
 — Piazza dei Signori’s Beating Heart 

Start your walk at Casa del Caffè, just off Piazza dei Signori, Treviso’s grand square where morning light pools between the Torre Civica and the Palazzo dei Trecento. Sit outdoors and order a cappuccino with a view of the clock tower. Early hours bring a hum of conversation and the scent of pastry cream drifting from nearby bakeries. The gentle gurgle of a canal just a block away provides a constant undertone—a reminder that the city moves on water as much as stone. 

Il Caffè Letterario — Espresso among Books and Bridges 

From Piazza dei Signori, stroll along Via Calmaggiore, where boutique windows reflect the waterways below. Within minutes you’ll reach Il Caffè Letterario, tucked near the Canale dei Buranelli. The name is literal: part café, part salon. Order an espresso or macchiato, thumb through an Italian paperback, and watch the reflections ripple beneath the bridges. Locals favor this stop for afternoon quiet, when the city’s rhythms slow and the light turns amber. 


Caffè Diemme
 Italian Attitude

Continue south toward the River Sile, whose clear current once powered the city’s medieval mills—many of which still stand, now repurposed as galleries or energy hubs. A short walk leads you to Caffè Diemme Italian Attitude, a modern espresso bar celebrating Treviso’s sustainability renaissance. Try the house blend alongside a slice of fregolotta or the local invention, tiramisù, which legend credits to a 19th-century madam seeking a “pick-me-up” for her clientele. From the terrace, the Sile flows beneath weeping willows—perhaps the most serene coffee view in northern Italy. 

***

On the willow-lined Sile River, Café Rosa offers a calm, romantic pause in Treviso. Beside an old water mill whose wheel still turns with the current, its shaded terrace opens to drifting light and the murmur of water. Espresso and handmade pastries mark slow mornings; at sunset, locals gather for spritzes as the river glows gold beneath the fading day.

Riverside Reflections (see above)  

Treviso’s caffés are linked not just by stone streets but by living water. The Sile River, Italy’s longest spring-fed river, curls through the city walls, while side canals like the Cagnan Grande and Buranelli thread beneath bridges and houses on stilts. These waterways have defined Treviso for two millennia, nourishing its trade, its mills, and now its eco-friendly rebirth. Many ancient mills (now modernized) power public lights with micro-hydro turbines—a literal marriage of history and sustainability. 

Bonus Tips for Caffé Hopping in Treviso 

--Go early or late. Mornings and late afternoons cast the softest light and invite leisurely pauses before or after the lunch rush. 

--Sit outside when you can. The best tables overlook canals or riverbanks—perfect for sketching, journaling, or people-watching. 

--Savor time. Order slowly, linger longer. Caffé hours in Treviso are a ritual of unhurried grace. 

--Mix and match. Try an espresso at one stop, a pastry at another, an aperitivo at dusk. Treviso is compact enough to reward caffé-hopping on foot. Final Sip   

By the time you circle back to Piazza dei Signori, daylight will gild the canals, and the city’s hum will mellow into evening. Treviso proves that you don’t need Venice’s grandeur to find poetry—just a walk, a river, and the perfect cup.