Thursday, June 28, 2007
Its no fun being an illegal alien
By Scott
As I drove the rental car back to Budget on Monday I listened to K-Rock the local "hard" rock radio station. Its really not hard rock so much as a combination of 70's rock, 80's pop and 90's hard rock. As I am driving an old song from Genesis came on and before I knew it I was singing along to "its no funnnn, being an illegal aliennnn". The irony of it was pretty strong since my visitor permit to stay on the island expires on Saturday and I don't have a flight off island.
With the prospect of being an illegal alien looming large, I went down to the main immigration office in George Town today to get another 30 day visitor stamp. Fortunately, the immigration office decided that I fall under the pastor/teacher category and stamped my passport with a two year work permit, even though I am not a pastor and I only applied for a one year permit. When the immigration officer asked me what I do I said I was the new Dean at ICCI, she said she was stamping my passport as a pastor/teacher and so I just kept my mouth shut and said thank you. I decided to double down my bet and pulled out Katie's passport to see if they would stamp hers but unfortunately she is still not approved and we are operating off the temporary permit she got when we landed that expires at the end of August. She hasnt been declined just "deferred".
It has been a crazy busy week at work, the registration rush is over but now we are dealing with the regular rush. On Saturday we have a campus wide meeting to meet the new dean and registrar. Next Monday is a holiday for Constitution Day so Katie and I are celebrating Fourth of July two days early. We hope to go out on a longer bike excursion Sunday or Monday. Will let you know how far we get.
As I drove the rental car back to Budget on Monday I listened to K-Rock the local "hard" rock radio station. Its really not hard rock so much as a combination of 70's rock, 80's pop and 90's hard rock. As I am driving an old song from Genesis came on and before I knew it I was singing along to "its no funnnn, being an illegal aliennnn". The irony of it was pretty strong since my visitor permit to stay on the island expires on Saturday and I don't have a flight off island.
With the prospect of being an illegal alien looming large, I went down to the main immigration office in George Town today to get another 30 day visitor stamp. Fortunately, the immigration office decided that I fall under the pastor/teacher category and stamped my passport with a two year work permit, even though I am not a pastor and I only applied for a one year permit. When the immigration officer asked me what I do I said I was the new Dean at ICCI, she said she was stamping my passport as a pastor/teacher and so I just kept my mouth shut and said thank you. I decided to double down my bet and pulled out Katie's passport to see if they would stamp hers but unfortunately she is still not approved and we are operating off the temporary permit she got when we landed that expires at the end of August. She hasnt been declined just "deferred".
It has been a crazy busy week at work, the registration rush is over but now we are dealing with the regular rush. On Saturday we have a campus wide meeting to meet the new dean and registrar. Next Monday is a holiday for Constitution Day so Katie and I are celebrating Fourth of July two days early. We hope to go out on a longer bike excursion Sunday or Monday. Will let you know how far we get.
Sunday, June 24, 2007
Royal Reef Resort
By Scott:
This weekend we had our first anniversary getaway (four weeks later than planned). On Friday I picked up a rental at the airport (pass the dutchie on the left hand side man) and when 5 O'clock hit (well actually it was closer to 5:20) we were out the door and headed to East End. Surprisingly, enough we ended up with the exact same car as we had when we first got to the island, license plate 108-210 with the same scratch we saw the first time. The resort is only 18 miles from the college but feels like a whole different world. You take the Queen's Highway and drive east to the northeastern most point of the island and you find two resorts well away from George Town and the Seven Mile Beach crowd.
When we arrived Friday evening we checked in and dropped off our suitcase. We were in the smallest suite which meant we had a room about the size of our apartment. Every room in the resort has a balcony that faces the ocean, overlooking the two pools and the beach. You can tell the resort has dredged the beach since there aren't any rocks as there are at all the public beaches. We also discovered that every morning around 8 a crew walks the beach, raking up all remains from the high tide thus the beach has a very white sandy quality to it.
Our room had a kitchen area with a fridge and microwave and basic plates and silverware. There was a stand alone shower twice the size of the typical stand up shower in the bathroom as well as a jacuzzi tub in the main suite area separating the kitchen area from the bed. The tub was huge!! Katie took at least three baths and it gave me a reason to watch ESPN.
After unpacking, we had a romantic dinner at Castro's Hideaway. It is a second floor restaurant at the resort overlooking the ocean and we ate outside with a great view of the water. We both had pina coladas and discovered at this resort they top them with hot buttered rum. The restaurant has nothing to do with Fidel Castro; there used to be a parrot who hid up in the rafters of a restaurant called Castaways and the manager of the resort decided to re-name the restaurant Castro's Hideaway. The bar downstairs, on the beach ( which looked like every bar you ever see in a movie that takes place in the Caribbean) is also called Castro's bar. After dinner we wandered over to a Fosters Express and bought some sodas, microwave popcorn and ice cream. We decided to do a evening swim but decided not to go in the ocean. We walked out a pier and could see huge fish at least two or three foot long hanging around the end. They obviously were used to being fed as they would swim upside down looking for what ever we would throw them.
After walking out the pier we went first into the hot tub then into the pool for our swim. As we left the pool we were given two coconuts still in their husks by a man who was leaving the next morning. We were able to get the husk off in our room and open the top of the nut to get out the coconut water but didn't have a big enough knife to open the nut and get at the meat. We wandered down to the bar where the bartender used a large knife to crack the coconut. While we ate fresh coconut, we shared a drink called a Cayman Colada which is a pina colada with a cherry liqueur in the middle. We headed to bed having had more alcohol in one evening then in several months combined.
The next morning we hoped to watch the sunrise from our balcony but it was overcast so we went back to sleep at 5:20 a.m. and slept in. Katie ran over to Fosters and got us breakfast (donuts and some local meat filled pastries) which we ate out on the balcony. Then it was down to the beach and a couple of hours of swimming and napping on our beach chairs. We went to lunch at a local restaurant in East End called Viviene's Kitchen. "The food was not good and the service was worse" (that is a direct quote from Katie with which I am in total agreement). We are not ugly Americans, Vernette our business office co-worker had warned us about the place but we wanted to rise above local prejudices, you know what sometimes local prejudices exist for a reason. We are also pretty sure that the fish we shared was bad because we both got sick later in the afternoon. In our three plus weeks on the island this was the first bad experience with local food we have had.
After lunch we headed back to the resort and discovered that they were painting the adjoining suite. Our maid was shocked to see us because they thought both rooms were empty. Without us even asking she had the manager on her cell phone telling her we needed to be moved. We moved our stuff and headed back to the beach. We decided to get some snorkel gear and snorkeled at the resort beach. The water wasn't clear because of high wave activity so we decided to head west toward Cayman Kai. We drove back to the beach we had found our first weekend on the Island. The wave activity was still high and there was a strong current but the water was clear. We swam for a while and exhausted ourselves fighting the currents. We then headed back to the resort and showered before heading out for dinner. Dinner was at an Italian place in Gun Bay called Portofino Wreck View. We ate out on the balcony from which you can see the remains of a wrecked ship out on the reef.
Back to the resort and a nightcap of more Cayman colada down on the beach and then a luxurious bath for Kathleen while I watched cable and channel surfed. This morning was a free breakfast as the resort welcomed all their week long guests who were just starting their visit with an orientation. Since we didn't need that we just got our breakfast from the buffet and headed out to the balcony to eat. We checked out around 11 and headed back to Newlands. We dropped off our stuff and the decided to explore George Town and West Bay which is north of George Town on the western side of the Island. We drove up to the Turtle Farm and over to Hell. We took a couple of pictures of "Hell" and it is pretty interesting but obviously a tourist trap. The gift shop was closed today so we had it all to ourselves. After driving around George Town we called it a day and headed back to the college.
A quick comment, the service all weekend was awesome. The people were very friendly and we both highly recommend the resort. I guess we shouldn't be surprised, the resort is in competition with Seven Mile Beach and is offering an alternative so they need to have great service. Listening to other conversations it was pretty clear there are people who come to this resort a lot as they were recognized by employees and recognized each other. We will definitely be going back ourselves when we need getaways.
