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February 15, 2006

Bit by the theater bug - #20

Dear Friends and Family,
If there are still a few of you out there wondering what happened to that crazy friend who moved to Texas, continue reading. Let me give you a quick re-cap. We sold our condo in Port A and moved to a new home in CC....and dealt with the evacuation of Port A due to Hurricane Rita. Good friends visited, and old and new friends helped me celebrate my 55th birthday. But my time was really consumed by one thing.
I had been captured by the theater and its powerful creative attraction. In the past year, my life has literally been consumed by theater. Doug and I became involved in establishing a new theater in Aransas Pass, Texas, called the Rialto Actors Theater, just last spring.

Continue reading "Bit by the theater bug - #20" »

September 24, 2005

safely home

Dear Friends and Family,
Well, I just experienced my first evacuation, and it was a couple of crazy days. It was most stressful on Wednesday when the electronic sign over the bridge and the bull-horned voice from the patrol car announced, "Mandatory evacuation". That really put my stomach in knots. The police said we had to be out by noon on Thursday. Doug climbed around on the roof, dripping with sweat to install hurricane shutters and I packed up files and photos and my computer into the truck. By Wednesday evening we were exhausted and decided to leave in the morning. The two and a half hour drive up 37 to San Antonio was not too bad, just a lot like holiday traffic. We stayed with friends Trisha and John at their San Antonio house, enjoying their pool and watching the news constantly for two days to see where the hurricane was headed. Friday night was our hurricane party, where the game was every time they mentioned Katrina, showed the Houston traffic, or got an opinion from an expert, you had to take a drink. We got pickled pretty fast. By saturday morning we realized that we had dodged the bullet and could head back home, and I took Doug to the airport to fly back to CA, then headed back home to Port A. Upon returning, I drove around our very empty town to see everything boarded up and to check on what was open, then went home to my dark townhouse because all the windows are covered. Thanks to all of you for your concern and prayers. I am tired but very thankful that the storm missed Port Aransas this time. Love to all, Janis

September 21, 2005

the storm about me

It was a great 18 month adventure, and if you didn't visited us in Port A, you won't now. We have just sold our house and have to out by Oct 20th. Of course if the place gets blown off the map we will be really going out with a bang. I'm afraid this island will look very different when we return on Monday. We have found another house we are making an offer on today in the berbs of Corpus Christi. Let's hope this works out. Whew. We are staying with friends in San Antonio, and when we get this place buttoned up and all our most precious belongings in the truck, we will leave. Probably late tonight. More later.

September 03, 2005

Katrina's aftermath

Dear Friends and Family,

In my latest correspondence just before hurricane Katrina hit, I begged you for prayers, sensing, but not fully knowing, the magnitude of the disaster that was about to unfold. I cannot watch TV, or pick up the paper or log on to the Internet, without seeing so many disturbing pictures that make my heart break. New Orleans will never be the same. Thank God to all of you who were willing to stop a moment and pray for others, for the storm did turn slightly to the east, and there have been storm victims who have said, that only through the grace of God they survived the wrath of this storm. Just know that your one little prayer held someone’s head above the floodwaters.

I am overwhelmed with emotions, as I watch the reality of witnessing in my lifetime the worst disaster in our nations history, and subsequently, how people and our country are responding, both the good and bad. Yes, the bad is horror in its purest form, but the good is just as tear jerking. It is easy to say that this is God's judgement, but the Bible also says "judge not, lest you be judged". So I ask you all, if you have any ways or means, to give to the Red Cross at www.redcross.org. I don’t understand fully why I am living here on the gulf coast at this time, and why I am here to have these “once in a lifetime experiences”. Perhaps being on the gulf coast makes me understand more acutely, but whatever the reason, please help these suffering people if you can.

And the hurricane season is not yet over….

Janis

August 28, 2005

Katrina

Dear Friends And Family,
Thankfully, we are safe from this one, but some have phoned to see if we are feeling the effects of Katrina, so I have attached a few pictures we just took down by the beach. The waves are pretty big and breaking quite far up on the shore, but not up to the dunes like the Ivan waves did. I have also attached a few picture of me and Molly getting ready to do some truckin in our new F150.
Most importantly, our God is an awesome God, and only He has the power to calm the waters and still the wind. Please pray that this category 5 hurricane will weaken drastically before making landfall. Please lift up your prayers continuously tonight for the safety of all the people in Katrina's path. By this time tomorrow, they are predicting a dooms day scenario in New Orleans. Pray for those souls that because of this storm, will seek and find God's face.
Janis

Continue reading "Katrina" »

