04 June 2012
27 May 2012
sonder
n. the realization that each random passerby is living a life as vivid and complex as your own—populated with their own ambitions, friends, routines, worries and inherited craziness—an epic story that continues invisibly around you like an anthill sprawling deep underground, with elaborate passageways to thousands of other lives that you’ll never know existed, in which you might appear only once, as an extra sipping coffee in the background, as a blur of traffic passing on the highway, as a lighted window at dusk.
08 March 2012
coconuts!
my first experience with a fresh coconut, straight off a palm tree, was on the beautiful flamanco beach on culebra island. I told laney and jameson that i had never experienced the whole process. also i had never tasted the difference between a young and an old coconut. and they were surely up for the challenge!
first, we roamed the beach looking for the perfect coconuts. we found a palm tree with young coconuts that were easy enough to reach. laney and i lifted jameson up, 'like a cheerleader', and he threw them down to us. then we found 2 old coconuts hiding from us in the brush. we quickly and excitedly brought them back to our campsite and fetched the machete!
the young coconuts were a lot easier to chop open then the old, thats for sure. jameson used his skills and got the young one open pretty fast. luckily our camping neighbor had a straw handy and we drank that water right up.
getting to the yummy meat of the old one was far more difficult but a rewarding challenge. and it was well worth the wait and effort! (let me just say that i remained an observer through all of this, and give jameson and laney all of the credit for breaking into them!)
the yellowish looking coconuts in this picture are the young coconuts. they have more water to drink but no meat to eat. the white coconut, on the bottom of the picture, is the old coconut which has probably half the amount of water but is full of meat. (i was surprised how filling it was)
starting on the left is the old coconut after its outer shell had been removed. this is how you might recognize one in the grocery store. the one in the middle is the old coconut fallen ripe from the tree, with the outer shell still on. the one on the right is the young coconut. once you chop the tip off you can use the point of your knife to pierce a hole right through the skin to drink till your hearts content. so so good.
and another thing to check off the list of things to do in life!
Labels:
travel
06 March 2012
27 February 2012
02 February 2012
01 February 2012
bus 9 to paradise
"paradise is to be found only in our immense and limitless minds, shaped by our own unique experience and willingness to continually grow and change."
"siamo vecchie troppo presto, e troppo tarde intellengente (we get too soon old and too late smart.) "
Labels:
good reads
09 January 2012
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