Friday, May 2, 2008

Radio Commercials

Katie and I each have a favorite radio commercial that the local stations play. Mine has nothing to do with selling anything its just a funny liner... "there are three kinds of people in the world, those who can count and those who cant." Katie's is a commercial for the easy listening station for listening at work and goes..."all your friends and family think your life is a Jimmy Buffett song but your stuck at work grinding it out every day, so listen to Mix 106.1 ............". The radio here has all kinds of stations from hard rock to pop to country and reggae. The one thing we don't have is talk radio or sports radio. Even Radio Cayman is a Christian music station that will break in with the official news during important times.

Thursday, May 1, 2008

Off Season Blues

Yesterday was the unofficial end of tourist season here on Cayman. The radio played a song by the barefoot man called Off Season Blues several times. The song talks about the resorts and condo's being empty, the sun tan lotion going unsold, the cars not being rented and the taxi drivers sitting around with nothing to do everyone singing the off season blues. Tourist season returns in November with Pirates week. Now of course comes what is setting up to be a very hot summer. Cayman in April/May is very reminiscent of Austin in August, hot and muggy. You also cant help but sense it is going to be a long summer before the cool "Christmas winds" return in late November and December.

Tuesday, April 29, 2008

Poetry at Dart Park

Havent had time to post since we got back from Texas as we have been busy catching up from work. Last Friday we took an evening off and attended a poetry reading at Dart park on South Sound road. Dart is a large corporation here on the Island and has a huge charitable arm to keep on the governments good side. The park is behind the national trust building, a building we have biked or driven past a hundred or more times, But until we went looking for it Friday we didn't even it know the park was there. The park overlooks the water and has an outdoor amphitheatre and play areas. The poetry readings were indoors since it was after dark and the mosquitos are too big a problem outside. We were able avoid the mosquitos for the most part even though we sat on a picnic table outside and listened in. The night was designed to have poets on Cayman of all ages read some of their work. We went because two of our students were having their poems read by a third student. Surprisingly several more of our students had connections as their children were reading poems. It seemed that several of the primary schools had their students do a poem for class and then many chose to read it at this event.

Katie is getting ready for her first concert with the Cayman National Choir on June 7th. They will be singing with the Cayman National Orchestra at an event to be held at the Grand Old House on Petra Plantation and the concert is called around the world in an evening. They will be singing songs from all over the world and every Monday evening she heads off to practice.

Coming back from Texas, we brought all of Katie's scrap booking supplies and her special suit case. So of course American lost our luggage and we had to sweat out 24 hours of waiting for them to arrive. This seems to be a common problem with American and its flights to Cayman. We think its because they always oversell the flight so it is always packed then everyone is bringing several suitcases since vacationers come here usually for a week. So they hit their weight restriction and have to leave luggage for the next flight. The problem is we were on the last flight of the day so our luggage didn't come in until the next day. This being Cayman we had to run to the airport to pick up our luggage once it arrived because if we waited for American to deliver it, it would be a couple of more days.

We are into week five of our quarter and things just continue to fly along. We cant even catch our breath once we finish one task its right into another.

Friday, April 18, 2008

Texas for dental work and surprise birthday present

We are back in Duncanville, Texas this weekend so Scott could get some dental work done and we could surprise Katie's Mom for her birthday on Saturday. We left Grand Cayman at around noon on Thursday getting to Miami by 2 in the afternoon. But storms in DFW delayed our flight then caused a three hour flight from Miami to DFW to become a 6 hour flight and an unscheduled stop in Lubbock to refuel when the plane couldn't land at DFW. We had hoped to surprise Gail at her school in the early evening but that turned into a 1:00 a.m. wake up surprise when we finally got to Katie's parents house. Russell knew we were coming late last week and did such a good job of keeping the secret Gail had no idea, even slipping out to pick us up at the airport when our flight finally landed at midnight.

Today Scott got his tooth fixed. He had cracked a veneer last week and since they use different bonding material in Cayman we had to get the work done in the States. We could have gone to a dentist in Miami but decided to spend the extra money and come to Texas for Gail's birthday.

We are here through Sunday morning then return to Cayman.

Monday, April 7, 2008

Spring Cleaning

The first weekend of April meant spring cleaning of our house. We have gotten into the habit of not regularly cleaning and sweeping which meant the job was longer than it should have been. But after a couple of hours we had a sparkling kitchen, bathrooms and bedrooms and a living room that looked more like a living room and less like a storage room for all the stuff we bring home. The cats were a little freaked out but seem to have adjusted.

