Cameron and I were supposed to take an L.A. Conservancy tour of City Hall yesterday but we got an email offering docents a special tour of Angelino Heights. Angelino Heights is a neighborhood close to downtown which was originally developed in the late 1880's. Its most well preserved street, Carroll Street, is lined with gorgeously restored Victorian homes.
Actually the tour was not special, it was the regularly scheduled tour. What was special was that we were going to get to see the inside of this house:
Isn't it awesome? And you can buy the house for $2.2 million. You can get all the details
here. And if you buy it, you MUST invite me over for dinner.
The lead up to the tour was a comedy of errors, really all my fault. I followed Cameron and John to
Cafe Tropical for coffee and guava cream cheese pie. John found a parking space right away but I started driving around in the twisty narrow hills of Silverlake. I got lost in nostalgia (back in the day I knew people living in those hills) and ended up parking miles of aisles away from Tropical. The saving grace was that I got to walk by
these. By the time I got to Tropical, Cameron had the food and coffee in hand. We were running late, said goodbye to John, and took our coffee and pastries to the car.
As I got into the car, I started spilling hot coffee all over myself and silverliningly said "At least I'm not the docent today. Ha, ha, ha." Cameron had ordered decaf because the coffee there is so strong and thank God for Cameron because the decaf immediately made me want to go home and clean my house seven times. I had to eat my guava cream cheese pastry while driving with one hand and so by the time we arrived at Angelino Heights, the pastry had flaked all over my skirt which went nicely with the huge coffee stains and I had pinkish goo all over my hands. Pleasant!
I had made such a fuss before I left my house about making sure I had the directions to Cameron's place and his address and all his phone numbers that I completely forgot to take note of where exactly in Angelino Heights we were supposed to meet the tour. We parked on Carroll Street and I tried to call the Conservancy which was closed. At the same time, Cameron pulled out his cell phone to call John and it fell on the grass into a pile of dog poop. We just started walking and the lucky thing was that Cameron had taken a similar tour once before and thought that the tour had begun at the fire station and we walked up ten minutes late and found our group of people.
From then, the comedy of errors stopped and there could not have been a better day for an outside tour. The sun was out, there was a nice breeze, the sky was clear and the houses were amazing. We spent two hours just on Carroll Street. At the end the owner of the house for sale himself, Mr. Morales, let us in to see the house and personally gave us the tour. His parents bought the house in 1941. Mr. Morales is now 70 years old, having trouble getting up the stairs, and wants to sell the house before he "croaks" and his wife is stuck taking care of it. Okay, I've told you everything you need to know....now, go buy it.