August 08, 2005

Issue 19

It is hot here.
It is hot there,
It is hot everywhere,
But I dont care.
Dear Friends and Family,
July we flewoffto northern climes, hoping to escape the oppressive Gulf of Mexico heat. For months I had dreamed ofa cabin in thewoods next to a mountain stream, and thecool,fresh Canadian summer air. It was not to be found. In fact, I am happy to be homeagain in Port A where the weather at leastis normal.
First, we went to Lake Tahoe, to attend a writers workshop in Squaw Valley. Arriving two days early to survey the area, we stayed at an adorable B&B. I learned Doug hates adorable. You can read my review by going to www.tripadvisor.com and search for Cottage Inn, Tahoe, CA. I recommend adding this place to your list of must-see vacation spots; it is a lovely cabin-in-the-tall-pines experience. Lake Tahoe, called the Lake of the Sky, is spectacular for its natural mountain beauty and the blueness of its water. Im glad we arrived early to explore, because once we got into the workshop, I never saw the outside world again.
Aspiring writers of varying talent came together to sit at the feet of James Frey and learn how to write good, I mean well. It was a very intense week. We began at 9 am, only broke for lunch and dinner and continued to 10pm every day. We learned how to critique each others stories, what heroes do and dont do, and when to ask, Is your hero at maximum capacity?
We were high in the mountains, 6000 feet above sea level, where it is supposedly so cool you need a jacket in the evenings. Houses are not equipped with air-conditioning; ours didnt even have screens on the sliding doors. Yet that week, my jacket never made it out of the suitcase. We found ourselves in the midst of a heat wave. It was almost 100 degrees every day.
Doug and I enjoyed a week of sweating, cooking, (we traded my fee in exchange for doing the meals) more sweating, and having our writing ripped apart, (I use too many adverbs). The high point was the Friday night sex scene contest. Mine was the hottest, judging by all the squirming and giggling, and everybody couldnt believe I wrote it. A box of chocolates was the prize, which was torn into and eaten by all with gusto.
Early Saturday morning we left Reno for Montreal, and the very mention of the word Canada sounded cool and refreshing. To my chagrin, not even by going to another country could I avoid the heat wave. Unusually high humidity made it even more uncomfortable then Tahoe. Delta lost our luggage, our hotel room was stuffy and by midnight I was yearning for good-old Texas, where at least our air-conditioning worked.
The next morning our bags were delivered and we were moved to a cooler room at the Queen Elizabeth, a very lah-de-dah hotel. John Lennon and Yoko Ono staged their Sleep-in-for-Peace on the 17th floor here. Doug had to work a booth at a Retinal show, but we did have time together to enjoy seeing the highlights of the city from a tour bus, taking a romantic late-night walk, speaking French, and eating at very chi-chi restaurants.
Meanwhile, hurricane Emily was taking aim at Brownsville, and we were relived to arrive home to Corpus to find everything hadnt blown away. I needed two weeks of rest to recover from my two week vacation. Whew, I am swearing off traveling for a while.
Back in home port, I find myself getting involved in a new theater in Aransas Pass, the Rialto Actors Theater. Our friend Trish, a playwright and director, came to us full of enthusiasm about her new theater she is starting as Artistic Director, and since we both love the theater, we couldnt help but get involved. Now it seems we are founding members. Doug is the idea man, and also the chief carpenter, and we have put in a couple long weekends with Trish and her husband and a few volunteers, and the stage is almost complete. I will be stage designer/director/actor. I auditioned for and landed the part of Carmen, a drunk, Jewish, gypsy who gets hypnotized into acting like a chicken (the whole life cycle) and Zsa Zsa Gabor, and has a food fight (spaghetti) with Gus the chef (played by Doug Johnson). This could be fun. The play opens January 6th.
Our home has not sold as yet, although our realtor assures us that we will have a sale in a few weeks. Meanwhile, we have started negotiations on avery retro 1950s house that Doug and I think has a lot of potential, if we can get it cheap. It is on a big corner lot in Corpus, just over the causeway, about 1/3 of a mile from the bay, and a block away from a golf course. We have looked at what feels like a hundred homes, new, old, big, small, country, city, expensive and cheap. I hope this is the right one.
Oh by the way, if anyone has a cure for heel spurs, let me know. I have been limping around for about two months now and it is really painful. I figure it is Gods way of telling me to lose weight. When I was walking the dog, a guy drove by and yelled Fat Ass from his pick-up truck. I assumed that was God, too. So, I have joined the new health club that opened up in June about one mile from my house. I have my own personal trainer and have lost almost 10 pounds.
And for the last bit of news, I traded in my PT Cruiser for a new, 2005 Ford, F-150 crew-cab, bright red, PICK-EM-UP TRUCK! Finally, I have reached redneck nirvana, and am a real Texan. Doug still has the Merc, had the whole dang frame replaced; expects to get 300,000 miles or so out of it. He feels cool because now he has cop suspension.
Hey, three months summed up and Im done! Now I have to start re-writing my novel. Have a great summer! Love, Janis

May 02, 2005

Issue 18

Dear Friends and Family,
I have felt the collective squeeze of all my friends wondering when the next Sandy Toes would appear. Indeed, I have been remiss, so faithfully to all my fans I will try to recount my latest escapades. Look here at the calendar; it has been over a year since we started this adventure in writing. Ah me, I recall when my writings were weekly events to help me keep my sanity, and now I am so lazy I can barely get one out in two months.
I became involved with the Port Aransas Community Theater again as assistant director/stage manager/ set designer. The name of the show is Coming Apart and is a romantic comedy with a cast of four. We open on May 12 for nine shows. Last week two actresses had to back out and now the show is literally coming apart as we try to get two new people up to speed in less than two weeks. I am feeling very much like a rat on a sinking ship.
On Easter Sunday Doug and I both came to the conclusion that we wanted to move closer to our church. We put our townhouse up for sale and have found a house for sale we love on Padre Island, 15 miles down the road from here. Now we will wait upon the Lord. If He wants us to move, a buyer will come. So far, we have not had much activity, although it is the slow season.
Yes, it is the quiet season in Port A and my favorite time of year. It was a beautiful spring, with lots of wild flowers and gardens in bloom. Warm days where we could open the doors and let the breeze blow through the house.
Memorial Day weekend the tourists will descend and again it will be like living in the middle of Disney World. That is another reason why we want to move to a house in a quiet neighborhood. Spring Break only lasted a week in March but we live at ground zero. All night long the college kids cruised up and down the streets with the stereos booming to rattle the windows. When Molly and I stood outside the front door we could hear the sounds of beer cans bouncing off the pavement and cheers coming from the beach every time a girl pulled up her top. There were traffic accidents and tie-ups, stabbings and shootings. The boardwalk railings where I cross to the beach were dismantled for firewood. A lovely way to treat paradise.
My latest I cant believe I did this adventure happened last thursday when Doug and I went on an eight-hour deep-sea fishing trip. When we arrived, the nice man behind the counter said the ride would be a bit rough, about six foot seas. I decided this was an experience I wanted to say I had accomplished, so fool-heartedly, I turned down Dougs offer to go back home. The trip out was two hours of saying the Lords Prayer while remembering vividly scenes from the movie Perfect Storm, and then we finally anchored off an oilrig to fish. One couple was terribly seasick and I was merely shaking in fear. Creeping out on to the deck and bracing my feet against the railing, I became a fisherman. I hadnt got sick from the roller coaster ride out but the amount of gore involved with fishing made me very queasy. First, there was a lot of stabbing fish through their eyes, like to put them on stringers and to bait the hooks. Other people caught sharks and ling (about 3 foot fish) that the crew dragged in overboard with spears, and blood was everywhere as they subdued them (the fish!). We came home wet and covered in fish guts but with about 20 pounds of red snapper and a triggerfish Doug caught. And the next day I said, that was fun, lets do it again!
So if you come out to visit us, know that Ill be playing captain Ahab. Love, Janis

