Saturday, March 29, 2008

Home from Florida

Katie and I are both back from Florida and settling in for the start of the spring quarter Monday. Katie learned a lot at her conference and it helped both of us to get off Island for a few days. Epcot center was incredible and we got some spectacular pictures of the fireworks and laser light display that closes the evening. We did a lot of shopping as we always do when we are in the States. It was also nice to catch up with family and see our niece and nephew. Last night we went out to a sports bar to watch the Texas basketball game in the NCAA tournament and this weekend is being spent doing the pre-quarter faculty meeting and getting ready for the new quarter. Will take a break tomorrow to watch the Horns in the Elite 8.

Friday, March 21, 2008

Friday in Central Florida

Katie and I are in Orlando tonight at the hotel which has free Internet access. We flew up to Tampa today and after a bank run drove over to Orlando where this evening we have been running errands and picking up items that are too expensive on the Island. Tomorrow is another day of shopping, errands and some fun with family. We are planning on doing Epcot Sunday and then I head home Monday while Katie stays for her conference the rest for the week.

We found out something fascinating about Cayman today that we didn't know. Camping is illegal on the Island year round except for three days, Good Friday through Easter Sunday when many of the Island residents camp out on the beach. Many people asked us if we were going camping and there were ads in the paper for camping supplies. Today we asked our neighbor Randy why the camping at this time of year and he related that it is a throw back to the era of slavery when the plantation owners would let their slaves free for the Easter weekend and the slaves would go down to the beach and camp with their families. There were very few slaves on Cayman which did not have many plantations but the tradition has now come down through the years and many Caymanians will be out on the beach the next two nights.

The quarter is over and this vacation and trip away could not have come at a better time.

Sunday, March 16, 2008

Last week of Winter Quarter

It seems like the quarter just started but we have just four days left. That has meant dealing with registrations for the spring and finishing up this quarter. Katie is teaching the Intro to College Studies class next quarter so she is busy getting ready for that while still holding down all her registrar duties. She is also really looking forward to her first registrar conference in Orlando after the quarter ends. We leave Friday morning and fly up to Tampa then drive over to Orlando. Good Friday and Easter Monday are both national holidays so I am heading up for the long weekend to spend some time in Orlando before Katie's conference with her. I head home Monday as her conference starts and she comes home that Thursday. We have a week between quarters so Katie being gone for a week wont bring the entire college's activities to a halt.

We are both looking forward to a fun weekend in Orlando. Between meeting family and friends from the area and getting to see some of the amusement parks it will be a full weekend. Of course any trip to the U.S. means a long list of errands. We already have trips planned to costco, best buy and target as well as a bank run. There is also the mandatory scrap booking run.

I have joined the Kiwanis and yesterday spent a couple of hours at the Savannah Fosters helping to raise money for the Buy a Kid Breakfast program. There is no government meal program at the schools and so Kiwanis sponsors the breakfast program at five of the primary schools. We meet weekly for lunch in George town at the Britannia Golf Course which might be one of the strangest golf courses I have seen. A beautiful course designed by Jack Nicholas, it is also an iguana preserve and they lay out sunning themselves on the various holes. Katie and I are both trying to get more involved in the community and this is a good place for me. Katie is looking into joining the national choir starting in April and has also been talking to some fellow scrapbookers on the island.

Thursday, March 13, 2008

Welcome Sarah Elizabeth Bezemek

On Monday night Gary and Elizabeth welcomed Sarah Elizabeth Bezemek to the world. Congratulations to them, we cant wait to meet her.

Monday, March 10, 2008

Back to Central Time

Cayman does not have daylight savings time so we awoke on Sunday to a new time zone. For the last four months we have been on Eastern time and our television shows have come on starting at 8:00 p.m. We don't get to watch TV during the week but on the weekends when we do it means late nights and no news until 11 p.m. Now that we are back to Central time we get shows starting at 7:00 p.m. and and actually get to watch the late news from the states before going to bed. Just two weeks left in our Winter quarter. Next quarter Katie is teaching the EN 100 Intro to College Studies class and she is doing it with an online component so she has been spending the last couple of weekends preparing for the class. Both of us have been sick with the flu which has been going around the Island like wildfire.

