Friday, December 27, 2013

HAPPY HOLIDAYS

HOLIDAYS 2013

 

Mrs. T gets a bit homesick for the north around Christmas time even though we have been down here for the holidays for several years.  I miss the family get together as well.  We do manage a nice call and talk to everyone, but it is not quite the same as face-to-face time.  Perhaps they will have a webcam setup next time.  We had a wonderful Christmas Eve turkey dinner at Encore, a restaurant around the corner that does jazz music lead by singer/owner Armi Grano.  Armi has an absolutely wonderful voice and often sings at church.


R mentions Las Posadas which she has written about in previous newsletters. (http://www.casa-de-terri0ble.blogspot.mx/2010/12/happy-holidays.html And yes, the editor missed the misspelling of posada. –dt) The big annual one is down a couple of blocks sponsored by our supermini, Mary Paz.  It is mainly for the neighborhood children and always has a big turnout.  There is a lot of food and drink and everyone has a good time.  We usually just come for the opening festivities as the party goes on for quite a while with the children trying their best to break open the piñatas. 


This year Karen, daughter of our neighbor Luis, decided to organize a small posada in front of our Condos Jacarandas.  Here if you decide to close the street for a party you just do it.  It was more of a block party and everyone had a good time.  We had food, drink, singing, and general camaraderie – in other words, fun.


So here is Mrs.T's very short recap of Christmas:

 

We had a very nice Christmas in Mexico.   I decorated our tiny Christmas tree and our Nacimiento.  I wanted to get another animal but could not find what I wanted.  A sympathetic vendor gave me a little piggy and I bought a turtle.  The tin angel looked pretty rusty and dusty so I cleaned it as best I could and gave her another coat of paint and a new candle.  When I walk along the beach and see the palm trees I think of Bethlehem.  Of course I have never been there but I imagine that Bethlehem has palm trees.  It was a quiet Christmas.  We have no family here and I do miss our children.  But we did attend two Las Posadas which included music food and children pummeling piñatas and I compensated a little by giving pieces of candy to passing children.  Dan called up some classic songs on our computer.  I like some of the old songs best:  Adeste Fidelis; Lo, how a Rose e're blooming; God Rest Ye Merry Gentlemen; Grandma Got Run Over by a Reindeer, and many, many more. (Don't ask me about that last one; R especially likes Frontier Christmas - http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SIYiTW1uWzAdt)  We walked on the beach on Christmas day; there were fairly good waves and I boogie boarded a bit.   I collected a small audience who stopped to observe this local Christmas miracle.  Dan admitted the beach was pretty nice, except for all that sand!



 

The big story in town is urban renewal or however one wishes to describe it.  Our little amphitheater has been removed to be replaced by  -???  We are certain someone knows.  But unless you read the newspapers, websites, blog postings (many of which are just speculation), or, best of all, go to all the governmental meetings, all with masterful fluency in Spanish, it is hard to nail down exactly what is happening.  We do know that several million pesos were earmarked for the project provided it was started before year's end. The guys are working almost around the clock and maybe it will be sufficiently completed for only minor disruption to the annual festival.  We definitely are curious.


The other major story remains the weather.  After one of the wettest Novembers on record we are having one of the wettest Decembers.  We have had two nights in a row of rain and last night we had a humdinger of a thunderstorm.  Folks who have been here much longer than we have say it is all very weird.


And a big thank you to Sandra R. for the painting that now graces the entry to our bedroom; we see it every time we are at the computer.  Too bad you and Jack are back in real winter north of the border.


Finally, the puzzle ladies did a couple more of them; the palapa is a great place for that. 


Some pictures to explain a lot:  http://www.flickr.com/photos/9151458@N07/sets/72157639083329516/


Hope you have had great holidays and that the new year brings you health and good fortune.

Keep warm.

Dan and Rebecca

www.casa-de-terrible.blogspot.com

 

Thursday, November 28, 2013

THANKSGIVING

THANK YOU

 

It has been a while since you last heard from us, longer than we realized.  I have been trying to get the resident muse to put something together but she had not been inspired.  And actually most things have been rather routine.  Just a few highlights before the main story.


As many of you know and most have guessed, we are at our Winter Residence where it is sunny and warm, or at least should be.  Up until a few days ago the summer had not ended.  November 2013 will probably show record rainfall and record high average temperatures for Puerto Vallarta.


When we last wrote, Mrs.T was working on a new wood sculpture.  Well either she is getting stronger or there was a fault in the wood because her work split in half.  Not to worry:  An almost-last-minute shipment of 200+ bulbs arrived that she needed to plant.  It is dangerous to let her look at a plant catalog when she is in a good mood.  And there is plenty of wood for another project when we return north.


We also made a trip to Idaho to attend the wedding of Rita's son Jim – a simple, nice affair with tons of great, yummy food (prepared mostly by son-in-law Chris).  This is the real west with real cowfolks.  Unfortunately Rita broke her foot the day before we left.  Thank you Ruth – yes, all sisters' names start with R – for staying a bit longer with the invalid.  Rita should be completely healed by Christmas vacation when she will make her now annual visit.

Here is R's latest – perhaps her very best:

 

Thanksgiving.  We have so much to be grateful for.  Does anybody remember the Johnny Appleseed grace we used to sing?

 

"Oh the Lord is good to me.  And so I thank the Lord, for giving me the things I need: the sun and the rain and the appleseed.  The Lord is good to me!"


Johnny Appleseed (aka Jonathon Chapman) was your pretty basic guy.  It really did not take a lot to make him happy.  I think as we get older we seem to be going backwards, understanding we really need less and less.  We have our health, more or less.   We have our family and friends.  I have more or less given up worrying about the wrongs and troubles of the world.  I found that all this worry did no good to either the world or me.  I realize that many of you have tried to explain this to me for years but I think I finally got it.


Since I no longer have to spend my time worrying I have extra time to spend enjoying life in general and Mexico in particular.  So here they are in no particular order, the things I am grateful for:

v  My husband Dan.   I know he is a little grumpy but he is also brilliant and funny.  I find we laugh together more than we used to.  I like that.

v  (My wife Rebecca.  Although she can be confusingly convoluted, she is very caring and forgiving.)

v  Our children Marla and Nick.  I find great joy and comfort in their love.

v  The sun.  Some days I just stand and soak it up.  If I were a flower I would grow a foot a day here.

v  The sea.  The sea is warm here and I can float on it back and forth with a little taste of salt on my lips.

v  The underwater world.  I love visiting the strange creatures, the little caves, the great whales, the dolphins that play, and Alex, my friend and guide.

v  The mountains.  They reach for the sky and call me to explore.

v  The taste of fresh squeezed orange juice.

v  The nights with stars and kissing geckos and music from a Spanish guitar.


