In Defense of Social Media

I love community. When I am surrounded by people who “get me” I am happiest.

As a full-time traveler it’s hard to find community when the landscape and the people within it are constantly changing.

It was a very social time when we lived in Mexico over the winter. Drinks with these friends, movies with those, and large dinner parties at our house. These were all new friends, but people that we shared something with, and a community was born.

The balance of this year we have been moving every month or so making finding community harder. At these times you will find me sharing ideas and experiences on social media at, what my husband finds to be, a startling clip. I want the feeling of being surrounded by people who “get me” even though I am thousands of miles away.

When we are in a place for only a few weeks, we meet people all the time. We meet them at a bar, share a meal, give someone a ride home from the ruins, or share the drive to Campeche. Though we may only be together for a few hours, the bud of friendship grows. And happily, social media allows us to continue to cultivate even those brief encounters into friendships.

I share a sense of humor with Sara from Malta. Sara and I met awkwardly trying to pass each other on the sidewalk near Birgu. She, a European tried to pass me on the right, and me, an American tried to pass her on the left. This resulted in spontaneous dance, a dinner invitation any many glasses of wine.

I share, politics with Seattle Steve in Merida, a need to serve others with Peg from South Carolina, continued goofiness with George the Serb, now from Canada.

And happily, I touch base with most of them regularly.

I wish that during our first circumnavigation of the globe 30 years ago, Facebook, Instagram and other platforms had been around. But of course there was no internet at all then. If there had been, I would have been able to remain in touch with some remarkable people.

People like the young American man, his name now lost, whose mother had served as ambassador to Morocco. He grew up in Casablanca straddling two distinct cultures, spoke Arabic fluently, and was not only a great guy, but a handy travel companion in that part of the world.

Sharon and Phil, an Australian couple who were staying at the thatched palapa next to us on the beach in Tonga. We had all been recently married and explored the island of Tongatapu together. They were avid surfers disappointed in the surf. We were wide-eyed travelers marveling at the still unique Melanesian island culture, uneasily blended with sari-wearing Indian merchants.

Fatima, a teenaged girl I would meet on our roof in Marrakesh overlooking the medina. Though we did not share a language, we were joined by the love for a small abandoned kitten we nurtured together there on the roof.

Marcus, a young German who had lost his mother as a young child and then, at 22, his father. Alone in the world with a small inheritance, he had been traveling for a year and was notorious for how little he spent. He could eat, sleep and play for less than $8 a day, a tiny sum even 30 years ago.

The Garlic People who lived next to us in Maymyo (now Pyin Oo Lwin). The Garlic People had been on the road for four years back in 1985. They ate multiple garlic pods – not the cloves, whole pods – daily as a preventative health regime. This practice filled any space they occupied with a pungent odor, announcing their presence. Mrs. Garlic taught me the importance of buying toilet tissue and always having a pocketful. Incredibly, two months into our trip I had not yet figured this out…

If there had been social media platforms back then I would not have lost touch with these people and a budding friendship may have been allowed to blossom. Incredibly, their faces and voices are still with me. Though the focus and volume are diminishing.

Is there a difference between friendship on-line and other types of friendship? Well, of course.  Are they any less real or valuable? Work friendships may be different from childhood or school friends. Friendships with neighbors may be different from faith community friends. Friendships with relatives are often a different type of friendship.

But in this world where connecting is fragile, involves accepting risk, is often difficult and is always precious, aren’t all types of friends worth cultivating?

Oh yes. Oh my, yes.

 

 

The Lost Blog: Birgu and Valletta

“When you travelled to America, Sieħbi,” I asked, “what percentage of the Americans you met knew where Malta is?”

“None”, he answered. “And when I went to Canada last year, they said ‘Malta? Why, isn’t that just a bunch of rocks in the Mediterranean.’ ”

Maybe. But what a beautiful stack of rocks it is.

Fortresses, cathedrals, fountains and palms rising above the clear Mediterranean dotted with sail boats and water taxis. And yachts. Lots of yachts. Huge modern sailing ships and sleek floating palaces.

imageThe Martha Ann is docked here waiting for her next charter. To charter the Martha Ann will cost you $575,000 a week. You will have room for 13 friends. The 22 crew members are included, but the cost of food and drink are not.

Along with yachts come seaside restaurants and bars that cater to the sailing crowd. And those like us who come to watch the sun set behind the masts and the streets of Isla, the peninsula to our west.

We caught a water taxi over to Valletta, the capitol of Malta. From the dock we took the elevator up to the city rather than walking the five stories to the top. Set into the cliffs and with a magnificent view from just about every street along St. John’s square, this exotic and lovely city was a great place to sit and sip an Aperol spritzer and people watch.

And after a meal of thin pasta packets stuffed with gorgonzola cheese and served over pistachios with a sweet brown sauce, I wandered the smaller streets and found a button and lace shop and a spice shop.

