Monthly Archives: December 2014

Getting Out and Enjoying the Winter

It is important to get outside and enjoy winter!  No not THAT winter.  Not that cold winter where you wake up in the morning inside of a sealed house pumped full of stale dry furnace air and under a set of warm blankets.  I am talking about a different sort of winter. One where you can go outside and really enjoy the day- where the lows at night are in the 70s and the highs during the day are mid 80s!

Cassie Palm sea
Winter in Puerto Rico

Both Cassie and I grew up in Colorado and it was perfectly normal to have the bitter cold months as a regular part of winter life.  Scraping the windows, shoveling snow and experiencing cold temperatures so cold one could feel their nostrils and eyes freeze upon stepping outside.  Months upon months were spent mostly indoors watching movies, football, playing video games and eating with the furnace and humidifiers chugging away.  I think all of those things were invented in the winter for the winter.  Possibly even Thanksgiving, Christmas and New Years?  We would have some sunny days and it would warm up to the mid 60s but we knew it was a tease until the real warm up in mid June. Also of note was how brown and dead everything would get in the Colorado winters. The occasional snow actually added a little color!

Drill Rig
Weld County, Colorado in the winter: Dry and brown and lots of oil rigs

Light Snow Dusting Snowboarding
Winter in CO meant that going outside was a lot of work – and layers of clothing!

Now we contrast that with winter life here in Puerto Rico.  Winter temperatures are nearly perfect, humidity is low and we leave the windows and doors open all the time.  The biggest differences are when we look at the winter temps in CO and they dip to their lowest!  Right now it is a balmy negative 27°F!  When it would get that cold, I eventually wouldn’t even go to work.  I learned that it just wasn’t worth it.  What if I broke down?

snowy car
I used to climb into this ice box at -20 and go to work!

Plus there is the snow and ice that creates dangerous driving conditions and with the ever increasing amount of people on the roads trying to get to work it would just be a mess.  My commute to Longmont would go from 45 minutes to 2 or 3 hours each way.

Truck Broke Truck broke down in PR in December!  No danger of freezing to death.

The best way to experience the winter in CO was to go on vacation somewhere warm but if that wasn’t possible it was to be at home with food, entertainment and warmth.  This was always ok and cozy at first, but waiting for warm weather again took what seemed like an eternity.  We could only look forward to watching so many things on TV and enjoying so many indoor hobbies before we just wanted to be outside with a living world again.  Plus it was harder to stay healthy.  I think the lack of exercise and sharing the same air with everyone wasn’t the healthiest environment to be in.

Relaxing on the grass Cassie
Enjoying a relaxing winter day in the tropics

We came to the conclusion that we had a choice. We could try to convince ourselves that living in a freezer was ok or we could live in an endless summer doing the things we enjoyed the most (outside).  We chose the endless summer.  We still enjoy a bowl of chili when it gets “cold” (74°F), we can still watch movies and even football if we wanted to.  We can’t go skiing or build snowmen but beach sand and ocean takes its place!

Spanish Wall Cassie Ant Palm
Cassie at Spanish Wall in Rincón

There are lots of people on the island here that haven’t ever had the cold winter experience.  I doubt that they appreciate the year round nice weather as much as we do! It’s all in the contrast that we can say without a doubt that we now LOVE winter!

Britton yawn
Waking up and going to the beach on a wintry morning

What do you think of this post?
  • WOW (1)
  • Awesome (13)
  • Interesting (0)
  • Useful (0)
  • Bummer (1)
  • Whoa (1)

A Beach Winter Solstice and Christmas

We are so happy to have moved to a tropical beach town. Nearly any event can be magnified into something magical when you put “beach” in front of it.

Yin yang Britton and Cassie Xmas
Merry Christmas and Happy New Year from LifeTransPlanet!

This last week we had the opportunity to enjoy a beach winter solstice party with some friends at Steps Beach. Missy is so creative and a great party planner.

Steps Beach

We shared some great food, drinks and company as the sun set.

Steps Beach sunset Sunset silohette Sparkler light

Then we had a small ritual saying goodbye to the old (darkness) and welcoming the new (light). We brought the Swedish torches from some of the trees on our property that Ben had chainsawed as well as deviled eggs made with farm fresh avocado instead of mayonnaise.

Fire and candlelight

As the evening darkened, we watched a small bonfire and played with sparklers. It was a great night! To read and see more pictures of the evening, see Missy’s post.

