Crazy Dave’s Weekend Adventure

A small window of opportunity opened for us this weekend and with a fresh burst of post-exam energy, we jumped through it … right into a waterfall.

 

As of Friday afternoon, David’s mad marathon of studying and tests was over (for now). So we loaded up a few jungle “jeeps” and headed into the Grenada wilderness, to Annandale Falls.

“After leaving St. George’s, follow a narrow mountain road with a steep ledge for between 5 and 10 minutes,” our trusty guidebook said.

It was right. But the treasure at the end of the drive was worth the risky ride.

We spent the day splashing around and perfecting the art of the waterfall cannonball. It was hard to say who was having more fun, the SGU kids or the local 12-year-old boys laughing at us.

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The spot is a little touristy and perfect for those who want a beautiful jungle experience without the bugs, flesh-tearing vines and creepy crawlies. The waterfall is just one short, paved walk from the parking lot. A little jungle path circles around it with saffron, mango and other spices lining your path.

The main attraction though, is the waterfall.

A few crazy Grenadians make their living jumping from the cliffs over the falls and getting shocked tourists to pay to see the death-defying feat.

Of course, Dave had to try it.

He had the jumping Grenada guys take him over the river and up the hill to their jumping rock, about four stories over the falls.

After having the guide explain to him for a good 5 minutes that his target was about the size of a small trampoline (the pool is only deep enough in the middle), the guide took the plunge.

Then it was Dave’s turn. He waved, he jumped, we screamed and he lived – emerging from the water grinning like a crazy fool.

Yep. That’s Dave!

After that, the sweet and somewhat nervous “almost-3-year-old” boy who came with us was a little more excited about jumping into the water. He said he wanted to jump in and his excited dad pointed to the safe little concrete platform we had all been leaping from. The little boy pointed too … his little finger aimed at the perilous cliffside perch David had just scaled. We all got a good laugh and I wondered what daredevils our kids will someday be with dear old Dave as a role model.

But the fun train didn’t stop at Annandale!

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Just a few miles away was Grand Etang National Wildlife preserve with Crater Lake plopped right in the middle of it.

 

Dave and I snatched a little barefooted jungle kid and trekked off into the forest path, exploring and looking for the rumored lookout. In our defense, the little jungle kid was the son of a friend who came with us and his love of mushrooms, flowers and dirt made the muddy hike a lot more fun. Maybe Dave will make a great role model after all …

It was a great day out with great friends and would have been the student’s perfect weekend if not for the BYU football game that evening. But we won’t talk about that one …

Now it’s back to the books!

Categories: Adventure, Discovering Grenada | Comments Off on Crazy Dave’s Weekend Adventure

The Gift That Just Keeps on Giving

As some of you may know, I recently attained a quarter century of existence on this earth with my sanity and all limbs intact. And while some might debate the “sanity” portion of that statement, I thought the occasion was one to celebrate. Dave did too. However, he also thought that not failing out of med school was a pretty worthy endeavor … so on my birthday I got a card, a kiss and a “see ya later” from Mr. Wonderful.

However, he wasn’t about to let 25 years slide by so easily.

So one week later, after the tests were done, he took me out to dinner.


The restaurant was the chic date night spot right on the beach suggested by all our Grenada friends. And it did not fail to impress.

Our route there, however, is something to giggle about.

We were hoping to make it to our table in time to watch the sun set over the waves.

That’s the sun setting. We aren’t anywhere near the waves.

Our buses were a little late – hey it’s Grenada, apparently they can leave whenever they want! In addition, this late laid-back bus driver decided he wanted to turn around about 1/4 mile before the end of his route. As we started turning back toward the school, we shouted a quick, “Um, excuse me!”

He stopped the bus. We walked into our sunset.

When we arrived, the place was empty except for one couple who smelled of citronella. I guess we might not have smelled as sweet, because they soon left and we had the restaurant all to ourselves. The palm trees were beautiful, the food was excellent and the company wasn’t bad either.

