Sarasota is a beautiful city and our mooring field is just
south of the Ringling Bridge; just a quick dinghy ride to downtown. If you want to shop you can choose from lots
of chic shops and trendy boutiques. If
you want to eat…well there is no shortage of interesting looking places,
although we did not sample them during our short stay. If you need groceries Whole Foods is nearby,
with selections to please any palate.
Our first night we rendezvoused with our friends Jerry &
Sally aboard “Encore” in time for happy hour at O’Leary’s with the crew of Dos
Libras. If you are coming this way O’Leary’s
is sooo forgettable – they serve $5.50 wine in plastic cups, the fries looked
greasy, and the music was loud and the vocalist was awful. Other than that it was a fun time with
friends.
Our mission this trip was to go to the Circus and it was, at
least for this day, simply the Greatest Show on Earth. The only problem was we had too much to see
and too little time. We were able to
catch a city bus from downtown and we were off to the Circus.
We had been told there was “a lot to see”, but we no idea
what that really meant – talk about an understatement! The Ringling “experience” is so overwhelming we quickly realized the
need to decide on the fly where to focus our attention. Read – “what can we skip”? We decided the two high points were the Miniature
Circus and the Art Museum with a quick peek at the incredible Italianate bay
front mansion that John & Mabel built in 1926 as a winter home.
The Miniature Circus was created by a man named Howard Tibbals,
thus it bears the name of Howard Brothers Circus. The detail and
size is simply amazing. The incredibly
detailed display is the size of a football field and contains everything, from
unloading the rail cars the circus traveled on, to the dining tent where the
performers and crew were served by waiters at tables set with china plates, to
the impressive Big Top that is lighted in such a way that it simulates both
daylight and the lighted night time performance.
In the U.S. the circus heyday was in the late 1800’s to
1938. The Ringling brothers, all five of
them, started the Ringling Brothers circus in 1884. Ten years later they were the main competitor
to the famous Barnum & Bailey Circus; in 1907 the Ringlings bought out
their main competitors. In the current
age of travel & technology we forget that in the early part of the 20th
century many people, especially those in rural communities, people had never
seen elephants, and camels and zebras. There
was no TV, Netflix, or Internet so folks looked forward the glamorous costumes,
exotic animals, and the excitement of the big “Show” when the circus came to
town. We were so enamored of the miniature
circus that we didn’t allow time for the Circus Museum, but you can learn more
about it by clicking on the gray colored text.
Night lighting |
Daytime lighting |
Who knew that there was so much money in the Circus? John Ringling, the last surviving brother was
reportedly one of the wealthiest men in America before the Great Depression of
1929. In addition to being instrumental
in developing Sarasota he was an avid art collector and amassed an incredible collection, much of it
from Europe. I mean, how many private
collections include Rubens – more than one!
The art museum (along with the
entire property) was bequeathed to the State of Florida upon his death. We could have spent a day in the art museum
alone. Alas, the problem (if you can
call it that) was, there was so much to see that we had to look quickly and
move on.
The next time you’re in south Florida, be sure to stop in
beautiful Sarasota and see the Ringling – just allow more than a single day,
you’ll be glad you did!