March 03, 2005

Issue 17

Sandy Toes Diary 17
"These are the days of miracles and wonders..." Paul Simon.
Dear Friends and Family,
The snow that fell here on Christmas Eve was called a miracle. It thrilled and brought joy to so many Texans. The tsunami that struck the next day left so much tragedy in its wake. It made people wonder how God could let that happen. The longer I live the more I am amazed at the powerful force that existence is.
An interesting effect of our miracle snow was the fact that it killed all the Tilapia fish in our pond. Within a few days we had hundreds of dead fish floating on our little lake. Our neighbor, Norm, put on his waders and started the daunting task of scooping them out by the trash bag full but then the local pelicans came to save the day. To them it was a free sushi bar, and to us, it was an opportunity to watch pelican life up close and personal. We had nine very fat pelicans eating and sleeping, day and night, for about a week right under our noses, which saved our noses. They gulped down (literally) every one of those big, dead fish. (See pelican pictures). I found it fascinating and also a little unappetizing.
The day after Christmas our good friend Cathy came from Cleveland to visit for two weeks. Even though she cheers for snow storms and is a big fan of cold weather, (plans to move to Alaska some day), she was able to enjoy our 70 degree days and took many walks on the beach and collected her share of seashells. She wove some tiny shells into a necklace for me, which I just love to wear. For future reference, this is basically how we entertain people: we give you a bucket and send you to the beach. Thats really all there is to do here. Ask the Palmers, who sat in our garage and waved at people driving by for entertainment. But people always seem to look pretty relaxed by the end of their stay. (See happy cathy picture).
The play, Cheatin, that Doug and I were involved in ended January 22 after 12 fabulous shows that were sold out. The critics raved and the cast had a good time. Of course in this town, the farting man from the Moulin Rouge would be sold out also. I have attached some photos so you can see what you missed.
After the play ended I sat down and shoveled through my file box full of statements and receipts in order to get my QuickBooks program reconciled for the year so we could do our taxes. This is the current side order of big dead fish on my plate, which I have almost finished chocking down. Ugh. (Again, see pelican pictures)
To keep things interesting I decided to visit the beauty shop and I am now officially a blond (see photo), and yes, blonds do have more fun. No blond jokes pleeeeze!
For those of you who are following our budding writing careers, take heart, there will be more installments of chapters in both books, but probably not until after July. We are signed up to attend a weeklong writing workshop in a desolate cabin in Utah to hopefully improve and wrap up our novels. I am already rewriting like crazy as I learn more from every chapter I am reading of How To Write A Damn Good Novel.
Here's a holiday you don't celebrate in Cleveland. Yesterday, March 2, was Texass Independence Day. On that day in 1836 they declared their independence from Mexico and became a separate country, the Republic of Texas. Texas was a separate country before being annexed to the United States almost ten years later.
Bet you didnt know that.
Construction has been booming in Port A and we are smack dab in the middle of it. I swear they save the loudest jobs for five in the morning. We are watching two major building projects taking shape. One is a souvenir shop going in next door to us. The good thing is that we wont have far to walk to get our postcards and t-shirts. Behind us we are watching an amazingly speedy assemblage of a Days Inn. The good thing there is if you dont like staying with us (Doug does get a little smelly), you can always move out and shlep your luggage down the road to the motel.
Molly is whining and desperately wants to go for her daily trip to the beach to shove her nose in the latest flotsam and jetsam that has washed up with the tide. Speaking of desperate, I have become a rabid fan of Boston Legal. Whats my name? Denny Crane! Love it? If so, let me hear from you.
All my best, and Dougs best too,
Janis

December 12, 2004

Issue 16

How in the world do people in the south get into a Christmas mood without snow? I asked the cashier on this beautiful day in Port A. I awoke and looked anxiously outside for the first snowflakes (always hoping for a white Christmas), but instead, the sun sparkled brightly through my window. I strung Christmas lights from my gutters in perfect 70-degree weather. I listened to Christmas carols all day long while wearing shorts and flip-flops. My living room looks like a Christmas store exploded in it, and yet, it does not seem like Christmas. While chatting at the store, the cashier, who has lived in the south all her life, assured me that people do get in the Christmas spirit without snow. But what about all those songs about Frosty, Jack Frost, sleigh rides and winter wonderlands, how can you relate? I asked. Just fine, she said, we use our imagination. I am still mystified. I think there is a message here somewhere, like, Christmas is in your heart, not in your ski parka.|
Anyway, she then invited me to watch the lighted boat parade, explaining that it would get me in the spirit. Children and parents clim aboard lit-up boats and cruise around the marina singing carols. Okay. I went down to the marina dock and while waiting for the parade I gazed at a great blue heron posed on a pylon, silhouetted in the sunset. I recalled the last parade I attended was the lighted horse drawn carriages Christmas parade, and remembered how bitterly cold it was that night in Public Square. What a contrast! After the sun went down the boats came out all lit up and were amazing in their Christmas decorations. I had only worn a light jacket and after an hour, realized I was quite chilled. No Jack Frost nips, but I did leave for my car and joyously cranked up my heater for the first time. That felt more like the season.
Doug and I have recently become involved with the Port Aransas Community Theater. I suggested that Doug should try out for a part in the up coming show and the next thing I knew I am the assistant director and stage manager and prop mistress and set designer. It is a great ensemble of seven actors, from professional to amateur, and Doug is playing the part of Teddy Joe, the husband who gets cheated on. Now if you have ever wanted to see Doug act in his underwear (and I really feel sorry for you if you have) then come visit Port A in January when the play Cheatin will be running from January 5th to the 22nd. Twelve shows and we expect them to be sold out!
I am going to go to the beach now to write my Christmas cards. Hoboy, thats not going to feel normal either. But it is a beautiful day, so what else can I do? To my northern friends, I hope you appreciate the snow and make a snowman for me, and to all, have a wonderful, peaceful holiday season.
All my love, Janis