Valletta looks like Bagdad (so says my Iraqi friend Israa).

This is mainly due to the Mashrabiya windows that adorn many of the buildings. imageThese Arabic bay windows are cantilevered over the street and allow occupants to see what is happening on the streets below without themselves being seen. Painted a variety of colors, adorned differently and found at varying heights on each building, they add a great deal of interest to the street scape.

Malta’s film industry is strong. It stands in for many currently unsafe middle east countries and both films and television shows are made here. A few Game of Thrones episodes were filmed here along with a Colin Firth film and at least six other films in the past year.

Using the seclusion of the bottom of a cliff and bringing in sets built on barges and positioned just so, there is currently a film being made that is set in Turkey. From the water taxi we could see the Turkish flag hanging and uniformed 1940s Turkish guards drinking from their modern plastic water bottles as they waited between takes.

But Malta is not all yachts, film and Mashrabiya.

A few days ago we went to Birgu Fest. This is when the mediaeval streets of the city of Birgu are lit with candles only. Street lights are turned off, and every building is adorned with white or red candles inside set in lines at eye level in every alley and crook in the village.

Ron and I wandered the alleys early in the evening when the sky was still a deep, royal blue. The alleys were still visible in the dusk light and the effect was transforming. Candles hung from every wall in long curving lines. They hung just above our heads filling the streets with floating fairy lights. They adorned every doorway and many interiors.

imageMagical.

Families also leave their normally shuttered windows wide open to show off the beauty of their homes lit in elaborate decorative candlelight.

We are not talking about a few lovely candelabra on the dining table. These are candle tableaus used to illustrate the personality of the owner.

Sadly, my camera is not the best for low light, so I don’t have crisp photos. But I hope these give you some idea.

imageHere is one where an owner has created a red river through her living room.

imageAnd another where the eight point Maltese star is the focus.

imageAnd finally a set of stairs that send a welcome message.

Later in the evening the crowds arrived. In mass. “Mardi gras”, said Ron (our private term for “too many people”) and we retreated to our apartment for an hour of rest and to listen to the ethnic Maltese music from our balcony window.

Later, around 11:00, I went out again on my own. Most of the crowds had gone home, many to put the children down and to put up tired feet. I had the alleys all to myself.

The candles were still burning, still creating a fairy world among the ancient stone buildings.

After strolling for a few minutes in the glowing quiet I watched as another woman stopped and sat on a step, quietly absorbing the beauty.

I followed suit, finding my own alley where the silent glow of candlelight illuminated something inside of me. Something quiet. Something soft.

Something simply magical.

Dwerja, GPS, Game of Thrones and the Correct Usage of Awesome

Ron and I recently traveled to Dwerja on the west coast of Gozo. As an oval shaped island only 8 miles in length and about 4 miles across, Ron prefers to “feel his way” driving around the tiny island.

On the other hand, I am a deep and grateful devotee to my GPS, who I call Señor GooGEL. This is the name I gratefully dubbed Google Maps after being saved from being repeatedly lost last winter in the streets of Merida.

This navigational difference between us has been the source of many spirited “discussions” while traveling. Ron actually prefers a spiral approach when navigating toward a goal while I prefer to turn on the map, enter the destination and drive to it.

Ron loves the many cul-de-sacs, alleys and spectacular beaches where we accidentally find ourselves. He is so ADAMANT about NOT using GPS that we spend many hours, driving in a manner we recently named Pin-ball Navigation.

Startled locals who find us lost outside their homes act as “flippers” sending us careening along another route. I have met several lovely people this way including an older Maltese man who spent 1952 in Detroit. I met him walking behind the car while Ron attempted to back it up in an impossible alley. To the Maltese man’s young grandchildren, Kansas was an exotic place.

“Oh….Kansas…..”, they said dreamily with a look in their eyes like I would have for, well, Malta.

Only Ron has mastered right-hand drive, left-hand 5 speed shifting and the hell-no-not-gonna-roll-back upward hill clutch-to-first maneuver. This always leaves me (white knuckled) in the passenger seat.

Side note: You can always spot the Americans and Germans driving on the island because they are the ones signaling every turn with their wind shield wipers.

Gozo is a particular pin-ball navigational challenge as all roads lead to Rabat, the largest city on the island. Rabat is located in the interior of this tiny island. Which means if you are at a beach on the far northern side of the island and wish to visit a beach just in the next cove, you may need to drive inland back to Rabat and then catch the road to Whatever-it-Is-Cove.

That is unless you are willing to skip the GPS and try the most tooth cracking, stomach churning, crater-laden roads on the face of the planet. And still perhaps not even reach your goal in the end.

We have done this. Repeatedly. I would say our success rate at actually reaching our goal though pin-ball navigation is probably 40%. Most certainly, Ron would say 90%.

