Category Archives: Day Trips

Ponce Es Ponce…

It has been a while since we explored Ponce. Known as the Pearl of the South, it is home to beautiful museums, grand architecture and an interesting history. It is also a little self-obsessed. One of the expressions about it is “Ponce es Ponce, lo demas es parkin'” which translates to “Ponce is Ponce, the rest is parking.”

Ponce es ponce
Seen on a t-shirt in Ponce

It is the 2nd largest (non-metro) city in Puerto Rico and named for Ponce De Leon. Leon means lion in Spanish and that has become the spirit animal of the city where you can see it as a design element in many things around town.

Lions
Lion-theme throughout Ponce

Britton, Summer and I left Rincon mid-morning with our friends John and Fran to explore it a little more. The first time we came to Ponce was on our honeymoon and you can read about that crazy time here. As far as touristy things in Ponce go, not a whole lot has changed in the 10 years that have since passed but they were fun to see again. We were, however, able to get a little more in depth inside the parque de bombas, the great plaza, the Armstrong-Poventud house, and the Don Q Museum also known as the Castillo de Serralles and we ended the day at the boardwalk of La Guancha.

Ponce has some awesome colonial architecture and is just beautiful to simply walk around.

Ponce Architecture (2) Ponce Architecture

Great Ponce Architecture!

The first stop was downtown to visit the Parque de Bombas and the church. The Parque de Bombas (the Pump Park) is the old firestation turned museum that is painted in a bright red and black. It looks almost circus-like especially because they had some pretty wild art displays inside.

Ponce Parque de Bombas Mask

Parque de Bombas (2)
Inside the Parque de Bombas of Ponce

Ponce Church
I kind of wanted to check out the inside of this lavender church, but it looked closed

As we were taking in the church we noticed this beautiful building and came in for a closer look:
Armstrong

We saw that it was operated by the Institute of Puerto Rican Culture so we decided to go inside. It was a great museum called the Armstrong-Poventud Museum. There was a free and extensive tour which was super cool. We saw the old Fogon cooking room and how the husband and wife had separate but adjoining rooms (the husband’s room was far superior). They had built the house right across the street from the church because that was a sign of being wealthy during those times (late 19th century). Many of the wealthiest people in Puerto Rico lived in Ponce throughout much of its history.

Armstrong ceilings
Tin ceilings and stained glass in the Armstrong-Poventud House

 

We had a quick lunch and also a coffee break and headed up to the Castillo Serralles also known as the Don Q museum.

Don Q museum
Castillo Serralles
Indoor Fountain Dining room

Group photoView overlooking Ponce from the Castillo Serralles with our group

Don Q statue
Don Q Rum is named for Don Quixote

Fountain pool at the Castillo
A pretty pool/fountain and gardens and the view all the way to Isla Caja de Muertos

Old rums
Old Don Q Rums from the past

The Castillo de Serralles is definitely impressive. To have been able to build a mansion of that scale during the midst of the Great Depression would have really been something. The history and importance of the sugar cane industry was also really interesting to learn about. I felt, however, especially since we had had such a great FREE! personalized tour in the Armstrong-Poventud house just prior that the tour of this huge building was pretty short, that the tour guide had done that tour way too many times and that we were missing a large part of the house.

At $8.50/person I would have thought the tour would have been a little more complete and would have at least included the gardens. Also, it seems like we were partially paying for an advertisement for their rum since the waiting room was also a bar and sold Don Q rums (For the price of admission we could have bought a lot of rum -haha!). None-the-less, it was worth doing once and when we were here on our honeymoon 10 years ago it had been closed, so it was nice to finally be able to say we saw it.

Finally to end our great excursion into Ponce we went to La Guancha, a boardwalk area. People were buying bags of fresh sardines for a dollar to toss to the tarpon fish below and the seagulls above.  We enjoyed walking up the pier and the weather cooperated by staying nice and cool and overcast.

La Guancha
La Guancha

Pelican
A friendly fearless Pelican on the pier

tarpon at la guancha1 Here birdy birdy

Tarpons and seagulls ready and waiting for sardines

We had a great day in Ponce but are glad to be back to our home sweet parkin’ in Rincón ;-).

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Wilderness and Faro La Ponderosa

Palms galore
Fields upon fields of huge coconut palms

This week our niece Summer came to visit us. It is always great when we have guests because it gives us a good reason to do some exploring that we otherwise put off due to our projects at the property. Our friends Dan and Theresa spontaneously changed their plans and we all went together to Aguadilla and Wilderness. The day was gorgeous and every picture we took looked like a postcard. We explored the Ponderosa Lighthouse ruins for a while and then we found a great little beach cove where we set up for some snorkeling, paddleboarding, swimming and sandwiches. It was an awesome day!

