Category Archives: Flashback

Hurricane Season Life


Sept 10 is the zenith of hurricane probability

Ever since Hurricane Maria, hurricane season has become something different in our minds. We came to Puerto Rico very naive about hurricanes, and we lived here for 4 years with basically nothing ever happening. We had an occasional tropical storm, but we’ve had stronger aguaceros (downpours) come out of the blue. But Maria changed all of that optimism and surety. We have a deep underlying trauma associated with hurricanes now. On the surface, our logical brain tells us that if we can survive 2 + months of living like primitive people we can survive anything! But underneath, our subconscious says “Ah, hell no. I don’t want to do that again!” So we have our conscious and subconscious minds competing against each other.


This time last year I was 8 months pregnant going through hurricane season!

I was particularly nervous last year for a few reasons, most notably that I was pregnant with a due date right around the climatic probability of storms. After the birth my medical care turned out to be VERY lacking as it was without a storm, so I can only imagine how bad it would have had there been no electricity, water or medical supplies. I am SO grateful everything turned out ok. It was iffy there for a bit. My medical care nightmare is probably for another day, but suffice it to say, I don’t  ever want to be in another major medical emergency in Puerto Rico with or without a hurricane looming.


Last year in our tropical gardens

One of our neighbors is currently about as pregnant as I was, so we thought it would be fun to do a photoshoot in our gardens that we have finally named. Since Puerto Rico is La Isla del Encanto (The Isle of Enchantment), we named our farm/gardens The Garden of Enchantment. You can check out our new Facebook page and give it a like if you want. Julie is about as nervous as I was having her first baby in an unfamiliar land and so we thought it would be a nice de-stressor to take a little of that anxiety away and focus on the beauty that she is emanating! I gathered materials from all over the gardens and made her a flower crown to make her a jungle queen.


Finished flower crown

Here’s a “How-to” Video on the making of the crown.

It turned out so nice.


What a gorgeous mama-to-be


Even Aeden got to check out his jungle friend in making

When we heard a storm called Dorian was forming and heading straight for us, our nerves started to fray a little. We turned on the hurricane brain and started prepping. Extra gas, water, food, batteries, clean out the cistern, shut the windows, check, check, check.


There are always runs on water. We just rinse out and refill our jugs


Day of Dorian right outside Econo…wouldn’t think anything was abnormal!

Dorian thankfully turned anticlimactic and didn’t even really have any rain. But it did bring back lots of memories. We ended up going to a pool party for a friend who is moving away. We had even partied at Yukayeke a lot after Maria, so the recollections are stacked. Strange how much that period of time is embedded in our psyches now.


Fun at Yukayeke


Yukayeke Resort in Anasco from the road

Living in the tropics of Puerto Rico is 90% awesome. We get to live like we’re on vacation! But interspersed are moments of sheer panic and annoyance. I guess there’s nowhere on Earth that is 100% paradise all the time. But to me, this sure comes close. Even in hurricane season. It gives us all a little something to get worked up about I guess. No one would read a story if it didn’t have some complications to resolve.


Most days are wonderful


Calm, serene and peaceful on the farm

 
Fun family times

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Flashback to Puerto Rico: August 18-21, 2005

This is the 8th and Final Part in the Honeymoon Flashback Series.  To read the rest of the 2 week honeymoon experience that was the initial impetus for moving to Puerto Rico, go here for Part 1, Part 2, Part 3, Part 4, Part 5, Part 6 and Part 7.
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Vieques Trip, El Yunque and Plaza de las Americas

We woke up at the Ceiba Bed and Breakfast, had a nice continental style breakfast, then headed off to Vieques where we had planned to stay the night. First we drove around Farjado and looked for the lighthouse there since we were on a kind of “lighthouse tour” of the island, and we had by now found nearly all of them.

Fajardo
Fajardo

Then about 12:30pm we went to the marina to get tickets to Vieques Island off the east of Puerto Rico. The ferry left at 1:00pm; we were a little confused why we were segretated in the terminal as “visitors” and others were “residents” but one lady told us that the ferry had been at times congested so much with visitors that the inhabitants couldn’t even travel back and forth to their homes which they apparently do with some frequency to buy groceries and other things that are either hard to come by or really expensive on the smaller islands of Culebra or Vieques -what are also known as the Spanish Virgin Islands.

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Arrival in Vieques with ferry in background; Ferry ride

Anyway, that wasn’t the case for us and the ferry ride was pretty uneventful and fun.  It was also very inexpensive; only a few dollars each. As a larger boat, it was Britton’s first major boat ride for travel -if you don’t count various boat rides on Horsetooth Reservoir in Fort Collins for example.

Once we got there, however, we felt like fish out of water (ha!) without a car. We tried to find a guesthouse that we had seen in a travel magazine as being fairly inexpensive, but the locals hadn’t even heard of it. So we walked up to the lighthouse on that island and took a few more pictures.

