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‘Caribbean’ Category

  1. Carlisle Bay, Barbados

    March 28, 2012 by Gail

    Carlisle Bay, Barbados

    sunset over Bridgetown

    I wish I had more time, but this post will be brief. I just finished a client website installation, which means I’m pretty brain-dead now, and I have two hospital trips to make early in the morning. I wanted to post this sunset before hitting the sack, though. It’s gorgeous and it reminds me of that 2010 birthday trip to Barbados, the land of the perfect clouds at sunset. I’m convinced it’s quite impossible to take a bad sunset picture in Barbados, even with a lowly point-and-shoot from 2005.

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  2. Tuesday Notes

    July 20, 2010 by Gail

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    Another gorgeous sunset photo from the trip to Barbados — I can’t believe this was only a month ago!

    Went to my 9am research participation interview this morning at OISE (Ontario Institute for Studies in Education) at the University of Toronto and talked about myself for more than two and a half hours straight! Although it was a heckuva lot of speaking (there were few specific questions and very long responses from me), I felt quite energized afterward. We didn’t get through all the questions so I’m going to have another interview after this one is transcribed. In loose terms, it’s a study about women and psychological health.

    I have meetings at the Canadian Cancer Society the next two mornings as part of my orientation to become a volunteer driver for patients to get to cancer treatments. I think after Thursday morning I’ll actually be shadowing someone. I also offered to teach photography to patients and their families at Princess Margaret Lodge. You might be wondering where I could possibly squeeze in the time to do this. Believe me, it is possible. I don’t watch TV.

    And, tonight, I revamped The Brides’ Project website, which reminded me: my website will be eight years old next week!

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  3. Rainbows Over Bathsheba, Barbados

    June 21, 2010 by Gail

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    I spent a number of hours in Bathsheba because it took two attempts and long(ish) bus journeys to get there, including a short walk over a bridge. It was deemed unsafe for vehicles the day I made attempt #1 and the government buses stopped short of driving over it. But once I finally reached Bathsheba I was fully rewarded by amazing scenery and rainbows.

    If you have simple pleasures in life, you will be rewarded every single day.

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  4. The Barbados Album

    June 20, 2010 by Gail

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    I can’t believe it’s nearly midnight… I have to be at work at 6am! Here is the photo album for Barbados, which has 85 photos and 15 videos thus far. The best viewing is as a [slideshow], but you can also preview it as [thumbnails] or in the Pictobrowser below. Just click on a pic to advance to the next one. There’s also a slideshow feature within Pictobrowser (click arrow to play). Check back for updates — the album will continue to grow over time.

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  5. The Eagle Has Landed*!

    June 20, 2010 by Gail

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    The sunset landing in Toronto this evening was amazing… I know, aren’t all sunsets amazing? But I still take pictures of them. These photos are all straight of the Canon A520 point-and-shoot.

    I’m back, Toronto! Back to all your G20 mayhem and madness, and gritting my teeth to work through it all. I arrived home to find my G20 passes to enter The Security Fence, but I need to bring photo ID with me, too! I’ll be so glad when this is all over and we can get back to regular summer activity. In better news, I got to board a retired British Airways Concorde (Alpha Echo) yesterday afternoon in Barbados before I left. WOW, that’s all I can say. I had one chance only to fly in a Concorde (for free), but I’ll tell the story when I get the photos downloaded off the card and after some sleep.

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    * http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Eagle_Has_Landed

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  6. Oistins Fish Fry (preview)

    June 19, 2010 by Gail

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    www.barbados.org/oistins-fish-fry.htm

    According to the menu I ordered dolphin, but everyone assures me that I’m not eating Flipper, they just call it dolphin. “Dolphin in Barbados is an ugly but delicious fish, not a porpoise.” Some call it mahi-mahi (isn’t that a tuna?) or dorado, but until I look it up, I don’t know exactly what it is or what it looks like (before it becomes food). I also tried some marlin, which is a very meaty fish, to the point where it looks and tastes more like a beef steak than fish.

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  7. 38 Today

    June 18, 2010 by Gail

    38 today

    Holetown, St. James, Barbados

    Gail at Large is still at large, 38 years later. Thanks for the birthday wishes, it’s been a fabulous week!

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  8. Bathsheba, Barbados

    June 17, 2010 by Gail

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    It’s some crazy hour and all I want to do is shower, inspect my mosquito net for invaders — and destroy them! — and crawl in to sleep. I had a great day learning all about the history of Barbados in Bridgetown (I read EVERYTHING at the Museum of Parliament and I had a guide all to myself across the courtyard at parliament, so I drilled him), then caught a bus to Bathsheba on the east coast and spent the rest of the day there with the surfers at Soup Bowl. I tried to go to Bathsheba yesterday, but that’s a story for another day… every day has many stories!

    Yesterday and today ended by sitting on some video editing classes taught by my host, who’s a filmmaker and teacher of film studies, and after class we would go out for fish and beer around Bridgetown. When people ask me what I’m doing while in Barbados, I never know how to answer because I do a little bit of everything: I try new food every day, speak to locals every day, catch the sunset in different places around the island, take advantage of cheap bus fares (B$1.50 to anywhere!) and explore random places, nose around the grocery stores, walk, walk, walk, and learn, learn, learn.

    My trusty little El Cheapo Canon A520 is still alive after taking a beating in Barbados — downpours, sand, salty sea air — and here’s what came straight out of it today, without post-processing:

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  9. Giant Green Thumb Required?

    June 16, 2010 by Gail

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    While I could easily live without the enormous crawling insects with big feet (I almost stepped on one last night), one thing I do miss about living in the tropics is the flora. Everything is such vibrant colours, and with all the sunlight it all just grows and grows and grows… (and so do the insects!)

    Yesterday while at Little Bay, I was talking to a guy who was showing me the shellfish he caught nearby and at the same time was rubbing his head with the leaf — and I use this term loosely since it’s more like an octopus tentacle — of an aloe plant. I asked him why he was rubbing his head with it, if it made his head cooler, and he laughed so hard his laugh ate his answer. I had to ask him to repeat (like I’ve had to do with nearly everyone in the countryside), but all I could understand from his thick Bajan accent was something about the roots… i.e., the roots of his hair? Hell if I know, but it was entertaining to listen to him.

    It’s been quite the linguistic adventure the past four days, but it’d probably take six months of living here to fully catch on to what people are saying. I listen very carefully and try as I might, I still only recognise a word here and there. I remember it took a few months to get by with the lingo in Australia, and at least that long in Scotland to understand the farmers. It is most interesting — trippy, even — to hear people learn English as a second language here. It’s English in theory, I suppose, but not really in practice! Wish I had an example to demonstrate this, but you’ll have to use your imagination… imagine a Chinese accent mixed with Caribbean English!

    One creature I’ve been waiting to see but I’ve missed all the times they usually come ’round, I’m told, are the monkeys. Green monkeys have lived in Barbados for centuries, but the parish I’m staying in isn’t their prime location. My host sees them daily, around 5 o’clock, but I’m never here at that time. I doubt they’d stay still for my camera, but I’d like to at least see them for myself — I haven’t seen monkeys in the wild since I was in Malaysia.

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  10. Sunset From Bridgetown, Barbados

    June 15, 2010 by Gail

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    Carlisle Bay, Barbados

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    Carlisle Bay, Bridgetown, Barbados — all taken with the Canon 520 point-and-shoot from 2005. I shot lots of photos today with the DSLR, but the processing of RAW files on my (6-year old) PowerBook G4 is really slow to the point where I fall asleep while waiting for it… I’ll upload more of those after I return home to the iMac.

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