This weekend we had our first anniversary getaway (four weeks later than planned). On Friday I picked up a rental at the airport (pass the dutchie on the left hand side man) and when 5 O'clock hit (well actually it was closer to 5:20) we were out the door and headed to East End. Surprisingly, enough we ended up with the exact same car as we had when we first got to the island, license plate 108-210 with the same scratch we saw the first time. The resort is only 18 miles from the college but feels like a whole different world. You take the Queen's Highway and drive east to the northeastern most point of the island and you find two resorts well away from George Town and the Seven Mile Beach crowd.
When we arrived Friday evening we checked in and dropped off our suitcase. We were in the smallest suite which meant we had a room about the size of our apartment. Every room in the resort has a balcony that faces the ocean, overlooking the two pools and the beach. You can tell the resort has dredged the beach since there aren't any rocks as there are at all the public beaches. We also discovered that every morning around 8 a crew walks the beach, raking up all remains from the high tide thus the beach has a very white sandy quality to it.
Our room had a kitchen area with a fridge and microwave and basic plates and silverware. There was a stand alone shower twice the size of the typical stand up shower in the bathroom as well as a jacuzzi tub in the main suite area separating the kitchen area from the bed. The tub was huge!! Katie took at least three baths and it gave me a reason to watch ESPN.
After unpacking, we had a romantic dinner at Castro's Hideaway. It is a second floor restaurant at the resort overlooking the ocean and we ate outside with a great view of the water. We both had pina coladas and discovered at this resort they top them with hot buttered rum. The restaurant has nothing to do with Fidel Castro; there used to be a parrot who hid up in the rafters of a restaurant called Castaways and the manager of the resort decided to re-name the restaurant Castro's Hideaway. The bar downstairs, on the beach ( which looked like every bar you ever see in a movie that takes place in the Caribbean) is also called Castro's bar. After dinner we wandered over to a Fosters Express and bought some sodas, microwave popcorn and ice cream. We decided to do a evening swim but decided not to go in the ocean. We walked out a pier and could see huge fish at least two or three foot long hanging around the end. They obviously were used to being fed as they would swim upside down looking for what ever we would throw them.
After walking out the pier we went first into the hot tub then into the pool for our swim. As we left the pool we were given two coconuts still in their husks by a man who was leaving the next morning. We were able to get the husk off in our room and open the top of the nut to get out the coconut water but didn't have a big enough knife to open the nut and get at the meat. We wandered down to the bar where the bartender used a large knife to crack the coconut. While we ate fresh coconut, we shared a drink called a Cayman Colada which is a pina colada with a cherry liqueur in the middle. We headed to bed having had more alcohol in one evening then in several months combined.
The next morning we hoped to watch the sunrise from our balcony but it was overcast so we went back to sleep at 5:20 a.m. and slept in. Katie ran over to Fosters and got us breakfast (donuts and some local meat filled pastries) which we ate out on the balcony. Then it was down to the beach and a couple of hours of swimming and napping on our beach chairs. We went to lunch at a local restaurant in East End called Viviene's Kitchen. "The food was not good and the service was worse" (that is a direct quote from Katie with which I am in total agreement). We are not ugly Americans, Vernette our business office co-worker had warned us about the place but we wanted to rise above local prejudices, you know what sometimes local prejudices exist for a reason. We are also pretty sure that the fish we shared was bad because we both got sick later in the afternoon. In our three plus weeks on the island this was the first bad experience with local food we have had.
After lunch we headed back to the resort and discovered that they were painting the adjoining suite. Our maid was shocked to see us because they thought both rooms were empty. Without us even asking she had the manager on her cell phone telling her we needed to be moved. We moved our stuff and headed back to the beach. We decided to get some snorkel gear and snorkeled at the resort beach. The water wasn't clear because of high wave activity so we decided to head west toward Cayman Kai. We drove back to the beach we had found our first weekend on the Island. The wave activity was still high and there was a strong current but the water was clear. We swam for a while and exhausted ourselves fighting the currents. We then headed back to the resort and showered before heading out for dinner. Dinner was at an Italian place in Gun Bay called Portofino Wreck View. We ate out on the balcony from which you can see the remains of a wrecked ship out on the reef.
Back to the resort and a nightcap of more Cayman colada down on the beach and then a luxurious bath for Kathleen while I watched cable and channel surfed. This morning was a free breakfast as the resort welcomed all their week long guests who were just starting their visit with an orientation. Since we didn't need that we just got our breakfast from the buffet and headed out to the balcony to eat. We checked out around 11 and headed back to Newlands. We dropped off our stuff and the decided to explore George Town and West Bay which is north of George Town on the western side of the Island. We drove up to the Turtle Farm and over to Hell. We took a couple of pictures of "Hell" and it is pretty interesting but obviously a tourist trap. The gift shop was closed today so we had it all to ourselves. After driving around George Town we called it a day and headed back to the college.
A quick comment, the service all weekend was awesome. The people were very friendly and we both highly recommend the resort. I guess we shouldn't be surprised, the resort is in competition with Seven Mile Beach and is offering an alternative so they need to have great service. Listening to other conversations it was pretty clear there are people who come to this resort a lot as they were recognized by employees and recognized each other. We will definitely be going back ourselves when we need getaways.
This will be another busy week at work. Finishing up registration, lots of academic advising, we are completing a new student hand book and on Saturday have a campus wide meeting to introduce ourselves and talk to the student body (at least those who show up). My tutoring of the Business Law course has now changed to me teaching that course also by reading and conference. I drafted a syllabus last week and the course starts this week. So I will also be teaching my two courses and Katie will be trying to catch up on several months of old transcript requests and hounding professors for their grades and attendance rosters for last quarter. We will update the blog as new things happen.
Wednesday, June 20, 2007
First Day as Teacher
By Scott:
Tonight I taught my first class as a College Professor. There were only three students and it is a graduate course that is a reading and conference class but it is still a big first step. With some advice from my brother Kevin who has been doing this for a while, I drafted a syllabus. The course is called Environment of Business, it is a Business law and ethics course so my J.D. is sufficient to qualify to teach. The students read a couple of chapters on their own then we have a one hour meeting to discuss the readings, basically a give and take where I throw out questions and issues and let the students run with it. I am grading them on a term paper, final exam and attendance at the 11 required meetings. I am also tutoring two undergraduates in Business Law who are taking the course by exam starting tomorrow.
Katie and I really feel like we are making a difference. You can tell the students are excited about evening staff and having someone who can answer their questions or at least start the process of getting an answer. I have set up a campus wide meeting next Saturday (the 30th) to have the students meet the new dean and registrar and I hope that we see a lot of attendees. The attitude here by the students seems to be antagonistic because there have been problems with student services in the past and that is a big reason we are here. We are working long hours but it definitely feels rewarding. The past two weeks have been end of the spring quarter, summer registration and start of summer quarter so we came during one of the four times a year rush. A baptism by fire. Hopefully things slow down as we get deeper into the quarter but our accreditation visit is looming in August-September and is going to be a ton of work.
I also had another reminder that the Dean's portfolio is rather large. We had a donation of furniture for our canteen so I spent an hour and a half moving furniture from a storage bin to a truck and then from the truck to our canteen. The first half done in a pair of slacks which wasn't the best use of clothing though all the dirt and grim seems to have washed out. Whatever needs to get done, that what the Dean does down here.
Yesterday we biked down to Fosters for a shopping run and then did an exercise ride up to North Sound. We are really looking forward to this weekend and our stay at the Reef Resort to celebrate, one month late, our first anniversary. We will let you all know what the resort is like.
Tonight I taught my first class as a College Professor. There were only three students and it is a graduate course that is a reading and conference class but it is still a big first step. With some advice from my brother Kevin who has been doing this for a while, I drafted a syllabus. The course is called Environment of Business, it is a Business law and ethics course so my J.D. is sufficient to qualify to teach. The students read a couple of chapters on their own then we have a one hour meeting to discuss the readings, basically a give and take where I throw out questions and issues and let the students run with it. I am grading them on a term paper, final exam and attendance at the 11 required meetings. I am also tutoring two undergraduates in Business Law who are taking the course by exam starting tomorrow.
