We are settling into our house! Did I mention how wonderful it
is to be OUT of a hotel? (And out of a 10 foot radius of my children). It took
us a bit of time to find exactly what I wanted as far as furniture, but finally
that feat has been overcome. And the greatest part of getting our furniture was
our journey HOME with the furniture. We paid $12 for a guy to move our fridge
from the house we had it put in that we were going to rent, to the house we are
actually renting. (I know. Insane labor costs, huh)?
THEN we traveled store to store trying to find couches I, I
mean WE, liked. We found a set. We held our breath as we looked at the price.
$650. Starling grumbled and I rejoiced. (We just sold our 8 year old Ashley's
furniture that went through three dogs and.... how many kids have I had living
at my house? (No really... I haven't ever sat down and counted all of my foster
babies...) for $650 before we left. Out with the old. In with the new!
Something interesting to note: every single thing in Coppel,
the store we bought most of our house furnishings, had two prices on ALL its
items. A pay now price, and a finance for $12 months price. And I mean
everything. Even the $7 pillows. This turned out to be a wonderful thing.
We found a repo table and chairs (normally $500) for $200.
We went to Sam's and found a repo t.v. We bought a repo hot water heater twice
the size as the one currently hooked up at our house. We bought a repo washer
and dryer. And I rode home on EVERY one of them.
Oh yes. Free delivery if we had waited 3 days. FREE
DELIVERY. But no. Impatient STARLING (okay you know that's definitely the
impatient one in our marriage... hence us driving to MERIDA for a puppy that
someone had to have...) insisted we bring the stuff home that DAY. In our van.
It's interesting not owning 6 trailers. As much as I complained about all of
Starling's EXCESS of "work vehicles" (since he was technically a
REALTOR), I sure took them for granted. The
van could only hold ONE thing at a time. We precariously stuffed one item in
the back of the van which I had to SIT on so it didn't fall completely out.
(Tie it up? WHY would we do that? We have a ME). All went well. Except riding
home on our king size bed. We had to put it on the roof. (JUST kidding... we
DID tie it on our roof. I just held the rope. It's the only thing I didn't ride
on).
I really wanted a stack washer and dryer. They were so cool!
Full size, but half the space. SNAPPER CRAPPERS riding that bad boy. Starling
went over a speed bump, and I almost took a ski trip into the road riding my
new appliance. I yelled, "SLAM on brakes!" Starling complied and it
shot us right back into a safer unstable condition.
Of course, when we got it HOME, the washer did not WORK. So,
I got to fear for my life AGAIN. We traded it in for an upscale model (since
that's all they had) and I got to slip and slide for a third time. We
discovered, upon hook up, that the washer and dryer cannot be used at the same
time. Starling had the gall to suggest we get a side by side. I quickly
snapped, "Or live with it!" Even I have a limit on extreme sports. If
anyone ever asks me if I've ridden a bull, I'll say, "No, but I rode a
washer/dryer combo in front of a giant bus with its bumper practically touching
my FACE. And I rode it for a LOT longer than 7 seconds."
I had my house. I had a place to sit, to eat, to cook (which
we've yet to use our stove... but that microwave is getting some serious
mileage), and to do my laundry. All I lacked was a little puppy to stroke
therapeutically while my children destroyed the upstairs.
I went on a rabid hunt. If Quintanaroo has dog breeders,
they stay WELL hidden. (With good reason. The white people here are NUTS. Dog
breeding is right up there with trafficking children). So when I finally found
a fluffy dog that would stay small, despite the fact it was in the Yucatan, I had
to have it. Right then.
Unfortunately, in my efforts to help a bestie, (yes
Michelle. I just referred to you as a "bestie." You've earned that
title in the amount of food you've fed me), move, I kind of got my bumper stuck
on a moving truck. AND it sort of fell off. But the sweet guy popped it back on
for me. His TANK of a truck was completely unscratched, and only my van's left
eye dangled from its socket. Starling suffered a mild stroke and small conniption.
But he didn't turn purple. He only passively aggressively held it over my head.
For the rest of my LIFE.
He did try to say he wasn't taking me to Merida to get the
puppy, but he liked having something over my head more than he liked sleeping
on the side of the road somewhere.
We woke up at 3:30 a.m. (Yes. Despite the teasing and the
mocking and the wretched face book posts of my follies, he obviously loves me.
