Hola mi amigos,
First off, I'd like to let you all know that our phone number here is 809-676-1568 not 1578. The phone company gave us the wrong number when we purchased the phone. We didn't figure it out until a recent trip to Santo Domingo. One of our contacts there tried and tried to call us with no luck. He finally checked the number on his phone when I called him and noticed the last 4 digits were 1568 not 1578. We were always wondering why family couldn't call us from the states. Now we know why. It seems typical of the way things work around here. Go figure.....:-))
(Picture is of Panda and Bobby in our back yard)
3-9
We're working on getting our house setup. (Pictures are of our downstairs and kitchen and stairway going upstairs.) Since we came with only 7 suitcases it's taking some time but it's coming together. We still don't have a couch or TV but we do have 4 plastic chairs, a plastic table and 2 small wooden tables that our friends Monica and Tim gave us. We use one for a kitchen table and one for a desk. I am attempting to setup an office upstairs in our bedroom. We did get a printer on one of our recent shopping trips. I will need it for my work.
Speaking of electricity....we received our first electric bill this month. It was 129 pesos....about $4. Guess that 8 hour a day electricity is good for the pocketbook. Also, we got our first water bill. 78 pesos....about $2. Water has been good so far but we hear in the summer you can run out of water if we go days without rain so we may need to look into getting a cistern (sp?) for the roof or balcony to collect rainwater.
We don't have hot water so our showers are quite refreshing. You have to work your way in to the water stream. You just put one leg in, then the other leg, then your head, etc... The back is the hardest. They do have a gadget here that you can hook up directly to your shower head and it heats the water immediately. It plugs in to an electrical outlet. It only costs 600 pesos (35 pesos to the dollar here now so around $17) but it looks like a good way to get electrocuted. You should see it. It just doesn't look right. Just picture this.....you're taking a shower, you are standing in a pool of water, your shower head has wires coming out of it going to an electrical outlet. Ya think??? That's just dumb. I guess someone did get electrocuted by one once. Our friend Bert has used one for years but we are opting out of this one. We think we'll stick with the cold showers! At least the water here isn't as cold as the good old Northwest waters!
3-7
There is an amphitheater there that seats around 4,000 people. We got to see Carlos Santana in concert there! Incredible!!! The concert was amazing. There wasn't a bad seat in the house! The Dominicans love Santana so it was a very warm, friendly crowd. There were people there with their whole families. We danced and danced.
After the concert us girls got separated from the boys and we got a little lost. We were so turned around we couldn't figure out where we were. The place is kind of a maze. We found an electric golf cart and thought it would be a good way to find the parking lot so Monica tried to hot wire it with one of my earrings. It was hilarious. Never mind the fact that you most likely cannot hot wire an electric cart, then try to do it with an earring. We laughed and laughed. We finally got a ride from a nice guy in his truck who took us to the parking lot where Tim and Steve were patiently waiting for us. We all got a good laugh out of that one!
After the concert we headed to our motel in La Romana. It had been a long day and we were hungry. It was very late so most everything was closed but we were determined to find something to eat. So, Monica and Emma headed out on the back of a scooter with the guy from the motel to find us some food. Chinese food, we thought. They were successful in that they did bring us some food but it definitely was not Chinese food. I'm not sure what it was but I know it wasn't meat. That is what was important to me. And, it did the trick. You should have seen Monica and Emma on the back of that scooter! So funny....
We had a nice breakfast the next morning and then headed to Jumbo, a big department store where you can get anything you need. We shopped for an hour and got many things that we needed for the house at a good price. After the drive home, which is about 3 hours, Steve and I took Panda and Bobby (the foster dog with the amputated leg) to Orchid Bay beach and went for a swim. A perfect ending to a perfect weekend.
3-9
We drove to Nagua on Monday to pick up our car title. We arrived in town during siesta time (12-2) so we had to kill some time. We went to the Dollar Store to get a few things and then looked for a place to eat. We found a small restaurant on the outside of town that looked nice. It was just a little hut with outdoor seating. We ended up having a wonderful lunch of rice, beans and a beautiful ensalada with huge avocados. The owners name is Juana. A very nice woman. We stumbled through speaking with her and made friends with her before we left. She told us to call ahead before we come next time and she'll have something to eat ready for us. We're a little hard to feed because we don't eat meat. Wasn't that sweet of her? The nicest people....
We picked up a couple dog beds we had made while we were in Nagua. There's a woman there who has all kinds of pads and fabrics in her store and she makes pillows, cushions, etc... for a very reasonable price. Now Panda has 2 great dog beds. One for upstairs and one for downstairs. Of course, we buy dog beds for Panda before we own a couch for ourselves. Go figure.....
