Thursday, October 25, 2007

A/C and Watching Chadin

Sunday afternoon a handyman suggested by our landlord came out to the house to take a look at the air handler and see if it could be fixed without having to be replaced. His instinct was that it could but that it would take a while. He told us he would be back Monday evening.

Monday morning we watched Chadin our business manager Kira's six year old son. His school is off this week and Kira needed someone to watch him in the morning for two days. I had a presentation at John Gray HS so while I went to gave my talk to the HS students, Katie took Chadin to Smith's cove a beach on the southwest side of the Island. After my presentation I picked them up and we had lunch before heading to the office at noon. That evening Katie stayed home with the AC man who worked on the unit for almost four hours. When he left, the AC was running good and three days later it is still running well so we will see if his work saved our landlord the expensive replacement.

Tuesday morning was my turn to watch Chadin while Katie went to an appointment. We went back to Smith's cove and this time I got to go snorkeling with him. Even though he is six, he is not afraid as a swimmer, but we kept a blown up inner tube with us and he would hold on to it as we moved out into deeper waters. We also did some exploring as he wanted to show me tide pools that he and Katie had found the day before. Katie picked us up at around 11 and we went home for lunch and then on to the office. His Grandfather arrived yesterday so we just had two days of kid watching. It was a neat small practice run for the two of us.

I made another presentation to some more students yesterday and Katie is getting ready for her week of teaching my Caribcert class next Monday and Tuesday. We get the official report on Friday from ACICS but are already hard at work addressing the expected citations. Things really haven't slowed down since the team left and we guess they wont until we actually get the notice our accreditation has been renewed.

Saturday, October 20, 2007

Watching College Football in a bar with 200 rugby fans

This morning I headed over to Davie Jones to watch the Texas-Baylor football game. When I arrived a little after 11 a.m. local time I could tell it was going to be a strange day. The bar was already packed. There were at least 50-60 people wearing green rugby jerseys with their faces painted the colors of the South African flag. I spoke with the bartender and insured that I would have a single TV for the Texas game and he reminded me that today was the final of the Rugby World Cup, England v. South Africa and that every other TV would be on the rugby match starting at 2 p.m. By the second quarter of the Texas game, the bar which normally seats maybe a 100 was packed with rugby fans who by the way like to drink. I sweated out a Texas win while listening to the fans sing and carouse and generally go crazy. The English fans made their appearance by 1 p.m. and the bar had to be in violation of the fire code shortly thereafter as you couldn't move. It was a very funny scene me the lone yank watching Texas-Baylor game while 18 other TVs in the bar focused on something the rest of the world was watching but no one was in the U.S. Texas kept the game close through mistakes and turnovers so I had to stick around until the very end as the bar got rowdy loud and jam packed.

Texas finally finished off Baylor and when I left the South Africans were singing loudly as they had the lead. I later learned they held on to win. I headed home and discovered that our A/C has again given out. Our air handler is broken and needs to be replaced. We are dealing with our landlord on it but it is taking time. Now those hurricane shutters that provide us protection are keeping all the heat in and without windows to open up, the house is stifling. We have all the ceiling fans running and have two regular fans set up in the living room that we will move upstairs when we go to sleep.

Katie and I decided to go do some late afternoon snorkeling at Eden Rock. Last time we had stayed close to shore checking out the rock formations near the entry point. This time we swam straight out about 100 yards to see what was further out in the harbor. With the sun setting the water wasn't as clear and we couldn't see as much. We swam back toward shore and saw some really neat formations with tons of fish in and around them. This must be the season for fish giving birth because there were a bunch of young fish around several rock formations. With our card from last week we were able to identify several species including four eyed butterfly fish, yellow tailed snapper and some interesting crabs on the rocks by the ladder.

After returning home to change we headed out for dinner at the Lone Star Bar and Grill on Seven Mile Beach. Katie has been wanting to try their margaritas for a while as our office mates rave about them. The margaritas were as strong as advertised though the flavor wasn't as great. The food was good but also not great so we likely wont be eating there often.

We have started a Friday night tradition of going for sushi so last evening for the fourth or fifth week in a row we went for the raw stuff. We have been alternating between Yoshi's and Thai Orchid both of which are excellent. We cant wait for house guests to come and try the fare.

We have another getaway to Miami planned for November 9-12. We will stay at a resort in Key Largo and this time do some snorkeling at Pennecamp and get down to Key West. I will also attend the Miami seminar for a couple of hours with our students Saturday morning. Katie is planning a get together with Bridget, her former Northlake fellow fourth grade teacher, who is now in Tallahassee going to school. Things have picked up if anything for me since the visit as we clean up some of the citations and wait for the official report. Katie doesn't feel much change as her job is constant crazy. She is working on our Christmas stockings and is cross stitching while I watch football this evening.