Thursday, March 6, 2008

Constitutional Referendum

Here on Cayman it is election season also. In May the Caymanian citizens and status holders vote in a constitutional referendum on the proposed new constitution. As work permit holders Katie and I do not vote in the election and we stay as non-political as we can because the college has to operate in whatever political environment exists and we cant be in the business of choosing sides.


It is somewhat difficult to follow the debate. There is no question that Cayman is not looking for independence and wants to remain a protectorate. There is a debate about what that status means. Yesterday I attended a meeting of a civic organization I am joining, and the guest speaker was from the constitutional authority to talk about the referendum. She spoke of the current situation and why Cayman is drafting a new constitution. There was a similar process prior to Ivan but it failed and then when Ivan came along was shelved. This new process is well along and is ready to be put to a vote of the people.

After the speaker finished the floor was opened for questions. There were a few questions about helping the Cubans and about the impact on the roll over policy. Then a few softball questions about whether the referendum might get pushed back and the voting places that have been chosen. Eventually, the questions started coming fast and furious on whether or not the new constitution would have a bill of rights. At first I thought the questions must be because people wanted a bill of rights but it quickly became obvious that wasn't the case. In fact, it is having the bill of rights section that most concerned the questioners and finally someone said what apparently everyone else had been thinking but not saying which was does this new constitution and the bill of rights mean Cayman is going to have gay marriage?

Apparently there is concern here that since the U.K. has civil unions that will be imposed on Cayman and Caymanians are concerned that the new Constitution and the bill of rights in it is the vehicle for that. The speaker kept assuring the group that this was not the case and that the constitution does not change the definition of marriage. It was a stark reminder of just how conservative this Island is.

Tuesday, March 4, 2008

West Bay

The two hardest parts of the Island to get to from Red Bay are Northside and West Bay. We make it up to Northside every couple of months to go snorkeling at Cayman Kai or go out to Rum Point but other than two short trips early last summer we haven't been to West Bay at all. West Bay is the northwest part of the Island. It is at the top of seven mile beach and looks like the head of a wrench on the map. Hell is located in West Bay as are many restaurants and dive spots.


On Friday we decided to do something new for our date night and passed on another sushi run. Instead we made reservations at Pappagallos an upscale Italian restaurant in West Bay. It was about a 25 minute drive and once again we were reminded how spoiled we have gotten as that ride seemed to take forever. We used to not bat an eye traveling 30 plus minutes to Arlington or elsewhere to go to a restaurant but now 25 minutes seems like so long. There is only one road going into West Bay. It is the Seven Mile Beach Road that turns into the West Bay road. As soon as you enter West Bay you can tell it is the high population part of the Island. The density of houses and people is dramatic. We had been told that West Bay was where a lot of people lived but until we drove through it never really could picture it any differently than the other districts on the Island.

The houses ranged from obviously high income people to some neighborhoods that could best be described as a little sketchy. The richest people on the Island live right before West Bay on Boat Club drive and many have moved out to Savannah but the younger crowd that wants to be where all the action is live in West Bay. As we drove through we both realized that it was definitely not a place we would enjoy living in, too many people, too much traffic, not to mention the commute we would have to make out to Newlands.

Pappagallos was a really nice restaurant on an inlet near the top of West Bay. We didn't eat out on the deck as it was being used for a private party. Instead we ate inside which had a roof designed to look like a huge thatch hut. Around the outside of the room were parrot cages with brightly colored Cayman parrots. The food was very good and the atmosphere was really nice. We did notice a lot of tourists dressed like tourists. The other really high end restaurant we have been to, Grand Old House, people got dressed up to go to (even the tourists). At Pappagallos they were in their shorts and sun shirts. This isn't a restaurant we will go to very often, for one its pretty expensive (even more than Grand Old House) and its distance from our home is a factor. However, it is a special restaurant and can be used for some special occasions.

On Saturday we went to the movies and saw Juno. We are trying to catch up on all the Oscar movies as we hadn't seen any of the best picture nominees. There are just three weeks left in our Winter quarter and we are definitely ready for this quarter to be over. The cats are doing well, still fighting their ringworm medicine but settling in and walking around like they own the place.