3-13
Many things are not available in Cabrera because it's so small or if they are available, they're very expensive so a good thing to do here is to travel to the bigger cities to shop. On Thursday we went with our new friends Dodie and Dave to San Francisco, which is SE of Cabrera. You go to Nagua then head South and then West. There is a big store there called La Sirena there. It's like a Fred Meyer. San Francisco is not a tourist town so the prices are good. We shopped for hours for housewares and for food. I actually had fun shopping. I'm not much of a shopper usually. Since we came to the DR with nothing we had to get things for the house. We've done more shopping in the last month than we've done in 10 years...honestly. But, it's been fun and all necessary so we don't feel too guilty.
3-17
(BTW, Dr. Medina doesn't speak English and he didn't know what his t-shirt said until we told him. He was embarassed. It was really funny when we translated it to him. He said his wife gave it to him. Classic!!)
3-18
I was out hanging clothes on the line today and I heard all the neighborhood dogs start barking. I looked out at the road and here came about 5 cows and 3 calves walking down our little dirt road. There were a couple Dominicans with them. It was a sight to see. (I tried to get a photo but they were moving fast. Here's the back side of them).
Our hump to keep the rain out of our driveway is holding it's own. It really rained this morning for a couple of hours and no water on our front porch! Thank goodness. It's important to be 'humped' around here. :-) Our front gate is done now too, thanks to Tony who finished it last week.
Here's Steve and I in front of the gate. The little dog is Cici, Tony's dog. She has puppies right now....7 of them.
3-24
We do our best to take Panda and Bobby for a walk everyday. Our favorite place is the cliffs that run along Cabrera. There is a little place there called Manny's Bar & Grill. We have made friends with the owner of the place. His name is Frances and he speaks very good English. He bought the land 12 years ago and just built this little cabana. It just opened last week. It's fun to sit and watch the ocean there. We all met there Friday night for a beer. Frances lets us bring the dogs too. It's so beautiful there with the cliffs, the blue ocean and sometimes whales and dolphins. A special place.
The ice cream man here rides around on a scooter with cones hanging from his handlebars and a small cooler attached to the back of his scooter. He drives around ringing a small bell that he holds in his hand. Some of them wear a bright fluorescent green outfit – pants, shirt and a hat. They're very bright. Hey Eric – I was thinking this could be a new career for you??? But, I think fluorescent orange would be more your color. :-))
3-19- to 3-22
Steve and I traveled to Santo Domingo (SD) last week. Emma was nice enough to take care of our pets while we were gone. It's about a 2 hour drive to SD with the new road they have just finished. It used to take 5 hours. You head east to Nagua, then head south to SD. SD is a HUGE city. HUGE! It's the oldest city in the Americas. Tons of history there and old buildings. We found a motel in the Colonial Zone for $50/night.
The Foreigners Club Hotel in Santo Domingo. Our room was the one upstairs. You can see the cemetery in the background. Here's another picture of it.
Our neighbor and friend Tony has an uncle named Luis who lives in SD. He was nice enough to show us around every night. It was so much fun. He's a great guy and very funny. We met some of his friends, saw where he plays baseball on Wednesday and Saturday and he took us to a neighborhood one evening where they were playing music outside and everyone was dancing. A true Dominican evening!
Before we left Cabrera to go to SD I had arranged meetings with the local animal rescue groups in SD. I have been contracted by The Humane Society of the United States to write up an assessment of the animal welfare groups in the DR.
There are 3 major rescue groups focusing on spay/neuter of street dogs in SD and 1 group working with marine mammals (for example - whales and dolphins). I was impressed with all the groups. Believe me, they have their work cut out for them.
While there I also met with the Director of the Rabies Prevention Department, Dr. Rosario, and he informed me that there are around 60,000 street dogs in SD alone and that around 50% of them carry Rabies. It's a terrible health hazard, not to mention the cruelty the dogs endure and their poor health. Most of them have sarna, a form of mange that makes their skin hard and scaly. It looks awful and painful. Many also get transmissible canine venereal tumors. The tumor is spread from site to site and dog to dog by contact during coitus or licking of genitalia or extra-genital tumor masses. It is sooooooooooooooo sad!
