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| Beach Rescue |
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| Clean Machete, No Waiting. |
If a coconut falls in the grove and no one is there to eat it, is it still delicious?
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| Future Fuel |
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| Beach Rescue |
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| Clean Machete, No Waiting. |
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| Future Fuel |
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| Cruise ship "Orchestra" departing Castries at sunset |
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| Mingling in the Green Room |
On our way to the Sulphur Springs Saturday, we pass through the small, coastal town of Canaries. Located above the village featuring fantastic views sits Plas Kassav. This family run establishment was featured on Paula Deen's TV show last year and is now a celebrated, local tourist destination.
As we cross the ridge, the air gets eggy with sulphur and then we know we are nearing the hot springs that bubble up through a hole in a volcanic crater. Soufriere is French for sulphur, and the volcanic gases include sulphur dioxide, hydrogen sulphide and carbon monoxide.
The St. Lucia School of Music is is located in a quiet residential neighborhood called Tapion. This area features a hospital, a beach, an old lighthouse and dozens of dogs. Most Lucians keep dogs as a security system, not as pets. When I walk around the neighborhood, a cascade of barking follows me all the way down the hill to the water. The animals are kept on short chains in front yards and their ribs poke out as they frantically attack front gates and fence. On one of these walks I met my new neighbors, a couple from Alberta, walking on leash their three, rather large, friendly dogs.
As we pass thru the front door of their recently purchased rambler, the three dogs turn into nine. Six puppies! Not only has this enterprising Canadian couple found their dream home on a cliff over the sea, but they adopted a pregnant local dog and found themselves drawn to becoming passionate agents for the disenfranchised island canines. SLAPS, the unfortunate acronym for The St. Lucia Animal Protection Society, appears to be a growing group of individuals who lobby on behalf of neutering and adoption for stray. Less than 20-years old, SLAPS works for animal welfare without the support of government or corporations.
On my third day in St. Lucia, the sound post inside my cello went down. As my body was acclimatizing to the heat and humidity, so was my instrument. The sound post is a vertical dowel with angled ends that connects the back of the cello to the front. It's set in place with a sound post setter, an angled metal bar that stabs into the dowel. With infinite patience and a flashlight, one can insert the dowel into the cello and set it upright. An experienced luthier can dramatically change the sound of the instrument by moving the post location in one direction or another. I've reset my sound post four times in the last two weeks. It's completely annoying. So, in this blogpost I celebrate an enterprising 17-year old cellist named Runley. Maintaining a wooden instrument near the equator requires vigilance and determination, and, as of yet, there are no luthiers on St. Lucia. Perhaps that will change soon, but until then, I've adopted Runley as my luthier apprentice.
The St. Lucians are well aware that 60% of the island revenue is from tourism, and there is immense incentive to keep the island clean and welcoming. The government sends squadrons of workers out weekdays to rake and remove pile after pile of washed up waste. Like California, the waterfront is available to everyone, and beachfront resorts are vigilant about maintaining their beach access.
When the sun rises, the birds and I
begin to rustle and connect with the new day.
My back porch addresses a ravine planted with fruit trees, so I watch bleary eyed as the sun breaks thru the branches, and the finches chatter and stab at pommecythere fruit.
After another brief bus ride, I’m at work. All is peaceful. This building serves most students after their school day, so there is often time to set up my room and administrate. When the students do arrive the school is
humming. Children are
everywhere. Practicing, rehearsing, chatting at the picnic table. Somewhere along the way the sun drops into the water outside my window and the peepers pipe up. Cruise ship horns let us know they are sailing to Martinique or Barbados and then the harbor is still.![]() |
| Party Preparations |
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| Arch of Bows |
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| Priscilla at the Castries Market |
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| Mahlin Hanging Out |
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| Choc Beach facing West |

I found out today that I'm not the only one entranced by the hummingbirds each morning. I sit with a mug of mango scented green tea on the balcony below a huge Moringa tree and watch as perhaps a dozen Antillean Crested Hummingbirds zip from flower to flower. My landlord's house cat, Snowball, likes hummers, too! As though trying to blend in with the white flowers, she squats like a sphinx at the fork in the tree, ready, watching the show. Not once does she try to swipe at the little critters that seem to hover and taunt just within reach.
Tiny mandarins are in season now. Tart, sweet, and packed with more fiber than you might imagine, fresh mandarins are a distant cousin from canned version I loved as a kid. These cute, little guys were a welcome gift from my land lord.
If you were to head down the hill to visit the beachfront below you might still hear a tenor saxophonist practicing scales, the sweet sound blending with the keening of the wind. Brown boobies soar overhead, unrestrained by the blustery breeze pummeling the bluff.