A LOT. Or fears me. Maybe a little of both). We loaded our children in the car
and headed to the car ferry. THAT, in and of itself is always an adventure. $36
just to GO to the mainland. One way. WITH our van's handy dandy local sticker.
(A little bonus for buying a vehicle from a local).
The ride isn't bad. (WITH the exception of the swishing
ocean churning my stomach into a rubbery glob of "don't throw up.. don't
throw up"). We just sit upstairs in a air conditioned room watching a
movie until the boat reaches land.
The drive was gorgeous. I am officially obsessed with tropical
vegetation. It's gloriously therapeutic. Ropes were strung across the road for
the monkeys to pass from one jungle to the other. Vivid colors of greens, reds,
and yellows lined our path. Workers manicured the median with machetes.
Beautiful.
The directions given by the puppy owner were, nicely put,
HORRENDOUS. But, before Starling flipped an entire script, we found the right
Oxxo, and met the chic on her scooter. I fell in love immediately, squishing
the little ball of fur up to my face, watching her curly little tail wag in
anticipation of having the most spoiled rotten life on earth.
At that point exhaustion hit us like a freight train. We
checked into a GORGEOUS $26 hotel. (And THAT is why I will never go into the
hotel business).
I carried Liahla in my beach purse. She was fantastic. I did
have an interesting moment that night when I took her to go potty outside. I
stuffed her in my shirt since I didn't know if pets were allowed or not. A man
was in the pool and tried to hold a conversation with me. He probably thought I
had the strangest looking body ever. 'Is she pregnant, over loaded with love
handles, or are her boobs falling down to her waist...?'
It was an awkward moment.
The kids watched planes fly overhead in complete awe, as if
each plane was a rare meteor. Dropping gold. (It's the same with the gas truck
that goes around town singing Zeta, Zeta, Zeta Gas. It's a catchy tune, but
good grief! If the truck passes the house and you are in between Boeing and the
window, you WILL get trampled). The kids used palm leaves as boats to carry
their flowers they collected under the trees. Then they collected oranges to
race in the water.
The next day we went on our way. There are police
crossing/station things (like intimidating deer stands) every so often on the
highways. Since the police are pretty awesome here, my heart doesn't turn into
a trapped rabbit and I don't get the shakes. It makes me feel safe. If someone
commits a crime, they better be equipped for off road travel, because they
aren't going anywhere on the street. For the first time, EVER, a cop told us to
pull over. The officer was real nice and told us seat belts are required in the
Yucatan. Starling went with the cop to his station. My kids were terrified,
buckled up, and Brooklyn asked in a trembling voice, "Will they give Daddy
food?"
I looked at her, "What?"
"In jail..."
I rolled my eyes. "He doesn't have to go to jail. And
yes. They feed prisoners."
The officer said the standard procedure is to take his plate
and get it back when he pays his fine at the place you pay fines. Starling
said, "Can I just pay it now? How about a hundred pesos ($6)?" The
officer said, "It's up to you... the ticket is only eighty pesos ($4)."
Starling paid the two extra dollars.
We went to Zoo Animaya. It was awesome. I carried Liahla in
my beach purse, of course, and we rode in the truck/trailer/train thing IN the
zoo pens. WAY cooler than observing them from behind a fence. They had zebras
and giraffes and those animals that the lion's eat on Lion King. They had
little monkey islands and flamingos, amongst other animals. The hotel and zoo
were worth the drive to ME, even if we didn't go all that way to get a puppy.
Thinking on the subject, Starling said, "We should go ahead and get the
little boy pup. We could save some girl like you, obsessed with fluffy purse
dogs, a trip to Merida. And help with travel costs." So we met the girl
again and bought the boy pup. Adorable little Maltis-Bichons.
Two pups were a little more difficult to manage since I
didn't have collars and leashes. (I'm picky about those things, too, and the
selection was limited). It was an event to take them potty every time we
stopped.
We WANTED to stay longer in Merida, BUT, since the house we
are renting is also for sale, we had to be back for a showing the next day at
11:30 in the morning. We drove the "scenic route" home. (That means
we got VERY lost and I relished in the sights while Starling's head made
gurgling noises).
We missed the ferry ride back to the island. (Kind of the
down fall to living on an island... you can't be late or you can't go home).