Katie and I really feel like we are making a difference. You can tell the students are excited about evening staff and having someone who can answer their questions or at least start the process of getting an answer. I have set up a campus wide meeting next Saturday (the 30th) to have the students meet the new dean and registrar and I hope that we see a lot of attendees. The attitude here by the students seems to be antagonistic because there have been problems with student services in the past and that is a big reason we are here. We are working long hours but it definitely feels rewarding. The past two weeks have been end of the spring quarter, summer registration and start of summer quarter so we came during one of the four times a year rush. A baptism by fire. Hopefully things slow down as we get deeper into the quarter but our accreditation visit is looming in August-September and is going to be a ton of work.
I also had another reminder that the Dean's portfolio is rather large. We had a donation of furniture for our canteen so I spent an hour and a half moving furniture from a storage bin to a truck and then from the truck to our canteen. The first half done in a pair of slacks which wasn't the best use of clothing though all the dirt and grim seems to have washed out. Whatever needs to get done, that what the Dean does down here.
Yesterday we biked down to Fosters for a shopping run and then did an exercise ride up to North Sound. We are really looking forward to this weekend and our stay at the Reef Resort to celebrate, one month late, our first anniversary. We will let you all know what the resort is like.
Saturday, June 16, 2007
Lake ICCI
We had a huge storm blow through here last night and now have lakes all around the island including one in the field next to the college buildings. There don't seem to be any fish but some really interesting birds have stopped in to wash and sun themselves.
We have a land crab who lives next to Clayton Strain hall which is the administration building. He has dug himself a huge hole and every once in a while, Keith our maintenance man fills it in. Now the crab is just below the ground so you can see him and we can just hear his thought, "the next person to try and fill in this hole, loses a hand".
We went biking this morning for the first time since Tuesday. First we went down to Fosters to get some groceries. Everything is closed on Sundays so we have to get enough to last and Monday is a national holiday (The Queen's birthday) so we wanted to stock up. We came back to the college (about two miles round trip) and dropped off the stuff then immediately headed back out. We wanted to bike east for an hour and see how far we got. We stopped in Bodden Town after a half hour to drink some water then biked on for the last thirty minutes making it to Breakers near a restaurant that looks like a lighthouse. We had lunch at a place called the South Coast Bar and Grill, just hamburgers but after the 10 mile ride out there they tasted incredible. There is still a lot of wind from the back end of the storm last night and the sea was rough but very pretty with the big crashing waves.
We put some ice into our water bottles and headed back. We made a quick stop again at Fosters to pick up a few more items then headed back to the college. We have discovered that going to Fosters and going east is pretty much all uphill. The rides back are so much easier as there are long stretches of downhill where you hardly pedal at all. Once you get to the coast, east of Bodden Town the ground evens out but for the first seven miles it is pretty much all at an incline. That does mean that the last seven coming back are easy which is good because we are usually exhausted. All told we think we did about 24 mile today so we are improving. Tomorrow is a day for a beach so we wont bike out as far, we might even borrow the van and go back up to Cayman Kai the beach we found our first weekend on the island.
The weekends are becomming our exploration time and really give us something to look forward to during the week. Next weekend we are going to the Reef Resort to make up the weekend lost when our passport and work permit issues arose. We plan to go to Stingray City to snorkel and basically be completely away from the college for two days.
We are really beginning to feel like this is home, today on the ride we could tell locals and tourists and even joked about those darn tourists on their mopeds trying desperately to remember to stay on the left side of the road.
Week in Review
By Scott:
This past week has really seemed like a whirlwind. Katie and I are supposed to be going into work Monday through Thursday at noon but on at least three of the four days we found ourselves going in around 10:30 and working until after 11 at night and on the fourth, Thursday we were in at 9:00 a.m. and didn't leave until 11:30 as an exam ran very late and we are the ones who lock up the campus and turn off the lights, A/C etc. when everyone leaves. Then Friday night we worked until 5 and then i proctored two exams from 7-9 p.m. We only got to ride our bikes once, on Tuesday when we made a run down to Fosters. This week was exam week and also registration for the summer quarter so things are hectic. The one problem with living at the college is that when we get bored we work and so it almost seems like we are working all the time.
We had a couple of storms blow through and are still dealing with the leak issues. The latest caused a small leak in our bedroom which is a major concern (it also created a lake as the post above shows). We are watching more and more leak points form in the ceiling with a lot of concern. The apartment is a really great place if you can use the whole place but with half of it unusable when it rains and therefore really not usable at all since it rains all the time that makes it rough. When it is finally fixed we will feel a lot better.
I am going to be teaching this summer after all. I have a graduate course called Environment of Business which is a Law Business and Society course, basically legal and ethical issues for businesses. I am also helping three under-grad students who are taking the Business Law course by exam with weekly tutoring sessions.
Katie has been working overtime on the registration, she is fixing the spring quarter that we just finished while also getting the summer quarter going. She is also adjusting to having two employees who answer to her, she is developing into quite a good manager with just two weeks under her belt. On Wednesday I attended a meeting of the Cayman Mathematics Association in George Town. ICCI hasn't been represented at associations like that for a while and I am getting my face out there and meeting potential professors. I drove Elsa's van and got my first taste of George Town traffic at 5:00 p.m. Everyone is trying to get out of town on a one lane each way road and that backs things up for miles. It took 55 minutes to go 8 miles from the school district (where 5 schools are all right next to each other) back to Newlands. We did orientation for new students Thursday evening and have been watching the first season of "House" most evenings to wind our brains down.
We are radically changing our diet. The food is very expensive and with bikes you cant carry a lot. Throw in the fact that we have no refrigerator and the one in the teachers lounge is small and only partly working so we keep just milk and a few essentials in there. That means very little meat for me which is a huge adjustment. We have been eating lots of pasta since that stores easily in cabinets before being made. While we don't have an oven or microwave, we do have two good burners and have made chili, corn on the cob, spaghetti, beans and rice and a really good stir fry with some chicken we had bought the same day. Before each meal I walk from our apartment into the college, get stuff from the refrigerator, put anything we need microwaved into the microwave in the teachers lounge and then walk back. We actually have a microwave but it blew out the extension cord and we think there is an electrical issue with it. The only thing we really microwave is popcorn to watch "House" so it just becomes part of the routine to walk into the lounge and use that microwave.
We are both losing weight and getting darker just from regular activity outside. When we get a car we still plan to do mostly biking but shopping will get easier and we can go into George Town some evenings. Our Cayman experience has been largely limited to Newlands and the bike excursions since we dropped off the rental with a few work related trips thrown in using the van.
The people here are very friendly once they realize you are friendly. Katie and I have both noticed that they maintain cold veneers at first but once you smile at them, wish them good morning and show interest (ie you aren't a snobby tourist afraid they are going to pick your pocket) they open up. It seems like the onus is on us to break the ice but once we break the ice everyone has been great from the cashiers at Fosters to our neighbors etc. There really are all the comforts of the U.S. from Domino's Pizza to Subway to supermarkets and a blockbuster, they are just a lot more expensive and without a car mostly inaccessible. Still, two weeks in and we are both happy to be here. The challenges will make great stories some day and the three buckets we have to put out will become ten and the leaks will become floods to rival Noah and we will thoroughly enjoy recounting our experiences.
This past week has really seemed like a whirlwind. Katie and I are supposed to be going into work Monday through Thursday at noon but on at least three of the four days we found ourselves going in around 10:30 and working until after 11 at night and on the fourth, Thursday we were in at 9:00 a.m. and didn't leave until 11:30 as an exam ran very late and we are the ones who lock up the campus and turn off the lights, A/C etc. when everyone leaves. Then Friday night we worked until 5 and then i proctored two exams from 7-9 p.m. We only got to ride our bikes once, on Tuesday when we made a run down to Fosters. This week was exam week and also registration for the summer quarter so things are hectic. The one problem with living at the college is that when we get bored we work and so it almost seems like we are working all the time.
We had a couple of storms blow through and are still dealing with the leak issues. The latest caused a small leak in our bedroom which is a major concern (it also created a lake as the post above shows). We are watching more and more leak points form in the ceiling with a lot of concern. The apartment is a really great place if you can use the whole place but with half of it unusable when it rains and therefore really not usable at all since it rains all the time that makes it rough. When it is finally fixed we will feel a lot better.
I am going to be teaching this summer after all. I have a graduate course called Environment of Business which is a Law Business and Society course, basically legal and ethical issues for businesses. I am also helping three under-grad students who are taking the Business Law course by exam with weekly tutoring sessions.