October 23, 2004

Issue 15

The steps of the godly are directed by the Lord. He delights in every detail of their lives. Psalm 37:23
Dear Friends and Family,
It is good to be back at the ranch in Texas. The sun is shinning and it is still summer here, and this is one reason why I am glad to be home in Port A: the trip to Cleveland cured my homesickness! God provided perfect fall weather for the first week or so of our visit, and I enjoyed watching the leaves change and all the beautiful Ohio fall landscapes. (See lame photos attached.) But as usual in Cleveland, good weather is rare. It inevitably turned cold, rainy and dreary, and something wed forgotten about happened to us: we just wanted to crawl into bed at 8pm and put the covers over our heads. We couldnt wait to get back to blue skies and sunshine and warmth.
It appears distance does not have an effect on true friendship. I was hanging out, jazzercising, eating, and just doing dumb stuff with my friends like I had never left. It was great. To all my friends in Cleveland, thanks for spending time with us. It was really appreciated and I feel very loved.
My trip to Cleveland was an odd package of sensations and emotions. From the moment we arrived and hustled down the familiar dingy corridors of Cleveland Hopkins Airport to get our luggage it felt like an out of body experience. I recalled how many times those halls used to mean the end of the journey, the last leg of coming home. We would always be so tired but have just enough energy left to gather up our suitcases, find our car, and head home with a sigh of relief to our little haven, our little dog, and flop into our familiar bed. But this time there was no sigh of relief. In fact, although familiar it all seemed different, as if the perspective was off. Everything in Cleveland held that sensation of being a diorama of my life. It was a nostalgic and contemplative journey that made me wonder, where is home?
I am without a doubt a product of Cleveland; its dust is in my bones. My grandparents and parents are buried in its dirt. As I trekked up and down the old streets of Cleveland and reacquainted myself with many favorite landmarks, I noticed how worn away the town looks from generations of souls calling this place home. I felt the collective pressure of a city full of people living out there lives here. I wondered at how tenuously we live on this planet. When we are born we are dispensed into this world like a gumball, and where we land is where we call home. I think Cleveland will always be home in the sense that it is where I grew up and lived for over half my life, but home is more than that. Home is where we spend our time. Where we spend our time eating and resting. Where we spend our time with people we love. Home can be wherever we create that restorative, safe, and private place.
I feel at home now in my little townhouse by the ocean. I believe God has directed our steps to Port Aransas and I feel safe and at home in His hands.
May God bless you and give you much time to live and love.
Your Friend,
Janis

September 27, 2004

Issue 14

Dear Friends and Family,
If you havent checked our web-site lately, you owe it to yourself to take a look. We now have the deck cam working and updating every 30 seconds! You might be lucky enough to catch a shot of me in action feeding the fish or watering the plants. Also added is a link to the pier cam so you can see what the ocean is doing by the Horace Caldwell Pier. You might see some surfer dudes. Cowabunga man!
We just said goodbye to our first guests, Joan and Phil, who went home well tanned, well fed, and totally relaxed. It was fun showing them the island and going on shopping expeditions. After Labor Day, the stores and restaurants here are open when ever they feel like being open, so it was an adventure in shopping. Hey, its the island way of life here. And once you show them the beach, the Marine Science Institute, the Birding Center, and take them on a ferry ride, thats it. But they amused themselves mostly by taking walks on the beach and seeing what gifts the ocean was giving up that day. Phil found a pair of sunglasses and Joan brought home buckets of seashells and pink barnacles. We never did have to resort to giving them crayons and paper bags to play with. See attached photo of the happy couple.
I am looking forward to our trip to Cleveland next week and getting excited about seeing all our old friends. I love autumn and hope the leaves will be turning and the weather will be fallish because the weather here is still very much like summerhot! No hurricane threats so far, thank God.
In honor of the change of season I have attached a copy of my essay, Portrait of Autumn for your edification. I wrote it last year in my English class at Tri-C and it is one of my favorites, hope you like it.
Love, Janis
EXTENDED BODY:
Portrait of Autumn
Winter is an etching, spring a water color, summer an oil painting and autumn a mosaic of them all.-Stanley Horowitz
I am in love with autumn. Autumn is my flamboyant, fleeting lover. Mellow, mature, yet madly passionate, he teases me every year with subtle signs of his return. Even before the autumnal equinox, I sense him coming, as all about me nature is deftly getting ready for his revisit. I catch sight of the geese overhead, honking and heading south in their V formations, and watch the fidgety squirrels hoarding their nuts. I notice how the sunlight slants differently through the windows and the days become shorter. The skies wear a deeper blue, the clouds don a darker gray, and the sunset slips into a honey toned glow. Then colorful heaps of leaves begin to collect in the corners at my front door, like greeting cards and love letters from autumn.
Autumn is sensuous. I love the chilly sweater weather, wearing soft flannel shirts and floppy wool socks and spending cozy evening hours cuddled by a fire. Im crazy about the smells of autumn: the nutty tang of the woods, a hint of leaves burning, and pungent tree-ripened fruit at roadside stands. I love the tastes of autumn: steamy clam bakes, simmering soups, spicy chili, and hot apple cider. I love gazing at a bright-orange harvest moon, the crunchy walks, and the crispness in the air. Most of all, I love the delirious profusion of falling leaves. Wind tossed and irrepressible, across roads and lawns they tumble and scamper like overexcited children let out for recess.
The season is a festival for leaves. First the sumacs put on their lipstick red flush and the Virginia creeper vines adorn the trees with wine-colored garlands. Then the maples don their red autumn uniforms and stand like noble sentries along the streets. After the maples brilliant display the oaks take center stage dressed in their swirling splendor of gold and crimson. Every day is one exuberant exclamation of bright yellows and oranges, deep reds and purple, celebrating the glory of creation.
But autumn is also the end of summer. There is a look of resignation to the garden and a sharp smell of surrender in the air. Once sturdy plants are now hunched over, pale and weak, offering their final fruits, and saying their farewells. It was a marvelous party, darling, a stunning summer, we must do it again next year. Oh, is that a bit of gray I see on your crown? Yes, it does make you look distinguished. As it is a finale, it is also a time for reflection.
So while I marveled at the glorious autumn splendor, I began to wonder what makes leaves change colors and found this explanation from The World Book. In late summer and early fall, a disk of cells slowly grows near the leafs stem, gradually blocking the flow of water to the leaf. At the same time, chlorophyll begins to break down. As this happens, other vibrant colors previously hidden in the leaf are revealed. This simple definition deepened my love for autumn.
In autumns portrait I catch a glimpse of the progress of my own life. Richer hues held unseen within the green leaves of summer are gradually revealed by autumns bittersweet embrace. Despite hints of the harshness of the winter to come and the realization that summer days are a wistful memory, autumn is a wonderfully vivid and beautiful season of maturity. Amidst that beauty I find myself in the autumn of my years, gradually revealing a variety of amazing qualities that were once hidden and unknown, and adding new colors to the mosaic of my life.

