Day Ten, Monday June 1st 2016
Today is my birthday. I’m not going to say anything more about that for now, but keep it in mind for later. We cool with that?
This morning we had to drop Wes and Joyce off at airport. They flew on Panama Air from Bocas to Panama City. They’ll stay the night in Panama City, then fly on to Orlando in the morning.
We left them at the airport around 11 am and headed back into town. (By back into town, I mean the three blocks or so to the shopping district. The airport in Boca is more convenient to “downtown” than even in San Diego.)
We hadn’t had breakfast and the day was marching on, so we decided to grab a bite and find an Internet connection before we did our shopping. Wes and Joyce took me to The Pub on the day I arrived and it had good Wi-Fi, so I went searching for The Pub.
I think I mentioned earlier that Wes gave me a tour, but I was so totally confused by streets without names and directions, that I couldn’t have found anything. Well, today was the proof.
It probably should have taken us five minutes to get from the airport to The Pub, it took more like half an hour. By the time I finally found the joint, Dawn and Heidi were so frustrated that they would have stopped anywhere. Fortunately, I’m one stubborn Papa.
The restaurant is in an old white two story house. The sign is designed to be spotted by those spy satellites that can read a newspaper in Moscow from a hundred miles up. A normal human being could not possibly find the two by four foot sign buried in all the other signs and behind bushes while driving by at twenty kilometers per hour. (That’s about twelve miles per hour folks.)
Anyway, at some point Dawn asked what the name of the place was. “The Pub,” I said.
“Oh, I thought you were just taking us to a pub.”
“Wait,” Heidi screamed, “we passed that a few minutes ago.”
I turned around and soon found our lunch spot.
We had lunch and worked the Internet for a couple of hours. It was soooo frustrating. The bandwidth was so narrow that it took from two to five minutes to open a web page. It was not this slow before, but I guess no one else was using the Internet that day.
After a couple of hours at The Pub, we took off on a shopping spree. I didn’t want to mess up Joyce’s food plans while they were there, but now it was our kitchen. I wanted to stock it with what we wanted to eat.
We’ve been able to buy passable broccoli at the Super Gourmet, but that’s about it for fresh vegetables. Maybe I exaggerate. The potatoes, onions and garlic are pretty good too.
We could go to Super Gourmet and buy American brands, but you pay a premium for them. I
wanted to live like the natives, so we bought off-brand stuff in the local market.
The meat here is totally unappealing. The chicken in the butcher case looks diseased. The beef and pork looks like it was shipped from 1990. The one exception is the Super Market Isla Colon.
This store, like ALL the rest of the grocery stores on the island, is run by Chinese. Their meat counter has pretty good ground beef, if you buy the #1 hamburger. We buy the #2 for the dogs. They even have some half decent chicken.
Joyce has the freezer stocked with beef filets she orders from PriceSavers in David. They say
it’s the only edible steak available on the island. (For those of you who are just joining us, David is pronounced Dah-Veed. It is the nearest big city to Bocas, on the Pacific side of the isthmus. It is a forty-five minute ferry trip and a four hour cab ride from Bocas. You can fly there for about $100, an hour flight.)
It was hot and by the time we were through traipsing around all the grocery stores, we were beat. We climbed in the truck and picked our way home on the pothole highway.
This was our first night on our own. I knew that we’d be too tired and cranky to cook dinner, so I bought a roasted chicken at Super Gourmet. We sat down and looked at our food, too tired to eat.
A trip into town takes an entire day and you return too tired to care about anything.
The good news was that we moved from our broom closet of a room to the master suite.
Wes and Joyce’s bedroom is bigger than some houses. It has a bathroom, shower and sink attached. The entire building (remember, this is in a separate building) has a terracotta tiled deck around it. There is a walkway from the bathroom to the bedroom that has slatted teak walls to allow the breeze to flow through.
They have a custom made, teak king-sized bed. Why do they use so much teak here? It’s terribly expensive wood. Not here. The rainforest is filled with teak. There is a teak plantation on the road into town with thousands, if not tens of thousands, of teak trees. It is the most economical, and best, material to use.
Their bed is a giant four-poster. There are teak four by fours at each corner with two by four railing at the top. It is designed to hang mosquito netting from it. Wes and Joyce don’t have mosquito netting, but it still looks like something out of One Thousand and One Arabian Nights.
The cabinetry reminds us of the Victory. It is all teak and looks like the kind of cabinets you find in an expensive yacht.
I moved our bags into Wes and Joyce’s room but was too tired to even unpack. We flopped into bed and called it a day.
