Switching gears

And as all good things must come to an end, so did the business part of the trip.  After 2.5 days of presentations on data curation, data science, research data management and all the hallway discussions that went with them, my brain was full.  It was time to move on and the weather agreed:  it decided to snow during our last few hours in Edinburgh so we got well and truly soaked.

All in all it was a good few days.  Other than business travel and the occasional odd day in town while visiting family in Stirling, I never really get to Edinburgh.  We did a lot of walking – this is a 3D city:  no Google map can really do justice to the layers of buildings and roadways.  Our hotel was on Southbridge and the floor you entered the lobby at was at road level in the front but was the 4th floor.  The back of the building went down another 3 floors to the Cowgate which looks on a map like it crosses Southbridge but in fact it goes underneath it.  The hotel was fine: fabulous location, respectable albeit small room (although the plug placement and lack of clock in the room means I won’t rave about it) and very inexpensive:  the whole 5 days only cost $400.  Now breakfast wasn’t included in that rate so we did cough up an extra £10 each on the first few days for the buffet so that added a bit more.  But it was all you can eat and they had gluten free bread for me so I had bacon sandwiches on more than one occasion.  Then we found the lovely little cafe across the street where I could get bacon, fried eggs and beans for £4!  Yummy!

We did have some loveimg_0703ly meals and great pub time although we never did get to the local BBQ place. 😀 Our dinner at Cafe Rouge on our first night was very nice especially since there were GF items clearly marked on the menu and we were still to jetlagged to figure things out ourselves.  I had a very nice lunch with my friend Peter at Mother India Cafe where I experienced Indian tapas (and spicy haddock!) for the first time. The best meal by far and the one I would recommend most highly was dinner at Angels with Bagpipes, a place I normally would have overlooked because it’s on the Royal Mile which usually means that it’s a tourist stop. Not so!  We were joined by another friend for a lovely dinner (lamb for me, venison for Frank and Bill with haggis to start!) with wine and whisky with the haggis for the boys and all the trimmings.

We also had the chance to check out a few pubs.  We made a quick stop at the Edinburgh installation of Brew Dog where they had just tapped the keg of their gluten free beer – which means that Bill has the honor of having been with me both times that I have been able to have GF beer on draft.  Two other pubs worth a mention are local landmarks.  We had drinks with our friend Stuart at the Sandy Bells, self described world renowned folk bar.  Indeed, we sat at the back of the bar and were quickly displaced by half a dozen folks with fiddles who proceeded to sit and play.  Not necessarily as a performance but just as a group of people playing traditional fiddle music. First time that’s ever happened! We also made a quick stop at the Royal Oak, another folk bar right by the hotel.  It can’t hold more than two dozen people and there was a solo guitarist playing everything from Dylan to Bowie while we were there but it was still quite entertaining.  I’d love to find the equivalent in KC!

Now that we are on the “visit” portion of the trip, we are far less likely to have such experiences.  On one hand it’s a welcome change because we are staying in an AirBnB flat that we’ve stayed in before so even that feels like home.  We made tea and did some laundry before heading to Cambusbarron for the annual knees up and “box of curry” which has been described repeatedly in the travel blog and has yet again resulted in the need for lots of ibuprofen and coffee this morning.  I’d like to think we’ll learn our lesson some day but somehow I doubt it. 🙂

Conference – with spouse

Maybe it’s because I had more than 25 years of business travel where I didn’t bring the family along that this one trip is proving more trying.  I’m used to having the hotel room to myself and checking in with the loved ones once or twice a day.  Now that Frank is here with me, I worry about whether or not I need to check in more frequently or whether he’s bored on his own or…. {sigh}

He’ll tell me not to be stupid (except he’ll say “dunnae be daft”) especially because he has family to go to visit.  It’s not like he’s playing tourist on his own – in fact, I think he spent today replacing brake rotors, diagnosing engine misfires and drinking tea with various relations.  Nevertheless, I can’t help but notice that he’s cramping my conference style.

Let’s start with sharing a hotel room.  You would think we’d be good at it by now.  And generally we are except that we stopped renting hotel rooms a while back and have rented flats, suites, or apartments for several years.  It works so much better when you have separate space to retire to when one of you gets on the others nerves or when I need to get some work done and he doesn’t.  For some reason, my work won’t pay for an AirBnB (I’ll work on that when I get home!) and so I picked a reasonably price hotel close to the conference venue.  Which means I got a reasonably priced hotel.  No sitting rooms. No upgrades. Not even a plug near a mirror which I shouldn’t care about except that I couldn’t actually use my curling tongs safely without being able to see my head! (Note: curling tongs means curling iron and normally I wouldn’t need to use them except that Scottish water is so bloody soft that no amount of “product” can get my hair to behave the way it does at home.)

