Thursday, January 31, 2008

Visit from Missouri Southern State University

Yesterday we hosted a contingent from the School of Business at Missouri Southern State University in Joplin, Missouri. The Dean of their business school and the head of their finance department came for the visit. We are in negotiations for an agreement to transfer credits and give our students an opportunity to pursue additional degrees or certificates in the United States as well as some distance learning opportunities. We spent most of the day in meetings but also got a chance to introduce them to some of our students and they passed out literature about their programs. The next step will be a memorandum of understanding between the two institutions.

We are very excited, because since Ivan the college has not pursued this type of partnership with a foreign institution. This is the first one the new administrative staff had been a part of pursuing. Before Ivan the college had many such partnerships which helped students who wanted to start their education in Cayman and complete it abroad. It did mean a long day for us both starting with leaving our home to pick them up for breakfast at 7:30 a.m. and ending when we closed up the college at 10:35 p.m. We put them on their flight home this morning and are looking forward to a very productive relationship with their institution.

We learned about Missouri Southern at a conference last fall where there was a presentation on their partnership with a college in the British Virgin Islands. They have a very international outlook and their mission statement includes partnerships abroad. We contacted them to see if they would be interested in something in the Cayman Islands and they were interested enough to send down the contingent. The students who met with them yesterday were excited because they have been pushing us to get arrangements with U.S. institutions and this showed them we were pursuing options for them. We suspect they would be in for a bit of a culture shock going from Cayman to Joplin, Missouri but that is what going away to college is sometimes suppossed to be about. Equally exciting though is the distance learning capabilities for our students to take MSSU courses here in Cayman.

This weekend we are hosting a Super Bowl party for some of the folks in our office. It is a rest weekend for us as next weekend we head up to Miami for the seminar. Next Wednesday is a national holiday here on the Island and is the big agricultural festival. We are also in the final planning stages for the annual college to castle walk which benefits the college scholarship fund. It is on Saturday the 16th at 6:30 in the morning (all events like that have to be early to avoid the heat). The students have responded well and we already have several who have signed up for the walk and posted the flyers at their work places. Our goal was to raise $500 for the scholarship fund we think we may double that at the pace we are going with registrations.

Our cats have both broken out with something on their heads and we are taking them in to the vet tomorrow for a check up. Neither one reacts with any pain when you touch them where they have broken out but it is worrisome since they both broke out in the same place with very similar looking sores. The kitty cats are much more like puppies than cats. They come running to the door when we get home each night and are very demanding of attention. The clincher was when we got back from the Brac. Usually cats give you the cold shoulder when you go away to let you know how angry they are with you, ginger and gypsy came running to the door and were so happy to see us back just like little puppies wagging their tails and licking us. We will let you know how the vet visit tomorrow goes.

Monday, January 28, 2008

Cayman Brac Holiday Weekend

We haven't posted for a while as things have been very busy here. The start of classes, work on the second accreditation report and completion of the Caribcert program have been taking up most of our time. Today is National Heroes Day in Cayman and is a national holiday. Katie and I took advantage of the holiday weekend to get away for a couple of days to one of the sister islands Cayman Brac. Located about 90 miles northwest of Grand Cayman, "the Brac" as it is referred to by Caymanians has a much more Caribbean feel than Grand Cayman which can sometimes feel like Miami south. The Brac was actually the spot where Christopher Columbus in 1503 discovered the Cayman Islands and claimed them for Spain. He sailed along the Northern coast of Cayman Brac and Little Cayman the third island in the group which is located about 5 miles west of the Brac. There were no inhabitants other than turtles until 1833, though pirates often used the two sister Islands before they were settled to hide their booty and make repairs.

We flew over on Saturday morning at 7:45 a.m. on a small prop plane that seated 18 people and was packed. The flight took less than 40 minutes and by 8:30 we had arrived and gotten our luggage. A short cab ride took us to the Brac Reef resort where we had gotten a special deal they give to locals, two nights plus the flight plus the Saturday evening dinner. One of the reasons Katie chose this resort was the bike rentals. It turned out that the bikes were free for guests so after we checked in and unpacked we headed out to explore the Island. We had brought our own bike helmets and our water bottles so we were in great shape for a long exploratory ride.

