Victor's Life Journal
travel log, pictures, personal finance, news and ramblings

St. Kitts

Right now, I'm here:

http://maps.google.com/maps?f=q&hl=en&geocode=&q=saint+kitts+and+nevis&i
e=UTF8&ll=17.306516,-62.714145&spn=0.002453,0.003412&t=h&z=18

Well, ok, the truth is I'm writing from my hotel room, but the fact
remains that I'm in St. Kitts on business. I'm working at the Needsmust
Power Station, helping to commission a new generator for the island. My
second day in St. Kitts is drawing to a close.

I just had my first filling meal here - a large plate of pasta with
cheese and a plate of local spiced vegetables. Mmmmmm! So far the veggie
food selection has been quite limited, and unlike Westernized countries,
"customer service" is not a common concept. For example, when asked for
any simple vegetarian suggestions such as rice, rather than say "oh, we
can make that, no problem" or "how about ____ instead?", the answer is
simply "no....not really."

Sunset is incredibly early here. I was expecting long tropical island
days and instead the sun sets around 7:30pm. It doesn't rise any earlier
in the morning either. That means that when we leave work around 6-6:30,
it's already on it's way to being dark (think 8pm at home). Because of
the hilly terrain, the sun sets that much faster. Today I was hoping to
go for a run to explore a bit, but ran on the treadmill instead as it
was too dark.

I'm hoping to have Sunday off, or at least partially off, to have a
chance to explore. I'll see if I can find an easy way to get around, as
I don't really feel very comfortable driving (they drive on the left)
and anyway we don't have a rental car. Perhaps I can rent a bike
somewhere. I understand crime is not really an issue during the day, so
I'm not really worried about that. I'm also hoping to do some diving.

I found out that one of the guys I was working with in Cuba in March
just died last week. There is a long (10km or so) causeway joining Cayo
Coco to the mainland, and his car was found in the water in the morning.
No further details. He was Dutch and had been in Cuba about 2 years.

Things are very expensive (more expensive than at home) even when we
visited a normal grocery store today. Given the salaries (a supervisor
makes about $250USD a month), I have no idea how people can afford to
live. Unlike Cuba, there aren't two levels of currency, two levels of
stores and government handouts to make up for the low salaries. However,
it's hard to feel very sympathetic as most of the people you see around
(of all ages) are not doing very much at all. Unlike Cuba, there has
been little to no interest expressed by the locals to learn what we are
doing and how the system works.

Despite the negativity above, I'm thrilled to be here! Despite the work,
I'm on a tropical island and will have some time to explore. I really
wish I could do this longer-term, and with M here. The others I'm with
complain that after traveling a while, all hotels everywhere look the
same, all the food tastes the same, etc. They may be right; I don't
know. I suspect it's a matter of attitude. I certainly haven't done this
long enough to get sick of it yet.

A thought

It doesn't matter who they are.
It doesn't matter how much they're paying.
It doesn't matter how they justify it to themselves or others.

There's only one planet to share.
Speak out.

Engineering Joke

A priest, a doctor, and an engineer were waiting one morning for a particularly slow group of golfers. The engineer fumed, "What's with those guys? We must have been waiting for fifteen minutes!"

The doctor chimed in, "I don't know, but I've never seen such inept golf!"

The priest said, "Here comes the green-keeper. Let's have a word with him." He said, "Hello George, what's wrong with that group ahead of us? They're rather slow, aren't they?"

The green-keeper replied, "Oh, yes. That's a group of blind firemen.
They lost their sight saving our clubhouse from a fire last year, so we always let them play for free anytime."

The group fell silent for a moment. The priest said, "That's so sad. I think I will say a special prayer for them tonight."

The doctor said, "Good idea. I'm going to contact my ophthalmologist colleague and see if there's anything he can do for them."

The engineer said, "Why can't they play at night?"

Biked Downtown

I biked downtown Toronto with E. yesterday, at the hottest time of the
day.

http://maps.google.com/maps?f=d&hl=en&geocode=15221921748024346376,43.47
9544,-79.695597&saddr=1144+Montgomery+Dr,+Oakville,+ON,+Canada&daddr=Jas
mine+Crescent+%4043.479544,+-79.695597+to:43.640796,-79.38077&mra=dme&mr
cr=0&mrsp=2&sz=15&via=1&dirflg=h&sll=43.638311,-79.37974&sspn=0.023511,0
.05476&ie=UTF8&ll=43.63769,-79.380898&spn=0.023511,0.05476&z=15

43km along roads and on the Lakeshore trail (and back). This was a
totally different ride for me. Normally I take the road bike and go
North, out of the city as quickly as possible. Yesterday I mountain
biked it because of the traffic and sidewalk/trail conditions. There
were a few events going on downtown and a lot of people everywhere.

Real Estate Agents Gathering Personal Data

http://www.fintrac-canafe.gc.ca/re-ed/real-eng.asp

It seems that as of June 23, 2008, real estate agents in Canada have to gather some pretty specific personal information from potential buyers and sellers. "Suspicious" people can include anyone making a cash deposit of $10 000 or more. As far as down payments go, that pretty much includes everybody.

Vehicle Maintenance

My total bill for vehicle maintenance on a 7 year old Civic was about
$1700 this week.

It's a great business idea from the dealer's point of view. First, sell
someone a car where there is tons of competition including even other
dealerships that sell the same brand, lowering the price. Buyers often
think they got a deal.

But once you have the sale, say a $30000 car which is pretty normal
these days, you then have regular maintenance every 8000km (3 times per
year for the average driver) that can cost hundreds each time. Then you
tell people that their warranty will be made invalid if they don't come
in for that maintenance. Then, every time they come in, you find
additional items that just HAVE to be fixed right away, and the car is
already in, so they might as well do it today to save themselves the
hassle. Brilliant.

It likely doubles the cost of the car over its lifetime if I had to
guess.

When you start adding in gas at $1.35 a liter, driving starts to seem
like it really should be the luxury it used to be.

I Made Jam!

Well, sort of.

M and I collected a jug full of mulberries at the local park. Then I cooked them on low fire with some sugar (not as much as is recommended) and three squirts of lemon juice. I didn’t use any pectin (didn't have any) and didn't use the proper jar lids (again, didn’t have any). I took two old pasta sauce jars and boiled them, then added the berries, sealed the jars as tight as I could, and boiled them again. I kept expecting the jars to explode as the contents expanded with nowhere to go (again, because I didn't use the right lids).

We'll see what moldy, runny mess this turns out to be in a month…



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