So the hotel room is fine but it is better suited for one person – or at least my style of living when I travel on business.  The tiny table in the corner where I’ve tried to do some work the last few nights isn’t quite the office away from home.  And it doesn’t help that while I’m typing away trying to get things done, my beloved spouse is alternating between the TV, his iPad, and regularly checking with me – “you okay?” or “you done?” {sigh}

And so we made it through the first day.  We have another day apart tomorrow so maybe I will have adjusted to this whole conference spouse thing by then.

Family (business?) travel

It turns out that when I have a business trip to a place where my spouse has family, he thinks it’s a good idea to join me.  Hmmm.  After nearly 30 years of solo business travel, I have now had company on two trips in just over one year. Yes, I’m going to Scotland for a conference. And yes, it makes sense that he comes along and we spend some time visiting family when I’m not learning stuff.  Okay, fine – I’ll share.

img_0690Travel now is more “interesting” since the arrival of our newest “child” – Buddy the beagle mix joined us in late October and we’ve been adjusting ever since.  There needs to be an entire separate post on adopting a dog as empty nesters – this isn’t it.  But it does affect our ability to travel.  We now need to make sure that we arrange for space in the kennel in advance.  Luckily, he boards at the vet and seems to be quite happy about it so we feel a *little* less guilty about leaving him behind.

So now we are off to Edinburgh so that I can spend 4 days at the International Digital Curation Conference and then a few extra days visiting friends and family.  Frank gets to spend all the time visiting:  work for me, holiday for him.

Not only does travel require more planning now, we are also seriously risk averse when it comes to planning.  After the hellacious travel experience of last summer,  I no longer assume that 1.5 hours connecting time in Newark airport is sufficient.  So when faced with that option for this trip, I decided to go for the earlier flight out of KC which meant we had 7 hours in EWR.  Ugh.  Well, this gave us an opportunity to try out our new Priority Pass membership to airport lounges that we got with our newest Chase Sapphire Reserve credit card (because Sapphire out ranks Platinum apparently!).

href=”https://cannonchronicles.com/wp-content/uploads/2017/02/img_0702.jpg”>img_0702We landed from KCI just after 1pm and wandered from terminal C to terminal B where the Arts & Lounge was.  Our card got us in and we had a place to sit and munch and drink and do some work and talk to the kids on the phone and just chill. We worked through sandwiches (Frank), salad (me), several glasses of cava (both) before the noise level and boredom chased us back to C terminal.

So now we sit in the United Club lounge – aren’t we just the globetrotters! – where there is a bit more ambiance as well as wifi and alcohol.  And only 3 more hours til the plane leaves. {sigh}

Cross your fingers that this is an uneventful trip and the next post just raves about all my newly gained knowledge or complaints about the weather.

A flying visit to the Green Mountain state

We picked the early morning departure for a reason: given our recent luck with air travel, I wanted lots of opportunities to make sure we got to Burlington when something inevitably goes wrong.  And we started with a 45 minute delay out of KC which meant our 1 hour connecting time in Philly wouldn’t be enough.  Luckily the plane out of Philly was also delayed so we got to Burlington just over an hour after we planned.  We managed a quick visit with Jesse between classes, checked into the hotel and then the real visit began.

We had 2 1/2 days to spend in Burlington for what would be our last casual visit.  The purpose for this trip was to see the show for which Jesse designed the set as her theater capstone project.  We spent our time doing all the things we like to do in Burlington:

  • Eating at such fabulous places as the Farmhouse and Sweetwaters for dinner and Magnolia and of course the Skinny Pancake for breakfast.
  • Wandering up and down Church Street, drinking coffee and counting the various combinations of unique foot wear and hair colors
  • Visiting nearby Waterbury where Frank sometimes finds cans of Heddy Topper for sale and I always find neat stuff in the Stowe Street Emporium

And of course, we went to the theater to see “That F(*&king Bird” – a play on Chekov’s “The Seagull” which was very good.  The acting was excellent and of course, the set design was outstanding (Mommy brag!).  I did have a small part in it – I picked out the calendar that hung on the refrigerator during Act 2. (They needed to hide the gaffer tape… )

And we played tourist.  On Saturday, we hit the farmer’s market – where Frank tasted at ry local distillery booth there, including our favorite “Rail Dog” stand. A local gin purchase later, we were off to Montpelier, the smallest state capital in the country and an impossibly adorable place.  Another farmers market to visit as well as several shops and we wandered off with a variety of fabulous smelling soaps, yarn, and other goodies.