Katie has been working overtime on the registration, she is fixing the spring quarter that we just finished while also getting the summer quarter going. She is also adjusting to having two employees who answer to her, she is developing into quite a good manager with just two weeks under her belt. On Wednesday I attended a meeting of the Cayman Mathematics Association in George Town. ICCI hasn't been represented at associations like that for a while and I am getting my face out there and meeting potential professors. I drove Elsa's van and got my first taste of George Town traffic at 5:00 p.m. Everyone is trying to get out of town on a one lane each way road and that backs things up for miles. It took 55 minutes to go 8 miles from the school district (where 5 schools are all right next to each other) back to Newlands. We did orientation for new students Thursday evening and have been watching the first season of "House" most evenings to wind our brains down.
We are radically changing our diet. The food is very expensive and with bikes you cant carry a lot. Throw in the fact that we have no refrigerator and the one in the teachers lounge is small and only partly working so we keep just milk and a few essentials in there. That means very little meat for me which is a huge adjustment. We have been eating lots of pasta since that stores easily in cabinets before being made. While we don't have an oven or microwave, we do have two good burners and have made chili, corn on the cob, spaghetti, beans and rice and a really good stir fry with some chicken we had bought the same day. Before each meal I walk from our apartment into the college, get stuff from the refrigerator, put anything we need microwaved into the microwave in the teachers lounge and then walk back. We actually have a microwave but it blew out the extension cord and we think there is an electrical issue with it. The only thing we really microwave is popcorn to watch "House" so it just becomes part of the routine to walk into the lounge and use that microwave.
We are both losing weight and getting darker just from regular activity outside. When we get a car we still plan to do mostly biking but shopping will get easier and we can go into George Town some evenings. Our Cayman experience has been largely limited to Newlands and the bike excursions since we dropped off the rental with a few work related trips thrown in using the van.
The people here are very friendly once they realize you are friendly. Katie and I have both noticed that they maintain cold veneers at first but once you smile at them, wish them good morning and show interest (ie you aren't a snobby tourist afraid they are going to pick your pocket) they open up. It seems like the onus is on us to break the ice but once we break the ice everyone has been great from the cashiers at Fosters to our neighbors etc. There really are all the comforts of the U.S. from Domino's Pizza to Subway to supermarkets and a blockbuster, they are just a lot more expensive and without a car mostly inaccessible. Still, two weeks in and we are both happy to be here. The challenges will make great stories some day and the three buckets we have to put out will become ten and the leaks will become floods to rival Noah and we will thoroughly enjoy recounting our experiences.
Friday, June 15, 2007
Sunday, June 10, 2007
Saturday biking excursion
By Scott:
After a morning of work Katie and I took our first real long bike activity ride yesterday. We filled up our water bottles and made the six mile trip out to Bodden town on The Queen's Highway that circles the island. We stopped at the public beach and went swimming. The beach was nice but the ground was way too rocky and there was strong wave activity and currents so we pretty much have struck that beach from our list. The above picture is of the Bodden Town public beach. On our way back we decided to go down Beach Bay road off the highway and look for a beach Katie had read about. This is one of the rich neighborhoods and the houses were incredible. About a mile off the highway we found a pristine beach with what looks like a great swimming area that we will try today. We biked back to the highway and then back toward Newlands. We stopped off at the Domino's in Savannah and found out they had a carry out special. So we biked to Elsa's in Newlands and borrowed the van to go back and get a pizza. Our total bike trip was about 16 miles round trip and we were exhausted. Whatever else we may become, in shape is definitely one of them at this pace. Our librarian had the first two seasons of "House" on DVD, a series Katie and I started watching in the advice of her friend Jennifer, so we watched a couple of episodes while we ate the pizza. We are going out again today more to keep the stiffness from setting in, though we are looking forward to trying the beach we found.
After a morning of work Katie and I took our first real long bike activity ride yesterday. We filled up our water bottles and made the six mile trip out to Bodden town on The Queen's Highway that circles the island. We stopped at the public beach and went swimming. The beach was nice but the ground was way too rocky and there was strong wave activity and currents so we pretty much have struck that beach from our list. The above picture is of the Bodden Town public beach. On our way back we decided to go down Beach Bay road off the highway and look for a beach Katie had read about. This is one of the rich neighborhoods and the houses were incredible. About a mile off the highway we found a pristine beach with what looks like a great swimming area that we will try today. We biked back to the highway and then back toward Newlands. We stopped off at the Domino's in Savannah and found out they had a carry out special. So we biked to Elsa's in Newlands and borrowed the van to go back and get a pizza. Our total bike trip was about 16 miles round trip and we were exhausted. Whatever else we may become, in shape is definitely one of them at this pace. Our librarian had the first two seasons of "House" on DVD, a series Katie and I started watching in the advice of her friend Jennifer, so we watched a couple of episodes while we ate the pizza. We are going out again today more to keep the stiffness from setting in, though we are looking forward to trying the beach we found.
The Grand Tour
By Katie
I had all intentions of doing this yesterday but then I got pulled into four hours of work.....
By the way, mom, all the lights were only on for the sake of the pictures. Usually we are good at turning off our lights.... :)
Our Kitchen
The kitchen, "living area" and "study" are all part of one big room. In this picture you can see our drying rack for towels on the right hand side, the stacking washer/dryer in the back left, and our table. It is nice having a washer/dryer but they are very, very small and so we have to wash about every other day. Also in the picture is the sink that doesn't work and the little fridge that doesn't work.
Our Living area
The door in the back is to the bathroom with the only working sink so we have to wash dishes there after every meal. You can also see how close it is to the "kitchen".
Our Study
The blue box you see in the bottom right corner with the water and bucket, etc is our hurricane kit. We are working on building it up by getting just a bit more every time we run to Fosters. You can just see a bit of the bathroom door to give you a feel for how close everything is.
Our Closet
We have gone from having large, separate closets in our apartment in Fort Worth to sharing this one, very small closet.
The view from our front door
The door you see on the left is one of the entrances to the library and at 10:30 at night, often students will be slamming it on their way home.
The parking lot & field next to the building
There is a painted horse that grazes in that field. He was behind the large tree in the middle of the picture when I was out taking pictures.
Scott hard at work on a Saturday in his office
Katie hard at work on a Saturday in her office
I would like it noted that when I first got there last week, that desk was ENTIRELY covered in paper and files. I have gotten a lot done in cleaning and organizing.
I had all intentions of doing this yesterday but then I got pulled into four hours of work.....
By the way, mom, all the lights were only on for the sake of the pictures. Usually we are good at turning off our lights.... :)
Our Kitchen
The kitchen, "living area" and "study" are all part of one big room. In this picture you can see our drying rack for towels on the right hand side, the stacking washer/dryer in the back left, and our table. It is nice having a washer/dryer but they are very, very small and so we have to wash about every other day. Also in the picture is the sink that doesn't work and the little fridge that doesn't work.
Our Living area
The door in the back is to the bathroom with the only working sink so we have to wash dishes there after every meal. You can also see how close it is to the "kitchen".
Our Study
The blue box you see in the bottom right corner with the water and bucket, etc is our hurricane kit. We are working on building it up by getting just a bit more every time we run to Fosters. You can just see a bit of the bathroom door to give you a feel for how close everything is.
What you can see is all there is besides the closet. The bed takes up about two thirds of the room and we had to turn it like that (where it goes from one side of the room to the other) so that we could fit in our "dressers" (see plastic drawers).
Our Closet
We have gone from having large, separate closets in our apartment in Fort Worth to sharing this one, very small closet.
The view from our front door
The door you see on the left is one of the entrances to the library and at 10:30 at night, often students will be slamming it on their way home.
The parking lot & field next to the building
There is a painted horse that grazes in that field. He was behind the large tree in the middle of the picture when I was out taking pictures.
Scott hard at work on a Saturday in his office
Katie hard at work on a Saturday in her office
I would like it noted that when I first got there last week, that desk was ENTIRELY covered in paper and files. I have gotten a lot done in cleaning and organizing.