Soon, we were joined by a few other restaurant guests … of the mosquito variety. I suddenly realized why the people next to us had smelled so sweetly of citronella. I asked the nice waitress if she by chance had any bug spray – not normal fare for a nice restaurant. Right? They had plenty and plopped a nice bottle on the table next to the ice water.

After I finished my Jamaican Jerk Chicken and Dave finished his Bacon Wrapped Pork Medallions, the waiter brought us two scoops of SourSop ice cream – an island speciality.

Just as we were finishing, a few friends also out for a date night spotted us and offered a ride home. It was a life saver!

On the way out, the waiter slipped me a wrapped to-go bag with a little chocolate cake in it.

Happy birthday to me! I am so lucky in so many ways.


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How to flood an upstairs apartment in one easy step

Grenada’s rainstorms are legendary. And, apparently, sly. While David and I were enjoying the majesty of a few gale-force winds tonight (OK, he was studying, I was enjoying), something snuck in through our back window.

 

Yep. Those are our sheets and floor doused in a little bit of Grenada’s heavenly H2O.

This is the offending window.

Winds this time whizzed by at about 27 Kilometers Per Hour – at least that’s what the Internet said 😉

Tricky rain. We will have to watch you and your winds a little closer next time!

This video is a little old – tonight’s storm was significantly more intense. However, it gives you a little idea of what rain is like here!

Categories: Rain | 2 Comments

Caribbean Birthday Bash

After driving up a dark dirt road Thursday, we parked and I gingerly pushed side the door to a darkened apartment.

“Blaire … ? Are you there?”

As I cautiously entered the shouts began.

“Surprise!”

 

I hear my face was priceless.

On Thursday, several sweet girls from the island planned one crazy surprise party, disguising the bash as just another fun-filled  girls night.

Balloons, streamers and a whole lot of crazy fun lay behind the darkened door. For a detailed description of the awesome-ness, check out my friend Sara’s blog – TheWhitsittFiles. She was nice enough to let me pilfer her pics for this blog.

We played tons of fun games that had us giggling into the late hours of the night, including the reappearance of my favorite bridal shower game – chubby bunny. Admit it. I am hot with puffy cheeks.

It was so sweet of these girls to put so much preparation into my birthday! The night left me smiling for days.


The party night snowballed into a few days, someone made me feel extra special with well-wishes on each one.

Then came Saturday (The Big One).

I woke up at 6 a.m. with sunlight already trying to peek over the jungly mountains. On went the shoes and as the sun rose and the waves splashed on the beach, I went for an amazing run.

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After chilling at home for a bit, I donned the swimsuit and headed to the beach for some fun with friends … and the local orphan kids. From there, we went to our pal Lyndzee’s house for some BLTs and good conversation.

After lunch, I went shopping, at the request of my mother. It was a fun afternoon! This vid is for you mom 😀

Categories: Birthday, Uncategorized | 1 Comment

I Remember

I remember sitting on the small step leading down into our family room and trying to understand. An old rabbit-eared TV radiated Tom Brokaw’s voice into our family room while mom sat at the nearby computer desk, slightly ashen.

“An airplane has crashed into the second tower.”

I held my lanky 15-year old legs into my chest and realized what had just happened. People had purposely flown planes into the World Trade Center. My fellow Americans were running, covered in grey dust.

I had heard the news hours before, at 6 a.m. from the old radio in my mom’s big blue suburban as we drove to early morning seminary. She was always listening to AM talk radio and they had pulled crazy half-truth jokes in the past, so I thought this was no different. Maybe?

Class buzzed with “what if” questions and real half truths that convinced me this was no AM radio joke.

“We are at war,” they said. Or, “It’s the Russians that did it.” Or my personal favorite, “I really don’t know why you are making such a big deal about this. You people are being so overly dramatic.”

We managed to squeeze in a couple minutes of class before the teacher broke down and turned on the corner TV. His normally cheerful eyes glossed over, revealing how much us Sophomores in high school really didn’t know. I left, going back to another day of home schooling.

