Some Don't Like It Hot
Atlantans regard summer—and the overheated tourists it spawns—woefully
- By Melissa Fay Greene
- Smithsonian magazine, August 2007, Subscribe
(Page 4 of 4)
The real Atlanta isn't on display.
The real Atlanta unfurls her beauty in the spring, then folds it up again, as into a perfumed hope chest, well before July and August.
Atlanta in the spring is the loveliest place on earth. Atlanta in the spring is the Disneyland of flowers.
There is a morning in spring when we awaken to the shy presence of the pear trees in wedding gowns of white blossoms; and the dogwood trees, like bridesmaids, are beribboned with their own white or light-pink flowers. This day is the Deep South's version of first snow.
Soon, like the aunts on the groom's side with cheap taste, the azalea bushes bustle into view, lipsticked and rouged in brightest scarlet and purple; wisteria vines pour their lavender flowers down like shawls.
The real Atlanta would not be recognizable to Margaret Mitchell's cotton planters. Atlanta today is a dazzling modern and cosmopolitan city with people from every nation and culture. Atlanta's mayor is an African-American woman named Shirley Franklin. The birthplace and final resting place of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., Atlanta celebrates Black History Month every month. Our local high school educates students from 57 different countries. The Druid Hills soccer team (which reached the state semifinals) fielded players from Somalia, Ethiopia, Mexico, Sudan and Japan. The intersection near my house has Greek, Ethiopian, Mexican, Italian, French, Chinese, Thai and vegan restaurants. Within a mile you can visit a Hmong congregation, a Russian Orthodox church and a Muslim mosque. I came home from errands one morning and realized I hadn't spoken to a single native-English speaker in three hours. The butcher was Iranian, his cashier, Ghanaian; the bakery woman, Russian; the dry cleaner, East Indian. Back at home I found a Honduran carpenter and a Nigerian baby sitter.
Do visit Atlanta, but not in the summer.
Come in late February or March or April, when the sky is bright blue and the flower show is beginning. Check into a bed-and-breakfast in midtown and wander around on foot. Walk up and down long, deeply shady residential streets to the sound of whirring sprinklers. Say, "How you?" "Nice to see you," to everyone you pass.
Or bike. Bump along sidewalks made topsy-turvy by the roots of the tulip poplar trees. Even on a bike, wearing your helmet, you'll want to say, "Hey," or "How you doing?" to people you ride past. A thousand scented petals circle lazily down from the trees.
Or rollerblade. Rollerblade in Piedmont Park, over the bridge, around the lake. Admire the long, lean leotard-clad rollerbladers whizzing by. Listen to many languages. Admire biracial couples, gay couples, multiracial family groups. Bike or walk or rollerblade or run your dogs down the long forested drive, closed to traffic, of Lullwater Park of Emory University. Feed crackers to the geese. Climb the magnolia tree there. Forget to ask for directions to Tara.
Atlanta: Come for the people. Come for the flowers. Come in the spring.
Melissa Fay Greene's most recent books include There Is No Me Without You (2006) and Last Man Out (2003).
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Comments (6)
As a 55-year-old native second-generation Atlantan, I applaud Melissa's dreamy concoction of the city, but other than the dogwood petals that drape the ground everywhere in our version of "snow" after the first glow of Spring has passed, she paints a picture that merely gives a touch of the flavor of the city's more progressive-minded midtown and intown districts.
Yes, we suffer from sweltering heat from May through September, and Atlanta is blessed with a variety of ethnic subcultures; however, the truth is that it is still largely racially segregated, there is rampant prejudice, and the city suffers from a dirth of parks and greenspace and has earned trepid awards for being among the most bike-unfriendly cities and as the city with the most pedestrians killed per capita.
Atlanta is a city of commerce, and if you are a real estate developer or have something to sell, bring it on. If you want aesthetic architecture, broad and endless tree-lined streets and family-friendly parks, mind-blowing museums and unusual haunts, and broad acceptance of out-of-the-box ideas, look elsewhere.
Come for the sweet tea, the hospitality (unless you are caught in one of our notorious rush-hour traffic jams on the four Interstates that criss-cross and surround the metro area), and "set" by a neighborhood swimming pool. And oh, by the way, alsovisit The Carter Center. Even if you don't agree with his politics, the place is a hidden jewel that will educate and delight; and of course the newly renovated Ebenezer Baptist Church -- if you can, experience a Sunday service, where people of all religious affiliations are warmly welcomed.
Stay for as long as it takes to do the above, so you can tell your friends you actually stepped foot outside of the Atlanta airport. Maybe I'll come with you.
Posted by Ellen Fix, Copywriter on August 2,2011 | 12:28 PM
I'm from Mobile, Alabama (mentioned in the article). I've lived in Atlanta 7 years. Atlanta summers a cool refreshing drink of ice water compared to summers on the Gulf.
Posted by Eric Ludgood on February 11,2010 | 11:29 AM
Atlanta summers are an asset. They are mild and people just exaggerate. It's no warmer or more humid in Atlanta in the summer than most places. Here it is July and only five days have made it to 90 degrees this month. Also, our summers are short, very rare to see 90 degrees prior to late May or after mid September. This is no Dallas or Houston. Atlanta is warm and muggy....not hot and humid. Humidity is also moderate....you will hardly see the heat index more than five degrees higher than the actual temperature in Atlanta.
Posted by Nimish on July 16,2009 | 09:12 PM
Georgia summers are a test of endurance--but the rest of the year is worth it!
Delighted at your references to early life enduring Northwest Georgia's heat without AC. (That is the world in which most of us Georgia Boomers grew up!)
You express well the beauty of our capitol city and its fasinating ethnic diversity. The Woodruff Arts Center and Midtown, epicenter of the arts community, is the place of choice for most of my visits to Hot-lanta.
When asked, recently, by a group of fifth graders what I considered to be the greatest invention of the 20th Century...my ready reply was, "Air conditioning..." The heat of summer is one of only a few things I don't like about the South.
Posted by Susan Ridley on July 2,2009 | 11:15 AM
I think Atlanta is perfect! Four seasons and each one is the right length. I lived in the metro Atlanta area before moving to northern Germany, and after reading this article (albeit a few years after its publication) I am really homesick. Atlanta is the perfect European city in the southern US. What more could anyone want?
Posted by Susan Lerdo on June 17,2009 | 07:48 AM
Too hot in Atlanta in the summers to do anything. That's why I am moving!
Posted by sam jones on July 11,2008 | 04:25 PM