Our little western New York adventure started
on a Friday afternoon with an email. Some
friends were on their way to watch a Balloon Rally. Yes, those big hot air balloons with baskets
under. It was in a place called Wellsville, about half way between our
respective homes. Would we like to meet them there?
Well why not? Better
than sitting at the computer.
The weather was ominously thundery but the drive to Wellsville was beautiful,
through rolling hills dotted, occasionally, with the remnants of old oil wells.
The town itself, like so many in our
region, smacked of the lost prosperity
of a bygone age. A hundred years
ago, mansions were built from the
profits of an early oil boom, the most spectacular of them a pale pink
confection - Italianate crossed with gingerbread and a couple of Grecian statues
thrown in.
We’d arranged to meet in the car park of the Catholic church, up on a hill behind Main Street,
which would be a good vantage point for watching the
balloons. We sat there, scanning the
heavens. The six o’clock launch hour came and went. Nothing seemed to be happening.
I decided to walk
down to the town park to check out the preparations. It was Wellsville’s biggest weekend of the
year –
policemen directing traffic, people
converging, from all directions,
bringing camp chairs and picnics. The media were there in force
There were
stalls selling local delicacies.....
And a classy mobile pub
And
everywhere there were balloons ...
..just not the sort we were actually here for. I
walked over to where people were staring intently at what appeared to be an
empty field.
The sign looked promising.
“Is this where the balloons are taking off from?” I asked a spectator.
He looked uncertain. “There was a balloon.
They got as far as raising it up .. (at which point he helpfully proferred a photo
he’d taken) ... but they took it down again.”
I pointed to what
looked like a bundle of red and blue cloth that was clearly going nowhere,
“That’s the balloon?”
“Uh-huh. Guess so.”
It seemed that the
weather had won. It was too windy. Seasoned locals shrugged
their shoulders and got on with their revelry and their picnics. Perhaps next morning would be better.
I hoofed it back up
the hill to the church.
“I suppose”, I
suggested, “We could take a look inside.”
We climbed the steps
and tried the door. It was locked.
We were just about
to call it a night and leave when a man came
up, waving.
“Hi how’re you
doing? Would you like to see the church?”
He turned out to be
the parish priest. He unlocked the door. The church interior was gorgeous, newly renovated by the same people who did St Mary's in Olean
Father took us to the Victorian (yes, Americans say that too) presbytery, complete with a “widow’s walk” –a mini lookout tower - atop the roof. It still had its old gas lamp fittings.
And a friendly pooch.
Two
priests were in residence but these days they have six other local churches and
chapels to look after as well. On the columned verandah, Father offered us welcome cold drinks.
Sorry I can’t report
on my first ever ride in a hot air balloon but there’s always a silver lining. We got to discover a western New York gem
and made some new friends. And as we stared hopefully at the empty skies, Father
whipped out his iPhone and showed us some pictures of last year’s Balloon Rally. There are worse ways to spend a summer
evening.