And from there we visited a sugaring house (and learned how maple syrup was made), a covered bridge, a pumpkin patch and a corn maze! Grey skies and intermittent drizzle was not going to stop us! Although the corn maze did defeat us – we never found checkpoint #2 but we found checkpoint 3 four times so we feel like we accomplished something.  And Jesse won a pumpkin by finding an ear of corn in the maze with a pumpkin drawn on it (a teeny tiny pumpkin that I couldn’t have seen if my life depended on it!)

And then in the blink of an eye, we were back at the airport for the early flight out and made it home with no drama or delays.  (I had to admit even American Airlines gets it right sometimes).  So while we’ll have several chances to see Jesse again in the coming months, we won’t see Burlington again until May 2017 when it will probably be the last time because she really is going to graduate.  {sniff, sniff}

 

Mid-summer update (and a warning!)

Three months since the last post? I can’t decide if I should use the excuse of having nothing to report or no time to report it.  How about both?

This summer has been the first where we have had far less time to play – and no good weather for playing outside.  With me teaching summer session and 90+ degree temps for days on end, things like tennis are just not on the agenda like they were last year.

We have done a little more traveling – a long weekend in Virginia to visit Duncan.  That should have been a blog post on it’s own because of the entertainment afforded by leaving my wallet on the plane.  It covered more miles than I did as it eventually wound up in the Raleigh airport.  No matter what the current sentiment about Southwest Airlines is right now given their technology troubles, I have nothing but good things to say about their baggage folks who went out of their way to help me track down the missing wallet.  And then shipped it back to me entirely intact.

imageIt was a nice weekend in Charlottesville and Frank got to spend Father’s day with one of
the people who call him “father” (insert joke about what else his family calls him!) and we visited a winery, brewery, cidery, and distillery all in the one day.  Four new food groups anyone?

The following weekend was less exciting – a rainy start to the 4th of July weekend where temps barely got into the 70s – led to a cloudy but dry 4th.  And what do you do with that? Visit wineries of course!  In the convertible.  Then grill lots of meat with home made beans and slaw.  And drink the newly acquired wine.

And so now, we count the days until we REALLY travel.  So here’s the warning:  beginning next week we will start the annual overseas pilgrimage.  Keep an eye on the Cannon Family Travel blog where we keep the tales of our travel triumphs and travails.
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A weekend of firsts (and 21sts)

And so the Cannon clan descended on the poor unsuspecting city of Burlington for the epic occasion of Jesse’s 21st birthday.  This would be the first time all four of us had been to Burlington at the same time. Duncan was staying with his sister but Frank and I had rented our first airBnB accommodation and boy were we pleased.  A small, one bedroom apartment with fully fitted kitchen, really comfy queen size bed and all around a neat and tidy wee place.  We got a good night sleep and then headed to the rugby pitch the next day for the tournament – where Jesse scored twice!  The sun was blazing and though the breeze was cool – this is Vermont after all – it was beautiful way to spend the morning. IMG_0042We then parted ways for a bit:  Frank to replace a valve cover gasket (yes, he did); me for a long run (10 miles – longer than was good for me!) and Duncan and Jesse to the rugby social.  They were allowed to shower and change for the occasion which is apparently not always the case which is why the gatherings are sometimes referred to as “stink and drink.”   Jesse was appropriately roasted and got toasted – as befits the birthday girl/co-MVP of the game.

Sunday was to be our grand day out with a hike up Camel’s Hump but Mother Nature had other plans and the glorious sunshine turned to grey drizzle.  We are not to be deterred, however, and instead headed up and down the coast of Lake Champlain visiting wineries.  Yup, Vermont has them and both Shelburne Vineyard (just south of Burlington) and East Shore Vineyard to the north provided lovely experiences.  The former was busy and bustling and was our first chance to taste sparking wine from the Louise Swenson grape. (We don’t have those in MO.)  The latter was empty and had a very congenial woman running the tasting and so much conviviality (and a great family picture) ensued.