Then, one of the towers buckled, faltered and crashed to the ground. People ran. I slipped into my walk-in closet and prayed. Hard. On that old TV, members of Congress sang “God Bless America”, a song that I can’t hear to this day without getting a lump in my throat.

For one brief moment, Americans felt one united feeling: shock.

The days and months that followed contained a surge of patriotism and front porches peppered with American Flags. You couldn’t pass a firefighter on the street without a feeling of reverence. It was Armageddon. Our world seemed to be crumbling. While thousands of lives ended, mine went on.

In 2007, I remember standing at the gaping pit that is now Ground Zero.

Even six years later, tons of twisted metal and soot lay beneath me. Strains of “Amazing Grace” came from a flute attached to a grisly old man in a pea-green trench coat as he sat huddled against the fence. Thick around me were the spirits from those bodies that might still lay mangled beneath the rubble.  I have never been one to believe in ghosts or superstitions, but that feeling there was real, thick and palpable. Later that night, we went to dinner with my best friend’s sister – a New York native. As we sat in the old bagel shop, she said she couldn’t look up at the sky still and see an airplane without her heart beating faster, even to this day. At that little Brooklyn bagel shop, I could still see the pain she felt while watching people just like her run screaming from the Financial District on TV.

I remember looking into the eyes of a little two-year-old child on September 11th, 2002. Together, we watched the memorial services on TV.

There is no simple way to communicate the gravity of September 11th. He was one-year-old at the time that chaos came to America and all I could think was that he will never know what this day really means. Will he look at a firefighter with admiration and reverence? Will he think of the people running through the streets of New York as his fellow countrymen? How will his generation learn the true meaning of heroism, patriotism and unity? Will it take thousands of deaths to act as one nation, under God?

A more critical question is asked of us. Do we remember?

 

Categories: USA | 1 Comment

Getting Crabby

They have some funny traditions here in Grenada.

Last night, a few friends and I gathered around a circle drawn in the sand and cheered frantically for a few crabs.

On a little corner of the beach, beneath the glamour of a hotel and the beats of a bar, a few crabs go to work every Monday night at 9 p.m.

The Crab Races at the Owl was the first time I got so excited about something so anti-climactic. They place about six crabs in a metal bowl in the center of a sand-drawn ring and people place their $2 bets. When everyone has picked their favorite, the odds are announced and the bowl is tipped.

And they are off!

Last night, the first race’s crabs were named after countries. Then the next shift was named after world leaders. The odds against Obama were 6-1.

We cheer along with the British tourists for a solid five minutes until the first crab meanders his way out of the circle and the little kids on their holiday come and pick them all up by their crusty little shells.

 

We had a great time and a fun night with some great girls. Thanks for getting me out of the house ladies!

Thanks Jessica for letting me use your close up crab picture!

Categories: Crab Races, Discovering Grenada | 2 Comments

We all Struggle as Med Student Wives

Lately, I have listened to the heartache of many here who are struggling with the adjustment to med student wifery. We stare down missed dinners, anniversaries, scant time with children and painful days of homesickness and we do it with a smile.

Here is a piece I wrote for TheGraduateWife.com that could hopefully heal a few hearts. The journey to becoming a doctor is long and hard for everyone involved. Just remember that no matter how much time your husband (or wife) spends with their studies rather than you, it is no reflection on how much you are loved. I happen to know that my husband thinks I am much more exciting than a whole list of diseases 🙂 And yours does too.

Enjoy!

By Sarah Glenn

824 Words

4,530 Characters

Copyright August 2011

To be reprinted on TheGraduateWife.com only with the permission of the author.

Detours

So there I was, sitting at a cheap plywood table in Newcastle England, starting blankly into a MacBook, more than 3,000 miles away from where I wanted to be.

How did I get so far off course, you might ask? Well, pull up a chair and lend an ear. My story is one a graduate wife can appreciate.