Friday, June 8, 2007
Spiders and Frogs and Ants OH MY
By Scott:
Yesterday was an interesting exploration into God's lesser species down here in the Caribbean. When I got to the office I sat at my desk and started working on some procedures manuals I am supposed to update and revise. Suddenly out of the corner of my eye I see movement. On the opposite wall a spider the size of a baseball had wandered up the corner and stopped half way. He almost certainly came out of my credenza where he had been making his home with the office empty and this was the first day I had opened it up and started using it. I called to Kelly (our librarian) in the office next door and asked her to come to my office but not into it. I asked her to look at the spider and let me know if it was poisonous. She jumped a few feet in the air when she saw it and said she didn't know but I should kill it. Kira from the business office and Vernette both came in along with Katie and after some discussion of the possible poison risk we decided upon "operation spider capture" as Kira called it and to catch the little guy and set him free in the world rather than end his life. Katie got a folder, I grabbed a trashcan and we maneuvered him (using masculine but for all I know it was a female) into the trashcan then carried him outside and set him free.
That evening I was closing up the classroom building around 10:20. I had turned off the outside lights and as I walked toward the vending room to go in and turn off the A/C a frog jumped from the roof of the building right onto my head. I about had a heart attack and honestly thought I was being attacked by a bird at first. I reacted, with some justification, quite violently pushing it off my head and onto the grass where it gave me a croak and promptly jumped away. I guess the croak was thanks for breaking its fall.
This afternoon while Katie and I had lunch we looked over at our door and we must have dropped something on our way in because a swarm of ants was crawling all over some food substance. Per our prior declaration we had a stomping party and killed probably a hundred or so of them then swept the bodies out, another reminder that we cant drop food and have to keep this place clean. The college is in the middle of a field and there are more ants than can be counted. Keith puts down poison every few weeks massacring millions but they keep coming back. He tells me that the rain washed away his last treatment so that is why they are a little more active now. Incidentally good news on that front, it rained last night and the roof seems to be working as there were no leaks. We are going to wait through one more rainstorm before starting to use the front room and closet.
First work week is done though both Katie and I are working tomorrow, I am proctoring an exam and she is doing some registration work. We are both enjoying our work though it is draining and sometimes you feel like for every problem you solve there are two new ones that arise. Still we are both very happy to be here and really enjoying the transition to Island life.
Yesterday was an interesting exploration into God's lesser species down here in the Caribbean. When I got to the office I sat at my desk and started working on some procedures manuals I am supposed to update and revise. Suddenly out of the corner of my eye I see movement. On the opposite wall a spider the size of a baseball had wandered up the corner and stopped half way. He almost certainly came out of my credenza where he had been making his home with the office empty and this was the first day I had opened it up and started using it. I called to Kelly (our librarian) in the office next door and asked her to come to my office but not into it. I asked her to look at the spider and let me know if it was poisonous. She jumped a few feet in the air when she saw it and said she didn't know but I should kill it. Kira from the business office and Vernette both came in along with Katie and after some discussion of the possible poison risk we decided upon "operation spider capture" as Kira called it and to catch the little guy and set him free in the world rather than end his life. Katie got a folder, I grabbed a trashcan and we maneuvered him (using masculine but for all I know it was a female) into the trashcan then carried him outside and set him free.
That evening I was closing up the classroom building around 10:20. I had turned off the outside lights and as I walked toward the vending room to go in and turn off the A/C a frog jumped from the roof of the building right onto my head. I about had a heart attack and honestly thought I was being attacked by a bird at first. I reacted, with some justification, quite violently pushing it off my head and onto the grass where it gave me a croak and promptly jumped away. I guess the croak was thanks for breaking its fall.
This afternoon while Katie and I had lunch we looked over at our door and we must have dropped something on our way in because a swarm of ants was crawling all over some food substance. Per our prior declaration we had a stomping party and killed probably a hundred or so of them then swept the bodies out, another reminder that we cant drop food and have to keep this place clean. The college is in the middle of a field and there are more ants than can be counted. Keith puts down poison every few weeks massacring millions but they keep coming back. He tells me that the rain washed away his last treatment so that is why they are a little more active now. Incidentally good news on that front, it rained last night and the roof seems to be working as there were no leaks. We are going to wait through one more rainstorm before starting to use the front room and closet.
First work week is done though both Katie and I are working tomorrow, I am proctoring an exam and she is doing some registration work. We are both enjoying our work though it is draining and sometimes you feel like for every problem you solve there are two new ones that arise. Still we are both very happy to be here and really enjoying the transition to Island life.
Thursday, June 7, 2007
Security Dogs
by Katie
Note to Self:
Some houses in North Sound Estates have large, scary security dogs, unfenced. When riding, these dogs will chase you, barking and snapping at your heels. Must pick up pace when passing house or simply avoid these locations.
Note to Self:
Some houses in North Sound Estates have large, scary security dogs, unfenced. When riding, these dogs will chase you, barking and snapping at your heels. Must pick up pace when passing house or simply avoid these locations.
new roof, new bikes, new job
By Katie
Some people came and worked on the roof for two days; it seemed as if they were putting on a brand new roof. Everything is finished now but, since it hasn't really rained since Sunday, we haven't been able to put it to the test.
As you know, we got our bikes on Monday and tested them out. Yesterday we did a successful ride down to the Fosters to get groceries but we only brought one bag so Scott had a heavy bag on his back on the way back down. I'd wanted to go for a longer ride one of these mornings and spend some time before work at a beach but, as Scott pointed out, we will be exhausted after a long ride and then putting in long hours at work is going to be very difficult. I will just have to wait for Saturdays, until we get in better shape, before hitting the beach to swim!
We have been working very long days (put in twelve hours with two short breaks yesterday). I feel lucky that with my job, even though there is so much that needs to be done, everything that needs to be done consists of smaller steps. Therefore, I can do a small step, feel accomplished, and then move on to the next step. Scott's job is more abstract and so I don't think he feels the same sort of progress, no matter how slow. I have been spending about a quarter of my time trying to get things organized so that we know where things are in the office. I was a bit surprised to find that I do have two people that I supervise and have had to adjust accordingly. For the first time in my life (besides bossing my mom and sisters around when cleaning), I am in a manager's position. I am using all the great advice that I received from Mary Anna, Scott and all my experience of what not to do to help!
Some people came and worked on the roof for two days; it seemed as if they were putting on a brand new roof. Everything is finished now but, since it hasn't really rained since Sunday, we haven't been able to put it to the test.
As you know, we got our bikes on Monday and tested them out. Yesterday we did a successful ride down to the Fosters to get groceries but we only brought one bag so Scott had a heavy bag on his back on the way back down. I'd wanted to go for a longer ride one of these mornings and spend some time before work at a beach but, as Scott pointed out, we will be exhausted after a long ride and then putting in long hours at work is going to be very difficult. I will just have to wait for Saturdays, until we get in better shape, before hitting the beach to swim!
We have been working very long days (put in twelve hours with two short breaks yesterday). I feel lucky that with my job, even though there is so much that needs to be done, everything that needs to be done consists of smaller steps. Therefore, I can do a small step, feel accomplished, and then move on to the next step. Scott's job is more abstract and so I don't think he feels the same sort of progress, no matter how slow. I have been spending about a quarter of my time trying to get things organized so that we know where things are in the office. I was a bit surprised to find that I do have two people that I supervise and have had to adjust accordingly. For the first time in my life (besides bossing my mom and sisters around when cleaning), I am in a manager's position. I am using all the great advice that I received from Mary Anna, Scott and all my experience of what not to do to help!
Tuesday, June 5, 2007
Crabs
by Katie
The crabs here are very interesting. The first day we walked, we noticed all of these squished crabs everywhere. On our long drive Sunday out to the north side, we noticed huge groups of little red crabs or one/two big grey land crabs out in the middle of the road. It is the best place for them to sun themselves so they all hang out right where tire tracks run! Scott had to have killed about twenty little crabs; although he is denial and claims that all of the crabs in the groups that we ran over were able to maneuver around his wheel. (More like two or three tops and there was nothing I could do when you are going 40 mph on one lane each way hwy and 10 of the little suckers run right out into your lane-Scott)
See I told you he was in denial!!