The Lord is good to me.

(As made famous by Disney:  http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=V_IrdS-zu48 )

 

A few comments about the pictures.  Alexander is the cute grandson of Luis; he has been staying at Jacarandas with his mom Karen while her broken leg heals.  The empty plate is what was left of delicious treats prepared by Eduardo and Karla of Tuna Ceramica; they were like elephant ears that tasted like pizzelles – I should have taken a picture before they disappeared.  The whale shark is now hanging in Daphne's room with the other fish.  And the ladies warmed up with a 500 piece puzzle; they are finishing a 1000 one now.

http://www.flickr.com/photos/9151458@N07/sets/72157638131113755/


And don't worry – we will have sat down to a traditional Thanksgiving feast at Sandrina's. (Fantastic pumpkin pie!)  The restaurants here actually provide for two Thanksgivings, one in October for the Canadians and one in November for we folks from the States.  (Some of our Canadian friends may be going over the border about now to seek out much cheaper USA turkeys for their freezers.)  Like the restaurants we celebrate twice, once with the family before we depart and once here.


Finally, a big Thank You to you, our many readers around the world.  Best wishes to you all.

Dan and Rebecca

www.casa-de-terrible.blogspot.com

 

Monday, September 9, 2013

Wildlife and More

TURTLES REVISITED

A couple issues previously in June Mrs.T related the egg laying by one of our turtles.  This month we have the followup.  Mother Nature can be exciting but can also be cruel – at least from the human viewpoint.  R explains all below in this edition of life at the Summer Estate.

Living in the middle of the woods means one will see a lot of animals, insects, and mystery plants.  Several of you (I am thinking of you SR.) are real herpetophobes and we have a couple of pictures of some our residents.  One snake we saw – the picture is quite blurry – was a pencil-lead-thin ring-necked snake, smaller than an earthworm, that was caught in a spider web.  We were able to free him and send him on his way.  There are virtually no venomous snakes around here and even the larger black snakes run away from people.  This month there are also some pictures of mystery bugs and beautiful mushrooms.  (Maybe JT-L can enlighten us.)

On to this R's story:

 

Two turtles, Myrtle and Yertle lived in our pond. When I fed the fish they came up and ate some of the fish food.  And also one small turtle whom I seldom saw and shall remain nameless.  One day Yertle (How did Mrs.T know Yertle was not Myrtle? -dt) decided to lay some eggs.  There was really no good place around to lay them.  The sunny side of the pond was concrete and rocks.  The shady side of the pond was very steep.  It had a lot of rocks too.  Yertle found the place she liked best and dug out a nest.  She had to move some rocks but she was a determined turtle.  Yertle laid twenty-two eggs. (See below –dt)  It took her a long time.  I came and rather rudely took Yertle's picture.  Yertle did not care.  She was busy.  After Yertle laid all of her eggs and covered them up with a lot of dirt sand and rocks.  Yertle, after laying 22 eggs was not feeling much of anything, and I did not blame her it was a lot of work.  Then Yertle left.  (Left the pond –dt)

I went home and looked for information about Yertle and her eggs on the internet.  I knew Yertle was a map turtle.  There are different kinds of map turtles but I never got close enough to decide which kind she was and I really did not care much.  In fact I did not know Yertle was a she until she started laying eggs.  Research told me that although not considered rare or endangered, map turtles were becoming less common because of habitat destruction and other reasons.  I went to the extension office to see if someone wanted to take some of the eggs to other places.  No one did.  However I did meet the wife of one of our art colleagues who really wanted a turtle for their pond.  The internet site said the eggs should hatch in 60 to 75 days.  I watched the next anxiously for about 65 days and nothing had occurred. 

I carefully uncovered the eggs and counted them. (Bad idea –dt) There were 22.  I packed 5 eggs in a bucket of sand and gave them to our new friends so that if they hatched they could go right to their pond.  We waited and waited.  Every day I checked the nest to see if anyone had emerged.  I was also worried that some animal would find the nest and eat the eggs.  After another two weeks when nothing had occurred I dug up the nest again. (Bad idea again –dt) One egg was cracked and when I picked it up to look at it out came a little turtle.  He was tiny!  He was crawling around so I put him in a plastic butter tub with some water and a small rock.  When I put in some fish food he ate it.  I was so happy.  Alas, he died the next day before our friends could come and get him.  It was at this point that Dan began handing out the blame. (Explanations. –dt) It was my fault the turtle died because I uncovered the nest.  It was Yertle's fault for laying her eggs where they did not get enough sun.  As Dan is good at assigning blame and I am good at feeling guilty (Mrs.T takes everything personally –dt), we work well together in such situations.  I wondered if the heavy rains and cold weather we had had damaged the eggs.  I was in despair.  It had been longer than the computer site said it should take the eggs to hatch.

But two days later another little turtle emerged from the re-covered nest with no help from me.  Alas, shortly thereafter he also expired; evidently emerging from the egg did him in. Will none of them survive, I wondered sadly?

But the next day yet another turtle emerged.  He inched determinedly toward the pond.  At one point he fell and turned over on his back.  After righting himself he stopped to rest.  Dan and I were taking pictures.  I was fervently urging him on.  It was only about ten feet (Maybe turtle distance but much less directly –dt) from the nest to the pond but it seemed to take forever.  Another time he crawled right up to a rock about four times as tall as he was.  Evidently backing is not a skill at which newly hatched turtles excel.  But inch by weary inch he moved downward.  Not surprisingly the turtle was dazed by the whole new world he was seeing for the first time.  He would pause periodically and turn his long neck from one side to the other.  What must he be thinking?  Do turtles know instinctively about the world they hatch to?  Maybe or maybe not.  When the turtle came to the edge of the water he stopped as if in shock.  I had expected he would jump in, but no he wanted to think about it.  Finally he crawled in.  Then he stopped again considering.   Finally he took the plunge so to speak and immediately began swimming around.  As he investigated his new home he ran into he ran into one of my water plants.  He took a cautious nibble.   Hey this stuff is good!  After a few more bites he resumed his tour of the pond with much more enthusiasm. The turtle was home!  (Our friends returned their eggs and retrieved some tadpoles. –dt)

The next day I saw tracks in the sand and found two empty shells in the nest.  I could only hope that two more turtles had made it to the pond.  Always I feared that predators such as raccoons, coyotes, or snakes would find the nest.  I took away the empty shells to prevent this.  So far we had been lucky.  Then I found a little guy halfway down the hill toward the pond.  I picked him up and put him in a plastic bowl with water and a rock. As we drove him to his new home in our friends' pond, he continually tried to climb out.  He was quite lively.  When we put him down beside the pond he jumped right in and began swimming around.  My friend put a small stone in the pond so that he could bask.  We put him on it but he jumped in and swam around some more investigating his new home.