Some of you might remember what it is like to have a great career. I can still hear the hum of the printing press and feel the thick tension in the air as I tried to get a newspaper out on deadline. As a reporter and editor for our local newspaper the days were 100 mile-per-hour marathons, both exhilarating and exhausting. Since I was a little girl I had dreamed of this career. Every extra-curricular activity, internship and my university education had been strategically designed to make me a super reporter.

In my early 20s, I had almost made it. I was an editor at the local paper. The job title, awards and offers proved that I had become a small town Lois Lane. But I was aiming higher.

Then I met my husband.

He was intelligent, ambitious, a Matt Damon look-alike, and I was in love. He was also applying for medical school.

After a year of dating and applying for schools, we were married. On our one month anniversary he was accepted to a medical program – out of the country. We would be moving once a year for the first four years of our marriage, or more if fellowships and residencies dictated.

Like a monkey wrench thrown into the cogs of a printing press, my dreams came to a grinding halt. For this next season of our lives it would either have to be his career or mine on the chopping block – we couldn’t do both. With a few tears, I carefully packed up our unopened wedding gifts, cleaned off my desk and moved to England. I doggedly looked for a job there. Anything. Sadly, there were no jobs there in newsroom administration, especially for a transient who would stick around for less than a year. This foreigner couldn’t make headway in the reporting business either – I didn’t know a bobby from a bodge.

Do you ever feel resentment for the sacrifices you have been asked to make?

My bitter tears and empty days alone in a foreign country were poison to my budding marriage. I knew I needed to find an antidote.

A wise comedian, who also found himself 3,000 miles from where he wanted to be, once said, “There are few things more liberating in this life than having your worst fear realized.” Conan O’Brien might have been speaking to graduating academics at Dartmouth, but his words resonated with me. He continues:

“I went to college with many people who prided themselves on knowing exactly who they were and exactly where they were going. At Harvard, five different guys in my class told me that they would one day be President of the United States. Four of them were later killed in motel shoot-outs. The other one briefly hosted Blues Clues, before dying senselessly in yet another motel shoot-out. Your path at 22 will not necessarily be your path at 32 or 42. One’s dream is constantly evolving, rising and falling, changing course.”

As a newly-minted graduate wife, change was my only constant and adaptation my only antidote.

Somewhere in that foreign London fog of change and hopelessness, I started trying new things. I explored. I blogged. I taught myself how to design a website. I adapted.

Fredrick Nietzsche famously said “Whatever doesn’t kill you makes you stronger.” But what he failed to stress is that it almost kills you. The loneliness, the disrupted career path and the stress in my marriage almost killed me. But for those who are stuck in the middle of that mire, I promise that on the other end of your effort there is peace.

My blank stare into that MacBook on that plywood table in that cold, dreary place turned into a journey of exploration. But only because I made it so. Conan was right – there is nothing more exhilarating than having your life flipped on its head and, through your own sheer force of will, flipping it right side up again. When you finally straighten things out, your dreams might look a little different. But because you were the one to do the changing, somehow those new dreams are alright.

Sacrifice became what I made it. It was still painful, but only as painful as I would allow it to be between the bouts of blogging and exploring.

We have survived our second move now and are tripping blissfully and blindly into year two of marriage and of his late night, blood-shot eye studying. We have learned that those who adapt, survive. I am a survivor.

 

What strategies have you found successful in your transition to a graduate wife?

Categories: Adapting, Friends, Grenada | 4 Comments

Ship it on Down the Line

In your hasty move to Grenada did you forget that little essential item? Have you ever wondered about how things are shipped here?

For your reading pleasure, here is my story.

It starts out like most others. I left something important behind in the move. A poor little iPod touch that I had ordered off Ebay before we left took its sweet time arriving in the mail. It decided to arrive at the in-laws house one day after we said goodbye.

Now, people have horror stories about shipping things to Grenada. Eg. Christmas mornings ruined because “Santa” got lost in the mail or needed items arriving on the island after months of wondering. Anecdotally, the shipping system has been proven unreliable here.

Needless to say, we were a little concerned about Pod Pod’s journey. It was an expensive item (for our little shoestring budget) and we didn’t want it getting accidentally air dropped over the Atlantic.