The next ferry didn't leave until 4 a.m. When we went to buy our ferry ticket, the
ticket booth worker said, "This ferry is only for gas trucks and other
dangerous things. You, sir, can go across in your van, but you can't take your
family."
We are law abiding citizens. We really are. But we really
had to get home and I wasn't waiting until 8 the next morning. We did what
anyone else would do in that situation. (Or maybe what no logical person would
do). We loaded all of our luggage into the front seats and smuggled ourselves
in the back, and onto the boat. It was a little wild smuggling three kids and
two dogs in the back of a van, knowing that if any of them decided to be
uncooperative we would be compromised and thrown in jail. But it was a chance I
was willing to take.
I explained to my children that we were playing a sneaky
game where we all had to hide and we couldn't talk or sit up or MOVE.
Surprisingly they quickly obliged, covered up, and fell asleep. We waited in
the gates for several hours before the 4 a.m. ferry arrived. (No way were we
paying for a hotel in Playa, where hotels are expensive, to leave at 3 a.m.).
Luckily by 3 a.m. when the cars lined up for the 4 a.m.
ferry, our van windows were completely fogged. I hunkered further down when a tap
finally sounded on Starling's window. Starling paid for the ferry and moments
later our van began to move. When the pups woke up and wanted to play, I wasn't
worried. The roar of the boat engine covered up all noise, thoughts, and sanity.
Despite the fact that it sounded like we had entered the inside of a tornado,
the children didn't wake up. I breathed a sigh of relief as the doors closed
and the people dispersed inside the upstairs cabin. It was a little more uncomfortable,
riding the boat in the van instead of in front of a movie screen, but less
stressful since Boeing was sleeping instead of trying to climb out a port hole.
Then I had to pee. There is only one bathroom on the ship.
And to use it would require me to give up my position. There was no grass to
hobble to. No secret passages. I thought hard. Then I had a stroke of genius. I emptied a zip lock bag of pretzels into a
Wal-Mart bag, peed in the zip lock, and zipped it up. I'm pretty sure I should patent a pee product of similar nature. It worked like a charm.
I dozed off. I didn't wake up until we drove onto land.
We got home and crashed. (Into our bed, not into another
car). I did NOT want to wake up and clean my house for the stupid showing. I
drug myself out of bed and looked around. Half of our stuff was still packed
and strewed. I kind of swished it around. Then I turned on the water.
Oh. No water. FAN-fricken-TASTIC. How do you CLEAN with no
WATER? We couldn't even FLUSH the toilets. Awesome.
Starling got on the phone. We used our drinking water to
wipe up the messiest spots, namely, the foot prints in our kitchen.
Because I don't know if we are allowed to have pets or not
and I don't want to stir up drama, I threw my kids and pups into the stroller
and walked down to the park. WHERE my kids got FILTHY.
Meanwhile Starling made some calls and discovered the city
turned off our water because they thought the bill wasn't paid, when it
actuality WAS paid, and they had made a minute mistake which they said they
would fix. Well. They didn't. We called AGAIN. FINALLY at 6:00 p.m. our water
returned. I stuck all three of my children into the bath tub where the water
turned a lovely shade of DIRT. We then spent an evening at our friends' house.
Today Starling posted our boy puppy on the Cozumel 4 You
page for only $200. (Okay? Same dog in the States costs between $400-$800. Not
making a killing here). I don't know if he would have gotten more back lash
from tree hugging, close minded, bigots if he'd announced he was euthanizing an
orphanage. It was INSANE. Seven people PRIVATE messaged him immediately that
they were interested in buying the puppy. The public messages were enraged
citizens (oh wait. NOT citizens. Know it all white people with nothing better
to do than play dictator of all things that do not concern them).
I tried not
to be a smarty pants, but failed. Miserably. To BUY a dog from a breeder!? I
might as well burn down the animal shelter. How DARE I buy a dog when hundreds
of dogs on the island need a home. Never mind that I volunteer there weekly. It
was pretty comical, actually. But we sold the puppy within an hour and then
Starling removed the post entirely. (He was afraid I might say something (more)
to instigate further outrage). Drama in paradise.
But on a happy note, because I always like to end on a
happy, Starling and I made friends with another evil couple that like purse
dogs.
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