September 15, 2004

Hurricane Ivan Special

Hello Friends and Family,
This is a short "special edition" to get you some pictures I just took on the beach. We are feeling the wrath of Ivan's surf. The waves are 12-15 ft and coming up all the way to the dunes. They closed the beach road to traffic, but one gal drove around the barrier and got her car stuck deep in the sand and it is now filled with water and ruined I'm sure. Some crazy guys have a chain and think they are gong to pull it out. I was amazed by how powerful these waves can be. The next high tide is going to be at 4am and they are predicting the waves to be into the dunes. This whole area is on a flood alert. I hope we are going to be high and dry by tomorrow afternoon, but who knows. Please say a little prayer for us and for all those in the path of this horrible storm.
Love, Janis

Continue reading "Hurricane Ivan Special" »

August 26, 2004

Issue 13

Dear Friends and Family,
August 16th was B-day: back-to-school day and thus deliverance from the throngs of family vacationers. The tourists dispersed as quickly as they arrived, leaving in their wake the blissful calm we came to love about the island. Once again, we can venture to town, the ferry or the beach with a laid-back island attitude. The month is winding down. And it looks like Im going to survive August. Thank you Lord!
Earlier in August we took a mini-vacation to Philadelphia. It was necessary to get me someplace cool as the dog days of summer, with their heat and humidity, were making me suicidal. The weather in Philly was perfect. We stayed at the Latham Hotel in the center of town and walked to everything. We visited Independence Hall and the Liberty Bell. We had dim sum in China Town. We strolled the oldest residential street in America and took a bus tour of Valley Forge. I felt 12 years old again.
Then God was good to us once more. When we arrived home the jet stream dropped a once-every-25-years cold wave down into Texas and gave us beautiful 70 degree weather and low humidity for almost a week; just enough to remind us why we moved here. The Corpus weather folks say that the first cold wave usually comes in the middle of September, steering away many tropical storms. At this moment we have no hurricanes heading for us and I hope we can say that again in September.
We did watch carefully hurricane Charlies path, and on Wednesday called my sister in Fort Myers to advise her to fill up her bathtub with water and turn up the fridge, but they have lived in Florida long enough to become complacent. On Friday, the eye of the storm missed them by 150 miles, still giving them a good dose of the hurricanes fury. The path of devastation left behind seems staggering, but thankfully Rosemary and Bob rode it through unscathed. Now she agrees that hurricanes are nothing to be complacent about. We plan to put up our storm shutters and leave for San Antonio if anything bigger than a Category I comes this way.
Ive included some typical tourist pictures of Philly and some bird pictures. Yup, bird pictures. Well, when they land right on your deck you must take a picture, right? Hope you like them. God bless, and live each day to the fullest.
Love,
Janis

July 28, 2004

Issue 12

Dear Friends and Family,
If people cruise by your home yelling, Waaaahoo! then summer is in high gear. Many schools start back in August, so loads of families are taking their vacations in July, and the Gulf shore is their destination for a crazy, lazy, hazy, week of summer fun. Living at ground zero of vacationville has its drawbacks. In my aerobics class the gals were complaining about how they couldnt go shopping on Sunday because the traffic is so bad. Duh. We just moved here and we figured out fast you dont go anywhere on the weekends. I get a kick out of watching the tourists take their pictures in front of everything island and feel a bit smug about being a local. I also gladly give directions to the myriad of cars that pull over whilst I am puttering in the front yard or garage. The thing that saddens me is the copious amount of litter the tourists thoughtlessly leave behind on the roads and beach. I hope our town has a plan for cleaning up this trash.
The weather is sooooo summertime. How many words for hot can you think of? Well the weatherman earns his pay with these astute predictions. Lets look at todays "Corpus Christi Caller Times" for our weekly forecast. Lets see, Wednesday: hot and humid. Thursday: hot and sticky. Friday: sauna like. Saturday: sweltering. Sunday: Baking hot. Wow, in Cleveland we never got baking hot or sweltering. Sounds like I should do my baking on Sunday. Being on the island by the ocean we do get a few degrees cooler with the constant ocean breeze. In fact, we go to the beach just before sundown and it is rather pleasant. At the beach Doug is practicing flying his training kite. He is training for kite surfing, which I will again agree to watch so I can dial 911 and tell the Coast Guard exactly where to start looking.
New things: I started swimming daily at our beautiful community pool. It is a good workout and you dont sweat. I also go to a morning step class (7:30am!!) about twice a week where I really sweat. We recently got Molly a doggy life jacket to see if she would venture out into the deeper surf with us. Nope. She must know about the law of the ocean; it is a giant food chain. There are things in the ocean that will sting you (jelly fish and sting rays) and eat you (sharks), no questions asked. We go heedlessly in to play in the rolling waves, but Molly prudently stays close to shore. Doug now has a WaterRower. This is a rowing machine that uses water for resistance and makes sounds like one is rowing. Boy, now he is he really going to get buff. It looked like he got a good workout just pulling it the stairs and putting it together. Doug got the weather station working again. He had to reconstruct all systems after a major meltdown on two computers. Therefore, the Deck Cam is off the air until next week or never, according to our technical staff. So thats about it until next time.
Stay cool and Bar-be-cue, Yours Truly, JanisTITLE: Issue 12

July 11, 2004

Issue 11

Dear Friends and Family,
A picture is worth a thousand words. I have attached some recent shots of us doing our thing. We went to a great gourmet restaurant in Rockport and took our picture there. Doug pulled the seat out of his car because it was broken so we joked about using an orange crate for a seat...he looks ready to drive to an Amway meeting. Fourth of July evening we sat on lawn chairs outside our garage and had drinks, listened to the crickets, watched the town fireworks and got bit up by mosquitos, a perfect summer night. We just bought Molly a doggy life preserver so she can go swimming with us at the beach. We also just got a kite for Doug. So we are off to the beach for some fun.
That's all for this week, It's summer, have fun..
Janis

