Wednesday


21
Jan 15

My good, delayed, fortune

We don’t eat Chinese terribly often, but the nice lady that runs our favorite restaurant knows us. She knows where we work and our names and, on the phone, when we tell her our orders, she says “Oh hi, Mr. Smith.” Because we are predictable. Also because she has an amazing capacity for knowing her clientele.

I noticed that we developed another little habit, one I doubt she knows. The last two times we’ve ordered takeout from there we did not eat our fortune cookies. We have four on a countertop, 2014 fortune cookies. I tried two tonight, thinking they might have gone stale, but was pleased to learn the manufacturer is using industrial grade cellophane.

This brings up a question. We all agree that the fortunes don’t apply to the person that puts them in the cookie, or just on the day they are placed there. (What? Your fortunes aren’t handwritten? One of us is doing this wrong.) Do they apply only on the day that they are given and purchased? What if I wait several days, or weeks, before I enjoy them?

I ask because of the four I could choose from tonight, these are the two fortunes I got, in sequence.

That has to mean something, right?

I choose to view this as a good thing.


14
Jan 15

Seeing St. Kitts

Late last night our St. Kitts plans fell through. We couldn’t find anything else we were interested in near midnight — some other things had shut down, too. Hey, not every stop can be your best stop.

We did get a magnet for the refrigerator, however.

St. Kitts has Basseterre Circus, a smaller, Caribbean version of Picadilly. They also have a Big Ben, a four-sided, cast iron clock in the center square:

Big Ben

My best girl, at dinner:

The Yankee


7
Jan 15

Touring Aruba

We got off the Eclipse and took a bus out to the famed California lighthouse on the far Aruban shore. It was built between 1914-1916. Topping out at 100 feet, the stone was quarried on the island. The lighthouse is named after this part of the island, which was named after a 1910 shipwreck. The SS California was traveling from Liverpool to Central America and people on board were having a party when the ship ran aground at midnight. The next day the locals saw the damage and waded out to pick up the vessel’s cargo: merchandise, furniture, clothes and other provisions. They took it all down to Oranjestad to sell it. And now there’s the famous lighthouse:

California Lighthouse

Anybody can show you the sharp, focused picture. It seems more daring to take a fuzzy shot as iconography.

The bus didn’t come back to pick us up. A different, entirely random bus, with the business model of picking up stranded tourists, did the job.

We got back to the cruise ship, hired Lisette, a wonderful and sweet taxi driver:

Lisette

And she gave us a great tour with views of the island we otherwise would have never, ever seen. Lisette told us all about the demographics and much of the history and the current government and even the natural remedies that Arubans use. She took us to her brother’s house so we could see iguanas. Our 90-minute tour turned into an almost three-hour experience. You’d be hard-pressed to find someone who loves their home more than she does. It was a treat to see it with her.

She showed us all the good spots, like this inlet:

shoreline

That’s between the Bushiribana ruins — once a gold smelter used to extract gold from the nearby hills — and what was formerly the premiere tourist attraction, the now-fallen Natural Bridge, which collapsed in 2005.

Just down from there was a rock beach where people build miniature rock cairns. It is a long, wide stretch of shoreline filled with the hopes and dreams and whimsy of a great many people. I built one, the first one I’ve ever made.

rocks

Most peaceful, at ease moment you could imagine.

Our day in Aruba:


31
Dec 14

Happy New Year

Us

We went downtown, listening to the cars hum by and the parties going on across the street and watching the fire trucks head off to a call. We shivered. We stomped our feet. We met with friends and made a new friend. We shivered some more. We stood out there for almost an hour, enjoying a clear, cold, regular night, staring at the time and the temperature on the bank clock on the opposite corner. We took pictures and wished each other well.

It was, hopefully, the start of something, the “See ya later, 2014. I’m headed to Toomer’s!” tradition. It seems a fitting way to end a year, to revel in it, celebrate it, push it away, whatever you want to do with it. And it is as fine a place as any to offer people you care the sincerest of happy new year wishes.

To the 11,000+ visitors and several thousand more subscribers of this little corner of the web, I wish you peace, prosperity, love and fulfillment in this next orbit around the sun.

Us


24
Dec 14

Hark! And joy!

music