But the in-laws sent it anyway – tucked away in the bottom of a box, wrapped in white shirts and hope. Thankfully, everything went exactly as it was supposed to.

Here’s how the process went:

Step 1. Get the fam to get a Flat Rate Box from USPS and slap about $45 worth of postage on it. This holds about a shoebox worth of content. Pop it in the mail and say a little prayer. The prayer part is important.

Step 2. Let it bake in the shipping system for three weeks.

Step 3. The student gets a letter in their SGU mailbox saying “You’ve got mail!” Aaaaaaand you have to pick it up asap or we will charge you/ send it back.

Step 4. Take your little letter and some ID, hop on a Number 1 Reggae Bus (usually trolling around by the Food Fair grocery store) and tell the driver you want to go to the post office in St. George’s. Look for a place like this and pay the driver your $2.50 EC fare.
General Post Office, St. George's, Grenada
Step 6. Hope that the import officer is in a good mood. Bat the eyelashes if it helps. They will now make you open your box so they can rummage around inside of it. Some just peek inside. Others toss your little gifts all over the counter for everyone to see. Like I said, hope they are in a good mood.

Step 7. Pay the people and go home. We were lucky this time and were only charged $17.25 EC for the import tax. But I guess it depends on what you are sending. Food is taxed at 55 %. Ouch.

Step 8. Take your goodies, hop back on one of those crazy Number 1 Reggae buses and go home. But not before paying your $2.50 EC fare.

 

*Thanks so much for sending that iPod touch! Now I will be able to talk to you all from anywhere an internet connection is available! If you will excuse me, I have a little texting to catch up on 🙂

Categories: Shipping | Comments Off on Ship it on Down the Line

Home Means La Da Da …

If you started singing my state song before even reading this post, then you are officially a Nevadan.

This week as people toss tomatoes at each other, crave tasty ribs and hike through the sage and the pine I can’t help but feel a little home sick. So for those of my new-found friends who see slot machines the second I say Nevada, here are some of the things I love (and miss) about my home state.

1. Mount Rose

 

A quick hike in the mountain air was bliss. We lived only about 30 minutes from the various trail heads of this beauty so after work some days I would go for a walk in the pines and just breathe. Screaming down some of its edges on a mountain bike, dodging evergreens as their fresh smell flew around you, was indescribably refreshing and exhilarating. There was also noting better than having every sunset frame your playground.

2. Balloons at the Crack of Ridiculous

 

 

 

Every September 10th, flames lick the inside of hundreds of hot air balloons, sending bright orbs into the  air. As a child, I would come in my pajamas and watch the balloons fly from the window of mom’s car. As an adult, I would show up in my power suit at 4 a.m. for media day. September 10th also happens to be my birthday, so watching the huge mass of balloons float into the sky with the sunrise gained sentimental value. I will be watching the sunrise this year just to watch a glowing orb for my birthday.

3. Fireworks With the Fam

 

For as long as I can remember, we have gathered with friends and family on a little spit of grass on July 4th and watched pyrotechnics spit out of the top of Sparks’ two tallest buildings. Yes, it is a hotel/casino.

4. Tomato Fight!!!!

When David and I began dating, he took me to this:

La Tomatina en Reno 2010 August 28 - 29.
We chucked tomatoes at each other and totally ruined our clothes, then went down to the Truckee River for a rinse. You will be happy to know that is the last time I hurled rotten fruit at my husband. I am frankly a little sad about the missed the opportunity this year though.

5. Summertime Barbecue

 Sparks, Nev. hosts one of the world’s largest rib cook-offs every Labor Day weekend. About 24 award winning rib cookers from across the country fire up their grills below billowing tents. The ribs, roasted corn, funnel cake and fun tempt more than half a million people into the streets.  It is sweet, juicy mayhem. For almost a week, the sweet smell of barbecue sauce and summer fun would float through my office just a block away. You can take a wild guess what I ate for lunch that week … and how many pounds I packed on.  The last summer I was home, the Gin Blossoms played at the free concert. Ahhh, summer.