The next day disaster struck.  When I went to check on the nest is was completely uncovered with broken eggshells everywhere.  A raccoon had found the nest.  I counted the egg fragments and the best I could tell they amounted to about 6 eggs.  I searched carefully and could not find any more eggs.  So we had 4 live turtles 10 dead turtles - this included 2 who died, 2 undeveloped eggs I discarded earlier, plus 6 raccoon victims - and 8 remained unaccounted for.

I removed the cleaned out the shells and recovered the nest in case there were still some eggs I had overlooked.  Had more turtles made the trip down to the pond and escaped my notice?  I just do not know.  I walked around the edge of the pond searching pensively.  With all my water plants who knows what is in there.  But I know for certain at least one little turtle made it.  I think I will call him Shelly.   (Since writing this, R thinks one more turtle hatched. –dt)

 

Here are some photos:  

http://www.flickr.com/photos/9151458@N07/sets/72157635444504652/

You will also note some of our art projects.  R in particular has been whacking away at some wood and making something; I cannot wait to see what it will be.  Rebecca reported that a hummingbird came into the garage one day to see what she was doing.

Many of you have asked about our departure to the Winter Residence and as usual it will be towards the end of October.  We have already had a few cold nights here but only a few leaves have fallen.  There is still time for you to visit us here.

Hope all of you have had a good summer.

Dan and Rebecca

www.casa-de-terrible.blogspot.com

 

 

Monday, July 15, 2013

Brief Update

TOUCHSTONE AND OTHER THINGS

 

Last year Mrs.T and I visited Fallingwater, the well-known house designed by Frank Lloyd Wright over a waterfall.  Meandering about we discover the Touchstone Center for Crafts in the same Laurel Highlands area of Pennsylvania.  We stopped and obtained a catalog for the just-ended sessions.  Over the winter we thought it might be fun to take some classes there especially as it was not far from the summer estate.   It took a while for us to compromise on a week when there were classes we both might like.  R settled upon wood carving and I upon nature printing.

Well, Rebecca was in for a big surprise.  Wood carving was not the genteel picturesque whittling of grandfather in his rocker with penknife in hand. Although she took a LARGE log with her, she discovered that there would be a lot of tough hackin' and wackin' – this was sculpting in the tradition of Michelangelo, although perhaps without quite the same result.  R did make a wonderful 'Bird with Hat' sculpture and the group collaborated upon a tall sculpture which we purchased at the fundraising auction.   The Bird with Hat is in the forest where we were going to put the tall sculpture.  But the instability of the tall one caused us to rethink our plans and anchor it to the front porch.

Nature printing was a bit different than I expected.  We did most of the printing by hand, not with a press.  The class was taught by internationally recognized master nature printer Gudrun Garkisch.  Although I was a newbie, I learned quite a bit and have some skills and ideas about how I might want to continue with this craft.  I met several wonderful and skilled artists.

It rained a great deal while we were at Touchstone so it was not a big surprise when we returned to high waters in Philo.  But it continued to rain for many more days after our return.  Water runoff has even made a small gorge in our driveway that we need to traverse.  In one of the pictures you can see a beached glass globe showing how high the water in the pond reached.  Now it looks like heat is upon us with temperatures about 90F (33C) due for the next several days.  I might even need to turn on the air conditioner.

Here is a short piece by Mrs.T describing some of the things happening hereabouts:

 

Things have been a little unusual here in Philo.  We got so much rain that the pond overfloweth.  This happens occasionally but the water got so high that it shorted out the pump for my waterfall.  I am waiting for the water to recede so that I can dry the thing out and test it to see if I can make it work by resetting it or if I need to consult Bill the handyman.  The water got so high I wanted to trade my new Japanese maple tree for a gopher wood tree but the nursery refused, there having been a run on gopher wood trees.  N.B.:  If you don't understand this read Genesis, Chapter 6. 

Meanwhile every weed on the place has been growing at a prodigious rate and it has been too soggy to chop them much.  Dan has been extremely helpful pointing out all the different places I need to trim.  The last few days have been sunny and we - my weedwacker and I - have worked hard trying to get caught up.  The temperatures have been in the high 80's in the shade and Dan sitting on the shaded porch to better supervise has remarked several times that with the little breeze it is really quite comfortable. (!)  (Mrs.T does not appreciate my supervisory and management skills. –dt)

 In my spare time I have been coating the two wooden sculptures from my class so that they can survive outdoors.  Today we moved them outside.  I think they look okay but the tall one needs to be braced to keep it from blowing over.  Dan is getting a couple of his prints framed and so we are slowly returning to normal.

I had a wonderful although exhausting time working on sculpture at Touchstone School of Crafts, and Dan, I think, enjoyed his printing class. (I did! –dt) I was looking at the fat lady catalogs thinking about buying some new clothes because we are going to a wedding in Idaho in September.  (Any excuse for new clothes, right guys? (R is actually quite restrained.)  -dt) But Dan suggested I might get some new chisels or gouges instead.  The tools I brought to my class were totally inadequate but all the other guys cheerfully shared their stuff with me, when they had finished laughing.  Their tools were incredible - some hand made for them, some specialized Japanese tools, some old tools bought at flea markets, and some special power tools.  I brought the wrong kind of wood too, white oak which is very strong but hard to carve.  But they gave me some nice cherry.  What I am thinking about is getting a nice angle grinder, either that or a new dress.

This summer we have had a lot of birds we do not usually see.  We have pairs of scarlet tanagers, indigo buntings, and eastern bluebirds hanging around.  I also saw a pair of red tailed hawks.  Dan thinks he saw a bald eagle which is rumored to be in the neighborhood.  But strangest of all is the idiotbird.  The first time I saw a broken bird egg on our porch I felt sad.  Some other critter stole an egg and dropped it, I thought, as I scrubbed it up.  The second time it happened I showed it to Dan.  "Do you notice the broken egg is right under the porch railing?" he pointed out.   "It looks like the bird sat on the railing and pooped out an egg."  - his words not mine.  The next day as I scrubbed up yet another egg broken under the railing it was clear Dan was right.  A couple days later I caught her in the act.   "Stop that you idiot!" I yelled.  "Make a nest like a decent bird!"  Well the bird took my advice to heart.  Unfortunately she made the nest in one of the boxes that Dan was saving, for no reason I can ascertain, that was in our garage.  (Mrs. Naturalist is strangely not into reuse and recycling.  –dt) This is a small brown bird who lays cream colored eggs with brown spots.  And this particular individual is definitely lacking in common sense.  (Bird brained?  -dt)

Not only have we been bird watching quite a bit but we have been entertained by the antics of three fawns.  We never see them with their mothers although occasionally a doe will wander by in a sedate manner.  The little guys leap and chase each other and are a lot of fun to watch.  The other night we had a violent thunderstorm which shook the air around us.  Suddenly we saw all three fawns leaping and zigzagging around the yard yelling "EEK!", "EEK!", "EEK!"  After a few moments, as the worst was over, they started browsing and trying to look nonchalant as if to say, "Who me?  I was not a bit worried."  So our life continues from one moment to the next full of the ordinary which, we find, is actually quite extraordinary.

