1. Boiling tap water to make drinking water
2. Getting buckets of water from the well on the property to water the veggies and chuck over us when we get back from the beach
3. Eating dinner by candlelight every night as Jirama (electricity) seems to go off at the precise time of preparing and eating dinner
4. Putting buckets under the eaves of the cottage when it rains to collect the rain water
Yesterday when I was out for my run, it was an hour earlier than I usually go, big mistake - it had been an overcast and rainy day so I thought it would be nice and cool, but typically, about 15mins
into the run, the sun came out, not pleasant. But the worst part was that I coincided with running past a school and through a small village at school finishing time. About 150 kids, all ages were
spilling out of the school and either walking to the fields to play football or heading home. A melange of colours drifting with excited chatting and laughter punctuating the air .... and there was the
big white vasser lady running. I got whoops, laughs, claps, thumbs ups and some of the smaller kids running along with me!
The older kids seem to take the piss, but the younger ones are so polite and give you a Salut! or Bon Soir! or take a little jog with you - the older ones are typical teenagers in a group!
David was very excited yesterday as a friend of Ryans arrived bringing him a replacement spear gun for the one he lost, and one more appropriate for the water and fishing here - a 1.2m Rob
Allen. He's twitching to get it into the water for a try out and the guys will be going out on Friday (today) for a days fishing.
We gave in to one of our self promises this week and asked if the cleaner for the properties here can do our clothes washing for us! No matter how much we have tried, we just cannot get the
hang of hand washing and our clothes were coming out just as dirty, just smelling a little better! So Clementine has started doing the washing once a week for us!
Exciting news! We have bought a boat! Antoinin, who David went spearing with when we were here in August and is a good friend of Ryan and Cath, was selling one of his boats, a smallish one
with a 60HP engine, which has been fit out specially for spearfishing and can take four people plus the driver. So thats going to be great to get out for diving, spearing and a bit of exploring over
the next few weeks. But before we take it, we need to sort a mooring in the bay
where we live, and a guardian for the boat at night. All boatshave a guardian that sleeps on it to prevent petty theft but also to keep an eye on things with the unpredictable and changeable
weather. So Serge and David went down to the beach to go and start making enquiries for a guardian and within 10 mins found a guy who wants to be the guardian for the boat - sorted.
Ross is coming out next week and we will be chatting with him about the part he wants us to play in his tourism business. We will be acting as local agents / tour operators and guest reps to
assist with making the clients stay and requirements while here even more seamless.
In order to understand the business operations more, we will be joining him and some guests on one of their island hopping tours in early May for a week! I can't wait - so looking forward to that!
Will be a great way to see more of the areas around us and to mark some good spots of where to go in the boat for diving / snorkelling and fishing and camping - as well as just to play when
people come stay!
So we had a bit of a fright and realised our original two month visa's were about to expire. We want to apply for residency but realised we'd left it a bit late, so David went off on Tuesday morning
to drop our passports into some magic, under the table system which will get us a 3 month extension, which will then give us enough time to sort our residency out, saving us the process every
few months.
I've had a real issue with trying to get things to grow here. I thought potentially I was just being useless, but I've done this growing thing before with no hassels. The soil isn't the greatest here, but
my mom also said it may just be too hot at the moment! I very gladly have seen the change in how things are starting to grow just in the last couple of weeks as its started to get slightly cooler,
so I'm very excited to get things underway again and watch them start to produce! Things seem to stay alive and get to a certain height, but then just don't do anything else, just stay there, not
getting any bigger, not dying and not fruiting! So I'm holding out for some home produce in the next few weeks - definitely some purple basil at least and my one corgette plant has a flower, so
finges crossed its going to fruit!
We got really excited this week when we went to see one of the other supermarkets on the island, which is owned and run by the Chinese. We have gone past it a hundred times while we have
been in a taxi brusse, but not been able to stop. So we hopped on our bicycles and cycled over. Luckily for us just as we set out some clouds came over cooling it, as its pretty hilly going around
here!
