Pages: 1 10 replies
M
Mambo
Posted
posted
on
Thu, Aug 26, 2004 8:29 PM
Name:Rusty Pelican Description: [ Edited by: Mambo on 2004-08-26 20:31 ] |
B
Benzart
Posted
posted
on
Thu, Aug 26, 2004 9:21 PM
Many Years ago I carved 2 pelicans for the Salad Bar table.I doubt if they are still there because it has been SO Long ago. They were carved from Cypress and had a burned effect with grey base and rope wrapped around the base |
Q
Quince_at_Dannys
Posted
posted
on
Fri, Aug 27, 2004 5:32 PM
But... what of the drinks, Mambo? WHAT OF THE DRINKS?!? |
M
Mambo
Posted
posted
on
Sun, Aug 29, 2004 8:51 AM
Quince, I went during the day at lunchtime while |
PR
Phillip Roberts
Posted
posted
on
Thu, Aug 25, 2005 12:51 AM
[ Edited by: filslash 2008-09-15 15:00 ] |
T
thejab
Posted
posted
on
Thu, Aug 25, 2005 11:14 AM
It is, but I have not been there. |
T
tiki1963
Posted
posted
on
Mon, Aug 29, 2005 10:02 AM
OH MY GODDDDDDDDDDD!!!!!!!!!!!!! whoa! the Rusty Pelican is still around! thanks for the post Mambo (even though its a year old!) i lived right down the street from there on North Bay Island! Brings back some great memories. that whole area along Rickenbacker Causeway/79th street was littered with great tiki /nautical themed places. every time i go back to Miami, i'm amazed how little has changed... |
I
IsleConch
Posted
posted
on
Thu, Sep 14, 2006 9:35 PM
I just got back from Miami last week and I went to the Sunday brunch there..WOW ! great food at reasonable prices...it was an all you can eat buffet...and all the TIKI theme you can capture in a pic. I'm gonna try to put up my pics. |
K
Kono
Posted
posted
on
Fri, Sep 15, 2006 2:13 AM
Did you tell them that the tiki carving on the left is upside-down? |
I
IsleConch
Posted
posted
on
Sat, Sep 16, 2006 7:44 PM
Yeap..I noticed that too,but look at the people working there...they wouldn't know which way is up, they don't know "TIKI". or what it stands for...they treat it like another piece of furniture.Check out these pics.. |
S
Sabina
Posted
posted
on
Wed, Sep 20, 2006 8:51 AM
Hmmmmmmmmmm, I thought I had posted about the RP before, but since I can't find anything I might have written about it before via search and Hukilau is just around the corner (who me, counting the nano-seconds? Yeah, well!) OakTiki and I explored it on an earlier Miami trip and fell in love with it. It's little known to most Tikiphiles treasure! I think they may have one of the better internally lit glass float collections I've seen in a long time, and plenty of shell lamps and 'glass pebble' lamps. There are a few Tikis here and there, but think more nautical than overwhelmingly Tiki per-se. As with many coastal true Tiki haunts, it's tucked in alongside a marina and is right on the water. There's a long covered walkway leading up to the front doors with lamps hanging overhead. Once you enter, in the afternoons anyway, the entryway is light and somewhat airy with tropical fans and rich dark walls. As you can see from above in one of the pictures, booths have slight shell curtains framing them, adding to the feeling of intimacy. It's nautical through and through, and while not heavy on the flotsam and jetsam does have enough 'neat bits' to make us tikiphiles at least comfortable with the general surroundings. There is some matting, though most of the walls are wooden planking. Mainly, the Rusty Pelican conveys a sense of time/age (with all the positive connotations thereof) and of being somewhat of an 'institution', a place that has been there long enough to make you wish the walls could talk. I'm not sure I'd call it altogether Tiki, although it certainly has enough to keep tikiphiles interested, (doubly so, considering how much of the rest of FL suffers a relative dearth of Tiki artifacts, and constant mistaking chickee huts for Tiki.) Still, it's good food, fantastic views, a place with a real sense of place and time to it, some Tikis scattered throughout, and enough nets, lit glass floats, cork floats, shell lamps and pebble lamps, carved wood panels, lauhala matting, etc to keep us happy- when we wander beyond the sacred walls of the Mai Kai, that is! I'm realtively certain we don't have any pictures from our earlier expedition, but we hope fo remedy that this trip. |
Pages: 1 10 replies