Many, many times this type of navigation takes us to a shockingly gorgeous place like this.

image

Marsalforn

Other times it has us backing up a quarter mile in an alley like this. And meeting lovely Maltese people.

image

Way cool Mini tempting us down an alley…

Let me just say, Ron’s style of gut-navigation was born in the logical grids of New York City, and further matured on the again logical grids of Kansas City. With a couple of completely illogical cartographical stops in Boston (horses-can-go-where-no-car-ever-should) and New Orleans (uptown, downtown, lake side, river side, WTF).

So after spending two hours making a 7 mile drive (just sayin’), we finally arrived in Dwerja. One of us was irritated and frustrated, yelling at signs, or the lack thereof.

It was not me. I secretly had the GPS on.

The Azure Window is the top tourist site in all of Gozo. These towering rocks are made of soft Maltese limestone called Globigerina (Go ahead…try and say THAT one aloud. Then hope you can work it into casual conversation).

Water has hewn this soft rock into an enormous bridge rising from the deep blue waters and bathed every minute by stunning turquoise waves.

It is AWESOME.

Finally a time when this much-maligned adjective is truly required. This place inspires awe. Lots of it.

As if the geological formations were not enough, everywhere we walked was laden with fossils. Ancient mollusks baked into the rock by millennia of hot sun, water pressure and mystery.

image

Fossils, fossils, everywhere!

As I walked along the water’s edge accompanied by a large representation of Europe’s travelling public, I overheard a British couple ask “should we be permitted to walk on all these fossils?”

I thought about this with some alarm.

But when I returned to our house in Qala, I noticed them in the pavers along-side the pool.

Fossils are everywhere.

The fossils in Dwerja are from the Miocene period, 7-23 million years ago. And they are built into flooring, quarried into stone for the housing and pavers for streets and sidewalks.

When you visit Dwerja, because you surely must, be certain to wear your hiking shoes. No one else will be wearing them and you can escape the crowds this way. The rock along the sea varies from bubbly black spikes with nary a place to put your foot down to flat expansive ancient coral laced apricot stone.

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The black rocks make footing difficult.

But here’s the thing, the black bubbly stuff is REALLY hard to walk on. So if you are wearing your hiking shoes and are at least part goat (as I am) you may find yourself on an amazing outcropping overlooking the sea. But please understand that by standing there you are likely to become someone else’s goal.

“Look, that looks awesome. Let’s go over there where that lady is.”

And when the others finally get to where you are, wearing their sandals, the fact that there is only a one foot space to stand on, and YOU are already standing on it, this will not deter them from joining you. Because they STRUGGLED to get there. And they brought little Dieter WITH THEM.

So now you are helping a 6-year-old in a place where no 6-year-old should ever be. Or their stupid parent. All because you were standing there in your hiking boots when they looked at the horizon.

Dwejra, which in Maltese means ‘a small house’, got its name from a small house that was built above the bay. The house was originally built in 1651 and used to protect a lonely soul sent there by the Knights of Saint John to watch the sea.

He would no longer be lonely today as just about everyone who visits Gozo also visits the Azure Window. So to escape the crowds, you are going to want to walk south along the coast toward Fungus Rock.

image

Awesome…

Fungus Rock, a 400 foot high rock is so called because of a plant, cleverly called Maltese Fungus, discovered by a commander of the Knights of St. John.

This rare flowering plant was highly prized by the Knights. They believed, erroneously, that it had medicinal properties. They used it both to dress wounds and as a cure for dysentery.

While Fungus Rock does not seem to be in any jeopardy, the soft rock of the Azure Window arch is disintegrating. Pieces of rock have fallen from the underside of the arch several times over the past decade changing the shape from nearly rectangular, thus the original window name, to more of an arch today.

How much longer the arch will last depends upon who you ask, tourist boards or geologists. Their answers range in years from single to triple digits. In April 2012 a huge chunk fell from the arch. People now are warned by signs not to cross the arch itself. But the signs are largely ignored.

image

Azure Window

Not by me. Though this would be a very interesting way to bite the bullet.

“Oh my gawd! Did you hear about Sara? She was walking a natural limestone bridge 350 feet above the Mediterranean Sea in Gozo and the whole damned thing collapsed taking her right with it”.

No thank you.

The Azure Window has been featured in many films including Clash of the Titans (1981) and The Count of Monte Cristo (2002).

It was also featured in HBO’s TV series Game of Thrones. You can find places all over Malta where Game of Thrones has been filmed. In fact, there are locals who will take you around to show you all the filming locations, for a fee.

I learned that HBO skipped the country in the dead of the night and has not returned after one particular scene resulted in an environmental controversy. A protected and unique ecosystem was irrevocably damaged in Dwerja.

Apparently the director wanted a sandy beach while many Maltese and Gozitan beaches are pebble-y. A crew laid crushed stone on top of the rock to simulate sand. But they used a permeable sheeting between the original rock and the crushed stone. The crushed stone permeated through the sheeting, bonded with the rock below and obliterated a micro-ecosystem unique to this location.