In closing, we want to say a special hello to Gary and Elizabeth in Houston and Jennifer and Ryan in Macon. Its neat that at the same time my best friend and his wife are expecting, Katie's best friend and her husband are as well. We hope you know that you are in our thoughts and prayers. We will see you soon.

Monday, October 15, 2007

Press Coverage of Governor's Visit

The Cayman Net News ran an article on the Governor's visit which is linked below.

http://www.caymannetnews.com/index.php?news_id=2629

Sunday, October 14, 2007

My Birthday Weekend

By Katie

Scott has made this birthday weekend absolutely fantastic!

Friday we went to Yoshi's for sushi and ate at a table where we got to sit on the ground, not criss/cross/applesauce but like you would at a regular table because the tables were set over holes in the ground. We had the love boat, a great combination of miso soup, some tempura, lots of sushi & sashimi, and mango icecream. I had a fantastic Skittles Martini that tasted just like Skittles! The bartender made his own Skittles infused vodka. I highly recommend it to anyone visiting in the future.

Saturday morning we had some friends over, Kira, the business manager at ICCI and her son and fiance. We had omelets and waffles and just had a good time talking and playing.

After the football game, Scott came home and we got ready for our nice dinner out. We went to Grand Old House, one of the nicest restaurants in Grand Cayman. We had been there before and loved the outside seating with the waves, the fantastic food and the even better service. We got there around 7:15 and were seated under a gazebo outside since they were painting the patio. We could still hear the waves crashing and there was a nice breeze to cool things down. We watched a storm move north just to the west of us with wild lighting. After an incredible meal, we had cake. Scott had them bring it out singing Happy Birthday(with real piano accompaniment). The plate was beautifully decorated (see picture). The dinner ended around 9:15 and was a beautiful, leisurely meal.

This morning we slept in, then headed to town to meet our 1:00 tour to Stingray City. We picked up a sheet (waterproof, of course!) that had pictures of fish found around Cayman along with two disposable underwater cameras before leaving Captain Marvin's where we checked in. The tour was very full, most likely because it has been raining for days and these people would have been trapped in their hotel rooms. We had a fairly diverse group of people with a family from France, one from England, quite a few Texans, and some random other Americans. The first stop was a place located just off the regular Coral Gardens (the actual Coral Gardens didn't have great visibility because of all of the recent rain). At this stop there were a lot of Sergeant Majors, some beautiful coral formations, and lots of colorful fish. The second stop was right along the barrier reef. That was fantastic and my favorite part of the whole trip. We were able to snorkle right on top of the reef and Scott and I kept finding ourselves over parts of the reef where we were almost scraping our stomachs. We saw some very large parrotfish(one of my favorite fish because of all of its colors and its strange mouth), some black durgon, bluehead wrasse, grey snapper, Nassau grouper, glasseye snapper, cleaning goby, and lots of random fish that we haven't been able to identify yet. We got some pictures that we hope turn out great.

After the barrier reef, we headed to the Sandbar. As we pulled up to the bar, the sting rays started to gather around the boat. It was amazing being in the water as they glided around you. They have such soft skin as they rub all over you. There were some large rays (at least four feet) and then the smaller males. Scott fed one of the rays then tried to feed another but a fish snatched it out of his hand first. Since this was our rookie trip, we had to give a stingray a kiss and then got a couples massage from the ray. They were beautiful as they glided along the bottom of the ocean and we hope that the pictures we got capture that.

We are both exhausted after a long fun weekend.

Friday, October 12, 2007

ACICS Visit and the work ahead

The ACICS team completed their work Wednesday and left the Island yesterday but not before giving us a preview of their report which will be issued in about two weeks. It will involve a lot of citations a couple of which are major. They are not things that come as a surprise and it means we have to spend the next two months before the council meets to consider their report fixing those issues and drafting a response showing how they are being addressed. Katie's department came through with flying colors mine not so much and other parts of the college not so much. We had three straight 14 hour work days and that followed being in the office all weekend.

Tuesday evening I got away from the insanity of the team visit and made a presentation to the Rotary about our library that went very well. We are lining up help from several members including a Governor of the Rotary who was visiting from Washington D.C. and wants to talk to us about a large targeted grant for the library. One of our major citations was our library so this will help with our response.