Friday night we went to the movies at Caymana Bay and saw Vantage Point which was actually a pretty good movie. It was pretty clear many of the people in the theatre had not seen the commercials and they were surprised that it was basically a telling of the same story from several different vantage points which meant that it was jumping back and forth. The quarter is now in full swing. Katie has had two classes with her Intro to College Studies students and is about to start the on line component which we are doing as a pilot program. Its funny you finish one quarter and before you catch your breath the next one is going and we are even already working on the summer schedule and faculty since registration for the summer starts at the end of April. The wheel just keeps turning.

Wednesday, April 2, 2008

Cayman National Choir

Katie has joined the Cayman national choir and is attending weekly practices in preparation for some summer concerts. This is something she has been talking about for a while and we have adjusted our Monday night work schedule so she can attend the practices. We are both looking forward to her debut and will post photographs when it happens.

It is beastly hot here most days which means a very hot and sticky rainy season is just around the corner and is not good news for the approaching hurricane season which begins in less than 60 days. It is also not good news for our electric bill. Even though we keep our home temperature at 80 degrees it is running a lot and electricity does not come cheap on this Island. The spring quarter is now in full swing and we are both working long days. We are planning to go to Little Cayman for our second wedding anniversary and finally get to see the third Island in the group. We are also fast approaching our one year anniversary of moving to Cayman, it certainly doesn't feel like a whole year has almost gone by.

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.

Sunday, February 24, 2008

Riding into a storm

Yesterday, we decided to try a new bike route. We decided to head west using the Crewe Road bypass and go by the Sports Complex and through some residential neighborhoods. When we pulled out from our house, the sun was shining and there was no real hint of bad weather. About 20 minutes into our ride though we could see the clouds gathering and the wind picking up. This was one of those fast moving Caribbean storms and it blew in very quickly. Suddenly, we were dealing with 30-40 mile an hour winds and a driving rain. We had to start aiming our bikes into traffic to combat the wind which was blowing us off the road. At first, the sand from the beaches was stinging our legs but once the rain started that stopped. Of course that meant we got soaked and our glasses (my real one's, Katie's sunglasses) suddenly needed wipers. At one point Katie called back to me that we were like a Nike commercial braving any elements to get our exercise in. This mini storm is not unusual here in the winter in fact our students call them the Christmas winds which come every year starting in December. As we pulled back into home, the rain slacked and the wind died down. We both started laughing as it seemed like it had been a test just for us.

Katie has started scrap booking our Keys trip from November with the scrap booking supplies we bought in Miami two weeks ago. She has also made contact with some scrap booking enthusiasts here on the Island. We went to a book store in George Town yesterday afternoon and she found some more supplies though they are much more expensive than the States. Gypsy loves to sleep on the scrap booking pages and we are constantly having to move her as she wants to participate in the process. We are watching season one of Heroes having finished season one of Grey's Anatomy. We figured out how to hook up the mini DVD player to the TV and watch the DVD's on the large television which has been nice.


The stores and newspapers are starting to put up signs for the 2008 Hurricane season which begins June 1. Although we had the huge scare with Dean last year, 2007 was a very quiet season with far less storms and hurricanes than predicted. 2006 was similarly quiet. Whatever global warming may be doing elsewhere it hasn't increased the number of hurricanes though there is some debate about whether it has increased their intensity. Down here some of the weather people talk about the false debate on global warming and hurricanes, saying that since we really couldn't accurately measure hurricanes its hard to say that they are "more intense" now than they were in the past. That isn't to say they discount global warming just the premise that global warming is affecting hurricanes here in the Caribbean basin. Some people want so desperately to argue the affects of global warming they see it in everything even when there is a real question whether it is having a particular affect. Its too bad since you can see global warming in many other things, why blow your credibility trying to link it to everything?

We don't get to follow US politics much down here but at least one candidate is doing the right things to make a play for Scott's vote. See the link at

http://mackbrown-texasfootball.com/index.php?s=&url_channel_id=40&url_article_id=3626&url_subchannel_id=&change_well_id=2

and the video posted at:

http://mfile.akamai.com/39650/wmv/univtexas.download.akamai.com/39650/2008/02/022108_fb_obama.asx

That is if we can figure out how to vote and not lose our tax status of having permanent residence abroad and therefore being exempt from income taxes. To vote absentee in Texas you have to have a permanent residence in Texas so we are trying to figure out how to do that. We may end up just passing all together since we would probably just be cancelling each others votes out anyway.

Saturday, February 23, 2008

How fast a year goes by

Wednesday marked the one year anniversary of our first visit to Grand Cayman. That three day trip to see the college, meet the people and interview with the Board of Trustees doesn't seem like it can have been over a year ago but it was. It has also been a little over a year of since we started this blog site to keep everyone updated on our news, that doesnt seem possible either but time really does fly.