Then on Christmas, we went to the beach again! While I have heard great things about Puerto Rican lechón, I have not had any here before. Even in Colorado, it has been a long time since we’ve had a pig roast. But a pig roast on the beach on Christmas?! This was the best idea ever. The company was great, the pig was delicious, the drinks were flowing and the setting at Almendros Beach was superb!

Almendros beach
Fun at the beach 

Pig and People IMG_1637
Pig roast time (thanks Lowell for the great idea)!

Sunset almendros
And yet another beautiful sunset

We then spent the rest of the evening with some of our very favorite people who are just about as close to family as we have here. It was a fabulous Christmas.

Kersch Xmas
Silly friends!

Man we are blessed! Good friends, good food, good times. We even awoke Christmas morning to a few gifts! I looked out the window and saw this gorgeous rainbow appearing through a sunshower.

Rainbow2
Christmas rainbow in paradise

First Turkey Egg
We found our first turkey egg!

Earrings
And my mom gave me the most perfect pair of chicken and egg earrings 🙂

We hope your Christmas was filled with magic and all that you hoped for as well!

What do you think of this post?
  • WOW (2)
  • Awesome (9)
  • Interesting (0)
  • Useful (0)
  • Bummer (0)
  • Whoa (0)

Bare-Handed Green Iguana Hunting and Catching

I had briefly mentioned it before, but one of my new pastimes is hunting and catching small green iguanas. Britton thinks I am crazy, but I really do like to do it. So far this has just been a catch and release practice, but maybe someday we will grill up some iguana tail pinchos (kabobs). These lizards are invasive to the island and are everywhere! There is hardly a day that goes by that we don’t see them on the ground or in the trees! So I have plenty of opportunities for the hunt.

Catching iguanas
An iguana and his tail

The key to catching these iguanas is to be quick and to divert their attention. You can’t be timid. You must strike like a ninja. I watched the white Garza (cattle egret) birds hunting for the geckos and found that they strike once and don’t waver.

Garza bird cattle egret
Watching these birds taught me a thing or two about lizard hunting. I can even catch the little gecko lizards as well

So I grab at the tail and hold on for dear life. They will twist and twist and try and snap at your fingers, but if you hang on to the top of the tail you will have him for as long as you want him. If he twists too much, he will break away the tail and run off. It is really weird when this happens because the tail keeps twitching and moving around like a snake for about 5 minutes! In this video, I had caught him but the tail twisted off so I tried again and scored!

The next level up would be to catch the big guys, but I am not sure I am quite ready to be grabbing at these ones just yet!

Lizard close up
A little meaner looking, doncha think?

What do you think of this post?
  • WOW (26)
  • Awesome (10)
  • Interesting (4)
  • Useful (6)
  • Bummer (6)
  • Whoa (3)

Are We Hillbillies or What?

We are nearing the very end of the house demolition project. However, now that the house is basically just pieces of wood on the ground, everything else about our life is totally disordered. That’s what happens when you live “on-site,” I suppose.

Working in Paradise

Thursday was the craziest with activity and lots of hammer drilling from about 7am to 7pm, so Friday we needed a break (and I think the workers did too)!

But it wasn’t a true break, because I still needed to get laundry done amidst all the chaos that was left behind. I was getting a bit snippy with Britton about my “less than ideal” ability to wash and hang laundry and he stopped me in my tracks and said, “Wait, I need to get a photo of this.” Yep, it is pretty hilarious. And a good reminder to not take things too seriously. Everything will get sorted out….eventually! And if we turn into hillbillies in the process, so be it!

Crazy laundry and turkeys
Crazy acres is the life for me! 🙂

The cool thing about living amidst all the construction progress is that you get to know everyone pretty well. Well enough that when the guys heard that I had never had “pitorro” (which they pronounced pitojo), the next day they brought a bottle of it for us and a bottle for them and we all took shots (a very small one for me) from the same metal cup and said “salud!” Pitorro is like Puerto Rican moonshine and everyone has a different recipe for it. This one tasted pretty good and sweet and was made with tamarind and parcha juice, but it did pack a punch. An only in Puerto Rico experience for sure.

PitorroYou can’t be a true hillbilly until you’re drinking the local moonshine, right? 🙂

What do you think of this post?
  • WOW (2)
  • Awesome (7)
  • Interesting (0)
  • Useful (0)
  • Bummer (0)
  • Whoa (0)