Sunday is Katie's birthday and we are planning a trip to Sting Ray City to go snorkeling. It will be our first trip out to the sand bar. The only issue is the weather. The rainy season has hit full force and we have had a couple of weeks of sustained rains that have left lakes all over the Island. One lake has developed on the street we have to drive down every day to get into and out of our complex and it is growing so fast we are worried at some point our little car may flood. You don't get flash floods on Cayman because the rain is steady not huge quick downpours. We are really looking forward to Sting Ray City and seeing what all the talk is about. By the way no worries about a "Steve Irwin" these rays interact with hundreds of people a day and no one has ever come away with anything other than a gentle reminder that no one likes to be stepped on.

Tuesday, October 9, 2007

ACICS visit Day One and Visit by the Governor

On Monday evening, the team from our accrediting agency and the British Governor both came to the college. The team arrived while my class was still in session and one member sat in on the last twenty minutes of my review for my midterm then stuck around and interviewed some of my students. I met with the other members of the team and so far at least, they seem to be friendly and impressed. They mentioned their student interviews were going very well, of course, they wouldn't tell us if they had gone badly and its virtually certain they were told some bad things by the students but are relaying to us the positive comments.

Katie spent the evening getting them data and after we got home we were both up past midnight completing the Annual Institutional Report (Katie doing most of the work, me reading off to her numbers to be inputted). Katie has been working on this report for a couple of months and when it was done she kept saying what a relief it was. Monday they got to see our college and the best analogy I can come up with is they saw the exterior of our car and we had cleaned it up well. On Tuesday they pop the hood on our little car and lets hope things go as well then as they seemed to go Monday evening. They were only on campus about an hour but for that hour the college was humming. Part of that was the anticipation of the governors visit. You forget sometimes that this is a very British island and the representative of the monarch coming to our college is a huge deal.

When the Governor arrived Dr. Cummings and I gave him a brief tour while Katie took photographs. When he entered the classroom, everyone stood and he was announced "His Excellency, the Governor, Stuart Jack". After his forty minute or so presentation, he took questions for well over an hour. The students were very respectful but asked pointed questions about education, the budget, environment, immigration policy, and foreign policy. I was very happy about the level of discourse and the Governor seemed genuinely pleased at the level of questions coming from our students.

It was amazing to see every student preface their question with "your excellency", a reminder that we are a British dependent and that American style egalitarianism isn't in dominant style here. The contrast between how the students addressed the Leader of Government Business back in August and the Governor yesterday was startling. The Leader of Government Business is the highest elected position but he is political while the Governor is appointed by the Queen and is head of the Civil Service, the Police and must approve all legislation for it to become law. As he pointed out in his presentation he has approved every piece of legislation that has come to him and hopes to never reject legislation drafted by the Cayman Legislature but he has that right and the right to remove elected officials (only for corruption).

Our team visit continues Tuesday and I have a presentation to the Rotary on our library needs. Let's hope day two goes as well as day one. Monday was the easy part and we seemed to pass with flying colors. Tuesday will be the nitty gritty and that's where we will struggle but not for lack of trying. Katie in particular has done an incredible job on the records and while we expect to be cited if she hadn't done all she did our accreditation would be in serious jeopardy. As it is we are very hopeful.

Friday, October 5, 2007

Hurricane shutters

Katie and I were awakened yesterday by the sound of drilling. As we lay there listening Katie said "that really sounds like it is just below us". Convinced it must be one of our neighbors we chalked it up to the weird way sound moves. When I went downstairs though to start breakfast I could see light streaming through our back patio door. The wood had been pulled off. I opened up the patio door to find three men removing the old plywood and putting up brand new hurricane shutters made of aluminum and with hard plastic centers so that you can see out. They put up a complete shutter on the patio door so we cant get out the back anymore. They also put one on the upstairs window. The upstairs shutter is permanent and can be rolled open and closed. The patio one will come down at the end of November. Our landlord had told us she intended to get shutters but we assumed that wouldnt happen until next summer.

This morning they have returned and are putting up a shutter on the front window. It is also a removable one that will come down after the season is over. We seem to have gotten through the heavy part but hurricane season lasts until November 30th so they stay up for at least seven more weeks. Selkirk our property owner was here this morning and mentioned to me that we shouldn't get complacent because late in the season the storms will form in the Caribbean and we have less notice of them.

We are putting the finishing touches on the college for the accrediting visit next week. We are not even close to really being ready but we will do the best we can. We are also preparing for the Governor's visit Monday night by getting a committee together to receive him and getting press releases ready.

This weekend is also Texas-OU and from the look of the coverage map the ABC channel we get will get the game so I will be able to watch at home and not have to restrain myself as I have at the sports bars. We have discovered that its the actually the New York major broadcast stations not Tampa for the regional coverage.