Cue HBO: sneak out of Malta with Maltese environmental officials hot on their tails.

Game of Thrones fans: when you watch the story of Daenerys being sold into marriage with Khal Drogo, now you know what actually happened here.

In case it ever comes up in casual conversation.

Domestic Issues, Part One

Like it or not, when traveling long term, domestic tasks still need to be addressed.

There are fun ones like grocery shopping and ones that are less fun. Like where do I dispose of this stinking, rotting bag of trash?

And then there is cooking, sometimes fun, other times less than fun. And bill paying, never fun. And laundry, usually interesting in the least (See “Not Travelling”.).

Let’s start with grocery shopping.

I used to be the sort of cook who decided what meals to make (chicken pie today?) and then went to the store to find all the ingredients. Not any more.

Now I go to the store, find something that either looks fresh. Or, more simply, I can recognize what it is.

Packaged foods can be tricky. In many places, like Portugal, the only way I knew the identity of some packaged food was from the picture on the front. But I recently learned NOT to trust the pictures.

For instance, as a non-Italian speaker, I assumed that this was a package of sugar cubes thinking surely Suerte had something to do with sweet. And look, there’s a sugar cube right there on the front!

image(Of course, using this logic, this might also be a box of cups…)

Today I opened the package only to learn that it was coffee. Which was fabulous because we ran out of coffee today. See how mistakes can end up becoming nice surprises?

Speaking of coffee, we have had a very interesting time travelling as devoted coffee drinkers. We have used many brewing devices. Including a French press, three different types of Italian stove-top espresso makers, a Kurig-y thing. And a percolator.

They all worked fine. Except the percolator. It tried to kill me.

The first morning here in Gozo I made a pot of coffee in the percolator. My parents always used one so I nostalgically enjoyed the familiar sound of the coffee bouncing in the lid, watching it gradually turn dark brown through that glass thingy.

But sadly, the dark brown color was a ruse. For folks who usually like their coffee to stand up and salute them before they take the first sip, this coffee was weak.

I must have said this out loud and offended the appliance. Because on our second morning in Gozo, the percolator tried to kill me.

I awoke early, made the coffee, and plugged the percolator in. Suddenly there was a pop, a current ran through my body (adding an extra lub and dub to my heart) and all the electricity in the house went out.

As any mature 60 year old woman would do, I ran upstairs and sobbed at Ron. And I mean AT him. He had been sleeping. But was awakened by my howling and whimpering. He suggested that I climb back into bed so that he could comfort me. But for some reason, I needed to remain standing.

Probably to show that percolator that it would take a lot more than a shock to knock me down.

I regained control of myself and remembered the most important thing. We have a gas stove. I could still make coffee. And that I was still alive.

imageSo yesterday and today I made cowboy coffee. Delicious but ever so messy. Today I plan to go to Rabat to buy some sort of coffee maker. Or at least a filter.

The Duke is the big shopping center in Rabat, Gozo. I can handle shopping there since the second official language of Malta is English. I usually have some idea of what I am buying. (Except, apparently, coffee).

Last time we went to The Duke, I came away with gorgeous peppers to stuff, a ton of antipasto from the deli department, lovely English jams and Maltese cheese. And bath soap.

That last one was quite a coup. Bar soap is located internationally in the oddest places. Like next to the peanut butter or under the lemons or some other place that makes sense to Maltese or Portuguese but none whatsoever to me.

Here is one thing that I did NOT buy at The Duke.

image

No, thank you.

I have tried fresh octopus several times and I am not a fan. Canned octopus does not appeal. At. All.

image

Brrrrr…

I did, however, buy some chilly powder.

image

And some integrated eggs.

imageI also bought lots of different salamis and sausages, olives, and pickled seafood (no, not the octopus).

Before shopping, Ron and I decided to have lunch. Saves a bit of money (the pictures on all the cookies look delicious!)

But it was a bit disconcerting to eat my sandwich at the second floor cafe while looking through the glass floor at the meat department below.

image

Seriously. Who thought this was a good idea?

So we shopped, brought the stuff home and now are trying to eat at least a few meals at the house each week.

Our current kitchen in Gozo is large and reasonably well equipped. Not the one in Birgu.

Personally, I find it so much easier to cook when you can stand up straight in the kitchen. Maltese people are usually small, medieval ceilings are low and our house in Birgu required frequent performance of what we are calling “The Maltese Dip” while moving around. It was difficult to pay full attention to the task of cooking whilst banging your head on the ceiling/cabinets/light fixtures.

As I said, our kitchen is reasonably well equipped. But there is one item in the kitchen that baffles me.

image   Here it is hanging on the wall.

image   And here it is a close up.

I’m too scared to taste it. (Hey, I almost percolated to death yesterday.)

What do you think it is?

I’ll let you know the consensus in Domestic Issues, Part Two.

So I Took A Pain Pill And Went Out To Lunch

So I took a pain pill and went out to lunch.