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In Vieques

We decided since we had to walk everywhere or take a taxi maybe we would just take the next ferry back, but we had just missed it, so we walked to a little bar right by the sea -Al’s Blue Sea or something like that. We sat and drank and got a little hungry, but they apparently don’t serve food there. What they did instead was did give us menus for the local restaurants nearby that we could either walk to or have delivered, so we ordered a pizza!

It was nice talking with the people that live there. Almost everyone in the bar were gringos who had moved there from the states. They told us about how and why they had moved, most due to the winters up north (mostly from New England states). I had a great (but pretty expensive) piña colada and Britton had a few beers. A sailor guy (someone who owns a sailboat) tried to talk us into going sailing on his boat, but it was $110/pp!

They also tried to convince us to stay the night on the island but the only thing left to see was the Bio Bay and they said it wasn’t that great because of the almost full moon that was going to happen on that night. The light of the moon would make it so the bio-iluminescence would not be as visible. So we headed back on the 6:00pm ferry and drove around and around again looking for a hotel but finally ended up back at the Ceiba Inn since we knew where it was and were comfortable there.

Friday we got up fairly late since we knew we would have a lot of time to kill before we got on the airplane back to Colorado on Saturday morning. We thought we might go to a casino, but we decided to see El Yunque -the tropical rainforest instead. We found Mount Britton which we thought was funny and awesome since Britton isn’t even a Spanish word. We saw the beautiful waterfalls and a definite change in vegetation.

Mt Britton

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We then drove to San Juan to make sure we knew where the car rental place was, just in case. Well, we got really lost (not a surprise by now), but finally found it and asked when we could return the car. They said they were open 6am to 12 midnight. We knew that to catch our flight the next day that we would have to turn it in as early as possible.

We then decided to find the Plaza de las Americas and have dinner and walk around. The mall is huge! It has over 200 stores and 40 restaurants and like 40 movie screens! So we saw a movie and walked around a little more until it started at 7pm. We watched “Skeleton Key” which was pretty good, especially the twist at the end.

We hung out pretty late and then just crashed in the car again since we were going to get up around 5am anyway. We slept most of the time in a neighborhood until flashing lights awoke us and we saw a policeman looking in the windows of the car! They didn’t say anything to us, and just left though.

We awoke before the sun was even up and filled up with gas. Britton had been doing it on his own for a while by then and had learned the expression “tanque lleno”. At this station he said they had asked to see his ID when he paid with credit and laughed  when they saw it was from Colorado. We then dropped off the car and took the shuttle to the airport. We had to go through something for the USDA -an agriculture check for plants and seeds and insects- which was a new process to us in addition to the normal security.

About 10 hours later we were out of the dreamland of two weeks spent all around Puerto Rico and were back in Colorado… dreaming of a way to return, for good.

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Flashback to Puerto Rico: August 17, 2005

Observations of the Island, Trip to Ceiba and Survivalism in Guanica

In PR

This is the 7th Part in the Honeymoon Flashback Series. I would like to finish sharing this whole journal that we wrote on our honeymoon in 2005 before we leave to start our new Puerto Rico life adventure this fall 2013. Go here for Part 1, Part 2, Part 3, Part 4, Part 5, and Part 6.
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Today we got up around 9, hung out a  little and then went down to breakfast. Unfortunately we were a little late since we found out they closed breakfast at 10 and we got there around 10:30am. But they went ahead and served us. It was a good home-cooked style meal with fresh fruit for only about $8 for the two of us! And because we had been eating so much fried food here on this island, it was a much needed health booster.

Even though the US has an obesity problem, it seems that Puerto Rico has it even worse. I think it is for sure worse than Colorado which I believe is the leanest state. There is so much fried food everywhere, especially fried chicken, pollo frito!, places everywhere and many of the people look like they enjoy it a little too much!

Even the Chinese food places serve fried chicken instead of grilled chicken in the chicken and vegetable dishes, but the kicker was that they served it with both white rice AND French fries of all things which we thought was so weird. They also don’t have unsweetened iced tea. All the drinks are super sweet here. It’s also hard to get just a cup of iced tap water like we usually do when we eat-out in Colorado.

Anyhow, back to the trip. We spent some more time down at the thermal pool which is nice and relaxing. Then we packed up and headed out.

Today was a day of driving. We drove up the mountains, down the mountains, to the ocean and back again. We drove the ruta panoramica (Panoramic Route) and Highway 53, we took toll roads and back roads. We were definitely tourists taking lots of pictures everywhere we went.

plantation

We saw farmland -what looked like bananas or plantains and maybe coffee growing on the sides of steep green hills. There are some interesting plants and flowers on this side (eastern) of the island.

We went through Humacao and found a Chili’s very easily and were able to finally use our gift card! We also saw another lighthouse -we have made a little side game of trying to see and photograph all the lighthouses on the island.

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Finally we arrived here at the Ceiba Country Inn and are trying to rest -again for the second time. Our first room was infested with some sort of biting bugs. So the owners moved us into another bugless room -thank goodness! The owners are nice Americans from Rhode Island. They have adopted like 3 dogs, all former strays. Poor things. Dogs and cats run around stray all over the place here and the females seem to all be pregnant or nursing.