 

Here are some pictures, some of which our new friends from Touchstone will have already seen:

http://www.flickr.com/photos/9151458@N07/sets/72157634429374582/

and:  http://www.flickr.com/photos/9151458@N07/sets/72157634413270749/

There is a good possibility we might return there next year; Mrs. T will need to use her new tools.

 

A little housekeeping particularly for those recently added to our newsletter distribution list:  Our newsletter comes out irregularly, approximately once each month.  Feel free to share it with anyone you like.  Also, you are welcome to enjoy previous 'issues' and browse the pictures on Flickr.  If you wish to be dropped from our distribution list or know someone who would like to be added, just contact us.

Hope you are staying cool.

Dan and Rebecca

www.casa-de-terrible.blogspot.com

 

Thursday, June 13, 2013

The Great Outdoors

Flora and Fauna – Summer 2013

 

Every year when we return to our Summer Estate, the plants and animals have a slightly different dynamic.  While they are generally the same species, some have expanded and grown and others have been substantially reduced.  And there are often brand new things.  We have some flowers which even Mrs.T has not yet identified, although she is sure she planted them.


In her story R neglects to mention Woody Woodpecker, or rather Mr. and Mrs. Woodpecker.  We seem to have a pair of pileated woodpeckers in residence somewhere in our woods.  They both flew in the other day and now we know what they sound like, sort of a 'Yuk, Yuk, Yuk', in addition to the jackhammer sound they can make when working on a tree.



Well the flora is doing pretty well, In spite of a dry spell. The summer flowers are out now.  And everything is coming up roses (The $3 ones from Big Lots; Mrs.T does not like the wild variety. – dt) and peonies and daisies and iris.  Everything we got at two plant swaps and a few plant sales - not to mention some roadside flowers which may have jumped into my car as I drove past! (I will disavow any knowledge of the woman to the sheriff. -dt) - are all planted and seem to be doing pretty well.  The only down side is that the poison ivy is also doing pretty well in spite of the fact that I sprayed it.  I usually do not spray a lot of things, but in the case of poison ivy I make an exception.  (Some variety of Roundup, I think she is going for Agent Orange next. –dt)


The fauna seem to be doing well too but I am not sure that is always a good thing.  This seems to be a banner year for turtles.  I found one walking through the underbrush and brought her home and set her down by my pond and she immediately jumped in.  I called her Myrtle.  After a few weeks Dan told me that either she had grown a lot or I had two turtles.  He has a better eye for things like this so I watched her for several weeks and I thought he might be right.  I was not sure until the day I saw both of them together.  The newcomer I named Yurtle.  Meanwhile the fishies had been coming up every morning when I fed them and frolicking about, much to my delight.  Unfortunately it was too good to last. 


The first unwanted visitor was a barred owl. (I was lucky to get a decent photo. –dt) He sat looking thoughtfully over my pond for several days.  I feared that he had designs on my fish but they did not seem concerned and I didn't catch him making threatening moves.  Research on the internet showed that he did not eat fish but did like frogs and snakes.  Well I have so many frogs I was willing to donate one or two and many of you know my feelings about snakes.  (Barred owls often nest in holes made by woodpeckers.  –dt)


Speaking of which, a few days later I saw two water snakes in my pond.  The first one was an adult about 18 inches long and the second was a baby maybe 1 inch long.  At first I thought the baby was a very thin tadpole. But it was definitely a tiny snake.  I thought it odd that there was only one but I suppose the babies live a precarious existence.  I told the water snake to go away but he dived under the water and hid beneath a lily pad.  I have seen these snakes a few times but they know I don't like them, they eat the small fish, and hide a lot.  I was feeding the fish a few mornings later when "EEEK!!" a rather large blacksnake - about 4 feet long- stuck up his head, looked at me, and crawled away.  I have several times seen either him or his brother lounging about when I have been planting and weeding.  It is always the same.  I give forth a loud "EEK!!" and the blacksnake leaves.  Dan says snakes are our friends but I am not buying it.  (They take care of rodents.  –dt)


I was quite happy with all the animals in the pond - well at least most.  I have loads of frogs and salamanders, many little goldfish, four big fish, and two turtles.  I went one morning to feed everybody - they all eat fish food - when suddenly I was dived at by a rather large bird.  "Who are you?  Get away!" I shouted. And after I waved my arms about and drove him off I identified my assailant.  OH NO!! A KINGFISHER!!  I stared in dismay at the pond. Not a creature in sight!  Could that bird have possibly eaten them all?  I did not feed the fish that day, not wanting to lure anyone to the beak of doom.  The next day it was the same thing.  I was attacked by the kingfisher and there were no creatures.  I chased the bird from tree to tree shouting rude things at it.  In the afternoon when I came out the bird was perched sulkily on a tree near the pond but did not attack me.  I chased him around waving a long stick at him and finally the kingfisher flew away.  I threw out some fish food but no fish came out, only a few salamanders and Myrtle.  I waited quite a while but finally went back to the house unsure who if anyone had survived.


Dan told me that the fish were OK, just hiding under the lily pads.  And of course he was at least partially right.  Slowly, as the days pass they sneak out a few at a time but they are clearly traumatized.  The frogs and salamanders have recovered completely.  They are swimming around, sitting on lily pads, eating fish food as if nothing had ever happened.  And the Kingfisher, thank goodness, has not returned. 