Cayman Brac is a long thin island that looks a lot like a piece of rice. It rises from sea level on the western side where we stayed up a bluff that gets to 140 feet at the eastern edge of the Island. We rode our bikes from the southwestern corner where our resort was located over the western edge of the bluff and to the north side of the island about a 1 and a half mile ride. We stopped at the local market and had sandwiches for lunch. Feeling adventurous we set out east on the northern road. The bluff is full of caves that were and sometimes still are used by locals to hide in during storms. We stopped at a cave called Half Way Ground Cave (see picture to the right) and went exploring. You could walk well into the cave without flashlights (next time we go we are bringing flashlights to explore deeper). We then biked to the road in the middle of the Island that cuts over the bluff and connects the north and south side. Heading back west on the southern road we came to the Bat Cave which went deep into the southern side of the bluff. We explored as far as we could with the natural light, we saw one bat very briefly fly into the darkness but otherwise didn't see the bats or owls that live in the cave.

Arriving back at the hotel after our approximately 12 mile bike ride we decided to take advantage of the hammocks that were set up throughout the beach and read and sleep. Saturday night we walked to the western edge of the Island and watched the sunset then headed back to the resort for the Saturday dinner. Dinner included lobster bisque, seafood newburg, beef wellington and many side dishes. After our active day it was a great way to wind down.

Before going to the Brac everyone had said you couldn't get to the top of the bluff unless you rented a car. We took that as a challenge. Sunday morning we got up and after eating breakfast got on our bikes headed to the summit of the bluff. Saturday afternoon we had gone back to the market and picked up granola bars, apples and two 64 oz bottles of Gatorade. We refilled our 64 oz water bottles as well and were well stocked with energy food and liquids. Saturday evening we had watched some of the discovery channel before going to dinner and it was showing an episode on Everest and interviewing people who had summitted. We decided that with everyone telling us we couldn't do without a car, the bluff (yes all 140 feet of it) was our Everest and were going sans the auto.

We started off great and less than an hour into our ride were over half way there. Then disaster struck. The bikes were only one speed and with chains that had rusted from salt exposure. As I headed up a sharp incline my chain cracked, rendering the bike useless. We had brought our cell phone so we called the resort to come get the bikes. I told Katie I was sorry it loked like our summit would have to wait but Katie was undaunted. She suggested we hike the 6 remaining miles up the bluff to the lighthouse that sat on the eastern edge. With plenty of liquids and food and feeling like we wanted to finish what we had started we set out on our trek. It took us about three hours to get from the parrot preserve where my bike broke to the lighthouse. Along the way we actually deviated from the shortest route cutting over to an old path used by the lightkeepers before the road was built. The path went through shrub land and over black coral a beautiful but often difficult hiking trail. When we got to the eastern bluff we were met with incredibly beautiful scenery and breathtaking overlook.
The lighthouse, which is actually just a light not the traditional house and light, sits near a brown booby bird nesting site and we could see the birds nesting on the bluff in amongst the rocks. We took pictures, ate our apples and feeling like we had accomplished a lot headed back west. The trip back to the resort was over 15 miles with the winding road and having already walked seven miles we didn't expect to make it. Our goal was go as far as we could then call for a cab. We hiked for about two hours from the lighthouse making it back to the parrot preserve our starting point for the hike when we both reached our limit. We called the resort for a ride and while waiting for it to arrive actually got to see some Brac parrots eating on a tree near the road.

Dinner Sunday night was at the Tipsy Turtle Pub but after a seven mile ride and 14 mile hike we didn't care what we were eating, we just chugged it down. We headed back to the hammocks on the beach and enjoyed another sunset over the water. This morning we went out cayaking on the southern side of the Island, something Katie has been wanting to do for a while. We played some ping pong and then checked out. With only 18 people to check in we didnt have to go to the airport until 30 minutes before our flight. This was a really incredible vacation and we will definitely be heading back to the Brac again. We plan to go to Little Cayman in May and see the third island in the group.

Sunday, January 13, 2008

First week of classes

This week marked the beginning of the Winter Quarter. Katie and I are back to the nighttime work hours and having our mornings to exercise, run errands or simply sleep in. We have set up a regimen of run-walking and bicycling though this past week was harder because of the adjustment to the new hours. The first week went pretty well and we are both getting back into the swing of things.