But wine isn’t the star of the show in Vermont.  They have an amazing array of craft breweries including The Alchemist which brews Frank’s very favorite IPA – Heddy Topper – that is nearly impossible to find even in Vermont but for the first time we were able to procure his very own four-pack. (Sales are limited to one four-pack per customer per day when you can find it.)  IMG_0038 beer isn’t the only fizzy beverage popular in Vermont and we found ourselves sampling a couple of flights of cider at the Citizen Cider tasting room.  It is by far my favorite cider anywhere but of course you can’t get it in MO.  We enjoyed snacks and drinks and then what is one to do on a rainy Saturday?  Why bowl, of course.  We got two games in before enjoying a fabulous birthday dinner at a farm-to-table restaurant (are there any other kinds in Vermont?) in South Burlington.

Monday also dawned grey and dreary and also meant a return to class for Jesse who has less than two weeks left in the semester. But we had a quest to find one other Vermont specific beverage: Rail Dog maple spirit.  I don’t know how to describe it – it’s not whiskey or vodka but it is liquor made from distilling maple syrup.  Frank loves it and, again, it can’t be had anywhere outside Vermont.  In fact, it’s getting hard to find in Vermont because it is produced in such small batches which have such a loyal following that it rarely makes it to the store.  Such was the case on this day and so off we went to the farm where it’s distilled, 45 minutes north of Burlington and not far from the Canadian border. There we met Dave Howe, chemical engineer turned craft distiller, who gave us a private “tour” of the small building where he distills Rail Dog and a vodka, Literary Dog, which is the most amazing vodka (I don’t know how vodka can be creamy but this really is!) We also met the dogs for which the spirits are  

named and had a fabulous time talking about the distillation process, favorite single malts, and the best hikes in the area.  We parted with several bottles to bring home and an invitation to come back and hike the farm in the fall.  Oh and if Duncan wanted to put his biochem degree to good use, Dave would be happy to teach him everything he knows.  It was really the most singular day.

Or it started out that way.  And then we had to fly.  Luckily, the worst thing that happened to me and Frank was an hour delay in Detroit.  Duncan had the day from hell where his flight from Burlington to Charlottesville via Philadelphia turned into a rebooked flight to DC which was diverted to Harrisburg PA due to weather.  They sat for four hours (longer than it would take to drive to Charlottesville from PA) before finally being flown to DC in the wee hours of the morning.  He had to stay in a hotel before heading south Tuesday morning (but I understand there were Georgetown cupcakes to help soften the blow a tiny bit.)  That’s the last time any of us flies American Airlines again.  Ever.

So we ate, drank, and were merry (and then we ate and drank some more).  And it was good to be together as a family again.

 

 

Birthdays and renewals

I still don’t know quite what to make of having a birthday on Easter. It happened when I turned 40 which seemed prophetic. But that was a while ago when my kids still lived at home and my mom still lived. There were many jokes about being resurrected (and which parts of me would never be. My family is very funny.)

This year was very different though. First, there was only Frank there to carry the “make San feel special” burden. He did a fabulous job – I should say he does because he makes me feel special every day. And my birthday gift was a little over the top.  I asked for a counter top herb garden. I got a diamond necklace.  Okay, I guess that will do.

Easter service is always one of my favorites – I get my Alleluia’s back after a long 40 days without them.  But I felt a bit cheated because our church always goes out of the way to give birthday blessings on Sundays – it’s one of the things that drew us to the quirky little congregation:  the priest calls up everyone who has a birthday that week and the whole congregation prays for them (usually prayer 50 on page 830 of the Book of Common Prayer – feel free to look it up.  I’ll wait.) But of course with this being Easter and the most important day in the liturgical calendar, we didn’t do that part of the service. The egotistical me did have a little bit of a hard time not being the center of attention. Funny, but apparently it’s not always all about me.  Hmm.

I got lots of birthday wishes on FB and by email and text and for those I am grateful.  It’s nice to be reminded that you have connected with other human beings in such a way that they feel compelled to acknowledge a special day in your life.  My kiIMG_1521ds and brother have phoned and texted and I have been given carte blanche to make this my day as well as Easter at home. So we had champagne and Peeps for lunch.  And watched as the weather cleared from snow and sleet in the morning to cool sunshine in the afternoon.  Frank baked birthday cupcakes to have as dessert after the Easter-themed birthday dinner of lamb chops.  A hot bath tonight a few hands of cribbage (which I should win if there is to be marital harmony) and we’ll call celebration of the resurrection(s) complete.

I did have a very hoppy birthday – thanks for all the good wishes.