Continue reading "Issue 11" »

July 04, 2004

Issue 10

Dear Friends and Family,
Happy Fourth of JULY! It is nuts on the island today, so we are hunkered down and waiting for the 5th of July to go anywhere. We did go to church today and the joke was that the Pastor had been on vacation. When you live in a vacation destination where do you go for a vacation?
I have much to tell you. First, the Deck Cam is not working and the weather station is not updating because two of Dougs computers died. He is in his laboratory now putting new parts in trying to bring them back to life. So all the exciting stuff on our web site is not so exciting right now. Please be patient and check back.
Remember back when I was raving about all the birds? It turns out that this area is truly the birdiest. Here is a quote from the paper, Corpus Christi, for the second consecutive time, has won bragging rights as Americas Birdiest City, beating out such cities as San Diego, Calif., and New YorkThe competitions purpose is to see which cities can document the highest count of bird species during a selected 24-hour period. Corpus Christis bird team located 246 species this year, beating last years number of 228. Second-best Sand Diego spotted 209 bird species, and New York City came in third with 190. Philip Pryde, a retired San Diego State University professor, started the contest four years ago to gain bragging rights for Sand Diego. New York won the first year. In 2002, San Diego earned the title. The Corpus Christi birding team took the honors in 2003 and 2004, winning two of the three times they have competed.
It is wonderful to be surrounded by so much natural beauty. We have a family of Whistling Ducks and ducklings in our Lake that we watch from our living room. We also have two Moorhens that will paddle up to our deck to get fish chow to take to their little ones in the reeds. The latest new creature I have run into is the butterfly of death. It is a giant moth migrating from Mexico. Know as the black witch moth in the United States it is surround with superstitions. It has an average 6-inch wingspan and is often mistaken for a bat which is exactly what I thought when I surprised one Monday morning from my bushes.
Finally, I am giving all my friends in Cleveland advance warning that we are planning to return for the first two weeks of October. So we will be there for Claires birthday and Heathers Bat Mitzvah and any other parties we get wind of.
Thats all the news that is the news for now. May God bless you with boldness in his name. All my love,
JanisJanisJanis-----
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June 21, 2004

Issue 9

Dear Friends and Family,
What will people think if I am late getting my diary out? I hope they think I am having such a good time that I cant sit down in front of my computer. I confess Doug and I have been having some fun. First, check out the new home page on our web site, www.asknice.com, because there is a photo posted that is beyond description. In fact, I would like you all to submit to me what you think would be a good caption for this picture and I will post the winning entry (and all others) next week.
While at the beach I took a bunch of pictures of Molly (see attached) who is just crazy about playing in the waves. We also donned our suits and went in the ocean and boy is it ever warm (86 degrees).
Next, we had such a tremendous response from the Deck Cam that we installed another camera. First, we had it mounted over the water and called it the Turtle Cam, but the turtles were a little camera shy. Then Doug mounted it on the roof near the guest bedroom window and we now update every 10 minutes the new, spectacular, Guest Bedroom View Cam. It really is quite beautiful first thing in the morning and we hope it inspires you to get your airplane tickets to come on down.
Yes, come on down because the guest bedroom is now officially done, ready and tested by me (snoring seal of approval). I installed an enviroscape fountain that trickles rain and plays several different nature sounds like loons, tropical rain forest birds, distant thunder, summer crickets, etc., and it is an extremely relaxing room with a gorgeous view. We call it the Retro Room because it is done in a retro-modern style, including a Princess phone covered with clouds.
You can visit us now if you really like hot, hot, hot and sunny or wait until after September. Our neighbor says that April and September are the best months here, although September is a hurricane month. The hurricane season is 6 months, from June 1 to the end of November. They (the experts) are predicting a heavy hurricane season this year, so we have readied ourselves by reading all the manuals, practiced putting up our storm shutters, and stocking up on water, batteries and Chef Boyardee. I dont know what to expect but am putting it all in Gods hands.
Even though it is summer and hot we are loving the perpetual sunshine. Cleveland has only 70 sunny days a year so I never knew what real sunshine was until we moved here. It is sunny just about every day. Even the partly cloudy days seem bright compared to Cleveland. So keep checking out the web for bargain flights. Southwest has been advertising $99.00 fares to San Antonio and maybe it wont be long before they advertise for Corpus Christi. Southwest also allows you to change the date without penalty. If you fly into Corpus that will be your only expense as we will pick you up and bring you to the best place on the island with the best food, our place!
Also this week we have been looking at many different trucks and trying to decide what to get to replace the Gran Marquis and PT Cruiser that will be good for hauling friends and luggage. Let us know if you have any advise about trucks or vans.
May God bless you and keep you safe. Peace out.
JanisJanis-----
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June 13, 2004

Issue 8

Dear Friends and Family,
(Drum roll, please.) Last week, from high atop the Little Lake Condominiums we brought you the weather station. This week we present, (cymbal crash) the Deck Cam! Yes, now you too can thrill to the never changing view from our deck. Just go to www.asknice.com and click on Our World. The image is updated every 10 minutes, (sorry, no streaming video yet, if ever), and sometimes it is a little blurry, but hey, its fun. If you think looking at our back deck is boring, then just be glad we didnt include the Front Door Cam.
This week we drove our scooters to Aransas Pass to get their state inspections. It was fun since I havent been on my Malaguti since last summer. Even though the line to get on the Ferry was an hour long, when you have a scooter they let you pass everybody and get right on. And my pink scooter seems to bring a smile to everyones face. Then we went to look at kayaks, since they are very popular down here, and now Doug is talking about building a rowboat, (ho boy). For exercise, Doug is riding his bike mornings on a five-mile course up 361 and back. I will try to join him as soon as I can get up at 6:30am. I like taking Molly to the beach for her daily romp in the surf. I have attached a couple of pictures.
I have realized the official uniform of the island is the T-shirt, shorts and flip-flops. Unfortunately I packed everything from our closets without much culling. Coats, jackets, sweaters, scarves, hats, gloves, long pants, dresses, long sleeved shirts, turtlenecks and flannel pajamas: all as useful as an ice scraper and snow shovel down here. Because Doug works at home we had created and abided by one longstanding a rule: out of your pajamas by noon. But what we sleep in and what we work in are now oddly the same. The only difference between our daywear and nightwear is sans underwear. There are no fashion police on the island. People walk barefoot into stores and wear flip-flops to church. My sister, who lives in Florida, says you can wear a T-shirt for about seven years until it gets holes in it, and then you wear it some more. Wow, this is going to save us money on clothing.
We think we found our next church: Padre Island Baptist Church. We both enjoyed the two worship services we have attended. It reminds me very much of our old church, CVCC, just a bit smaller. The sermons have been insightful and thought provoking. God has been very much a part of this move and I am looking forward to finding the church and the path he has planned for us. Hope all is well and may God refresh you and bless you with wonder and astonishment.
Love,
Janis-----
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June 07, 2004