Let me explain.

Suddenly, my feet have been announcing themselves. Like, “HERE WE ARE!”

Ignored for 60 years, they suddenly are like the middle child of appendages. Any attention will be fine. Even negative.

After two days of paying WAAAAY too much attention to them. (“Yes I KNOW you are there. And I also know you miss your hiking boots, sweetie. But, it’s hot here in Malta. And I’m hot.  Trust me, so will you be. We NEED to wear our sandals, OK? And we have our supportive sandals, isn’t that fun?!”)

And then, like bratty children, no matter how I cajole and empathize, they act out and ache for days. Little shits.

And and I don’t want to be in a situation to see how yet another country has remarkably better health care than my own. That is SO depressing. American healthcare is great for gunshot wounds. Very good. In fact, we LEAD THE WORLD* in gunshot wound care. We are VERY experienced.

Anyway, turns out my feet are are swollen and aching because of edema and because Malta is humid. (Or I have heart, liver or kidney failure and this will be my last post.)There’s not much I can do to treat it except keep my feel elevated, reduce salt and wait for my body to acclimatize.

In the meantime, my rings don’t fit, only my hiking boots fit (don’t get excited, bratty feet) and one pair of adjustable sandals.

But I’m in freakin’ Malta. I’ve gotta walk. There are views to see, restaurants to try and old stone forts and architecture everywhere.

Walk. We. Must.

So I took a pain pill and went out to lunch. I wanted to see if, once stoned, my feet would let me walk on them and be like, “hey, no worries, dude. Whatever…”.

I wanted to learn if I would still be able to function. Or at least enjoy my dis-functionality.

As it turned out, it was kinda both. My feet remained swollen but ached less. And I cared less. Win-win.

So I left Ron back in the apartment and walked to the harbor. Holy crap! The boats in this marina are crazy huge. The kind of boats, like the Martha Ann, that cost $575,000 a week to charter. (Look up Yacht Martha Ann on You Tube…)

The Martha Ann

The Martha Ann

Your charter fee includes sleeping for 12, though it forces you to select your least favorite two friends and put them in funky pull out beds (hey, what do you expect for half a mil?!).

It comes with a crew of 22 who do everything to sail the floating mansion, clean, cook and look after you and your 10 favorite and 2 least favorite friends. But the cost of food and drink is on you.

And if you are cruising on the Martha Ann, I don’t think Pringles and Fanta will keep your guests happy.

Later, Ron, (another) Sara, David and I met a few crew members from the Martha Ann. They were both very nice young women and had been working on the boat for three years. One was head of housekeeping and the other was a bookkeeper. They sailed all over the Mediterranean, Caribbean and even back to the States where the owner lived.

It seemed like a fabulous life and something I might have enjoyed in my 20s-30s.**

Until they told us the long and sad story of another crew and the owner’s witchy wife who could never be satisfied (…get your head out of the gutter. I’m talking standards here…) and made the cruising a living hell. I shook my head in empathetic agreement but thought, “Yup, life. Bad bosses happen on both land and sea”.

Now, October, the boat is slated for dry dock and maintenance. So these young women had a couple of months off. Malta’s airport, home of many discount airlines, was beconing them to Europe.

Anyway. We were talking about lunch, right?

I learned a bit at this lunch during which I stared slack-jawed at the world on a side-walk cafe.

1. Just because you CAN get it zipped does not mean you should wear it. Seriously.
2. It is easy to pick out Italian women. They are the ones in the four inch stilettos and PULLING IT OFF.
3. Caio-caio is like buh-bye. Seriously. That’s a thing.
4. It is easy to pick out the Brits. They are in the big, floppy hats wearing sensible shoes.
5. And it is easy to pick out the Americans. They are the ones with the hot pick wrist bands with laminated name tags hung on lanyards around their ample necks. They are following a small woman holding up a bright pin wheel on a tall stick.

Sigh. They are the cruisers.

People, people, people. If you are reading this blog it’s either because you know me and want to follow how my usually ridiculous behavior plays in other places. Or, you are an older traveler and you are curious about independent traveling.

Cruising is not independent travel. It saddens me that Americans are so afraid (PETRIFIED!) of the rest of the world that they need the protection of 4000 other Americans and a 200,000 ton boat.

Second sigh. Oh well, to each her own.

Personally, I would rather stagger along the harbor (um, feet are SORE, remember?) meeting locals by asking directions and when suddenly they decide to simply walk me to my destination, chatting the whole way, bonus!

Because people are generally nice. And gracious. And happy to show you their little beautiful part of this great big wonderful world.

*I totally made this statistic up. But it sounds logical, right?

** Johnston offspring: do not look up super-yacht crew.com, learn about training and certification for becoming a yacht crew member.

Not Traveling

Not traveling is a skill. It is acquired slowly, usually by traveling.