6. The Family I call my friends and the friends I know as family.

 

* And so many others!
What are some things that you love about your hometown?
Categories: Home, Uncategorized | Comments Off on Home Means La Da Da …

A Harrowing Hike

I came home muddy, bruised, and with enough gusto to take on the world!

I cleaned myself up, vacuumed the house, ran to get some Benadryl cream for the bug bites and when I picked up the laundry hamper, it hit. The adrenaline rush was gone and I hit the bed with a thud.

Looking back on the morning’s events, I am surprised I didn’t pass out sooner.

We started at the base of Concord falls, the jungle stretching before us and an hour long car ride behind us. We had all heard about Grenada’s beautiful jungles and bright eyed and bushy tailed, were ready to see the majesty for ourselves.

What you see behind us is Concord Falls. We would be hiking to Fontainebleu Falls or Aux Coin Falls – depending on which fork in the road we took.  The hike itself was supposed to take about 30 minutes and
cross a little river about 5 or 6 times.

It was unlike anything I had ever done. We slugged through mud and muck and overgrowth and for once I envied the machetes  the locals carry around.

After trudging through our last 100 yards of what seemed like uncharted territory, we found it. A waterfall!

We weren’t sure if this was the waterfall the girls had been to before, but it was beautiful anyway. We jumped in and swam in the ice cold pool beneath the falls, perfecting the art of the log-jump belly flop and having a grand old time.

Then, it started to rain.

Now rain in Grenada is something peculiar. At our little apartment homes near the city, the heavens pour down havoc on you for five or ten minutes, then in the next instant the skies are clear again.

But we were in the rainforest and this rain was different.

It poured down buckets for a solid 15 minutes while we watched the water level in the little pool rise.  By that time, we were getting worried. After a few more flops, we packed up our soaked things and headed back down the trail.

The little puddles of mud we had splashed through before became streams and the streams we had passed through became rushing rivers. This is where the photographic evidence disappears. We were a little preoccupied with getting back, and besides everything was soaked to the core.

We managed to cross the river twice successfully but it was obvious the water had risen and we had at least three more crossings ahead of us. The third crossing was when we started to pray. Hard.

With water up to our waists and the rapids coursing off rocks that were once our stepping stones, we got a few people across, myself included. Two girls stood braced against opposite sides of the banks to hopefully “hand off” the crossing girl. When one of our friends tried to go, she lost her footing and the rapids swept her feet out from under her.

A hand whipped out and grabbed the floating girl by her book bag, eventually  grasping her left hand. Another girl braced against the bank and caught her right hand. For a moment we formed a human chain, one person grabbing the arm of another while the rapids yanked at one of our friends. She was stretched face up with arms overhead and feet being pulled down stream. With everyone helping, we pulled her safely back into shore.

That’s when we went for help.

After hiking back for about 10 minutes, I met three local trail guides who had come looking for us. They were an answer to prayer. The men braced themselves in the rapids and handed us across safely.

Then began our jungle trek back.

Rather than cross the river again via the marked path, we took the back way home – through the overgrown jungle. We climbed onto the vertical face of the mountain next to the river. Hanging from vines and clinging to undergrowth, we slowly made our way back to the clearing, ankles straining against the incline.

When we arrived safely back at the parking lot we were muddy, exhilarated and wet with our only casualty being a ripped book bag. I am so thankful to my Heavenly Father that the damage wasn’t worse.

While this was by far the craziest and most amazing adventure I have been on since coming to Grenada, I want Cat to know how thankful we are that she is alright. You should get to know this amazing girl by visiting her website www.budgetblonde.com. I look forward to getting to know her better and enjoying many more adventures in Grenada!

However, next time, we are taking a guide.

Now, I am taking a nap.

*Thanks to those who let me steal their pictures off Facebook for this blog!

Categories: Adventure, Concord Falls, Discovering Grenada | 5 Comments