Issue 7

Dear Friends and Family,
Ah, men and their toys. Doug is never happier than when he has a new gadget to play with and his latest cool gadget is his new weather station, which he installed on our roof yesterday. With an anemometer spinning atop a 10 foot mast, we look like an outpost on the Antarctic now. If you go to our web site www.asknice.com you will be able to check out every aspect of the weather inside and outside of our house. He is still trying to get some of the kinks out though, i.e., we did not have wind gusts of 177 mph today, just a balmy 15 mph average out of the south/southeast.
The weather is on the verge of starting to get hot. When listening to the Texas radio station the DJ gives the weather report like this, Today, hot. Friday, hot. Saturday hot. Sunday, hot. June, July, August, hot, hot, hot! But the days have been in the high 80s and so far it hasnt felt unbearable. It actually feels very summery, like all those great summer days you remember from your childhood have not disappeared, they just came down here to retire.
The Memorial Day weekend was a big success for the town of Port A. Lots of people came and spent money and had a good time and no incidents. Now the town is just pleasantly bustling with tourists and everyone is looking forward to a good summer.
We went to another new church today in town. The preacher wore sandals and shorts under his robe. We celebrated Pentecost by tossing handfuls of ribbons around the church, symbolic of the passing of the Holy Spirit. Definitely a fun, feel good church, but Doug kept getting hit in the head with ribbons and was not getting filled with the joy of the Spirit as intended. He says he would like something with a little more meat on the bone. So we are still looking for a church.
Hope you had a pleasant holiday and all is going well for you. Let me know what your summertime plans are.
Peace be with you,
Janis

May 30, 2004

Issue 6

Dear Friends and Family,
Wow, another week already? Im starting to get into the spirit of island time. Island time is great. Its like this: you drill a hole to put up a curtain rod and then maybe tomorrow you drill the second hole. No rush. I think I hung up three pictures this week. I get up early to walk Molly to the beach before it gets too hot, then come back and feed the turtles. Im busy naming them right now. Then I read the paper and finally I work on the crossword puzzle. Oh yeah, we bought a TV. Except we cant get any reception, even with an antenna, so its just sitting there until the cable guy comes out on June 4th.
Its different living in a resort village. This was a sleepy little hamlet until Memorial Day Weekend. Now the roads and stores and beaches are jammed with people. We drove down the beach and were amazed at the sight. An endless line of cars, miles of cars, pulled right up to the edge of the surf, the spaces between them full of tent covered picnics, beach towels flapping, kites of all kinds flying overhead, and tan and bright red bodies swimming, sun bathing, surf fishing, pitching horse shoes and tossing baseballs. In town the cash registers are ringing as long lines snake back and forth in the isles and theres no time for the idle chatting we used to enjoy with the merchants. Even at the row of townhouses where we live it feels crazy as there are about ten more cars then usual out front in the parking lot. Here we are one of only three full time residences as the rest are just used as vacation places. Today, we are just staying home and relaxing on the back deck where it is just as peaceful as it was before the marauding hordes descended.
I have attached some pictures of the shops that are in the center of town, just so you can see how different this place is from Cleveland. I hope you have plans to kick back for the holiday and relax, and I hope God keeps you all safe.
Love,
Janis

May 23, 2004

Issue 5

Dear Friends and Family,
Going out this week to the sushi party was a great relief from the tedium of unpacking and organizing and gave me a sense of being a normal person again. It was good to escape from the four walls and I enjoyed Annettas company and her stories of life on the island. Then Doug and I had our first dinner party on Friday night and that really helped us feel like we were back to normal.
Doug has grown his beard back and looks somewhat Hemmingwayesk. If nothing else, he looks like a fisherman. I have to brag, he did catch his first two fish on Thursday night, on his first evening out with his new rod. He did throw them back since he didnt want to clean them, but they were each about a foot long. It was a lovely evening too, as we sat by the sea wall we watched pelicans and the boats and even a dolphin go by.
Some folks have asked about how Molly is doing. Well, she is lovin the beach. It is a short walk up there and we try to go up every day. When we get to the water, if no one is around I un-clip her and she runs like the wind in the surf chasing all the birds and yipping until she is exhausted. She knows not to go too far and runs in a big oval around us. It is great to see her run. If we see people coming we call her and she will come over to get clipped up. (Because you are supposed to have your dog on a leash). We always carry a bag with us to pick up her droppings but I use it to pick up beer cans too. When we get home she stands patiently by the side of the house while I hose her off. The next step is we go to the front door where I keep a beach towel on a chair and I dry her off. It has become a rather enjoyable routine for both of us.
There is a small artist community here and I have stopped at a few quaint artsy shops. But this is such a tourist town and I still am amazed at the amount of T-shirt stores in this town. One store trying to out-do the other with storefront attractions like giant shark jaws for doorways or a pink octopus on the roof. Not quaint but very tourist tacky. This is one of the things we like about the island is as of yet there are no national or name brand type stores or restaurants, just one of a kind places which make it very unique and laid back. No Applebees or Wall Marts here yet, thank goodness.
Attached is a nice picture of the living room with the plants and curtains. Also the guest room is coming along. Still needs a desk and TV. But all and all, Im thinking that Im just about done. We still have some boxes in Dougs office and in the garage, but the rooms are all livable. Hurricane season starts June 1, so we will be preparing by putting up our storm shutters on the windows this week. They are predicting a worse than normal hurricane season this year. We heard Cleveland had a big storm with 80 mph winds. Hope everyone made it through OK. God bless and be with you all.
Love,
Janis