Road taken
The dirt road we took. Good thing Dan had a 4×4 truck!

Ponderosa Lighthouse ruins
The ruins of Faro La Ponderosa. What a cool place! The style reminded me of the Nunn Schoolhouse

Group
Group photo!

Group2
Ok, another!

Dan and Theresa up
Dan getting vertical with Theresa and Bandit down below (Bandit had a blast!)

Cassie wilderness
Ahoy! I have landed

Palms and garza bird
Garza and palms -there is a reason it is called “Wilderness”

 

Britton and Summer
We found this beautiful spot  with Flamboyans in bloom and the snorkeling was awesome!

Hidden Cove
Fantasy island with lots of hidden coves

Paddleboarding plus Dan
There was a strong current and wind that took Theresa and I a while to paddle against on the boards. It was gorgeous to look at the shoreline from just a ways off though

Cassie and Theresa Paddleboarding
Even Bandit got in on the paddleboarding action!

Solitary palm
Solitary palm tree blowing in the breeze

It was a great day trip and I would highly recommend it!

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Fiesta del Acabe del Café en Maricao

This weekend was the 37th Annual Fiesta del Acabe del Café or the Festival of the Coffee ‘End’ (Harvest) in Maricao, PR and our friends Ben and Missy invited us to go with them there on Sunday.

Bienvenidos

Britton and I have been to quite a few festivals around the island, but this one was by far the biggest. There were lots of venders of all sorts, live music and nice people.

Coffee lady
One of the coffee vender displays

There was also lots and lot of Puerto Rican coffee. We love the coffee here. In the mountainous areas where it is slightly cooler like in Maricao, coffee grows extremely well and with a great flavor. You won’t see Starbucks any time soon here! This stuff is the real, local deal!

Coffee berries
Coffee berries in various states of ripeness

We walked around and checked out most of the booths and had a little of the carnival style food and drink.

With friends at coffee fest
Enjoying some chicken pinchos and fresh-squeezed Maricao orange juice with our friends

Coffee plants
An agricultural display showing various coffee varieties

As we were walking around we even stopped to enjoy an impromptu group of drummers, singing and swaying to the beats. It was pretty cool.

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Getting My Driver’s License in Puerto Rico

Whew….Where to start??  So I had my birthday the other day….

Britton and Cassie sunset
It was great! We went out to dinner and watched a beach sunset

A few days later Cassie looked at my Colorado driver’s license and noticed it had expired on my birthday.  Bummer.  I tried to renew it online with the Colorado DMV but since it had been 10 years (or longer) I couldn’t renew it with CO.  So I started checking out other people’s blogs to see what the process was for obtaining my PR license. I found out that we probably should have done this soon after we moved here, but that it is rarely enforced, as long as you have a valid license somewhere. I read some comments and saw someone from Colorado simply had to take the medical exam and pay for stamps, show their SS card and turn in their CO license and was able to get their PR license. No tests, no old driving record or anything too difficult. Hmmm, hopefully this would be the case for me, I thought.

Cassie and I set out early (10am) for CESCO in Aguadilla.  We always fill up our water jug, grab some portable food, take care of all the animals and double check we have all the documents we need, camera, wallet.  We also stopped by the school supply store for copies of all my important documents and I picked up an English version of the Driver’s Permit Study Guide…just in case. Ok, we are all ready to go!

Driver's Permit Guide

When we got to CESCO we stopped at their information desk, and this was probably the wisest thing we could have done.  The lady at the front desk immediately noticed that my CO license was expired and told me that I would have to go through the ENTIRE process of getting a license. I thought MAYBE there would be a grace period, but nope. This meant I had to do the whole thing as if I were a brand new driver: starting with the learner’s permit and all the steps from there. Had I been there a week earlier when my license was not expired I would have only needed stamps, my social security card, proof of residency (water or electric bill with our address) and a medical exam.  The medical exam and sellos are sold next door to CESCO and cost $28. The “medical exam” was basically to just look at an eye chart and point your fingers up and down based on which direction the E pointed.

Medical Certificate
“Medical exams” for sale here

So this is where the adventure begins!!

We often compare living in PR to video games.  It can be a challenge sometimes or a cakewalk.  There are interesting characters we meet along the way, some have valuable information and some do not.  Some of the adventures we embark on have side quests as well.  They vary and you just never know what route your path will take.  The PR drivers’ license episode had a bit of everything that makes for a great adventure.

It was a good thing I grabbed that learners’ permit study guide. Yep just in case. I have learned that phrase in Spanish: por si acaso. Just like the copies of anything important (SS card, passport, birth certificate, utility bill, etc). Although not all of these were needed. We had them…just in case. It comes in handy because yes, I had to get a learner’s permit before I could get my actual license.  So it was back to being 15 years old.

