Saturday, June 20, 2009

Pinchos and Pie - Festival in Punta!


Last night was day two of the festivál, and I learned to salsa!

After a long day on Cayo during which I rapidly used up all my apple slices and managed to break my tripod, I returned to my now almost entirely operational flat, showered, and took a mid-afternoon excursion to the La Fav, the supermercado, with Sasha. I loaded up on stimuli and baking materials and made my way back past the already packed roadside bars to the Yalies house. 

I had settled on apple pie, and despite the fact that I had never baked an apple pie in my life, I figured that with premade filling and a store bought bottom crust it would be fool-proof. Not so. Did you know that store bought crusts have little in the way of instructions and that what they do have is useless to a newbie pie baker? Well, this is the case. Nevertheless, I managed to put together the premade items and improvised the crumb topping (flour, brown sugar, canola oil, and a little egg).  It was delicious! A success!! Manifique!!! I was so happy. I shall try again sometime and do the whole thing from scratch, but for the time being, the pie worked out well. The crust was fine, but needed butter or margarine or something else. I’m pretty sure the Yalies didn’t mind, though, as nearly 2/3 of the entire pie was gone within minutes of the first cut.

By the time I finished baking and work in the office, it was festival time. The long strings of party lights that hung between telephone poles and the glow of the carousel and teacup rides lit the dockside with a warm glow. People everywhere. Chatter. Comotion. The salsa music was blaring from the specially constructed white stage by the dock, and the pinchos were sizzling on their skewers and dripping with sauce. The little booths selling hand-crafted and “hand-crafted” wares were bustling with people, and drinks were flowing freely. Local radio hosts popped on stage between sets shouting things rapidly in Spanish about Doctor Mecánico (the sponsor, read: Doctórrrrr Mecáaaaaaaaaanicoooooo) and inviting girls up on stage for suck and blow contests (the game with the card, ask if you don’t know…) and free t-shirts.

At one point, we all found ourselves up by the stage transfixed by a dance contest. It feels as if everyone around here can really move. It’s awesome. I love how everyone is always dancing. Alone, with partners, with two partners, in groups. Just dancing. It is almost as if swaying your hips is clapping. It shows appreciation, enjoyment, delight, and it is far more fun than just tapping your foot.  We should adopt this mentality. Plus, the movement is better for you.

People in Punta really like to party, too. When I was waiting for some friends outside my flat, my landlord’s brother came by. He had helped me move in and get settled in the place, when I first visited, and seemed very happy to say hello to his little blond friend. As he leaned over the upstairs balcony to say hello, he cheerfully told me he’d already put back 4 beers. He looked it. How do you like the festival? Are you going out? Why don’t you have a beer? Do you drink? Of course you do. He generously offered me something, listing off a beer brands like a bartended. I thanked him graciously, but declined. Suddenly, nearly all the family members had noted and latched on to my beerless state and insisted on giving me something. What did I want? A Medalla? A Coors? Let us get you something. You should be having fun. Relaxing. You need to salsa! It took a lot of convincing to assure them I was fine and headed for the piña colada stand in just a minute, but they genuinely seemed concerned that I might not have that one beer and, thus, the evening would be shot.

Similarly, even though it can be a little uncomfortable at times, the men are very willing to ask you to dance with them. Mainly the older and middle-aged men. I often wonder if they could write a manual for guys back home, who do nothing but lurk in corners at parties or do the “man dance” on repeat (side step, fist pump x3, repeat). Then again, perhaps we, girls, would be unreceptive. After all, it took a few frozen drinks and a couple of hours before I was loosened up and keen enough to dance that I accepted an invitation.

Nevertheless, by evenings end, I am pretty certain that everyone danced with someone at least once and that we all now possess a basic knowledge of salsa. Adrienne was pursued doggedly by one bent over old man, who after dancing with her once, decided Adrienne was his partner de jour and would randomly turn up by her side all evening, eyeing her and beseeching her to take a turn. More than once, Tara or Kelly would have to step in and give Adrienne an occupation so as not to slight the poor man too dramatically.

Tara was a dance machine, eager to teach everyone the basic moves and be everyone’s partner. She was willing to be the boy and lead, if you were willing to sway with her. As a result, when she was not dancing with an agreeable stranger, she ended up dancing with Amy quite a bit, since Amy spent the night dancing and trying to learn to move her hips. The rest of us danced with each other or watched in amusement as those braver than we were spun rocked back and force with friendly partners.

