The Cave: Nica Nugget #17

Today the low tide was at 1:18 pm. So at 12:40 pm Kathleen Brugger and I left the sand of Bahia San Juan del Sur below the statue of Cristo and began our hike north along the rocks. You’d think we’d have a great close-up view of Cara del Indio, the profile of an Indian’s face which can be seen clearly from the beachside restaurants, but we were too close and only saw jagged rock. When we rounded the headland we came upon a travertine-type formation along the cliffside where seeping water formed layered rivulets over the rock. The cave’s …

Continue Reading

Meet Nella, Our Honorary Dog: Nica Nugget #16

Nella is our neighbor’s dog, from down the hill and around the corner. But you almost wouldn’t know it by the amount of time she spends with us. She’s here at first light, keeping John company on the porch with his first cup of coffee. Then she joins us on our morning hike, at least through the neighborhood and up to the first guard gate before she turns away and John and I begin the climb up to Cristo. She visits us in the afternoon and again right at dinner. Guests who have stayed in our home when we’re back …

Continue Reading

Moving Day. Correction: Moving Years, Part 1

Dear Reader, Maybe you’ve seen the cartoon of a garage packed to the rafters with stuff. The garage door is open and in front of the garage, facing it, is an older gentleman with a walker, and a younger man. The caption reads “One day Son all this will be yours!” When John and I first saw the cartoon we laughed and then I thought to myself: “No, I do NOT want to do that to Cliff!” When we pass away, I don’t want Cliff to have to lift, move and wade through piles of crap before he happens upon …

Continue Reading

Torrential Rain: Nica Nugget #15

The past two mornings I’ve awakened to torrential rains. It pounded on the plastic tiles on the roof of our porch and poured down the gutter spouts. It even entered through hairpin cracks under the aluminum windows in our bathrooms, ran down the walls and puddled on the floor. I never left the house yesterday for the first time in over a month since we’ve been back. But today when the downpour ended we had to stretch our legs. With the rain and the high tides and the human dredging of the sand, the river has finally broken through to …

Continue Reading

Teachers Gotta Teach: Nica Nugget #14

If you have a passion, you do it. And if it’s something you can share, you share it. And in so doing, you make life fun. Today I was lucky enough to be a recipient of Vanessa and Lucia’s (of the Latin American Spanish School in San Juan del Sur) passion for teaching and sharing both their culture and their joy. As well as Summer Shacklette’s joy in bringing her friends together. We learned to dance Merengue (“you have to move the body sexy”), to make Pico de Gallo (you use LOTS of lime juice), Guacamole (in the Nica version …

Continue Reading

Mantled Howler Monkeys at Home: Nica Nugget #13

This morning John woke me up with one word: Monkeys! Followed by: And we can see them! Last year I heard them near our home for the first time. And I was sure it was a screaming pig which the neighbors must’ve just acquired. But then, it sounded like an awfully strange screaming pig. Could it be a Howler Monkey making all that racket? John thought that it was indeed, and we listened to sound tracks via Google, but we didn’t actually see one. The year before, in the midst of a bad drought that was in its 5th year, …

Continue Reading

The Moments that Join Us: Nica Nugget #12

Jorge grew up in Colombia, speaking Spanish. Ashley grew up in the northern suburbs of Atlanta, Georgia, USA, speaking English. And then one day they met.  Ashley was working odd jobs while she worked on her Interior Design Art degree.  On this particular day she was working for a perfume company, spraying cologne samples on customer’s wrists, in Macy’s Men’s Department at the Mall.  Jorge was in Atlanta working on his English and a Master’s degree in International Business. The mall was near his home and he was running errands. While there, he decided to try the cologne.  Flash forward …

Continue Reading

Back to Quiet in Town: Nica Nugget #11

While Saturday night was busy in town with Managuans enjoying a long beach weekend, yesterday the town was back to being sleepy. Yet it was no less colorful than usual.  The Market corner was the busiest spot, with taxis and buses and cars and bicycles. And the park had a few people, but most of the benches were empty. And the streets were empty enough to make spotting the plantain truck easy.  If you’ve ever thought: “San Juan del Sur is too crowded with tourists and backpackers” or “I wonder what San Juan del Sur was like before all the …

Continue Reading

Saturday Night Action: Nica Nugget #10

The town was hoppin’ last night. One restaurant was completely packed. Others were also jamming. And the beach was full, with a final game of soccer under the lights.  John E Field and I and our friend Summer Shacklette were looking at each other in shock, feeling like we’d time capsuled back to last year. “Managuans,” our waiter Ricardo at Buen Gusto said, as I sipped on our Macuas (Buen Gusto serves THE BEST Macuas). “They are here because of the Santo Domingo holiday.” On the beach was the ice cream vendor, the sunglass guys, the surfer, the dogs, the …

Continue Reading

Dos Hombres on the Way to Cristo: Nica Nugget #9

John and I live in Barrio La Talanguera, San Juan del Sur, and we love to walk. Our typical morning hike is up the hill to the Christ statue and back down again. We like to climb up the back side and practically every day we see something new. Harold, though, is a common face on our morning hike and he typically greets us with a huge smile and a wave as he lifts up the gate. He’s one of the guards at the back entrance into the Pacific Marlin neighborhood, which we pass on our way up the hill. …

Continue Reading