It ended up that since I had to get my learner’s permit I had to take both the written and practical exam.  Since we were already in Aguadilla I figured I might as well take the written exam.  I studied for about 30 minutes (read from cover to cover) and then took the test.  There were 4 other guys in there taking the test, all of them ~16yrs old.  I was able to take the test in English which was a big help.  I scored an 80%, not bad.  They have some questions on the test that I didn’t really see the point of.  It was mentioned in the other blogs to pay attention to the fines, and this was good advice.  How much is the fine for parking in a handicapped spot?  $500.  How much for running a stop sign and potentially killing someone?  $50.

Sellos
Government “Sellos” or stamps

So with my exam passed, my medical and my stamps I was able to get the learners permit!  Everything went very smoothly and the lady at the front information desk was a HUGE HELP.  She pushed papers thru faster, she ensured I had everything and put us in order and she was super friendly. Props to Ilene! You rock. The next problem was that usually you have to wait 30 days from getting your permit until you can take the driving test….You know, so that your 16-year-old self has a chance to practice driving with your parent…  We talked to the lady in charge of scheduling the exams and convinced her that since I was an experienced driver that the 30 days was kind of silly.  She got her supervisor’s approval (this was important as you will see) and got on the list to take the test the next day. As we were leaving we saw some of our friends whose car broke down and we gave them a lift in our truck. It was pretty funny for our first drive under a learner’s permit.

Francis Greg Truck License
Just like I’m 16 again

Day 2:
Same deal.  Get up, get ready, make sure we have everything, etc.  We arrived in Aguadilla and found the exam location which is right across the street from the airport.  It is just a shack with some people standing out front.  This threw us for a loop because we figured it would have at least a sign out front.  It doesn’t.

Drivers Test place
Practical Driver’s Test Building Area in Aguadilla

You can take the test in your own car, or you can hire a driving instructor to go through the test with you and let you practice with their car.  Since the truck’s speedometer is inoperable we figured that we should use their car to avoid any possibility of problems.

I drove with the instructor for 20 minutes and she was very nice but humorously strict and controlling.  She would tell me to drive up, stop.  Put the car in reverse pull back till the sticker on the window is next to the 2nd cone, stop then turn the wheel and then go back, stop, then turn the wheel again, then go then stop.  She was trying to speak with me in broken English, Cassie was trying to interpret and I was just trying to follow her commands. We had the most frustrating time trying to work with each other and then I looked at her and said “so…you mean parallel park here?” She replied “Yes.”  Ok, then it was easy.  Trying to figure out what she expected me to do was the most difficult part of my lesson…lol. Then the instructor told Cassie to get in the front seat and told Cassie to kiss me for good luck on my test while the lady took a picture as a “recuerdo.” It was pretty funny.

Good luck driving kiss
Good luck to me!

Once I was done with the lesson and had my good luck kiss, it was time to take the test.  The examiner hopped in, we drove around the block and then he had me park the car.  I thought “Oh man, that was a cinch!”.  Maybe he was letting me off easy because I am a long time driver?  Either way, that was easy.  He got out and started to converse with Cassie and the Instructor in Spanish.  My Spanish is getting better, but not very good.  All I could make out was that he kept saying “Treinta dias”.  He was getting pretty angry and everyone was having heated conversations.  I knew this wasn’t good.

As it turns out he was saying that I only had my permit for 1 day and he wasn’t going to allow me to take the test.  We explained that we had special permission to do it, hence the appointment and form we took with us.  He was refusing.  Simply refusing to budge.  I was thinking we would have to do this all again in a month.  That would suck.

The instructor lady who did my driver’s ed  kept trying and trying.  She at one point told Cassie that we should probably leave and that things were not looking good and that we didn’t want to create enemies.  I just kept saying we would do whatever was needed to show that we had approval to do this today, we could get whatever form he needed and we weren’t trying to cause problems.  Finally we got ahold of the supervisor on the instructor’s phone (I think that was what happened?) and she of course said it was fine.  So I was a little shaken up and nervous to drive with the examiner who was clearly not happy, but I took the test and passed! Phew! We paid the instructor lady the $40 and were off to finally get my real license.

We went back to CESCO and the woman at the front desk recognized us and put our papers first in line.  We got the license! I am officially a Puerto Rican Driver! To top it all off, as I was walking back to the truck I found $2 in the CESCO parking lot. We then went to Crashboat and talked about how crazy this all was. I figured that was bonus points in the game for accomplishing the task.

Crashboat Beach
Crashboat Beach in Aguadilla

Britton and Cassie at Crashboat 1
The beach: somehow both the beginning and end of this story

Read this for Cassie’s PR license experience.

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