And as for the turtles, one day I found Yurtle, on the bank of the pond laying eggs!  I am so excited!!  If those dratted snakes and raccoons don't find the nest, which so far they have not, in a couple of months we will have baby turtles.  Hurrah!!  We saw a couple of other turtles crossing our driveway but aside from pushing them out of the way we left them to their own devises.  Dan said the one he saw was absolutely enormous.  (It was at least 12 inches in diameter.  –dt)(Mrs. T discovered that this was about the height of egg-laying season.  –dt)


Speaking of raccoons we do have a raccoon problem.  We store the fish food in a metal trash can on our porch.  Unfortunately the raccoon is under the impression that it is raccoon food and resents the fact that we do not serve it up each night on a silver platter.  It did not take him long to learn to pry up the lid and then he would simply crawl in the can and chow down.  Dan produced a bungee cord which I stretched between the handles so that Mr. R could not pull the lid off.  This worked for a few days.  Mr. R never got the lid completely off but he did pry up one side so he could reach in his little paw and bring out the food.  After I got up three times in one night to chase Mr. R, Dan decided to take over.  Not only was he (the raccoon, not me.  –dt) eating my fish food but to add insult to injury there was a small circle of pee where Mr R had marked the porch as his territory.  I got out the Fabuloso and scrubbed the porch.  I tried to get Dan to pee on it but for some reason he refused. "I am going to fasten that bungee cord so there is no way that raccoon can get it off!" Dan declared.  Implying, I thought, that it was my fault that Mr. R kept getting at the fish food.  (Of course it was; she had not tightened it enough.  –dt) I must admit, I was a tiny bit pleased when I walked out the next morning to see the lid off the trash can.   "There is no way he could have unfastened it," Dan muttered as I led him to the porch.  Well in fact he did not.  Mr. R had chewed entirely through the bungee cord to get to the fish food.  That night we locked the fish food inside the garage.  After some thought, Dan got a steel bicycle cord.  "Let's see if he can chew through that!" Dan exclaimed triumphantly.  So far he has not. (He may have died from intestinal blockage. –dt) But in my mind's eye I see Mr. R every night while we sleep, patiently turning the dials to try and get the combination.  And when he does all bets are off.



Some pictures:  http://www.flickr.com/photos/9151458@N07/sets/72157634088590980/     You will notice that Flickr has changed its format; I hope you can navigate through it okay.  Also, the pictures are in reverse order; my fault.


You will see in the pictures that Mrs.T managed to do a puzzle between planting flowers and feeding the fish; perhaps it will be added to the collection at the Winter Residence.


Also, we attended a very nice get-together at the house/studio/farm of Paul, Nora, and Ruby.  We had a great time – good people, good food, good conversation, and good art.  Hope you enjoy the pictures.


A bit wetter weather came through and the plants and pond appreciated it.  Hope your summer is full of sunshine, not too hot, and not too humid.

 

Dan and Rebecca

www.casa-de-terrible.blogspot.com

 

 

Sunday, April 28, 2013

Copper Canyon Locals

MORE ON COPPER CANYON

 

Well, we have been back at our northern home – The Summer Estate – for just less than a month now.  It has been cooler than normal - all that Canadian air.   And it has been rather wet as well.  As many of you know, we need to return at the beginning of April so that Mrs.T, a.k.a. Mother Nature, can see her flowers, particularly the wild ones, emerge.  We have included a picture of the house in the woods – note the trees are behind schedule – and photos of a few of the flowers; most of blooms are less than an inch across.

http://www.flickr.com/photos/9151458@N07/sets/72157633342597615/

With the house essentially in order – routine maintenance and a few repairs - between plantings Rebecca decided to write more about our vacation to Copper Canyon.  Besides the grandeur of the canyon complex, learning about the Tarahumara, the peoples indigenous to that area, added immensely to our understanding of Mexico and its cultures.  You will find R's story to be quite illuminating.  It is a bit lengthy. 

 

This is a story of the Tarahumara Indian people who live in the mountains and canyons of northern Mexico.  It is based on things told us by guides and information in tourist pamphlets as well as our own observations; it may or may not be accurate, but I have tried to keep it as true as I can and reined in my tendency to occasionally exaggerate. (I try to keep an eye on that. –dt)

The Tarahumara Indians are a slight people – short like the Maya but not as stocky.  In their language their name means 'the people who run'.  According to our guide Poncho, the record was one woman who ran some 60 miles before she got tired and stopped.  Evidently the men have more sense or less determination and don't run much these days.  In fact, unfortunately, the Tarahumara men, sharing a weakness of most indigenous people, seem to devote themselves exclusively to drinking alcohol.  Indians in Mexico are universally poor, poorly educated, and generally put upon.

The government gives them subsistence and provides schools and minimal social services, which the Indians ignore for the most part.  The government had been providing the subsistence to the male head of household, but found that they drank it up leaving their families to literally starve.  The government decided to give the money to the women and then the men beat them until they handed it over.  Oh well.  Now the children get free breakfast and lunch at school.  This seems to be working fairly well, at least for the younger children attendance is up.

The one means of income the women have is weaving lovely baskets out of native plants that grow wild.  Ah, you might think a traditional craft - well not exactly.  According to Poncho, in the 1960's an aid worker from the UN decided something should be done about the Tarahumara's desperate poverty and taught them to weave baskets.  Well however that may be, the ladies do weave lovely baskets.

We were told that these Indians live in caves. (For those familiar with the area, think Old Man's Cave. –dt) In fact the first place we stopped to buy baskets was actually such a cave, was a stone overhang from the mountain wall.    The grandmother who "lived" there had a firepit in one corner, a rude cot, and shelves to hold her wares.  (No sanitary arrangements were in sight and no one inquired.)  Now some of the Canadians on the tour were from Missouri (That means 25 of the other 28 people. –dt); they maintained that she did not actually live there and the whole thing was a setup to sell her baskets.  I prefer to think of her as an historic interpreter, such as you see at Williamsburg.  (We think she lived a short ways up the road in a rather rudimentary house. –dt) At any rate I bought a few small baskets.  I did note that she was quite able to speak enough Spanish to quote prices, and she made change quite efficiently.  The Indian ladies we talked to were invariably friendly and good natured but quite firm when they did not want to do something in which case instead of refusing they pretended not to understand what you were saying.

The Tarahumara men do still hunt.  As the population has been exploding they have pretty much wiped out the deer population in the mountains and canyons where they live.  They have also made serious inroads into the snake population.  The only large mammals left in the area are mountain goats which they are unable to catch and wild burros which they do not hunt.  It has been speculated that they will soon start on lizards if they have not already.

Traditionally as they reach puberty the Indian girls were personally evaluated – as it were - by the chief of the tribe who then gives them to be a wife to whomever he decides upon.  They were chattels in every sense of the word.  Women gave birth to ten or twelve children about half of whom died of starvation, pneumonia, or exposure when they were very young.  Things are slowly improving: the birthrate is going down and the survival rate is going up. But still these people live a very precarious existence.  Especially the women.