The crabs here are very interesting. The first day we walked, we noticed all of these squished crabs everywhere. On our long drive Sunday out to the north side, we noticed huge groups of little red crabs or one/two big grey land crabs out in the middle of the road. It is the best place for them to sun themselves so they all hang out right where tire tracks run! Scott had to have killed about twenty little crabs; although he is denial and claims that all of the crabs in the groups that we ran over were able to maneuver around his wheel. (More like two or three tops and there was nothing I could do when you are going 40 mph on one lane each way hwy and 10 of the little suckers run right out into your lane-Scott)
See I told you he was in denial!!
First full day on Job; First Bike Ride and other random facts
By Scott
We had our first full day on the job yesterday. We are working from Noon until Ten with a hour break for lunch and another hour break for dinner Monday thru Thursday (8-5 Fridays as there are no evening classes and some Saturday mornings as needed). That means we have the mornings for ourselves. Yesterday was our last day with the car so we needed to get maximum use. We got up at 6 a.m and walked north up Hirst road this time we kept going past the golf course all the way to the sound. There is a Heritage trail marker up there for Careenage which is the place where they used to turn the boats on side to clean the bottom. The sound is quite beautiful and very peaceful.
After finishing our walk and having breakfast we headed back into George Town looking for Uncle Bill's Home Improvement Center where we were told we could get high quality bikes. We found a pair of Trek bikes and bought them along with helmets and locks. Uncle Bill's delivered the bikes to the college. We also went back to the big Kirk's supermarket (like costco with bulk stuff - some of the items) and bought lots of food items for our hurricane kit including 5 galloons of fresh water, canned meat and fish, canned vegetables along with some non food items we hadn't gotten on Saturday like work gloves matches etc. We heard a news report on the radio while driving around that ended with the announcer saying in a totally normal voice "report from NOAA" (National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration), "no hurricane activity in next 48 hours". We looked at each other and laughed because down here that isn't a joke; they really mean you are clear the next 48 hours and that is important news. There are inserts in all the papers about hurricane kits and hurricane preparedness so we have taken very seriously getting a good kit together. Fortunately we had brought the most expensive items on island (first aid kit 25 in US 80 here, good flash light, batteries etc with us). We got more food for our use and headed back to the college.
In the afternoon, I returned the rental with Elsa following behind and then giving me a ride home. Katie began working in her new office organizing and inputting registration materials. In the evening I met with the current acting Dean and began sitting in on academic advising sessions and learning the Dean's part of the registration process which has just begun for the Summer quarter. We finished around 9:45 and called it an early night. I am currently drafting an exam for the Fundamentals of Business Law course people who are taking the class by exam (so it felt a little like old home-Scott).
This morning we took our bikes out for the first time. We rode up to the sound and back. Katie's back wheel seemed low so we tried to pump it up with our air pump but really only accomplished letting out all the air. Fortunately, Keith, Elsa's husband and the college maintenance man used to repair bikes in Jamaica. He had already helped us adjust the seats and now he helped us (really he did it) pump back up the tire using a good bike pump. He also pulled out the inner tube to make sure there was no puncture etc. and that the only reason it was low was because they hadn't pumped it up before delivery. We went out a second time to the sound and returned about 2 miles round trip so we biked about 4 miles this morning total. The trip out is downhill, back uphill. We didn't really realize how much exertion it was until we stopped after the first trip and realized we were drenched in sweat. This will be great exercise in addition to giving us a way to get around.
We did a little research on that song I hum to help with driving and, technically, the dutchie refers to a dutch oven and passing food from the dutchie but pretty much everyone on the net that I looked at said the song is slang for the happy weed so who knows, kind of like Lucy in the Sky with Diamonds, it is what you want it to mean.
There is tremendous amount of work and we keep reminding ourselves of something my mom told us before we left "we can't do it all in 24 hours". For those of you on windows live messenger/MSN we will usually be on in the mornings Monday thru Thursday and regular evenings Friday through Sunday.
We had our first full day on the job yesterday. We are working from Noon until Ten with a hour break for lunch and another hour break for dinner Monday thru Thursday (8-5 Fridays as there are no evening classes and some Saturday mornings as needed). That means we have the mornings for ourselves. Yesterday was our last day with the car so we needed to get maximum use. We got up at 6 a.m and walked north up Hirst road this time we kept going past the golf course all the way to the sound. There is a Heritage trail marker up there for Careenage which is the place where they used to turn the boats on side to clean the bottom. The sound is quite beautiful and very peaceful.
After finishing our walk and having breakfast we headed back into George Town looking for Uncle Bill's Home Improvement Center where we were told we could get high quality bikes. We found a pair of Trek bikes and bought them along with helmets and locks. Uncle Bill's delivered the bikes to the college. We also went back to the big Kirk's supermarket (like costco with bulk stuff - some of the items) and bought lots of food items for our hurricane kit including 5 galloons of fresh water, canned meat and fish, canned vegetables along with some non food items we hadn't gotten on Saturday like work gloves matches etc. We heard a news report on the radio while driving around that ended with the announcer saying in a totally normal voice "report from NOAA" (National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration), "no hurricane activity in next 48 hours". We looked at each other and laughed because down here that isn't a joke; they really mean you are clear the next 48 hours and that is important news. There are inserts in all the papers about hurricane kits and hurricane preparedness so we have taken very seriously getting a good kit together. Fortunately we had brought the most expensive items on island (first aid kit 25 in US 80 here, good flash light, batteries etc with us). We got more food for our use and headed back to the college.
In the afternoon, I returned the rental with Elsa following behind and then giving me a ride home. Katie began working in her new office organizing and inputting registration materials. In the evening I met with the current acting Dean and began sitting in on academic advising sessions and learning the Dean's part of the registration process which has just begun for the Summer quarter. We finished around 9:45 and called it an early night. I am currently drafting an exam for the Fundamentals of Business Law course people who are taking the class by exam (so it felt a little like old home-Scott).
This morning we took our bikes out for the first time. We rode up to the sound and back. Katie's back wheel seemed low so we tried to pump it up with our air pump but really only accomplished letting out all the air. Fortunately, Keith, Elsa's husband and the college maintenance man used to repair bikes in Jamaica. He had already helped us adjust the seats and now he helped us (really he did it) pump back up the tire using a good bike pump. He also pulled out the inner tube to make sure there was no puncture etc. and that the only reason it was low was because they hadn't pumped it up before delivery. We went out a second time to the sound and returned about 2 miles round trip so we biked about 4 miles this morning total. The trip out is downhill, back uphill. We didn't really realize how much exertion it was until we stopped after the first trip and realized we were drenched in sweat. This will be great exercise in addition to giving us a way to get around.
We did a little research on that song I hum to help with driving and, technically, the dutchie refers to a dutch oven and passing food from the dutchie but pretty much everyone on the net that I looked at said the song is slang for the happy weed so who knows, kind of like Lucy in the Sky with Diamonds, it is what you want it to mean.
There is tremendous amount of work and we keep reminding ourselves of something my mom told us before we left "we can't do it all in 24 hours". For those of you on windows live messenger/MSN we will usually be on in the mornings Monday thru Thursday and regular evenings Friday through Sunday.
Sunday, June 3, 2007
The North Side
by Katie [because Scott is sweeping the apartment right now:) ]
After meeting this morning with the acting registrar, Scott and I decided to head out farther than before and make it all the way around the bend of the island, out to the North side.
Side note: We discovered during lunch how quickly the ants will move in. During lunch one of the sunflower seeds Scott had on his salad dropped without us knowing. It couldn't have been more than two or three minutes before Scott noticed a trail of ants and we discovered they had found that seed and were going for it. We swept, again, under the table but even after going to the beach, the ants are in force trying to find something under that table. The ants, dirt, and sand are all reasons why we have to do a full sweep every single night.
Anyways, after lunch, we started to drive. We stopped in at East End Lighthouse (not really a lighthouse but just a GPS station). It is the only thing labeled as a lighthouse on the island so we had to go and get lots of pictures for Scott. (There is actually an old lighthouse up there with the light removed behind the new GPS tower and a lot of historical markers so I had a blast-Scott)
We made it around the East End of the island and Scott stopped in at the Reef Resort to get a different date for our anniversary celebration since we weren't able to do it last weekend. We found Rum Point, which has a great beach with nice sand, good water, sand volleyball, a restaurant, bathrooms, etc. All of that meant that there were a lot of people; again, me and lots of people don't mix. In wandering back we found Cayman Kai public beach and chased away the couple that was getting out of their car (it is funny the people who you can tell are looking for an empty beach and will drive till they find one, like us!)