I was a little nervous to dance with anyone, since I am not now, nor have I ever been, a couples dancer. I only know how to move on my own, and I never really learned how properly to follow. (This takes practice with a good leading partner, which I have never had.) I did long to try out a salsa, though, and hoped that if a less-than-creepy man asked me to dance and I got up the guts to say yes, I would be able to use my knowledge of the basic step to carry me through to a totally adequate, if boring, performance. I say performance because it was clear that as the only group of non-Puerto Ricans in the crowd, we were being viewed.  Ah, the pressure!

Around midnight that less-than-creepy guy asked me to dance. He was a middle-aged guy, bald, salt and pepper moustache, glasses, and very smiley. He looked like he could have been someone’s kindly uncle and was the friend of one of guys, who had been dancing with Tara and Amy. It took definite convincing, but he seemed very nice and what the heck, it was just a dance. I told him he would have to teach me. He was very helpful and patient, but as soon as it was clear that I had the step down, we were off. He taught me spins, twists, side-dances. I don’t even know how I kept up, but I managed OK actually. I have my bag on the whole time though, and occasionally a spin would send it slamming into his side. In my embarrassment and nerves, I spent almost the entire dance laughing and apologizing, glancing at my feet and trying to feel the dance, but we were pretty good actually.  I became less coordinated as the song went on. Cora and Adrienne were off to the side watching and taking photos. More embarrassment. My calves were burning, and we were moving so quick that I started losing the steps, but he kept on twirling and smiling, and never said a word. He was a very good leader. Finally, after about six false endings, the song ended. I thanked him, and he thanked me. I smiled. He smiled more. He pointed at his chest, “Théodore.” “I’m Rebecca.” “Rebecca.” He smiled again and did a little bow of the head, and we went our separate ways. I love innocent fun.

Anyway, this post is very long already, so I shall hold off on other stories. After all, there is more festival this evening, so hopefully more stories will be forthcoming.  In the meantime, enjoy your weekends, and go dancing. It frees up the mind and gives you great legs.



Adios amigos!

Much love,

B

Friday, June 19, 2009

Nacho

I’m afraid you will have to wait a little longer for a full-fledged post to come from this weary brain of mine. I am busy with work at the moment and taking all spare moments for reading, relaxing, and attending the festival, which is just outside my door.

Only 2 real things of note:

  1. My Landlord’s name is Nacho.
  2. Nacho and I have bonded. He stuck a rolled up poster through my back window screen as a gift. At first I thought he was using it to keep the screen propped open for the hose, but he told me this afternoon as he hooked up my gas that it is a gift! It is an old French print. You know, like the old stylized Absinthe posters with the black cats and so forth? Well, he was such a darling and gave me one of a monkey!! (I found this photo of it online.) Oh Nacho…

Wait, actually, I should also note that he was a boxer back in the days that he lived in NYC. This is just a tidbit to keep you intrigued. J I’ll tell you more about Nacho in the next full post. Fascinating man…

I should also note that the best Salsa band in the country is apparently playing at the festival this evening, and, lucky me, I get to hear and see the whole thing from right in my flat. This is because the festival is, I emphasize, RIGHT outside my door. Tada! Maybe I will record a little bit and post an audio clip with the photos tomorrow. I’m not sure I know how, but there ya go. Hmmm… I shall investigate.

Anyway, I’m off to go bake. I like to bake when I’m stressed, and now that it looks like I'm cookin with gas (forgive me!), apple pie is on the menu.

Best to all, and thank you for all your comments and feedback! Please keep it coming! Even emails are great.

Much love,

B

Tuesday, June 16, 2009

Dockside Digs and Monkeying Around


So, I moved.  Hmm… not as great as I’d hoped.

The new flat is located in a big white building on the main plaza of Punta across from the dock and right next to the Post Office. It isn’t on the second floor as I’d been told nor does it have a balcony, but rather it is first floor, with a fenced in outdoor entry area. It isn’t exactly the type of place you’d set up a chair and read outside. The front of the apartment area is kind of noisy as it sits beneath the landlord’s (and his extended family’s) apartment, and they like to sit outside on their balcony, drink beer and talk loudly in Spanish late into the evening, every evening. Across the street is also a bar that plays loud Salsa music until late every night Thursday to Sunday. Perhaps this will help me learn Spanish, though. Heh. 

The apartment itself is smaller, cheaper, and faaaar dirtier than the other place. Unlike the other house, which was pretty much in move-in condition aside from the atrocious plumbing situation, this place had been shut up for quite some time before I was to move-in. They only opened it up a few hours before I was to move-in, and the landlord didn’t get much of a chance to clean. You do the math.