Everywhere you go you see the women with children hanging on to their skirts while they weave baskets. (They can weave them blindfolded. –dt) These baskets are the real deal, not made somewhere in Asia and sold by the Tarahumara.  They make baskets out of the leaves of a succulent plant related to the Yucca, which is dried and cut in strips.  The plants grow wild and there seems to be no shortage of them.   There seems to be an established price for different sizes of baskets - the prices are very reasonable - and the ladies do not bargain.  Everywhere we went and at every train or bus stop the ladies were there displaying their baskets and weaving more while waiting for customers.

The story goes that maybe 80 or so years ago a Catholic priest came upon three or four girl babies who had been left out for the animals to eat.  He was horrified and rescued them.  He recruited some nuns and started a boarding school for Tarahumara girls.  This priest was a real dynamo: begging for building supplies; building the school; recruiting nuns; caging food for the girls; and going from village to village trying to convince the Indians to let him have their spare girls.  Although dead these many years, he is still revered today.

The boarding school today has 100 little girls ages 4 to 14.  They are taught by five nuns, who are each responsible for 20 girls.  Boys can and do attend the school but do not board.  The girls come from about 50 villages in the general area of the school.  And there is fierce completion for the 2 places per village.  Our guide for the school said that if there were 1000 places they could easily fill them.  The girls are sent home twice a year, for Christmas and Easter.  After the first time they go home, most of the little girls beg the nuns to let them stay at school.  It is heart wrenching.  You think these girls are losing their traditions.  And yet, they are being given instead a new life full of possibilities.

The girls take cold showers every morning.  The nuns tried to give them hot showers but they refused.  I thought a lot about this and wondered if perhaps they thought they were being cooked, probably their only experience with hot water.  I am a great fan of hot water myself; in fact I insist upon it.  The school was neat and orderly.  The girls do chores around the school following a strict schedule.  We saw the beds where the girls slept two to a bed.  Each bed was neatly made but they had stuffed animals of different kinds on them.

The girls skipped about smiling shyly at us.  I asked one if I could take her picture because I thought her traditional Indian dress contrasted with her Barbie backpack, but when the nun translated the request she hid her face.  "I think you'd better not," the nun said firmly, protecting her charge even from potentially wealthy donors.

Compulsory public education in Mexico ends at age 14.  But it is compulsory in name only, far too many children do not go to school. (Public education is not totally free; there are several relatively expensive fees. –dt) Only about 1% of the Tarahumara children graduate from the public schools at fourteen and that 1% are almost all boys.  In contrast virtually all the girls at the boarding school graduate.  When they graduate the Catholic church has guaranteed continuing free education for these girls up to a BA degree at the university.  One fifth of the girls who graduate continue their schooling to get their college degree.  The sad thing is they do not go back home.  There is no place for them in their traditional tribal way of life.  So we departed the school, leaving a healthy donation and a little piece of our hearts.

When we got to one of the deepest canyons there was a tour where we could go down and visit some of the Tarahumara and see the caves they really lived in.  There were several of them in one spot.  The caves were rock overhangs and the Indians had boarded up the front.  There were chickens scratching around in the dirt and miscellaneous items in front. And what looked like a roof, but wait, it was a solar panel!  The Indians had figured out how to get electricity down at the bottom of the canyon.  Sure enough - when I looked out over the canyon that night I saw two little lights where the caves were, but thank goodness no satellite dishes.  Dan and I did not go down to visit the caves.  It was not the 263 steps going down there that daunted me it was the 263 steps coming back up.  As a matter of fact, I thought Poncho looked at us significantly when he explained that this trip might not be a good idea for the less fit.

 

I have always loved stars.  I remember my father teaching me how to find Polaris, the North Star, and different constellations.  Growing up in the country there were lots of stars.  As we moved to the city there were far fewer to be seen.   The surrounding lights blotted them out.  In Philo out in the country again I am happy to see a lot more stars.  In Bucerias there are quite a few.  When we went to Copper Canyon the sky was blanketed with stars!  It was easy to see how the ancient peoples saw pictures in the night sky.  And if you are an intermittent sleeper, as I often am, you could come out at intervals and see the stars marching across the night sky.  It was glorious!  Robert Frost wrote a poem "Take something Like a star".  The last few lines explain my feelings well:

 

It asks of us a certain height,

So when at times the mob is swayed

To carry praise or blame too far,

We may take something like a star

To stay our minds on and be staid.

 

 

Here are some more pictures of Copper Canyon, the Tarahumara, and a few baskets.  You will also see a picture of the last puzzle of the season; it did not get finished and it will not be in rotation again.  Also, you will see a new wall hanging; it is by the same artist who did the tapestry we have at the condo.

http://www.flickr.com/photos/9151458@N07/sets/72157633347493499/

I don't know if Mrs. T will be writing more about the Copper Canyon.  But I am sure she will regale you about additional adventures between times tending her flowers, trees, and fish.

 

Dan and Rebecca

www.casa-de-terrible.blogspot.com

 

 

Friday, March 22, 2013

Copper Canyon - Part One

Dancing with Zorro and other Anomalies

 

You may have wondered where we have been as not much has been posted of late.  Well basically we have just been enjoying life at our Winter Residence.  Nothing too special.  Mrs.T has gone scuba diving every week as usual and reported on the many fish, eels, octopi, rays, etc., that she has encountered down in the deep.  Your humble editor has been doing usual chores of food, clothes, dishes, etc.  One new activity has been jigsaw puzzling.  This often involves several members resident at the complex; BC Judy has been the leader and expert for most of them.  Here are a few pictures:

http://www.flickr.com/photos/9151458@N07/sets/72157633062515314/

As Mrs. T relates below, we took a vacation to the Copper Canyon up north.  I will give a couple of links below that relate to the trip.  Let me give a plug for Superior Tours in PV; Astrid and her crew, particularly our guide Poncho, earned the 'superior' name.

I think R intends to write more than one account of our travel.  We took over 700 photos, a lot of duplicates and otherwise unusable, that were sorted through to give you some idea of the trip.  So here goes the first part:

 

Dan and I like to take trips around Mexico to get to know the country better.  Some of us may enjoy it more than others but Dan tags along.  We recently took a trip to Northern Mexico to visit Copper Canyon, El Canyon de Cobre. (More properly Barranca del Cobre  -dt)  We traveled through three states, Nayarit, Sinaloa, and Chihuahua. 

 I knew that a lot of our food comes from Sinaloa but I did not realize that it is the breadbasket -or should I say taco basket - of Mexico.  If you have traveled through Kansas or Iowa in the US; or Manitoba in Canada; Sinaloa will look very familiar.  There are tremendous fields that stretch forever:  corn, oats, tomatoes, melons, beans, and tobacco.  In Mexico instead of soy beans they grow garbanzo beans.  I would never have guessed there were so many garbanzo beans in the whole world.