When you are not traveling, you are simply living. Although, you are simply living in a place that is not where you have ever lived, not where you worked, not where you raised your family.

Most often, it is a place that is totally new to you.

You are not rushing to see The Sights, to eat at The Best Places, to shop at The In Spots.

Right now, I am not traveling in Lisbon, Portugal. I am waking at 10:00, drinking coffee until 12:00 in an apartment on the third floor above a French bakery.

I am right across the street from the Museum of Antiquities. Though I have been here for 10 days, I have not yet been to this museum. In part, that is because I am not travelling. Instead, I am grocery shopping, doing my laundry, napping, reading and living in this apartment.

I am living. Not traveling.

Sometimes living can be tedious. Not traveling is rarely tedious.

This is because even the simple things, the grocery shopping, the laundry are adventures.

“How do I buy cheese here?” The cheese is all room temperature, displayed on the counter and it smells like Ron’s socks after tennis.
“How do I do laundry here?” The machine is so different, the loads so small.
“How do I cook dinner?” The pots are so large, the burner is so hot, the spices left for me in this cabinet are so fragrant.

When you are not traveling, it is best to take your cue from the locals. If the shops and restaurants close at 3:30 and reopen at 8:00, it is best for you to head on home at 3:30, take your nap, do your reading and writing and then come back out into the city center at 8:00.

Don’t try buying sunscreen at 4:00.

The only way you can enjoy not traveling, is to stay in a place for not less that two weeks. If you stay less than this amount of time, you will feel the pressure to SEE ALL THOSE sights. You may forget the importance of napping (this is an important skill).


Ron enjoys the recent eclipse.

Ron enjoys the recent eclipse.

And you may feel pressure and stress. This is bad. The best thing about not traveling is that there is very little pressure or stress. You have plenty of time.

Time to read, time to stare, time to think.

Next to reading, thinking and staring are my favorite things. It was the gift of not traveling that taught me to take a pillow and stool on to my tiny balcony and stare out on the plaza for an hour.

I have no schedule, no place to be, no plans.

After a lifetime of planning – career, financial, familial – having no daily plans is the best part of not traveling.

I want to see Sintra. I want to go the the beach in the fall. I’m not sure when these things will happen. Or if they will happen. Most likely they will, but if they do not it is OK.

I am not traveling. I am living.

That Twinkle

Apparently, walking the back roads of Galway during the evening implies a deep knowledge of the countryside.

It was my first evening in Ireland and I needed to stay awake just a few more hours to reset my body clock. I’d been awake for over 30 hours. So I took a short stroll in the cool air.

Marveling at the thick purple and red fuchsia in bloom everywhere and highlighted by the long evening light, I was stopped by two lost drivers. And one comedian.

Most were people about my own age with thick brogues. But for the clear tone of questioning that ended each statement, I had no clue what was being said other than it was indeed a question.

And that rising end tone told me that I should respond. The first time I was stopped for directions, I replied that I had been in the country just short of ten hours and that “not only can I not help you, I also have no idea where I am right now or how to get back to where I started”.

This answer was met by a great flashing smile, and a hearty laugh both from the driver and his passenger in the back seat.

“I can see you’re not good for much help all”, he grinned.
“I suppose not”, I replied.

The second time I was stopped I held up my palm, and told the driver straight off that I had no idea where I was let alone where they might be going. Again, this had us both laughing right away.

The third time a car stopped, it was the man who had been directly behind the second driver who had stopped me. Seeing my shrug, palm and smile to the driver in front, he offered to give me directions “anywhere in Tonabrucky” so I could better help the next person who stopped to ask.

My third good laugh in mere 10 minutes. Welcome to Ireland.

That evening I learned that my sense of humor, a deeply important trait that has pulled me though many an adverse occasion was born right here in Ireland. Born here and handed down from mother to daughter, for five generations.

Playful, self-deprecating, ornery, these are all parts of my own sense of humor and were easily shared with most of the Irish folks I met. Perhaps, our great, great, great grandmothers had been the closest of pals.

In the airport as we left Ireland, I watched an Irish father and his teenaged son in line with their bags. The son was bored, perhaps a little anxious. The father slid their bags along the floor until they pushed at the son’s shoes. A moment later, the son slid the bags back, up onto the father’s shoes. Back and forth the bags slid, each time further, each time, neither one looking at each other or smiling openly.

But their eyes said it all. I feel you, I love you, let’s have a smile together.

Thanks, Ireland. I am grateful to you for my sense of humor and playfulness. I’ll carry you with me.

Like a Boss

Ashford Castle in Cong, County Mayo boasts:

  • Fully restored to its historic splendour
  • 68 unique guest rooms with spectacular views
  • 14 luxurious staterooms and suite
  • Regular host to royalty, dignitaries and celebrities
  • The Huffington Post’s Top Hotel in the World for 2015

What it doesn’t say:

  • Occasional seasoned interlopers may be seen driving upon the walking paths

Yesterday we traveled to Mountbellow Woodland.  Best sign seen on the way:

“Bar-Restaurant-Undertaker-Funeral Home”

What more could you possibly need in one location?