So much of excitement! The shop is so much closer than Hellville, bigger and better stocked than the supermarkets in both Hellville and Dar Es Salaam, cheaper and with so much more! David
was stoked to find a bottle of J & B whiskey, reasonably priced too (more than Dubai though!), but you just don't see things like that around here!
There is also a butchers next door, small but owned by a French guy - fresh produce, frozen produce and so much selection - pork and lamb which we'd not seen yet here, rabbit and duck,
pate's, Italian sausage and hams!!! And not that scary in the price department, actually some of it was cheaper than the Zebu mince we've been buying in the market! We bought some chicken
that Davids going to make into his speciality curry on Friday! I'm salivating at the thought - its the second bit of chicken we'll have eaten since arriving - the first being that lovely gamey chicken
leg we had at our first outing to Tatie Chris!
On our way home, we took the dirt road which runs on the other side of the rice paddies across from where we live. We mainly took it to avoid the hills coming back and to get us off the main tar
road. About 5 mins from home the sky opened and it started pouring with rain! Absolutely divine! The dirt road turned to mud almost immediately and we were filthy when we got back home! The
great thing is, we just hauled a bucket of water from the well, chucked our clothes in to wash the mud off (we always have our cossies under clothes!) and stood in the rain, washing the mud off!
We love rainy days - it hasn't rained all day yet, we've only had a couple of days where we have had rain during the day. If its late afternooon / early evening its awesome as it cools things off
beautifully. If its early morning or during the day its a nightmare, as the sun comes out and heats it all up making it incredibly more humid than it would have been anyway! Just means more swim
time to cool off!
On Sunday mornings the guys from Manga Be, one of the resorts near us where Ross's clients start and end their tours at, play a game of cricket on the beach. This week we watched - an
English guy - Bob, an Aussie and an Italian guy, along with a bunch of Malagasy guys of all ages, having so much fun playing. I think Davids going to try and join in this week - should be a laugh
and a good way to further imbed ourselves into island life!
We decided to do a bit of a tour around the island this week too on the quad - now that we can go a bit further. It was very cool! We packed up a picnic and just rode around the main road,
ducking off on side roads to find access to the beach, looking at different villages along the way and just getting more of a bearing for the place. So many of the roads going to the beaches are
blocked off as private for private houses or small accommodation / restaurant spots. We'll have to get a bit more savvy in finding off road routes, thats what the quad is for!
We found 2 of the 11 volcanic lakes that are on the island, as well as two of the ylang ylang distilleries. As you ride around, the pungent sweet smell of ylang ylang punctuates your journey, as
well as little kids running to the road at the sound of the bike to wave! Everyone is just so happy! Some of the older guys are a bit annoying though, trying to get you onto an excursion or tour - you
try and explain you're not a tourist, you're a resident but they don't stop! It gets rather annoying sometimes. All we wanted to do was find a place to sit and have a cold beer in their village, but they
chased us out and lost our business as they wouldn't leave us alone! Their loss! Its times like that we wish our French or Malagash was better than it is to press home the point that we are totally
not interested in their business opportunity!
Its such a divine overcast day today - it rained most of the night leaving everything crisp and cool. The weather is definitely turning and we are no longer permanently coated in a sweaty sheen!
Winter is on its way, which means temperatures dropping into the twenties! Bliss! Will make mountain biking and running a lot easier!
Right - got to hit the veggie patch and work that soil!
Quad tour of Nosy Be |
One of the 11inland lakes |
Private beach for a picnic |
The camera just doesn't do the views justice |
An old ylang ylang distillery |
Another of the lakes |
Mer-dog!!! |
Preparing dinners! |
Filleted, steaked and sorted |
Waiting for the moon rise |
The hat rack David made from bamboo |
We put the hammock up - perfection! |
The herb pots |
Basil in action |
Coriander |
Marigolds coming up |
Cucumber and more seedlings on the go |
Serge's pumpkin in the garden |
Papaya in the garden |
Bananas - the fresh fruit we can just pick is awesome |
The rice has been harvested and now planting will start |
The huge orange tree by Serges house |
All the oranges - divine and sweet |
Sunset on Palm Beach |
Our boat Akio at sunset |