The corn is a whole different matter.  Due to the law of unexpected consequences, that is, if you pass a law to accomplish one thing something else will inevitably occur,  Mexico ships most of their white corn (the kind most Mexicans prefer) to the US to make Ethanol.  In return the US ships most of its yellow corn (the kind Mexicans don't like) to Mexico.  Go figure!  Because of the climate they can grow three or four crops a year here.  There is only enough water from rain for one crop.  They make up the difference with irrigation from the damming of the El Fuerte River, the river that made the canyon.  (There are actually six rivers that combine to make Rio Fuerte.  And there are six interlinked canyons.  –dt) Right now the lakes are 30 meters low because of the drought so if there is not a lot of rain soon they will have to go back to one crop a year.  (The automobile license plates for the state of Sinaloa feature a tomato, many of which – tomatoes not auto plates – are consumed in the US and Canada.  –dt)

The Mexicans claim the Copper Canyon is what the Grand Canyon would like to be when it grows up.  That is because the Copper Canyon is bigger, deeper, and more beautiful.  The first two are hard to dispute.  As for the third I don't know but I think it is more fun to visit because there are a lot less tourists.  But there is a reason for this; you can't get there from anywhere.

First you get on a bus and after 4 or 6 hours you arrive in Mazatlan.  The bus was fairly roomy and comfortable but I want to tell you that it is possible to get saddle sores from a bus. The next day we took another long bus trip to El Fuerte.  At El Fuerte, we had a choice of an historical tour of the town or a river raft tour to identify local birds and plants.  Dan and I went on the river tour.  We really enjoyed it.  Thank goodness Poncho (our guide for the entire trip –dt) had warned us of the vicious insects, so lavishly coated in OFF we were OK.  Many of the birds were the same ones we see in the summer at home up north.  Three we don't often see were ospreys, vermillion flycatchers, and prairie chickens.  We also stopped at a petroglyph site.  Our guide Michael Angel for the river experience explained about them too.  Some of the petroglyphs are pretty obvious like the sun, a snake, and people.  But some of them such as a drought or religious ideas are far from obvious and I have a sneaking suspicion that some archeologists are just making them up.  On the way back to the hotel I practiced my Spanish on Michael Angel; he was very nice about it but his English was much better than my Spanish.

Next day we met the first Tarahumara Indians lying in wait to sell us baskets and tee shirts at the train station while we waited for the train which was only about an hour late.  We were told by our helpful guide Poncho that this was almost on time. Hmm!  The train was fairly comfortable and served very nice meals in the dining car.  If you got tired of sitting you could stand between cars and cool off while looking out at the landscape.  Dan suggested that if I were feeling like James Bond I could climb up on top and hop from car to car.  It was tempting but I resisted.  When a freight train passed us I was surprised to see there were several men resting on top of most of the cars getting a free ride.

The three hotels we stayed in in the canyon area were all lovely.  The hotel in El Fuerte used to be a hacienda and is famous as the birthplace of Don Diego de la Vega, otherwise known as Zorro.  Of course they make much of the fact and that first evening as we were listening to the music during happy hour who should appear but a masked man!  Dan was drinking two beers and I was having lemonada.  Dan was grumbling because, although you got two beers for the price of one, they were very small bottles.  They put me in mind of the old Coke bottles and I found them rather cute but Dan did not see it that way.  Of course since they do not usually get much call for lemonade during happy hour, they became confused and brought me two regular sized ones.  Virtue is its own reward.

About this time Zorro started singing along with the live music; he had quite a nice voice.  They were doing mostly mariachi songs.  Several of the younger ladies in the crowd - in their twenties and thirties I would guess (and not in our older people tour group –dt) - started taking turns dancing with Zorro.  Dan leaned over and whispered to me that he thought that Zorro was our guide from the river tour.  I was looking at him trying to decide.  Then Zorro announced that he had saved the last dance for a very special lady.  This was a lady he met on the river tour this afternoon and he held out his hand to me!  Well I don't dance really, but if you get a couple of lemonades in me it is amazing what I will do.  We have no photos to record this event; undoubtedly someone else in the tour does.  Another lady in our tour group who was about our age told me later she was so glad that I had done it; she would never have had the nerve.  Was this a compliment?  (No telling what Mrs.T will do after a couple of margaritas  -dt)

 

Here are some photos.  But a couple of preliminary comments are appropriate.  With a modern digital camera is possible to take a lot of photos as noted above; most of us are snapshotters and not photographers.  And with the advanced technology, especially image stabilization, pictures come out very nice without editing.  However, in a speeding bus, train, or boat, pictures of birds and other things often result in blurs.

http://www.flickr.com/photos/9151458@N07/sets/72157633051699773/

Of course Mrs.T will be writing more about the trip.  The pictures had just a couple of the canyons; next installment will have more.  If you want to read more background, head over to Wikipedia:   http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Copper_Canyon 

And you can read the travel details of our tour at:   http://www.superiortoursvallarta.com/copcan2013.html

 

There is more to come.

And we will be back at the Summer Estate soon.

Dan and Rebecca

www.casa-de-terrible.blogspot.com

Thursday, February 7, 2013

Enjoying Life

MEXICAN NIGHTS

 

The festival has been over for a while.  We are having a turnover in renters.  Things are more or less back to normal.  Normal includes group dinners on specials nights and good-bye dinners to friends heading north. (By and large that means Canada.)  And of course normal also means shopping trips to PV by the ladies.

One night walking back from Centro, i.e. downtown Bucerias, going over the Kissing Bridge, Rebecca noted the scent in the air.  She composed a poem and story about the experience.  You will enjoy it:

 

Mexican Nights

The stars hang low against the midnight sky.

The geckos hanging upside down throw kisses. I,

Enthralled by music from a lone guitar

Drift on a road of mellow song afar

Across the world, from Mexico to you.

By Rebecca Sellers Terrible

 

Mexican nights; ah Mexican nights are sensual.  The warm breezes caress.  You walk down a quiet street in our little town, enticed by a stream of melody from a Spanish guitar.  You find yourself smiling and realize it is because you are floating in the scent of night blooming jasmine.  The stars hang so low that if you stand on tip toe you probably can pluck them.  But why do that; stars are for wishing.  In the distance you hear the heartbeat of the world as the sea advances and retreats in measured tread of the great dance. 

 

And dancing, oh Mexican nights are full of dances.  You sway with the stately progress of the angelitas who follow the Virgin's float to the church during the fiesta.  You hop and bounce with the rhythm of the Indian dances on the plaza on Sunday nights.  And, even if your feet can't do it, you heart whirls flirting with the wide skirts in the folk dances, your head held high, your Spanish eyes flashing a challenge to the vaquero who dares to share your dance.  When the dance is finished, you skip lightly home and lie down to dream Mexican dreams.