Tales of Travel to Texas

Stop me if you’ve heard this one:  A girl walks into the airport with luggage and a boarding pass and NO PHOTO ID.  Welcome to my Tuesday.  Let’s back up a bit.

I am in Dallas (Grapevine actually) at a big IT consulting summit where I will be one of four use case presentations among a sea of consulting advice.  It’s not really nerve wracking necessarily but this trip has been quite the challenge to put together.  First there was the challenges with getting my slides to the organizers – apparently Powerpoint attachments from the Fed get consistently caught in their spam filters.  I don’t know that we ever got a useable slide deck transmitted properly.  So I had to prepare to bring the slides on a memory stick. Except that we can’t just use any old memory sticks in Bank equipment.  So I need to track down the special encrypted kind that we are allowed to use.  We have a loaner one in the office so yesterday I grabbed that and prepare to upload the files. Except it doesn’t work.  The firmware is out of date. Okay.  Let’s try again.  I borrow another one marked quite clearly that it has a particular purpose and is NOT FOR BORROWING in capital letters.  The firmware for this one is up-to-date so I carefully type in the password written on the bottom of the box – great security! – and get a nasty pop up that says “Incorrect Password.  You have 0 more attempts before device self-destructs” or something like that.  Since I apparently wasn’t supposed to be borrowing it in the first place, I was taking NO chances.  That one gets returned and my awesome IT colleagues run around finding one that works.  I left the office yesterday with multiple copies stored on a relatively new encrypted device (and the password written on a piece of paper in my wallet.  Sssh.)

So now I’m ready.  Today was my mandatory “work from home for business continuity purposes” which was fine with me.  I had a quick doctor’s appointment (dermatologist says all is well), voted in the primary (and got to see what the Baptist church up the street looks like inside) and then settled in to get some work done before the car to the airport picks me up at 2:15 for my 4pm flight. (Yup- there are some benefits to being in the middle of the country with a small, navigable airport).  So I am plugging away working in my kitchen when it occurs to me that there’s a lunchtime spin class on Tuesdays at my gym.  I could spend my “lunch hour” getting some exercise before getting packed into the flying sardine can for the trip south.  So I get changed, grab my keys, gym card and driver’s license (foreshadowing here) and head to spin.  And nearly died spending 45 minutes “climbing mountains like we don’t have in Kansas City”.  Ugh.  But I kinda made it through.  Grabbed a protein shake to actually have for my lunch and then headed home for a quick shower, a short conference call, and then off to the airport.

Quick shower:  check.  Short conference call:  not so much.  I was first on the agenda and the participants were most interested in what I was saying so my 10 minute discussion lasted nearly 30 minutes.  So now I have 15 minutes to wrap everything up before heading to the airport.  Logged off the laptop and got that smushed into my “personal item” with my purse and my plane reading.  Closed up the suitcase and got that sorted.  Left the checkbook for Frank since I won’t need it in Dallas.  Left the car keys at home since I won’t need them in Dallas.  The car is now waiting and I rush out the door – remembering to leave the spare key in the mailbox for the cleaners who are coming tomorrow (which is why Frank needs the checkbook.)

So now we’ve caught up with our heroine who has just been dropped off at KCI with the boarding pass and belongings but whose driver’s license is home with the car keys. [Insert favorite swear word here.  Repeat 23 times.]  I tried to call Frank to see if he could run home and get it for me since there was about an hour before my flight left.  Two texts, two voicemails and 10 missed calls and it was obvious that wasn’t going to work.  So I checked with the airline to see if I could get on the next flight so I would have time to get my ID before boarding.  The gate agent told me that I could get on the plane without photo ID.  What?  No.  Really?  Do the presidential candidates know?  I can’t believe that.

So off I go to the TSA line and plead my tale of woe.  I have nothing on me with a photo.  Didn’t bring the work ID either since I wouldn’t need it.  (Had I gone to the office…. grrr…) The TSA agents are very nice and understanding but seem dubious that I have 3 credit cards, 2 ATM cards, insurance cards, etc but nothing with my photo and not even a checkbook with my name and address.  But wait!  I have my voter card cuz I voted!  The poll workers didn’t want to see it but I could show it to the TSA!  I got the most thorough search I have ever seen – every article of clothing I brought got swabbed and you have never actually seen such a pat down.  But I passed. And I got on the plane.