We have put up pictures in the house to give it more of a home feel, we printed off wedding pictures in Miami and put up a collage in our upstairs hallway. We also did some football pictures for Scott and we put those up as well. Having cats has meant more constant cleaning as their hair gets into everything. It also means getting used to having their toys around. Gypsy likes to sleep on the bed but Ginger prefers the floor. We bought her a bed in Miami but except for a few times she has avoided it. She actually prefers sleeping on the top of a cardboard box. We continue to give them their medicine each day and they seem to be getting better though both still have visible signs of the ringworm on their foreheads.

Last night we went out to Bamboo a sushi place at the former Hyatt resort. It was OK but way too expensive. They obviously hike up their prices for the resort tourists and since those people don't know there is better and cheaper sushi just up the road they stayed busy. We have now sampled all the sushi places on the Island and Yoshi's is by far the best. We aren't having sushi every Friday anymore because it was starting to not be special. We are trying to check out different restaurants on our date night using the guide magazine we have.

We are getting back into biking and with the bypass to the middle of the Island now complete there are bike paths all the way from Red Bay where we live to Hirst Road in Savannah. Our long term goal of biking the entire Island is still a ways away but we are getting better. Four weeks left in the Winter Quarter then we head to Orlando for Easter to meet family and attend a conference of registrars.

Thursday, February 21, 2008

Some Unique Caymanian Things

One thing that has really struck us since we moved to Grand Cayman is the number of people who are usually walking by the side of the road hitch hiking around. Because the Island is so small it is not at all uncommon to pick up people and give them a ride. It took us about a month to get used to it but now we will stop to pick people up and take them as far as we are going all the time. It really adds to a sense that this is a close knit community with people helping strangers for no personal benefit, just to be a good neighbor. We noticed it on Cayman Brac when several people slowed while we were hiking and asked us if we needed a ride. Its like everyone is looking out for each other. In the U.S. you just dont pick up hitchers, here it is normal and accepted.

Sunday, February 17, 2008

Busy weekend in Cayman

This has been a really long week and weekend for us. On Thursday I was on a morning radio talk show called Cross-Talk getting interviewed on the Caribcert program. Also on the program was the Minister of Tourism so it was a great chance to promote ICCI and what we have been doing for the Tourism Apprentice Training Program. Doing the early morning things is hard since we dont get home from work until after 10:30 Monday through Thursdays but every chance we get even if it means little sleep we jump on. The show lasted over an hour and I got several plugs in for ICCI.

On Friday we had a booth at the Chamber of Commerce Job and Career Expo. The Expo was took place at Sir Vassell Hall on the campus of the University College so we were on unfriendly turf. Friday was for high school students and all the local schools brought their 11th and 12th year students. There are seven high schools all within about a two mile stretch that all the high schoolers on the Island go to. We passed out brochures that Katie has designed and also gave out key chains with ICCI and our phone number on a palm tree. Friday night was the welcome reception so after 4 hours in the afternoon with high school students we had another two hours with some big wigs like the Minister of Education and some industry leaders.

Saturday morning started at 4:30 a.m. as we woke up to start getting the donations for our memorial walk which began at 6:30 a.m. Katie had been planning this for two months and had lined up donations, sponsors and gotten everything ready. We drove over to the Island Taste factory and picked up patties for the walkers. On Friday we had gotten some donated fruit platters from Fosters Food Fair and had already picked up the donated drinks. It was a testament to good planning as everything went off without a hitch. Katie had made a banner with all the sponsers and we had stations set up at the half way mark and at the castle. We were the marshalls so we had to make sure everyone stayed safe. We walked fast at the beginning leading the group but later had to slow down and be the back end marshalls escorting the slower walkers to the finish. Even slowing down for the second half of the walk we finished in about an hour and 15 minutes so we kept a pretty good pace. It was a good first training walk for the half marathon we want to run/walk in December.

The college to castle walk is designed to raise money for the Hugh Cummings Scholarship Fund. We had almost 50 people pre-register and then another 20 plus walk ups, some didnt walk but over 60 people did all or part of the four mile walk. We raised over 800 dollars for the fund. It was a complete success and is something that we look forward to doing in the future.

After getting home from the walk Katie spent a day scrapbooking while I went back to UCCI for six more hours of the Expo. Katie had bought a lot of scrapbooking supplies in Miami last weekend and is working on a scrapbook of our Keys trip from last November. I headed back to the Expo for the Saturday session which was open to the public. We passed out a ton more keychains and brochures. We had taken five pages of call back sheets and filled up all five with potential students. It was also great for raising the visibility of the college. Lots of people came up to tell us they were happy to see us there and that it was great that ICCI was coming to events like this. It also helped that we had a really professional looking booth, with our web site called up on the lap top through wireless, brochures, pictures and program forms as well as the keychains.