 

Here are some pictures of recent events and a few are evocative of Mrs.T's  poem and story:  http://www.flickr.com/photos/9151458@N07/sets/72157632711303970/

 

We have something very special this issue:  A guest contribution.  Recently we had a visitor in the pool and our neighbor Don wrote about the event.  Here is his description.  (Thanks Don!):

Hola everyone
     We had a little excitement around the pool today. I had just been out of the pool for about 5 minutes when Jude (Judy is Don's wife –dt) decided to go in. Just as she was going into the water I noticed this shape on the bottom of the pool. At first glance it certainly looked like a young crocodile, it sure swam like one. But very quickly I realized it was a small iguana. Of course Jude screamed and high tailed it out of the water. Rebecca come running out of her condo to see what the hell was going on and started to laugh. "Go in there and grab him," Rebecca says to me. "Who do you think I am Crocodile Dundee" I say as I am backing away from the pool. So she climbs in the pool, chases him around for a while, and finally grabs him as the rest of us cheer her on. I knew I should have brought my fishing rod. So Rebecca hands him to me and I take him over on the grass and let him go and he takes off for the high wall that surrounds our complex. Next thing I know here he is climbing up the brick wall. He gets about 6 feet up and tries to climb over some cables and he slips and down he crashes to the ground we think. So Rebecca runs over and there he is swimming around in this huge flower planter that is full of water. I guess he landed right in it. "Grab him", she says. "What do think I am -crazy" I said. He looks pretty pissed off now, and I am backing up again. "Oh you Canadians," she says and leans down and grabs him for the second time. So Rebecca lets him go and explains that every once in a while "Chion" the local cat chases the iguanas and they will run into the pool to get away. Another first for us in Bucerias. Now the question is Will Jude go back in the water? I wish I had the music for JAWS. Adios
                                                                                    Don

 

Here are a few pictures:  http://www.flickr.com/photos/9151458@N07/sets/72157632711538088/

 

Hope all of you are staying warm and dry.

Dan and Rebecca

www.casa-de-terrible.blogspot.com

 

Saturday, January 12, 2013

NOT READY FOR PRIME TIME

RETURN OF THE MUSE

No, we have not fallen off the planet or sought asylum in Mexico.  Mrs.T the resident muse has been in a distressed and depressed state for about a month.  She explains what happened below.  Thus her stories have been neglected since the beginning of December; now she is more or less back into the swing of things.  We enjoyed the usual fireworks on New Year's Eve and launched a couple of Chinese lanterns.  The first week of the year saw the departure of the first wave of Canadians and the arrival of the second group, most of whom will be here for at least a couple of months.  January first we had an unusual torrential rain.  And it has been a tad cool a few days here and there.  But we mostly have been just going about the normal business of living and enjoying life.  Here is R's latest:

 

After I broke my leg on the trip to swim with the whale sharks some of you might have wondered what I would do next.  Well the truth is I broke a rib trying to learn to paddleboard.  Actually I was able to get standing up on the paddle board four times.  And I have a picture to prove it.  Unfortunately I fell off three times, hence the broken rib.  This was not, I will admit, my most successful venture.  However looking on the bright side I did have two very nice young men trying to help me.  (Wisely I did not try to explain the physics involved. –dt)

 

It did not hurt too much at first but it kept getting worse so I went to see Dr. Victor.  Dr. Victor felt around a bit and said my rib was broken.  Dan was very pleased to hear that because he, Dan - also known as The Voodoo Doctor (long story, but TVD is usually correct on his diagnoses -dt) - had told me my rib was broken while I maintained it was just a strain.  Dr. Victor hooked me up to his machine.  It showed that in spite of the pain my blood pressure was quite low.  I have always been rather proud of my low blood pressure.  This may seem a little odd but if people can be proud of their intelligence or good looks, why can't I be proud of my blood pressure!?  You have to play the cards you are dealt, I say.  But I digress.  His machine also said that my oxygen was very low.

"Are you a smoker?" Dr. Victor asked disapprovingly.

"No," I replied.

"Did you used to smoke?" he inquired.

"No."

"Why do you think your oxygen is so low?" Dr. Victor asked.

"Because I am not breathing," I replied.

"Why are you not breathing?" he questioned.

"Because it hurts to breathe," I replied with unassailable logic.

"Well you had better start breathing more or else you will fall over and that will hurt worse!" Dr. Victor replied firmly.  Sigh!!  Our friend Daphne (We are happy you are feeling better. –dt) maintains that you get better more quickly with Dr. Victor because he gives you hugs and kisses before you go.  She quite possibly is right.

I have not yet decided whether I should try again.  I have gotten quite a bit of advice on this subject, much of it concerning acting my age (About 12, do you think? (On a good day. –dt) Or were they speaking chronologically?)  Was it Mark Twain who said if at first you don't succeed try, try, again, and then quit, there is no need to make a complete fool of yourself!?  (Actually it was William Claude Dunkenfield, aka W.C. Fields:  "If at first you don't succeed, try, try again.  Then quit.  No use being a damn fool about it."  -dt)

Moving on, I saw some therapy dogs on television and I told Dan that maybe I needed a therapy dog.  Dan, ever supportive said I could have a therapy iguana.  Well, Okay!

Paddleboarding attempts:

http://www.flickr.com/photos/9151458@N07/sets/72157632507226740/

 

Last Friday when I went diving I heard the whales singing.  We did not see them until later when we came up.  But you could hear that there were several different whales singing together.  I cannot help but wonder what they were saying.  So there I was hanging out underwater trying not to breathe - when you breathe you cannot hear the whales for your own bubbles - totally entranced!  I had the urge to sing back, but if you open your mouth your regulator would come out - not a good thing because that is what you breathe with.  Have you noticed that breathing figures heavily in all these events?  Perhaps if we could breathe osmosisically our lives would be more fulfilling.  Just a thought.

 

We were diving on the South side of the bay at a place called Majahuita.  As we prepared for our first dive a tribe of coatimundis came out of the jungle.  They climbed down on the rocks at the side of the ocean and were catching and eating crabs that were climbing up the rocks.  Coatimundis are kind of like a cross between monkeys, raccoons and anteaters.  Very neat animals.  The tide was very low and a lot of rocks were exposed.  Thank you moon!  Tomorrow perhaps I will walk on the beach.

 

We have been watching the unusual weather many of you are experiencing.  We hope you are staying warm and cozy.

 

Dan and Rebecca

www.casa-de-terrible.blogspot.com