Saturday, March 14, 2009

Still in Mexico








It is now the 14th of March and we are still in Mexico. We've had visitors from the frozen Colorado (Bill's brother Charlie and his wife Linda) and from warmer Palo Alto (Amy's Godmother Martha Cohn). The visitors have given us the excuse to go into town for dinners and lunches and to shop. And with Charlie and Linda we did a fishing charter which yielded nary a bite but was a lovely day on the water. Otherwise our days have been spent lying in the sun and reading and in Bill's case, paddling his kayak out into the bay. We are both as brown as we have ever been and completely ignorant of what is happening in the world. Room photos are of our boutique hotel Casa KauKan on Playa Larga just south of Zihuatanejo. In hotels we have visited on other trips the maids will have a towel/flower creation on the bed or dresser to greet you when you arrive. At Casa KauKan they do this every day and after we complimented the lady on her fine artistry she went wild and made them bigger and bigger and was soon also decorating the sink and the toilet seat. It is almost a nuisance now getting around all the flowers.

Monday, February 9, 2009

Hello Mexico






We are now in Mexico, on the seven mile white sand beach near the tiny village of Barra de Potosi just south of Zihuatanejo. When we went to Africa we flew via Los Angeles so we could leave the inflatable kayak at the hotel to be picked up on our return. Today Bill blew it up and made his way out through the pounding surf. I've taken a couple of photos of him and of the palapa and view in front of where we are staying, a place called Our House Bed and Breakfast. The last photo is of the neighbor's house and pool where I am going to lounge this afternoon. Sigh

Thursday, February 5, 2009

Farewell to Africa








On Feb. 4 we flew out of Livingstone to Johannesburg and then on to Washington DC and finally to LA. The trip involved 23 hours of flight time and 9 hours of airport waiting. For our last African blog we wanted to include a few of the animal photos that we took on our Chobe safari with Toff. For those of you who would like to do a trip such as ours you can reach Toff and Kiddy, pictured above, at www.toffandkiddybotswana.blogspot.com That should also lead to the website of their company Ultimate Africa Botswana. We highly recommend them to anyone wishing to experience the best of animal viewing.

Tuesday, February 3, 2009

Bush Picnic

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On Sunday, Feb 1, neighbors Franz and Mandy and their friend Gary took Toff and us to a lovely pan not far from their lodge where we had a bush picnic. Gary prepared the food that was cooked on the open fire:mild red chilis with cheese, cabbage with garlic and cheese, and an enormous squash (they called it a pumpkin) stuffed with chicken and mushrooms.

Monday, February 2, 2009

Visiting Pandamatenga






On Saturday Jan. 31, we drove to Pandamatenga. A few miles out of Kasane on the main paved highway we were forced to stop because of giraffes on the road. This is always exciting to me, running into exotic animals leisurely crossing our route. These were two large adults and while we were stopped for them we noticed two more adults, a teenager and two new babies in the bushes beside the road. Of course the camera was in the trunk. A short while before the giraffes we had passed elephants on both sides of the highway. At Panda we stayed at Touch of Africa, the lodge of our neighbors Franz and Mandy. We spent part of the afternoon walking to our building site and pointing out the giraffe and zebra tracks. Toff had marked out the site and we measured and discussed and came up with the correct size for the building pad and the location of main supports for the thatched roof. All of the above photos were taken on or near the property. The top one is the border road between Botswana on the right and Zimbabwe on the left. It is nearly 100 kilometers to any road or settlement on the Zimbabwe side. The second photo is a millipede, one of many on the road. The third photo is a road along the farm fence that leads to the boundry road. The left is open animal corridor and the right is farm land. The last two photos are of our building site, the last from the back of where the house will be showing the view to where we will have a water hole and the first looking away from the back of the house.

Sundowners on the Chobe





A safari tradition that we have come to enjoy is the sundowner. This involves finding a beautiful spot frequently with some game to view and sitting and enjoying a cool drink, usually a gin and tonic, while the famous orange ball that is an African sunset slowly fires the landscape. Since we were in the town of Kasane, Toff and his little Jack Russell took us out on his boat to a spot on the Chobe where the Zambezi backs up and makes ripples and there we sipped and listened to the hippos.

Thursday, January 29, 2009

Village Visitors








Kasane is a town of about 15,000. It and Maun are the two biggest tour centers of Botswana. Still it has a small town feeling. Bill saw two wart hogs at the shopping center a few days ago and I heard a hyena outside the window last night. Today our visitors were male and female boomslang snakes in the trees above the house. The book says that they rarely bite but their venom can kill you in 1 to 3 days due to internal bleeding. Toff called in Mike Clemence local chief mechanic and snake catcher. Mike and his crew caught both snakes and put them in pillow cases provided by Toff. They measured 1.7 and 1.79 meters (5ft 8 inches and 6ft), a record for this area.