Cayman Kai beach was perfect. The beaches that we have found on the East End are usually framed by bits of beach that aren't sand. There are huge limestone deposits that create really rocky areas where it isn't safe to swim but this beach had a small area where you could get into the water between the rocks. We walked through the seaweed, which feels really weird on your toes, and then swam out to the bright blue part. The thing that amazed me was the lack of depth perception in the water because of the clarity of the water!! We swam out to get away from the seaweed and you could see everything on the bottom of the ocean. Then, as you put your legs down, you get a big shock because it is too deep to stand!! It is very strange to be able to see everything in water that is deeper than you are tall! (I used goggles which made it much easier on my eyes and I got to follow a school of fish around, the water is truly incredible-Scott).
After meeting this morning with the acting registrar, Scott and I decided to head out farther than before and make it all the way around the bend of the island, out to the North side.
Side note: We discovered during lunch how quickly the ants will move in. During lunch one of the sunflower seeds Scott had on his salad dropped without us knowing. It couldn't have been more than two or three minutes before Scott noticed a trail of ants and we discovered they had found that seed and were going for it. We swept, again, under the table but even after going to the beach, the ants are in force trying to find something under that table. The ants, dirt, and sand are all reasons why we have to do a full sweep every single night.
Anyways, after lunch, we started to drive. We stopped in at East End Lighthouse (not really a lighthouse but just a GPS station). It is the only thing labeled as a lighthouse on the island so we had to go and get lots of pictures for Scott. (There is actually an old lighthouse up there with the light removed behind the new GPS tower and a lot of historical markers so I had a blast-Scott)
We made it around the East End of the island and Scott stopped in at the Reef Resort to get a different date for our anniversary celebration since we weren't able to do it last weekend. We found Rum Point, which has a great beach with nice sand, good water, sand volleyball, a restaurant, bathrooms, etc. All of that meant that there were a lot of people; again, me and lots of people don't mix. In wandering back we found Cayman Kai public beach and chased away the couple that was getting out of their car (it is funny the people who you can tell are looking for an empty beach and will drive till they find one, like us!)
Cayman Kai beach was perfect. The beaches that we have found on the East End are usually framed by bits of beach that aren't sand. There are huge limestone deposits that create really rocky areas where it isn't safe to swim but this beach had a small area where you could get into the water between the rocks. We walked through the seaweed, which feels really weird on your toes, and then swam out to the bright blue part. The thing that amazed me was the lack of depth perception in the water because of the clarity of the water!! We swam out to get away from the seaweed and you could see everything on the bottom of the ocean. Then, as you put your legs down, you get a big shock because it is too deep to stand!! It is very strange to be able to see everything in water that is deeper than you are tall! (I used goggles which made it much easier on my eyes and I got to follow a school of fish around, the water is truly incredible-Scott).
We had dinner at a chinese restaurant on the main road from George Town and discovered that it is being moved to Savannah when the new road comes in about a month from now, so whenever we need our chinese food fix we have a place.
We can't wait for people to start to come and visit. As we explore more of the island, we keep seeing things that we want to share with all of you. Hurry up and come!!Saturday, June 2, 2007
Our first 48 hours
Bold by Scott; Italics by Katie:
Katie and I flew down here Thursday flying through Houston's Intercontinental Airport. We flew Cayman airways which was a great airline and Houston was much better than Miami for connecting down here. We did immediately get our first taste of Island life. The flight was due to leave at 2:10, around 2 O'clock I started getting nervous that no one was doing anything and we hadn't boarded and there was no announcement. At about 2:15 they called for Turtle club members and then some time passed and no new announcement but people kept getting in line and boarding the plane. After a while I realized that they weren't calling rows you just got on when you felt like it. Katie and I boarded and the flight left about 45 minutes late apparently because hey that's just the way it is. The service on the flight was great and the flight itself was smooth, we highly recommend Cayman Airways from Houston but dont be surprised if things run very casual in the boarding process.
We got in and went through immigration. Katie got her work permit stamp for 3 months but mine still needs some kind of letter so I was allowed into the country for 30 days, my permit is OK they just couldn't stamp it (I don't have to leave to get my stamp which is all I really cared about anyway). We got the rental car, a very small Daihatsu Charade with the wheel on the right side and the turn signal and wiper controllers backward from US cars. I kept humming a song from many years ago "Pass the Dutchie on the left hand side" to remind me to stay left, the song sounds like it is about the happy weed smoking but I remember seeing one of those I love the 90's shows on VH1 and it is actually some kind of kids toy in Jamaica. Anyway it is a handy way to keep reminding me. Driving on the left is a lot like when I was 17 and just learning to drive you have to really pay attention and you cant rely on your instincts because they are wrong, plus every time I went to turn at first I turned on the wipers not the blinker.
We got to Elsa's house to get the key to the apartment and learned that the heavy rains had flooded the front room of our apartment. I had brought down a load of stuff in April and the linens that I left in the front room along with several books and other items were soaked. The apartment also needed a cleaning so instead of unpacking we decided to just get a few clothes out for Friday then go shopping for cleaning materials and other stuff we would need. We also started drying out the stuff that had been soaked. We headed down to Fosters and got groceries, cleaning implements, some pots and a pan, a broom, dustpan, dirty clothes basket, trash can etc. With the prices down here you don't want to know how expensive that first grocery run was. We got in around nine and decided to put the groceries away, nothing on the floor and nothing exposed then went to sleep.
Around 1:30 it started raining and Katie mentioned to me that it sounded like it was inside. We turned on the light and walked into the main room and saw that it was dripping from two or three different spots. We used some coolers that were left over from a previous trip and a bucket we had bought to catch water. We also saw a seven inch long centipede meandering across our floor looking for somewhere to hide, with our suitcases out and the most likely destination and the poisonous nature of most centipedes, he had to die. It took three shots from my hiking boot(and a good squishing) but we ended the life of one of God's little creatures and flushed him down the toilet. Then with nothing else we could do we moved everything to the east end of the apartment, the apartment slopes west and the water was migrating to a corner where the front door, front room closet and front A/C vents were, and called it a night.
We woke up at 6:00 a.m Friday, the Caymans don't have daylight savings and are really in the Eastern Zone even though right now they are the same as Central time so it gets light out at 5:30 in the morning, of course that also means its dark here by 7 in the evening. We walked up Hirst road waving good morning to everyone we saw and generally had a great morning exercise/walk. We then drove to Fosters picked up some breakfast in their buffet (all the supermarkets here have buffets for each meal at around 4 dollars a pound for whatever you put in your container) and came back to the apartment to eat. We went in to work around 8:15 and worked until noon. I felt like a deer in the headlights learning everything new and for the next several weeks I am sure it will feel that way until I learn all the aspects of my job, it feels just like my first weeks as a lawyer. Katie has been doing her job remotely for a couple of months so her transition will be a lot easier.
At noon we headed out trying to get the most use out of our car. We knew about a sale at Cox Lumber and also wanted to find the other home stores and the other grocery stores in George Town proper. They have a supermarket like a Costco called Kirk's that sells bulk items and we will be using that when we want to take the 25 minute trip each way(only about 7 miles away). The island is small but traffic is heavy and with small one lane roads that wind around a lot you can't get anywhere fast. This trip, we got lost a couple of times and went through the same intersection no less than 6 times but eventually found what we were looking for and bought a plastic chest of drawers, some rolling carts (you can't have anything on the floor not just because of flooding but because of our little critter friends). I told Katie we would make a wary peace with the spiders who stayed up high since they would kill the mosquito's but it will be war with the ants and centipedes.
We proceeded to do a massive cleaning and move in, we actually got everything into the back room and closet, quite a feat when you consider we planned to use the front room as our walk in closet but until the leaks are fixed that room is unusable except for some storage of empty suitcases on the bed at a spot where there is no leaking. We finished the bathroom and bedroom using a Swiffer which swept and mopped the tile floor. We have an infestation of some kind of worm that looks like a sunflower seed in its cocoon and had to clean those out. We destroyed any spider webs at eye level and below and announced to the remaining spiders they could stay if they ate their quota of mosquito's. The rain has no where to go on the island and there is standing water everywhere. We bought bug spray that first night and use it every day. While we have no refrigerator or kitchen sink, the stove works so we made spaghetti for dinner and it tasted great after all that work. To celebrate really feeling like we had accomplished something cleaning the apartment and getting all the suitcases unpacked we went down to the Haagen Dazs in Savannah and had two ice cream cones.