Remember how I mentioned that yesterday was my birthday? Dawn remembered it today. I totally spaced out.
Usually, in the Wallace family, birthdays are a big deal. We call it the birthday season, because it normally lasts a week or so, but Katie (my oldest) has managed to stretch it out for more than a month on occasion. Of course, there’s the birthday dinner, with cake and presents on your birthday. But if it falls on a week day, we usually schedule a party for either the weekend before or after.
I hate stuff. I spent years trying to get stuff out of our house. Friend Susie kept giving the girls stuff that she no longer needed. We finally made a rule, for everything she gave the girls, she had to take something back.
Why do I tell you this? Because we discourage people giving us stuff for our birthdays. Instead, we ask that they give us memories. We ask for gift certificates for a nice restaurant, tickets to a ball game or the theater. Much better than having stuff hanging around the house.
Sometimes it can take weeks or even months (like ticket for a concert for play) to use them. That’s all part of the birthday season.
So you get the idea. Birthdays are a big deal.
So how in the hell could I forget my own birthday?
Dawn decided to make it a special day. We stayed around the house, I did a lot of reading, we went swimming in the ocean and took a couple of walks on the beach.
Dawn made us a nice dinner with one of the filets Joyce left in the freeze and a nice bottle of wine. No cakes, no birthday songs, no presents. I’m expecting a big celebration next year.
Since there wasn’t a lot going on, I’ll tell you a little bit more about the wild life.
It’s time to talk about the crabs. We have thousands of crabs around us. There are small white crabs that dig holes just above the tide mark on the beach. They are opaque when they’re small and turn a sandy color as they get older.
I mention these only because they are Little Bit’s favorite sport. (I’ll get around to telling you about Joyce’s dogs later. She has two, Little Bit and Peanut.) Bit loves to dig them out of the sand. They live in holes about two feet deep.
He sniffs a crab and starts digging. He’ll get down to where only his hind end protrudes from the hole, clouds of sand being thrown out between his legs.
Every so often, he stops and sniffs the sand, then he may change this course and dig in another direction as the crab moves underground.
Occasionally, he may actually dig one out. He flips it in the air. The crab hits the beach and takes off for the safety of the water. These little buggers are fast. It’s a hoot to watch them, small brown dog in pursuit, take off along the beach.
We also have land crabs. These guys live in holes they’ve dug in our yard. They’re all over the place. Some of the holes are an inch or two in diameter; some are large enough to trip in.
They come out mainly at night. A mature crab is about the size and color of our rock crabs in the Northwest, about four to six inches across the shell. I don’t know what they eat, but they’re nocturnal hunters.
I saw one the other night that really got my attention. While most of them are reddish-brown, this guy had a blue shell. I thought that the only blue crabs lived in the Chesapeake. At any rate, he was one of the larger crabs I’ve seen and very distinctive.
Next up on the list are snakes. So far we’ve see garter snakes slithering away into the bushes, baby boas and an emerald boa.
Cesar called us downstairs one afternoon to see the snake in our driveway sunning himself. He was a baby boa, about a foot or so long, brown with flecks of yellow in its scales. Boas are not poisonous, they use they’re firmly muscled bodies to strangle their prey. As babies, they eat mice and other small animals. When they are fully grown, they can eat a whole goat, but a foot long boa was no danger to us.
A couple of days later, Peanut was barking up a storm in the back yard. We went down to see what the commotion was all about. Peanut had cornered a baby boa about two feet long on the concrete pad where we hang our laundry to dry.
The snake was at least ten feet from the nearest cover. If it turned its back to run, Peanut would be on it in a second. The snake coiled and hissed at the dog. Peanut feigned a bite at the snake and it uncoiled and sprang towards Peanut in a flash. It was a dead standoff. (Should I call it a Panamanian Standoff?) The snake couldn’t escape and the dog couldn’t get it.
Peanut was making such a fuss that I decided to intervene. I grabbed a stick and tossed the snake into the yard where it could escape. Or so I thought.
These dogs are jungle dogs. Peanut’s reactions were so fast I would not have believed it. She was on the snake before it had a chance to coil. She grabbed the snake behind the head and started shaking it. She got a paw on its body and tore at its flesh.
It was over in an instant. Relying on her primitive instincts, Peanut had caught a tasty afternoon snack.
I know there are other species of snakes in the jungle, we just haven’t seen them yet. The local kids play in the jungle all day long, wearing only shorts, so I don’t think there’s much danger here. The poisonous snakes must live on the mainland.
It’s a long swim to the islands.