In the evening we attended a Cayman Outreach Association dinner. It was a celebration of Valentines Day but both of us were so exhausted it was hard to really enjoy the occassion. We got home around 9:30 and the TV station was showing the Young Caymanian Leadership Association awards dinner from the Ritz Carlton. The guest speaker was Mike Huckabee, yes that Huckabee who actually gave a really good speech on perseverance and leadership with no politics mentioned. You can tell he was a preacher as he was very polished and was great story teller. Couldnt tell you a thing about his politics from last night but he is definitely a really good speaker.

The girls ringworm has definitely gotten better but we are still giving them medicine. They are getting smarter though and it is getting more and more difficult to get them to take the medicine without having to force it down their throats. We have the hurricane shutters off and the cats sit in the front window watching the world go by everyday when we leave. They like the toys we brought from Florida and Ginger has adopted several as her children and carries them up and down the stairs every morning and evening crying as she does to the ones she left behind not to worry she will be back soon. We are half way through the Winter Quarter and already planning for the summer and fall events. Cayman has been unusually hot this winter and everyone tells us that means a steamy summer.

Sunday, February 10, 2008

33 hours in Miami

We made a quick trip to Miami this weekend to deposit money, do some much needed shopping and stop in on our Miami seminar. We arrived at 9:30 Saturday morning and were shopping or running errands straight through to nine in the evening. Today Katie had a hair appointment, we did the last of our shopping and headed home looking like a pair of refugee's with suitcases that had been empty yesterday now full of supplies for the college, dvd's for us and new clothes that would have been outrageously priced here on the Island. People on Cayman will literally fly up to Miami for the weekend to shop because it is so much cheaper in the US, even with import duties which we avoided by keeping our purchases under 800 CI which is 1000 US.

We also learned that cats will eat anything if mixed with clam, tuna or shrimp juice. We are now mixing the ring worm medicine in with the liquid from cans of various fish and crustaceans and both Ginger and Gypsy lap it up. There sores have gone down dramatically in the past week so they are both looking up.

We are on Island until the end of the quarter and Easter weekend when we go to Orlando for a conference that Katie is attending for registrars. Good Friday and Easter Monday are both national holidays so we are going early to meet family and see some of the parks.

Wednesday, February 6, 2008

Ash Wednesday

Today is a national holiday here on Cayman giving us a well needed day off. We had planned to go to the agricultural festival but as we drove toward Savannah the traffic was backed up a few miles from the fair grounds. Deciding that we really didnt want to sit in traffic for an hour and a half to get into the festival, we headed home to a rest day of watching Planet Earth and some pre-spring cleaning.

Gypsy and Ginger get medicine twice a day for their ringworm and while Ginger dociley accepts the liquid and the pills, Gypsy fights us like we are trying to kill her with each drop of the medicine. Ginger has stopped crying all night and is now sleeping on our bedroom floor. Gypsy continues to sleep in the bed. At least they still have the dog like characterisitic that after a few minutes of being mad at us after they get the medicine they want attention and as Katie calls it their Luvins.

On Saturday we are headed up to Miami for a quick shopping, banking, working trip. we will be stopping off at the seminar which is going on to check in with the students but for the most part doing a lot of personal errands. We get back Sunday afternoon so it is a less than 36 hour trip. The following week is our memorial walk which we are both looking forward to both for the exercise of the 4 and a half mile walk and for the way the community has been reacting with the registrations and support/donations we have gotten. Yesterday the Cayman National Bank agreed to sponser and man a water station for us and we already had gotten donations of breakfast for the first 50 walkers and a donation of water and gatoraide for two water stations. We are hoping to raise at least $500 for the scholarship fund but even more importantly get the college back in the public eye with these type of events.

Saturday, February 2, 2008

Bathing cats

So it turns out that Gypsy and Ginger picked up ringworm while guests of the Cayman Humane Society. After a visit to the vet yesterday, we got some special ointment, pills, liquid medicine and shampoo. Last night we had to bathe the cats. Bathing cats is not a fun experience. We trapped them within the bath doors with each of us at one end. In the beginning they fight you, but then they become so dejected that they just sit there looking completely defeated. We used the shower head to get the water on them and then they had to sit with the special shampoo on for 7 minutes. We also had just forced them to take their pills so it was an all around bad experience.

They spent a good hour licking themselves after they got out of the bath. Surprizingly, they showed their puppy side with forgiving us fairly quickly.

The overall experience of giving them two pills a day, syringe of liquid medicine, rubbing in ointment, and weekly baths is frustrating but we love our girls and want them to get better. The treatment lasts a month and sometimes two so we will be doing this for a while.