The cats are definitely settling in. Gypsy is an attention hog and loves to sleep on the bed with us. She also prevents Ginger from getting up on the bed which leaves her downstairs crying a lot during the night. We try to call her up but she wont come. Katie is going out of her way to give Ginger attention when we get home and we will often split up the cats so that both of them feel like they are the center of our individual attention. We have bought them a cat tree and toys that are now spread out throughout the house. Its not that Gypsy is mean to Ginger she just demands attention and ginger defers to her. Ginger is the more curious and we have now opened up the entire house, except for the upstairs guest room, to them so they have a lot to see and do.

Last night we went to a party for the Pirates Week volunteers at Breezes by the Bay a restaurant right on the George Town Harbor. The food was good and it was a chance to catch up with one of our board members who does a lot of work for the Heritage Days that happen during Pirates week. We had manned a small stand for ICCI during the Savannah Heritage Day which got us the invite to the celebration.

Earlier in the day was our winter faculty meeting which had a great turnout. I am also working on my two classes, a grad course and an undergraduate course. Katie is working on a newsletter that will come out every month and is also doing a math skills class for our caribcert students during the day. Our winter enrollment is larger than our fall enrollment which means each of the last two quarters ICCI has had its biggest enrollment since Hurricane Ivan. The accrediting agency has asked for more information so we are once again working on a new response. We have found that the process of working on those is actually quite helpful in getting issues at the college identified and addressed. We are all very optimistic about where things are headed and all that we have accomplished in the six months since we arrived.

As I write this I am watching the Cowboys game on TV and watching Katie take a nap on the big couch with Gypsy asleep by her feet. A nice lazy Sunday afternoon for us both.

Tuesday, January 8, 2008

Ginger & Gypsy

By Katie

This morning we picked up our new family members Ginger and Gypsy. They are sisters who are each about 2 years old. Ginger is the orange one and Gypsy is the orange and white one. They had a home but the family had to leave the island and were unable to take them.

We were expecting them to be timid as they entered a new home but they have been very curious and bold. Both of them are out and about. They were a little wary of the stairs either going up or down but they have gotten used to them and now enjoy running up and down. Ginger loves Scott's shoes and has, as the picture shows, made herself at home on top of them. The two of them follow us around from room to room and are quite demanding for attention.

They have brought many smiles to our faces since they have arrived and we are very happy to have them.

Thursday, January 3, 2008

Sweater weather

The same cold front that is freezing Florida is affecting us down here in the western Caribbean. The temperature has dipped into the low 60's and everyone is wearing sweaters and acting like it is freezing cold. Our blood must not have thinned just yet because we are still walking around in short sleeve shirts and this morning did our exercise walk in shorts and t-shirts. Scott made another TV appearance yesterday and we are both working on orientation for the new students tonight. Tomorrow is our date night and we are going to Deckers on Seven Mile Beach to use the gift certificate Scott's cousin Chuck and his wife Twila gave us. We are also trying out the new movie theatre at Cayamana Bay the new American style mall and seeing National Treasure on Saturday.

Tuesday, January 1, 2008

Happy New Year

As 2008 began we were fast asleep but firecrackers are very popular here on the Island and right at midnight an explosion of them went off waking us up and giving us the opportunity to wish each other a happy new year and then roll over and go back to sleep. We had celebrated with our traditional spaghetti and clams along with a bottle of sparkling wine. Around nine we both were exhausted and decided to call it an early night. We fell asleep well before midnight and only the massive fireworks by our neighbors brought us out of our slumber.

We got up at 7 this morning and did a 2 hour bike ride out to the Ipigenia marker in Boddentown. Then this afternoon we went out snorkeling up at Cayman Kai. It has been a busy New Year's Day as we try to stick tpo our plan of running one day then bike riding the next. We are both trying to work off the holiday weight and also the weight we put on last fall. We have even started a bet with Katie's parents based around the biggest losers.

Our new quarter starts next Monday and Orientation is Thursday so we are getting back to the busy times at ICCI. Scott is teaching two classes and we are both teaching Caribcert during the month of January. We plan to go to Cayman Brac at the end of the month so that gives us something to look forward to.