As a result, I spent most of my Sunday and Monday nights scrubbing and cleaning things. I arrived at the flat with only a quarter bottle of bleach and a roll or two of paper towels, and I assure you, it went quickly. What with dusting every surface, bleaching the shower floor, toilet bowl, kitchen and bathroom sinks, laying down paper towel over any essentially uncleanable surface (inside cabinets, top of fridge, inside drawers, etc.), and so on, I was pretty knackered. I managed to make the place livable by evening and with a few more nights of cleaning, I think I should be OK. The place needs a broom, actual gas in the stove so I can cook, and new screens and outlets, but who am I kidding? It is Puerto Rico. It will do just fine. Nevertheless, I triple sheeted my mattress and pillow.  That is one place where unclean is unacceptable.

*Note: There are some happy things about the new place: a crazy mural on my living room wall, a shorter walk to the dock and the Panaderia, warm shower water, and no leaking ceilings. Also the landlord is very interesting: late 70s, extremely frail and still wearing sweaters and pants from the 50s, with a nostalgic passion for NYC rooted in memories of his own early years living on Fulton St. and in Little Italy. We bonded. He tried to set me up with his nephew, who lives in Brooklyn. No joke.*

On another unfortunate note, my right foot is swollen with fire ant bites. There are hidden mounds all over the place, and as I was moving out Sunday, I managed to step in one and get my right foot covered in bites. By this afternoon, the bites were pretty epic. I removed my sock and bam: big, juicy, blistery looking swollen bites all over my second and third right foot toes. I slathered them in hydrocortisone and Neosporin, but my toes still swelled up and look ridiculous.  I hope that by tomorrow the swelling will have gone down. I don’t know how fun it will be to hike around with weeping wounds on my foot. Ew.

Now on to the fun stuff: it rained a lot this past weekend, and this is great. Why, you ask? Well, when it rains a lot, the lowland areas around the feeding corrals on Cayo fill with water and in large quantities. This means… PRIMATE POOL PARTY!!!!  Yup, you read that right. J As soon as it clears up and heats up, the baby monkeys use the giant rain water lakes as pools and the nearby palm trees and bushes as water slides and high jumps.

Imagine yourself standing by a huge pool of water. Adult monkeys are collecting around the edges bending and drinking water, wetting monkey chow to soften it, splashing bits of water around to clean the surface. Then suddenly, FLYING BABY MONKEY *SPLASH!* FLAILING BABY ARMS AND LEGS *SPLOOSH!* BABY MONKEY CANNONBALL *SPELUNK!* Then tons of scurrying and splashing as the babies and juveniles hurry back up to the top of their bush or palm tree and reset. This is literally how it goes… for hours. They are like little human children in that regard. They do belly flops, cannonballs (The actually grasp their feet and tuck in.), and launch themselves off higher and higher branches until they chicken out. I’ve even seen a few juveniles push another juvenile off his branch into the water. I had to stop myself from doing a voiceover. (“Marlon’s a scaredycat! Nyah nyah nyah nyah!!”) 

Anyway, you can imagine how enjoyable this is to watch. It more than makes up for the fact that days on Cayo after it has rained are not terribly fun. We are wet. Our shoes are muddy and gross. The monkeys are more difficult to follow because of the new, soaking obstacles, wet grass, and so forth, but primate pool time is uplifting and heartwarming. J

Ok. I’m off to go clean up a little more and then sleep.

Remember: leave comments! I need to know what you want to hear about and who is out there reading.

Much love,

B

Sunday, June 14, 2009

Punta v. Palmas... Hmm...

I am moving today. J

I like the place I’m in now, but due to some confusion at the CPRC about booking us lodgings, the rentals got mixed up, so now I have to switch places for the rest of the summer. I will be moving from where I am now to just down the street above the Post Office and across from the dock. It should be a nice change, and I’ll be moving to a second-floor place with a balcony, which must be deemed an advantage. Only problem? It’s farther from the office (and Internet). Pooh. Ah well, I’ll post pictures as soon as it stops raining.

I have been really enjoying my first few days living by myself. I sort of underestimated the pleasure to be had in cooking for myself, doing what I want when I want, and organizing things the way I like. I think that by moving to this new place, I’ll be able to completely set things up the way I like, and it might just be the making of the summer. The only downside to single living that I can see so far is when there is a bug, you have to deal with it yourself. I learned that the hard way. Eep!

