Category Archives: Travel

Kitty and the Kumquat Tree

This trip was a bit different than our other trips to Puerto Rico.  We had lots more to take and we aren’t coming back (for at least a while).  The voyage out to Rincon started in DIA with lots and lots of boxes.  We had prepared for Kitty’s trip by getting him up to date on shots, then getting a health certificate from our veterinarian.  All needlessly.  Nobody checked on him at DIA or flying into BQN.  Better safe than sorry I suppose.

Airport
Almost Everything We Own

We also took our Kumquat tree that we had kept as a houseplant in Colorado.  We have read that they are fairly rare in PR, plus it was an extra challenge.  Can you take plants to Puerto Rico?  How do you pack them?  Will security be ok with it?  All of these questions became fairly easily answered.  You can take plants, pack them however you wish but a shopping bag would work nicely and security was fine. (Thanks Charlotte and Anthony for sticking around just in case!)

Kumquat and Kitty Cat
Kitty All Doped Up and the Kumquat Tree

The flight went well, nothing too out of the ordinary.  We arrived in Aguadilla, loaded up our rental car and set off for the property.  At 1am as that is what time United flights arrive and depart from Aguadilla (BQN).

We arrived at the house around 2am.  It was dark and overgrown, this has been the norm since we almost always have to come back to CO after cutting the jungle back.  Here is a short video of our arrival!

The vines grow over the gate and the trees grow over the driveway.  We can’t park the car in the yard until everything is cut down.  It is quite the undertaking and usually requires around 6 to 8 hours before the car can be parked.

10 minutes later, after our arrival we were still at it..lol

It will take a while to “dig out” but we have our cabin opened up, kitty is starting to come out from under the blankets and eat, drink and pee which is a good sign.  He is pretty freaked out though, as he should be!  This is quite a radical difference from what he is used to.   All in all we have arrived safely, with all of our tattered and dented luggage!

Scared kitty

Kitty Hiding

We did a lot our first day too! We found the post office and got two of our flat rate boxes and we started working on the huge battle against the jungle that has overtaken the yard and house in the last nine months.

We had a couple of awesome and not so awesome finds in the yard as well.

Passion flower

Passionflower

One of the many vines growing everywhere is passionflower/fruit! And the hibiscus and starfruit trees are doing great in spite of the vines all over them.

orange hibiscus

Hibiscus

The not so great thing is that we think the bees are back….Good thing we brought our bee hats and veils! We might have to just get comfortable removing them.

more bees
More bees??! Maybe they are just swarming??

Cassie pulling vines

Even Cassie got into the vine pulling/yard clean up!

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Kitty Bought His Ticket to Rincón!

I went in the bedroom today and I saw something odd.  Kitty had most of his belongings packed in a suitcase!

Kitty Pack
Kitty Packing His Stuff

I asked him why he was packing and he responded that he had called up United Airlines and booked a one way ticket to paradise.  He was going to be missing out on the upcoming winter and was pretty excited about it.  He also bought Cassie and I tickets.  Which means that we are going to be closing out our contest!

I guess he really does love us and his day trading has paid off!

Kitty Leave
Kitty All Packed up!

We are all set to fly out on….well, I will leave that a secret for a bit longer.   We have a few things to finish up and are going to have a party at our place on the 21st.  By then most if not all of our stuff will be out of the house and we will be headed to Puerto Rico soon after!

Gracias, Gatito!

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Tumbling Down the Rabbit Hole

Our upcoming move to la isla del encanto has been one heck of a journey, and we haven’t even moved yet! It has come to mean so many things to us that it really is difficult to explain to others without a lengthy conversation that challenges commonly held beliefs. For this reason we normally leave it to simple things that we all understand; nice weather (no snow), growing plants, playing in the ocean, and achieving a goal. When we first started down our path and looked at properties in Puerto Rico we were simply going to get a mortgage and move. That was the extent of our planning. No idea of how we were going to make money or what we would be doing.

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First Property We tried to Purchase

Through the process of discovery which unfolded in front of us on our path we found solutions to all the big ‘problems’. How are we going to buy food? How are we going to PAY OUR BILLS!? Do I need a corporate/cubicle job down there? I was obviously still thinking in the box.  A box I had forgot existed even though I am in it everyday.

I didn’t realize what actual freedom entails or that I was even in a system that doesn’t promote or teach it, which is odd because we live in the ‘land of the free’. I didn’t even realize I wasn’t free! I like to use the movie “Matrix” as an analogy to the realization of what we were actually up against.
http://youtu.be/te6qG4yn-Ps

The answers came over time.

One essential thing was to cut our bills to a manageable size (no mortgage, very little in the way of consumer goods and NO SUBSCRIPTIONS). It’s pretty easy in the U.S. and totally normal to spend $1000/mo or more on just a spot to sleep. And that seems…I dunno…Kind of ridiculous. When you are first starting out on your own, that consumes a lot of your money. That money that you traded your life’s energy for.  Then add on cable, phone, utilities and all the other modern conveniences of life I haven’t ever been without for long.

Why do I have to spend money simply to exist?
A> Because that is the way it was decided long before me.  It is that simple.

The meaning behind this became profound.  Debt is the basis of American lives and is what our economy is built upon.  We as a nation rarely if ever mention this and certainly the paid for advertising of our mainstream media isn’t going to let it be known.  It isn’t taught in public school, or discussed on the television.  The debt based consumer mindset opened my eyes to how the things I buy hold me down. Everything I purchase has associated costs.  The concept of less is more started to appeal to me and also gets me closer to our end goal.

This is a huge consideration in my life now. Want that shiny object?  Would you trade your life for it? Is it worth 2-10 years of my life to have a new Corvette Z06 that will continue to consume more of my life’s energy (in the form of money for gas, licensing, insurance, tickets, repairs and worry)? No. I have struggled with this as an American male.  I started to question it. Where does that consumerism seed get started? Is it just an exploitation of a hard-wired evolutionary biological mechanism?  Is it installed into me by society and advertising? I think it’s a mixture, but it is deeply rooted in our culture and taught to us as children.  Want.

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This poster was in MANY of my classrooms

You see. This decision to walk a different path, even if just slightly,  from the standard has spawned an introspective thought process.  This is where true freedom begins, with our choices.  Not just the choices of what to buy, but the choice of how to think.  How to operate this human machinery.  It has allowed me to see more clearly and be more aware of my surroundings, motivations and beliefs.  All of this came from a simple goal to move to an island.

IMG_0244

Creating the lifestyle that we envisioned is now on our doorstep. We are both looking forward to a life without the rat race. No more waking up everyday at 6am to shower, eat, commute and work towards someone else’s dream and someone else’s freedom. We get to work at our dream and our freedom.  At the age of 34 I’d say that is one hell of an accomplishment and we are only getting started.

Today marks my last day of work and entrance into wonderland.

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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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