As I noted in a previous blog, few walks in Ireland are marked, either the route itself or the trailhead. So after following the directions from the website to a T, we found ourselves in the parking lot of the Mountbellow Golf Club. No worries, the golfers were friendly folk and more than happy to provide us with directions.

Of course, the golfer’s directions did not include road names, just a “drive until the road bends, stop at an old forge and park your car”.

They did not mention that the old forge was The Old Forge, a tiny museum set up to showcase the Bellow Family, former estate owners. The museum is proudly staffed by Jimmy.

At 62, Jimmy is very proud of his heritage and took us through his small museum explaining all the farm equipment as well as putting it into context.

After a chat with Jimmy, it was time for us to head into the woods. These were deeply mossy, fern covered woods but with trees just decades old. As if I had not seen enough varieties of green, there were even more shades here.

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Here I saw trees totally wrapped in moss, two inches thick. And ferns the size of Elephant Ears. I also discovered an odd berry looking wild flower. Extra points for whoever can identify it.

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After a short hike it was time for a long lunch at the local spot in Mountbellow town then back to Galway City via a different route. Always a different route.

We decided to go via Cong (because I wanted to meet the King, King Cong. A request made ad nauseum mostly to force Ron to make his thats-so-stupid face. Bwahahah!)

Just before entering the Village there was a turn off for Ashford Castle. We knew nothing about Ashford Castle other than it looked super cool! So we drove the one way road (not un-common for here) onto the property.

Whoa. Serious wealth. Expensive cars. People dressed to the nines. Fahncy shmahncy.

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Located on a lake, the castle was built in 1228 by the House of Burke, fought over during the next three centuries and finally purchased by the Guinness family.

This is the real deal people. It actually had a small bridge across a stream leading to the elegant front doors.

But alas, no draw bridge. Silly them.

At the sight of a castle surrounded by 350 acres of paved walking paths winding their way through gardens and fountains, their velvet rope barriers casually dropped next to their posts, forty five years fell from our souls.

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“Um, is this a road?” I asked?

“Might as well be”, responded the Ron, now directed by his inner 19 year old. And then  he drove on like he owned the place.

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And so we toured the paved walking paths winding through 350 acres of the elegant Ashford Castle. In our tiny Renault.

And yes, we gently nudged several well dressed patrons into the grass.

They must have thought we were making deliveries.

“Hey, is that a clay tennis court?” asked an excited Ron. “Lets go see!”

Down a side path we zoomed, checked out the courts and continued along until we reached the back of the Castle, a number of workmen. And a dead end.

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“Jig is up”, I lamented. “Unless you can do a K turn on this beautiful soggy grass without turfing it.”

“No problem”, replied Ron and then executed a textbook K turn without so much as a single clump of turf leaving the lawn.

By now the workmen were speaking into radios and glancing anxiously in our direction. So back to the bridge we headed, a few more middle aged ladies nudged into the grass, past the tennis courts, back over the one lane bridge and off to Cong Village.

Looking back in the rear view mirror we decided we’d been thrown out of better clubs than this.

Errisbeg

Yesterday we took another walk in the countryside. This time down by Roundstone. A walk to a mountain called Errisbeg.

A quick note about walking in Ireland. Most of the land is privately owned, few parks. And so most walking is dependent upon the graciousness of the land owners who are mostly sheep farmers. A few rules are in order:

Open a gate, close a gate.
Leave no trash.
Don’t bring dogs (sheep and dogs have a long and complicated relationship.)
Know how to use a compass (I do not…)

And also, don’t expect to find well-worn paths in most places. It’s heather jumping and scrambling from rock to rock with your eye on the prize up above. And a fixed point to return to on the way back.

This last part we learned yesterday. The hard way. Which is to say we did not have one.

So we drove an hour or so to Roundstone passing streams and lakes overflowing (literally, on to the road…) from two days of hard rain. A gorgeous drive (Ron is getting tired of my exclamations of “gorgeous!” and appreciates an occasional “stunning!” or “fabulous!”).

The town of Roundstone is small and gorgeous (!) with pastel colored two story buildings located on the bay and surrounded by lakes, stunning (you’re welcome) beaches and mountains. We decided that a lovely summer could be spent in a rental cottage here. Make a note.

We followed the directions in our 15 year old guide book “five kilometers westward from town to a sharp bend in the road, just before a rock quarry”.

Nothing was marked. No sign “Errinbeg Trail”. No “walkers welcome”. No “here ya go, Ron and Sara”. But there was a gate and there was a sign that said No Dogs. That sign is what assured me we had the right place.

So we opened the gate (closed it carefully) and began to walk down a rocky dirt road. Under the watchful eye of red and blue sheep.