Speaking of the past few days, Friday was a lot of fun. I spent the morning on Cayo running subjects, which went alright. I started the day running Opposite Rope conditions, which involves presenting apples, which are tied to 3ft long ropes, to the monkeys. Unfortunately, this proves to be a test of your reflexes as well as their instincts because if you are not on top of your game, they steal away with your ropes and force you to chase them into thick brush to get them back. Sadly, I was rudely shown how off my game I was: two monkeys ganged up on me and approached both ropes at the same time, each stealing a rope and running off in opposite directions. This is not ideal. I ended up losing one of the ropes in the woods and couldn’t track it down, so mid-morning I had to switch conditions. Now I have to make another piece of rope. Ehn. Not a fan.

Anyway, I took a half-day Friday because Tara, Alli, and Sasha offered to split the costs of a rental car for two days with me (~$10/day/person) in order to take a trip out of Punta (always necessary). So around 12:30, I met up with the girls and waited for the rental car guy to pick us up. (It is like Enterprise Rent-a-Car, “We’ll pick you up!”)

Once in the car, we went to some clothing places. We all had things we forgot or needed. For example, I was ill informed about the time we spend on the island, so I came down with one pair of shorts and no nice clothes – not even a skirt or a dress. (For Doreen’s party, I had to borrow a dress from Sasha. Thank goodness we were the same size.)  We then headed to Walmart to pick up other necessities and rounded out the afternoon excursion with a trip to Ralph’s, the big Humacao supermarket. I stocked up on more fruit and veggies. (By the way, I made a new food discovery: the Newton Fruit Crisp 100 Calorie Bar thingies make a great dessert.) 

Once we had delivered our things at home and cleaned up, we headed out for the evening. We made reservations at a little Asian restaurant in Palmas del Mar called Blue Hawaii. Palmas del Mar is a combination between a resort and a gated community. You pass through guarded gates to get in and all the buildings are white and uniform. However, the place is huge. It has its own shopping center, fitness center, street after street of condos, a giant lake with lit fountains in the middle, and a police force/security. It took us at least 10 minutes after driving through the gates to get to the restaurant on the other side of town. All of this makes it very difficult to know what to make of Palmas. I mean, it has its name presented like a city on the highway exit signs, but it isn’t really a city, is it? It is a strange place and certainly a very different place from Punta.

You get the same feeling passing into Palmas as you get when you enter a resort in any Caribbean locale, discomfort and relief.  Discomfort because you have just witnessed the true state of life there, and you feel as if you are lying to yourself and are over-privileged. But also relief because always feeling guilty about your good lot in life can be exhausting and because feigning ignorance and being pampered for a while is really not the worst thing in the world.  I don’t know about you, but this is how I feel, and this is certainly how I felt the other night. I have been living in Punta, which is far from third-world but also far from Upper East Side NYC, and after being somewhat marooned there, there was definitely a sense of relief that I was going some place where dressing up and ordering sushi and buying nice wine, cheese, and olive oil was not out of the realm of possibility. Call me spoiled, but it was nice. The uniformity of the place was notable and ridiculous, though, and I actually enjoyed arriving back in Punta later that night with the multicolored facades and varying architecture, no matter how grungy it can be.

We had a relaxing and easy time at dinner. The food was delicious, which was sort of a surprise, but Frommer’s did tell us it was the best Chinese in the region. That probably isn’t a hard title to achieve, but I should have trusted Frommer nonetheless. Good on ya mate. Later we went out and got ice cream, then drove back to Punta, and had Pink Martinis at Tara and Alli’s. Scratch that. I should not say Pink Martinis. I should say, alcoholic Capri Sun because the product is essentially the same. Apparently, some genius realized he could prepackage cocktails, such as pink martinis (a vodka cranberry, essentially), mojitos, and margaritas, in Capri Sun-type packages. These are then be frozen or refrigerated and pulled out and transported wherever. Genius. I wish they sold them in the states. It was so… college. Ha. They were actually pretty good, but by that time at night, I was tired from work. So after I finished mine, the girls escorted me home, and I called it a night.  All in all, a good day.

So, now I have related my recent events and need to go contact my new landlord somehow. I will keep you updated.

Much love,

B

P.S. – I finished The Guernsey Literary and Potato Peel Pie Society and loved it. It is a short and quick book, interesting, and deceptively informative. I would suggest this to anyone, looking for a light summer read. I also read Straight Up and Dirty by Stephanie Klein, which is a relationship-focused memoir. I found it sarcastic and easy, but self-indulgent. A good beach choice, but no more. Now, I am reading Water for Elephants, a real book. Huzzah!