Ceiba
The view from the place we stayed in Ceiba

Well, off to Vieques tomorrow!

Oh, I forgot, on the day we traveled to Guanica, when we also stopped by the Guanica Dryland Forest, we went for a hike because we saw a sign for the old Fort Capron ruins. So we decided to walk the 5 kilometers it said it was from where we could park. We got REALLY hot though and Britton took off his shirt and gave it to me to wear on my head as a type of hat. Then we kept walking and walking and hiking and walking but still we didn’t see any ruins.

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Watch out for those spikes!

Finally we decided to turn around about an hour later when we saw thunder clouds and lightning. We tried to hustle to avoid the rain and I had to watch my feet to avoid tripping over the rocks. So as I was looking down I ran smack into a thorny tree branch and poked my eye. My eyelid started bleeding but at least my eyes had been closed at the time of impact!

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Termite hive?

We also saw a huge nest of some sort that we can only imagine must be a termite hive. Britton developed some blisters on his shoulders from the sun and sweat. By the end of the hike we were super happy to the see the car (with A/C and water) once more.

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Flashback to Puerto Rico: August 15-16, 2005

This is the 6th Part in the Honeymoon Flashback Series. I would like to finish sharing this whole journal that we wrote on our honeymoon in 2005 before we leave to start our new Puerto Rico life adventure this fall 2013. Go here for Part 1, Part 2, Part 3, Part 4 and Part 5.

The Vortex of Ponce

Well, we left Parguera and headed to Ponce. We stopped for more super healthy groceries (beer, cookies, nuts) and for some fast food because we were having a hard time picking somewhere good to eat. Because Britton was driving, he had to order in the drive thru…in Spanish. I tried to help him, but it was hard to transfer the information across the car all mumbled through the speaker, so we ended up having to drive up to the window and talk face to face. When we tried to leave, we apparently went the wrong way because a policeman drove up and told us to turn around. This was the first of many police stops this day.

Dryland Forest
Puerto Rican Dryland Forest with cacti and everything!

Britton was a little shook up, but we managed our way out. We took a long detour and saw the desert part of the island and drove around where we could almost see Gilligan’s Island that I thought had a pretty cool name. It is just a small island about 100 meters off from Guanica.

Then we drove into Ponce, the Pearl of the South. It is probably the biggest city in south Puerto Rico. We got a little lost trying to find downtown, but once there, it was as if it had a vortex that sucked us in and we couldn’t get out.

Parque de Bombas

We saw the Parque de Bombas, the awesome old red and black firehouse. We also saw the old church and we drove all the way up the hill to the mansion and cross that overlooks the whole city and you can see all the way to the ocean!

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The streets were all under construction so when we decided to leave downtown when it got dark, we got really turned around and didn’t know north from south. There were no mountains like in Colorado to guide us east or west. We drove around for a while and since it was getting dark we again decided to see a movie. When all you have is free time on vacation you realize how much time you actually have to spend! We were finally able to get in and see the movie, the Island! It was a little hard to find the theatre too, but we managed and it was a fun movie.

After the movie, it was late but not as late as the other night, so we started to look for a good place to sleep. We left the theatre but somehow ended up in the vortex that took us right back downtown by the firehouse. By now it was 12:30am and there was construction on almost all of the streets and a ton of one-ways or TRANSITOS. We would try to go one way, but either the construction blocked it or the one-ways prevented it. We accidently ended up going the wrong way down the TRANSITO and got pulled over by the police now for the second time this day.

The policemen were nice and understanding giving us tourist free-passes I think. But they didn’t speak very good English and so I at first tried to help Britton by speaking across him in the car. But the policeman insisted in trying to speak English and so I stopped trying. He didn’t know the difference or words in English between his right and left so when we tried to leave and follow his directions out we ended up RIGHT BACK in downtown Ponce!

The vortex had swirled on us again! Britton thought he was going south when we were actually going north. It got a little tense in the car. We were tired, hungry, nervous from being pulled over and utterly lost. So we were more than ready to escape Ponce! Britton tried to leave and again went down a road against traffic on a one-way, and was AGAIN pulled over by the police! The police are, to say the very least, friendly and forgiving and didn’t give us ticket for any of these mistakes. The other confusing thing about being pulled over was that we didn’t even know if we were being pulled over because they drive around with their lights on at all times!

Finally after sticking to the cardinal rule when lost of going in one direction (as much as we could with all the one ways and closed roads due to construction) we were able to get out of the vortex. We were so tired we just parked up on the side of a jungle mountain road. It was much easier to sleep with the coquis instead of the dogs barking, although it was a bit creepier and dark.

This morning we got up -and lost- again trying to find breakfast. We finally got turned around and visited Tibes Ceremonial Indian Center. It was nice to learn about the original indigenous people from the island.

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Re-created Taino style huts at the ceremonial village

Then we drove up to where we are now: the Coamo thermal springs. We are tired and we’ve just returned from a dip in the natural hot spring pool and are hanging out in the room watching Puerto Rican MTV.

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At the Coamo Hot Springs

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