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I’m not exactly sure why the sheep are spray painted in Ireland. A Google search found a suggestion that the blue ones are boys, the red ones are girls and the pink ones are gay. This sounded reasonable enough to me.

After 40 minutes of walking it was time for our first “discussion”. Ron insisted that we needed to leave the rocky road and bushwhack our way to the top. Raised as a hiker in Appalachia, seasoned in the Rockies, I had learned that bushwhacking is never a good idea.

But I had yet to write the fourth paragraph in this blog and thus had not yet read it.

Finally, I was convinced that walking over rocks and heather (called “bog hopping” in one of our books) would be our only way to ascend the mountain. So after fixing our eyes on a rock outcropping above (the Stonehenge Thing Up There) we walked up.

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This is where I should mention that one of us was wearing waterproof hiking shoes. The other was wearing tennis shoes (ones actually used to play the game of tennis…) that had been retired due to holes in the toes from serving. I’ll let you figure out which was which. Needless to say (but I shall say it, over and over and over…) one of us had warm, dry feet while the other spent the entire day with cold, wet feet.

We reached the goal (The Stonehenge Thing Up There) and were rewarded with a gorgeous (well, it was) view of the cold Atlantic, and many lakes and bays. And down below were old, old rock walls and rolling hills of yellow (I think it was…) heather.

When it was time to descend, that’s when we realized that we should have picked a landmark to direct us back to the road. But alas, I had not yet written paragraph four, let alone read it.

So we picked our way using the sheep as markers. Bad idea. They kept moving away from us… Finally we saw a little sliver of the road and made some assumptions about where it might be going. Thankfully our assumptions were right (phew) and we were rewarded not only by the road itself, but several small waterfalls.

With only one fall each, mine resulting in a wet knee and Ron’s resulting in a skinned hand (it shall be noted…) we were quite proud of our 60 year old selves and our hiking adventure. But then pride turned into humility when a turn in the road revealed an elderly gentleman in a wool cap using a cane. No, not a hiking stick, a cane. For support.

When we got within hearing distance (which was quite close as this gentleman wore two hearing aids) we learned several things. One, the road ended a mile ahead at a river. Two, the gentleman was retired after working at Guinness in Dublin. Perfect. He had “made the dark brown stuff” for thirty years and retired to his birthplace “just a wee bit” down the road.

Back in the car (gate opened and carefully closed again) we drove eastward with the mountains and lakes directly in front of us. Poor Ron had to watch the (wee) narrow road carefully while I looked around and gasped as each bend in the road revealed something else more amazing than the view before.

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That’s when we came upon Dog Beach. A beautiful stretch of white sandy beach made entirely from the shells of 1000 year old crustaceans and now containing just a few walkers. But, alas, no dogs. A stop, a walk, a conversation with a couple of Brits and we were back on the road in search of a pint and a bowl of stew or chowder.

We found it at a hotel in Roundstone. The stew was made of lamb (neither red nor blue) and root vegetables. The pint was VERY cold. And the bar contained a British traveller sharing his photos of Texas with a very bored couple, also from England.

Back on the road and the views just kept getting more and more gorgeous.

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Why would anyone leave this I’ve-run-out-of-synonyms-for-goregous country? it would need to be an indisputable reason. Like starvation. The great motivator of masses.

With crops being ruined and large families to feed, even the sea could not keep up with hunger and the people fled. To America, to England to where-ever they could to stay alive.

But some stayed. And many more returned. Even if, like me, it was four or five generations later.

Missing You

Dear Kids,

You are now all grown. Living on your own, building lives, businesses, relationships.

I’d like to leave a few things with you to hold for me as I travel. Sorry about this, but I could really use your help to free up some extra space.

Not much. Just a couple of things.

First, I need you to hold some worry for me. You see, my life has been inextricable linked to yours for the past 28 years. Your well-being has been foremost in my heart.

Though you are not part of my daily life, I carry you with me.

Did you eat well today? Are you happy? How is your life going? Did you experience joy this week? Did you learn something that blew your mind wide open? Are your flowers flourishing? Does someone else love you?

I’d like to eat a warm biscuit and not wish that you could taste the salt and butter. I would like to see a lacey, white blouse and not think how perfect you would look in it. I would like to hear a story and not want to talk to you about it.

And second, will you hold on to some memories for me? I need the room to make some new ones.

I hiked today and compared it to the hike that we took together years ago. It was your first ten mile hike. Remember? The one with the lake where an upside down mountain lived. Not the one where we swam unexpectedly and then drip-dried, watering wild flowers all the way down the mountain.

Can I leave these memories with you for a while?

here is the deepest secret nobody knows

(here is the root of the root and the bud of the bud

and the sky of the sky of a tree called life;which grows

higher than soul can hope or mind can hide)

and this is the wonder that’s keeping the stars apart

i carry your heart(i carry it in my heart)*

I’d like to leave these things with you while I wander. You good with that?

The fam summer 2015

* ee cummings