I was fine for the first couple of days, but the sun, the heat, and a bottle of green water put me down for a metric day. Luckily, I am back in the saddle again. Oh Acapulco!
I have yet to plunge deep into Pacifica; I have yet to feel the cooling green and azul waters; I have yet to pull on my french free diving fins and afix my low-displacement mask onto my ready face. The bay is not crisp and clean, so instead of ruining my first time in a long time — my maiden dive — I have decided to wait a while.
In the morning, I awake before Mark and enjoy the calm lap of the water outside my State Room’s open portal, the bright stucco of the homes on the steep rises encircling our marina. The yachts, in transit for their billionaire owners, gleem.
As many of you know, I also madly send out text messages. Love notes from Mexico on my T-Mobileworld phone. Some of you are coy and never respond, but I thank those who have taken the time to figure out their phone.
Since there is plenty of business left undone, we spend most of our days doing business through the CyberOasis internet cafe. Its about $1.50 per hour and each workstation has everything on it one can imagine. There is a lot of work to be done for both the white collar world of our consultancies and for the leisure class world of the 42-foot catamaran.
Today is Ash Wednesday. Its now Lent. What should I give up? I don’t think its terribly prudent to give anything up so close to one’s birthday, now is it?
To me, this current day-to-day sounds pretty darn good. Sadly, I made some innocuous but painful choices that have effectively grounded me for about 24-hours. I consider it an important innoculation, but at the time it was most unpleasant. Here?s what happened.
But lunch and dinner have been amazing so far. I have never had mole, which is an ancient chocolate-based sauce you might be familiar with from the film, Chocolat. I had it poured over a chile relle????PAN>o at a local cafe here and it was not chocolatey at all but rather rich and spicy. Although looking like a thin tar, the sauce was light and subtle and added to the less chile. The food down here is far from tex-mex, which is what I am used to. The Mexican food here is a lot lighter and much more of the flavor comes from sauteeing and from spicing rather than from the copious amounts of cheese comprising most of the mexican fare I have eaten in the US. The cheese here in Mexico ? at least in Acaculco ? is new cheese, similar in texture to fresh mozerella.
Tonight I think it’ll be another movie. After sleeping for more than 14-hours in a go, I might be a little stir crazy.
Two night ago, Mark and I did burn some Velvia 50ASA slide film through my Lomo. Three roles. We explored most of the seafront and into the dangerous amusement park wherein parents attempt to collect their childrens’ life insurance policies. These rides remind me ofthe rides I enjoyed as a child in a less litigious Honolulu. Back in the 70s, very few of my friends were killed in those rust-addled death traps, so I am sure these are just as dangerous, but I assume just as protected by Special Ops-level guardian angels.
Until then, the mobile phone and SMS info works, so check out the contact info. I suggest SMSing me — texting me — as its a cheaper way for me to converse with you. And its a pretty fly technology I am sure you didn’t know your little “I bought it because its cute” cellphone was such a cool tool.
Until the next travelogue missive, adios, mis amigos!