The working horses in SD have it worse than the dogs. These are not the carriage horses that give people rides through the city. Most of those horses are cared for to some degree because the person working them owns them and makes money off of them so they need to care for them. But, the other horses, the working horses, are involved in a type of mafia ring. We were told that one guy will own many horses. He gets most of them by stealing them. He then rents these horses out to guys who walk the streets everyday selling fruit and vegetables and things. This guy does not care about the horses because they are not his and he is not required to feed or water them so they are terribly abused. They are weak and have sores on them. People tell me they have seem them literally collapse in the streets. We did not personally see them but we saw pictures. The guy who owns these horses does not want to spend much money on them so he barely feeds and waters them. He could own 40 horses, rent them out for 300-400 pesos a day, he most likely does not pay taxes or pay for medical care or for food for these horses so he makes a lot of money. SODOPRECA, one of the groups in SD, is working hard to get help for these horses but they have no support from the city. There is a law in place to protect these horses but it is not enforced. The whole thing is heartbreaking!
We did manage to have some fun in SD and met some really wonderful people. There are people there working hard for the animals, it is just very, very slow and there is so much to do. I learned a lot from this visit and we made some new friends. If you're interested in the groups I visited below are their websites:
Sociedad Dominicana para la Prevencion de Crueldad a los Animales (SODOPRECA) – www.sodopreca.org
Fundacion Dominicana de Estudios Marinos, Inc. (FUNDEMAR) – www.fundemar.org
Fundacion Salvavidas – www.fundacionsalvavidas.org
Patronato Amigos de los Animales (PADELA) – www.padelard.org
While in SD I also met with Dr. Mallen and Dr. More at the Hospital Veterinario Arroyo Hondo (www.hvahrd.com). They work closely with these groups. They are a husband and wife team and they are wonderful! Thank God for their help!
Fundacion Salvavidas has a shelter way up in the mountains at Jarabacoa. It is North and a little west of Santo Domingo. We drove there on Sunday on our way home. It was so beautiful.
3-23
It has been quite rainy and cold for the last week. It can just pour here! One night, it rained all night. No kidding. Usually here it rains some, then clears up, then rains again...like squalls. But this one night, it rained, I mean poured, all night. It rained so hard our roof started leaking a little. Our bedroom is upstairs and just after midnight Steve started feeling a drip on his head. It would drip every 5 seconds or so. It was funny at first, then got very annoying. The rain wouldn't stop. We had to get up and put a towel down. It hasn't leaked since that night.
3-27
Steve and I splurged this week and we purchased an inverter. It consists of an inverter and 4 batteries, like car batteries. It kicks on when the electricity goes out. When the electricity is on, it charges your batteries. So now at least we'll have lights and the laptop 24/7. It isn't enough power to power the fridge though. You can get different levels of power but the more power, the more money they want, of course. It is nice to eat dinner with lights though. Ah, the luxury of it all!
3-28
We were at Manny's for lunch yesterday with some friends and the whales put on a show for us!!! Literally....I've never seen anything like it. It was like they were standing on their head holding their tails out of the water. It went on for ½ hour or so. It was such a treat...no kidding! The humpbacks come every year and breed here. Maybe this was a breeding dance. We'd like to think so.
Here's Steve and I at lunch with Panda on the cliffs.
3-29
Pictured is Basile, Luis, Tony, Steve and I.
The beach is called La Boca and it's just outside of La Entrada. It's a very local beach and on Sunday everyone goes to the beach. A river flows into the ocean right at the beach so you can swim in the river or the ocean, or both! That's what we did. Here's a picture of us at the beach and a view of all the people there. They jump into the river from the bridge. Whole families were there having picnics, playing music and dancing.
3-30
Well, we are loving it here. It has its challenges but we like to think of it as building character, like I said before. Every day is a new adventure. We are meeting some very nice people and making friends. It's fun. Panda is a huge hit here. She rides around in the car with us and that is something that NO ONE does here. And, she is so striking looking that everyone just literally stops and stares. It's great. She is sending a good message just by being herself! And, her and Bobby are doing great together.
Now that we've been to SD I can start working on my project with HSUS. I still have some groups to meet with but that will have to be another trip. They are in La Romana.
I am headed to Las Vegas next week for the Animal Care Expo put on by HSUS. I'm hoping that it will be a worthwhile trip and that I can do some good networking for my Humane Education project I want to start here in Cabrera.
We start Spanish classes tomorrow. We will be taking them twice a week. I'm very excited to get started on that!
BTW, if you want to look us up on Google Earth our house is at 19 degrees, 37 minutes, 51.41 seconds North and 69 degrees, 54 minutes, 16.71 seconds West.
3/30 UPDATE ON BOBBY!
Bobby flew to his new home in New York yesterday and he has arrived safely. His new guardian says he is doing well and settling in. We are very happy to hear that. We were fortunate enough to be able to nurse Bobby back to health and now he's safe in the US. Now we can open our home to the next dog in need. Which is actually coming today.
She's a little terrier mix who lives in a small wooden shed because she is too much for the guardian to handle so she's chained in this tiny dark shed 24/7. We will work on finding her a new home next. That's what we're here for.....