IMG_1513And then had to figure out what to do without ID once I got off.  What’s the first thing they say at the hotel registration desk?  Credit card and photo ID please.  So the tale of woe begins again.  But they have my credit card on file and I know my hotel rewards number so maybe I’m okay.  They also have a FedEx office in the conference center so Frank will be able to FedEx my driver’s license to me!  Yippee!  And while most days, I don’t even think about my driver’s license because it just sits languishing in my wallet, today I feel naked and everyone wants to know who I am.  I stopped by the hotel shop to get some wine and treats and handed over my credit card and was asked “Do you have photo ID?” Really?  How many times do I buy things with my credit card and no one gives a monkey’s rump if I can prove it’s my card.  Yet here, I need to because I can’t.  So my tale of woe told once again and my room key and my Facebook profile shown on my phone (no lie) are sufficient to prove that I am worthy of buying some local wine and Cherry Garcia.  So now to consume both and put this day behind me.  I’m ordering room service – they can’t possibly want to see my ID for that!

And so it must end

We awoke on our last full day to the sound of rain pounding down on the roof of the cottage. {sigh} So we were not destined to frollick in the sun. Okay, we’ll manage. I hit the gym for a run while Frank slept in. We staggered down to breakfast late and as we sat slumped over our coffee bemoaning our bad luck with the weather, we noticed that the rain had stopped. A few minutes later, the sky began to brighten. Could it be? Were we really going to get a decent last day in paradise?image

YES! The sky cleared, we slathered untold layers of sunscreen on and tried to squeeze as much sun soaked activities into one day as possible. We walked on he beach, played pool volleyball, did shots with the bar tender at the swim up bar, and generally had the kind of day we had hoped for during our stay. I finished another book and got all the vitamin D and sun burn I could stand before we wandered off to see he sunset (there wasn’t one – too cloudy) and then showered and changed for the manager’s cocktail party. We had lovely conversations with folks from northern England we had met during the disastrous Gala Dinner and then headed to the beach bar for more conversations with lovely English strangers before having our final dinner on the beach. We stayed through most of the “cultural event” before heading back to the cottage to pack.

And so today is the lost travel day. Two hours by bus to the airport where I get “randomly selected” for secondary screening which turned out to be nothing but still scared the poo out of me. We did get to hang out in the VIP lounge (we bought passes in advance) so we had plenty of snacks and an open bar to help us while away the time. Both flights boarded promptly and took off and landed early (love Southwest Airlines) and now we are back to our cold reality.

All in all, it was a good trip. We managed to try curried conch and jerk chicken; we had fresh snapper nearly every day. We tasted just about every cocktail on the bar list, and some that weren’t on the list. We met most of Michigan and a large portion of England. We didn’t get in any good snorkeling but did relax and get plenty of sleep.

We weren’t particularly enamoured of the north coast or this particular resort – too laid back, too old (we were definitely in the younger tail of the age distribution), too  many naked people (the au natural beach was the most popular part of the resort and had the nicest beach), and not enough variety in clothed activities for our taste.

So we will head back to Negril next time – probably late next year. We’re thinking of ringing in 2018 in the islands. Want to join us?

Rainy and grey days, the Jamaica way

My OCD self had been obnoxious about checking the weather forecast in the days leading up to our departure. There were multiple days with rain in the forecast. I convinced myself that the accuracy wasn’t great and things would be fine. When we got to spend Friday in nearly complete sunshine in defiance of the rainy forecast, I relaxed a little.

And then I woke up on Saturday morning to choppy seas and grey skies. Which never went away. The red flag was flying- no snorkeling or other watersports for us. But clouds were all we faced; we were still able to enjoy room service imagebreakfast on our patio, a music trivia game at the swim up bar (Frank won), lots of reading time on the beach, and our new favorite vacation activity: champagne and nachos and a dip in the jacuzzi before dinner. We even hung out for the reggae show and did a little dancing.

Today we weren’t so lucky. The grey skies were leaking, sometimes as just a sprinkle, others were a downpour. But we are on vacation so we will make the best of it. And what can we do in Ocho Rios in the rain? Why climb Dunn’s River Falls of course.  It’s an activity that was guaranteed to have us get soaking wet so why not do it in the pouring rain? And so we conquered  the 180 feet of climbing from the beach to the top, holding hands with complete strangers in our group and being as wet as it was possible to get. It was brilliant!image

The rain persisted on and off for the rest of the day. We took advantage of our private villa by lounging on our sun chairs while it was dry, dipping in the jacuzzi as the sprinklers started and then playing cribbage while drinking champagne when the rain got serious. A leisurely dinner and short visit to the evening show and we were ready to put an end to the rainy day and keep up hope for tomorrow.