This morning we had intended to get up at 5 and go watch the sunrise but it started raining around 3 a.m. and another session of putting out buckets and coolers ensued. It was still raining at 5 so we decided to sleep in. I then ran down to Fosters got some milk and cereal, while KT finished cleaning and putting away all the kitchen items, and we had breakfast. We are using the refrigerator in the teachers lounge so before each meal I run over and get what we need then either during or after take the stuff back. We were waiting on the construction man to come look at the roof but he had not arrived by noon so we decided to head out and get the last immediate need stuff from the home stores particularly stuff for our hurricane kit. After another drive through George Town (Pass the Dutchie on the left hand side) we came back to the apartment unloaded and headed east for a beach. We found Heritage Beach in Cottage and went for a swim.
A rain storm chased us back to the apartment where we met the construction man who hopefully will fix our roof though it will be next week at the earliest so some nights of bucket duty await as at least two tropical storms have bands hitting the Island. That's what you get when you move here during rainy season and right at beginning of hurricane season. There is a reason tourist season is November to April when it isn't hot, muggy, rainy, windy and the bugs aren't going crazy. Still after just two days this is beginning to feel like home. We have already talked to a couple of relatives on Windows live messenger with web cam and are signing up for AOL Aim and some other services to talk or chat with other relatives so let us know what capabilities you have and we can try and talk.
Katie and I flew down here Thursday flying through Houston's Intercontinental Airport. We flew Cayman airways which was a great airline and Houston was much better than Miami for connecting down here. We did immediately get our first taste of Island life. The flight was due to leave at 2:10, around 2 O'clock I started getting nervous that no one was doing anything and we hadn't boarded and there was no announcement. At about 2:15 they called for Turtle club members and then some time passed and no new announcement but people kept getting in line and boarding the plane. After a while I realized that they weren't calling rows you just got on when you felt like it. Katie and I boarded and the flight left about 45 minutes late apparently because hey that's just the way it is. The service on the flight was great and the flight itself was smooth, we highly recommend Cayman Airways from Houston but dont be surprised if things run very casual in the boarding process.
We got in and went through immigration. Katie got her work permit stamp for 3 months but mine still needs some kind of letter so I was allowed into the country for 30 days, my permit is OK they just couldn't stamp it (I don't have to leave to get my stamp which is all I really cared about anyway). We got the rental car, a very small Daihatsu Charade with the wheel on the right side and the turn signal and wiper controllers backward from US cars. I kept humming a song from many years ago "Pass the Dutchie on the left hand side" to remind me to stay left, the song sounds like it is about the happy weed smoking but I remember seeing one of those I love the 90's shows on VH1 and it is actually some kind of kids toy in Jamaica. Anyway it is a handy way to keep reminding me. Driving on the left is a lot like when I was 17 and just learning to drive you have to really pay attention and you cant rely on your instincts because they are wrong, plus every time I went to turn at first I turned on the wipers not the blinker.
We got to Elsa's house to get the key to the apartment and learned that the heavy rains had flooded the front room of our apartment. I had brought down a load of stuff in April and the linens that I left in the front room along with several books and other items were soaked. The apartment also needed a cleaning so instead of unpacking we decided to just get a few clothes out for Friday then go shopping for cleaning materials and other stuff we would need. We also started drying out the stuff that had been soaked. We headed down to Fosters and got groceries, cleaning implements, some pots and a pan, a broom, dustpan, dirty clothes basket, trash can etc. With the prices down here you don't want to know how expensive that first grocery run was. We got in around nine and decided to put the groceries away, nothing on the floor and nothing exposed then went to sleep.
Around 1:30 it started raining and Katie mentioned to me that it sounded like it was inside. We turned on the light and walked into the main room and saw that it was dripping from two or three different spots. We used some coolers that were left over from a previous trip and a bucket we had bought to catch water. We also saw a seven inch long centipede meandering across our floor looking for somewhere to hide, with our suitcases out and the most likely destination and the poisonous nature of most centipedes, he had to die. It took three shots from my hiking boot(and a good squishing) but we ended the life of one of God's little creatures and flushed him down the toilet. Then with nothing else we could do we moved everything to the east end of the apartment, the apartment slopes west and the water was migrating to a corner where the front door, front room closet and front A/C vents were, and called it a night.
We woke up at 6:00 a.m Friday, the Caymans don't have daylight savings and are really in the Eastern Zone even though right now they are the same as Central time so it gets light out at 5:30 in the morning, of course that also means its dark here by 7 in the evening. We walked up Hirst road waving good morning to everyone we saw and generally had a great morning exercise/walk. We then drove to Fosters picked up some breakfast in their buffet (all the supermarkets here have buffets for each meal at around 4 dollars a pound for whatever you put in your container) and came back to the apartment to eat. We went in to work around 8:15 and worked until noon. I felt like a deer in the headlights learning everything new and for the next several weeks I am sure it will feel that way until I learn all the aspects of my job, it feels just like my first weeks as a lawyer. Katie has been doing her job remotely for a couple of months so her transition will be a lot easier.
At noon we headed out trying to get the most use out of our car. We knew about a sale at Cox Lumber and also wanted to find the other home stores and the other grocery stores in George Town proper. They have a supermarket like a Costco called Kirk's that sells bulk items and we will be using that when we want to take the 25 minute trip each way(only about 7 miles away). The island is small but traffic is heavy and with small one lane roads that wind around a lot you can't get anywhere fast. This trip, we got lost a couple of times and went through the same intersection no less than 6 times but eventually found what we were looking for and bought a plastic chest of drawers, some rolling carts (you can't have anything on the floor not just because of flooding but because of our little critter friends). I told Katie we would make a wary peace with the spiders who stayed up high since they would kill the mosquito's but it will be war with the ants and centipedes.
We proceeded to do a massive cleaning and move in, we actually got everything into the back room and closet, quite a feat when you consider we planned to use the front room as our walk in closet but until the leaks are fixed that room is unusable except for some storage of empty suitcases on the bed at a spot where there is no leaking. We finished the bathroom and bedroom using a Swiffer which swept and mopped the tile floor. We have an infestation of some kind of worm that looks like a sunflower seed in its cocoon and had to clean those out. We destroyed any spider webs at eye level and below and announced to the remaining spiders they could stay if they ate their quota of mosquito's. The rain has no where to go on the island and there is standing water everywhere. We bought bug spray that first night and use it every day. While we have no refrigerator or kitchen sink, the stove works so we made spaghetti for dinner and it tasted great after all that work. To celebrate really feeling like we had accomplished something cleaning the apartment and getting all the suitcases unpacked we went down to the Haagen Dazs in Savannah and had two ice cream cones.
This morning we had intended to get up at 5 and go watch the sunrise but it started raining around 3 a.m. and another session of putting out buckets and coolers ensued. It was still raining at 5 so we decided to sleep in. I then ran down to Fosters got some milk and cereal, while KT finished cleaning and putting away all the kitchen items, and we had breakfast. We are using the refrigerator in the teachers lounge so before each meal I run over and get what we need then either during or after take the stuff back. We were waiting on the construction man to come look at the roof but he had not arrived by noon so we decided to head out and get the last immediate need stuff from the home stores particularly stuff for our hurricane kit. After another drive through George Town (Pass the Dutchie on the left hand side) we came back to the apartment unloaded and headed east for a beach. We found Heritage Beach in Cottage and went for a swim.
A rain storm chased us back to the apartment where we met the construction man who hopefully will fix our roof though it will be next week at the earliest so some nights of bucket duty await as at least two tropical storms have bands hitting the Island. That's what you get when you move here during rainy season and right at beginning of hurricane season. There is a reason tourist season is November to April when it isn't hot, muggy, rainy, windy and the bugs aren't going crazy. Still after just two days this is beginning to feel like home. We have already talked to a couple of relatives on Windows live messenger with web cam and are signing up for AOL Aim and some other services to talk or chat with other relatives so let us know what capabilities you have and we can try and talk.
Friday, June 1, 2007
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