May 16, 2004

Issue 4

Dear Friends and Family,
It has been a record year for rain here. A big T-storm came through on Thursday night and dumped more rain then the previous storm last Saturday. I read in the paper that some folks in parts of Texas had been praying for rain and now they have a foot of water in their living rooms. We had minor flooding in Port A, but our little abode did remain dry this time, although the little lake rose up pretty high.
I have been feeling poorly all week due to some sort of stomach virus, which has knocked the stuffing out of me figuratively and literally, so quickly, heres the weeks highlights: Doug got three new kitchen appliances, a Panini Grill, a deep fryer, and a griddle. He does seem to enjoy cooking and trying out all these new gadgets and I enjoy most of his experiments and by-products. Then we went to a nursery and picked up some beautiful tropical potted palms to fill the living room. And finally, Doug installed a Hummingbird feeder on the deck and I have had flickering little visitors every day to watch. Doug went out and bought his Texas fishing license and went to the library to get books on salt water fishing and is just about ready to become a Gulf fisherman. Yes sirree, he is going to go out and catch some big fish. And me? Oh I'm just going to go with him and watch for now. You know, someone has to be there to dial 911.
I have to point out it has been one month now since we have been in Port Aransas. Even though my new home and surroundings are all very beautiful, something is missing that we cant buy at a store. good friends. I miss you all and think of you often. I miss your smiling faces and the sounds of your laughter. I miss the way you would just walk in through the front door with a cheery, Helloooo. I miss having you sit down and join us for impromptu suppers. So write (e-mail) to me if you can and tell me whats going on in your life. Tomorrow I am going out to my first "girls night out", a wine tasting and sushi bar party. I am also going to try and volunteer at the marine institute, as they need helpers to spend time with Harley the dolphin. It is a toddler that got separated from its family and beached itself and now needs 24-hour re-habilitation care. I think I can relate to how it feels to be separated from all you know and love. I love you and miss you all.
Janis
P.S. hello mudder, hello fadder, here I am in Camp Granader

May 09, 2004

Issue 3

Dear Friends and Family,
Sure enough, Monday morning some men came out and drained my chandelier. They also walked around on the roof and pointed and speculated how the water got in through the bottom of the upper windows, noting that most of the other units had the same problem except I alone received the water fountain chandelier feature. Then they did some pounding and plugging and caulking and when they were done I asked, what if the storm comes from the other side of the house next time? To which they replied with a smile, Oh, we dont get bad storms from that direction. Ok now, everybody reach up and pull your eyebrows down. I had to.
Have I mentioned the birds landing on my deck? Let me tell you, theyre just about landing on my head now. I feel like Im stepping out onto a set of an animated Disney movie. Enough already with the birds, lets talk about the shrimp. Thats one of the reasons we moved down here: cheap shrimp and cheap avocados (58 cents instead of 2.99 each, but no story to go with avocados yet). Now for those of you who are allergic to shrimp and one bite might cause you to blow up faster then a party doll at one of Paul Ettores soirees, this next chapter will not excite you. This is the chapter called LIVE SHRIMP.
In Cleveland we never get to have such a luxury as LIVE SHRIMP. Down here, not only can you get them LIVE, but there are 50 different varieties: Brown shrimp, Pink shrimp, Bay shrimp, Gulf shrimp, etc. Because we are from Ohio and stupid about shrimp, we saw a sign that said LIVE SHRIMP 10 lbs. for $20. Wow. Screech. Pull over. They were snapping their fingers and tapping their toes live. And they have their heads on with beady little black eyes live, too. But no problem, Ive eaten peel and eat shrimp before. Oh, but Ive never broken their gushy heads off first and then peeled and eaten them. Uggh, gross. Meanwhile, Doug is trying to cook up 10 pounds of shrimp in the one little sauce pan we brought with us the first week. That was the day of our first fortuitous UPS delivery, the soup pot! But we still had to remove the heads, so Doug took that gross job and I took the boring peeling job and we got through about 5 pounds before our hands were wrinkled and poked raw and our enthusiasm for live shrimp dramatically waned. This is the part we like to call the EDUCATIONAL EXPERIENCE. What we have learned is you cant throw a rock on the island without hitting live shrimp. So the next time we will just go out and pay the $9.99 a pound for the tennis shoe size shrimp, cleaned and ready to eat and be done with it, eatin fat and sassy fresh CLEANED shrimp.
Our new furniture was delivered on Thursday and we are trying to adjust. First, Molly is not the sharpest pencil in our school box, so for some reason, she is very nervous to walk on the chic bamboo area rugs I picked out and only paces around the edges. She has also started a new pastime in the evenings of licking the living room windows trying to get the little green frogs that are stuck on the outside. Doug is not quite as weird but he did sprawl backwards onto the new red chair when he forgot the ottoman was in front. I just keep staring starry eyed at all the furniture. I love getting new furniture. I picked much of this stuff out over the Internet so it is very exciting to see it all come together in person. Plus, I designed the living room around a very retro ballerina lamp that was my mothers. I had it re-wired and a new silk shade put on. I always say you can take a cheap lamp and make it look like a hundred bucks if you just spend $180.00 dollars on it. I have attached some pictures, but the place still needs some curtains and big plants to cozy it up.
Other highlights of the week in Port A: it has been raining like crazy, a 48 year record, there was a Red Fish fishing competition this weekend that was going to be aired on ESPN2, and the spinner dolphin that beached itself, named "Harley", is doing much better.
Love,
Janis

May 02, 2004

Issue 2

Dear Friends And Family,
You know that sound you can make by blowing across an empty glass bottle? Well the wind can make that sound by blowing across your house. Yesterday morning a Texas size T-storm blew through Port A with 70 mph winds. It folded my Welcome to the Johnsons sign in half. I was standing at the top of the stairs leaning against the wall to get a good look out the upper windows at the storm action when I felt the wall vibrating and heard a very low noise like the mother ship made in the movie Encounters of the Third Kind. Cool, huh? Not so much, since soon after that I heard water running in my foyer and looked up to see rivulets coming down the stem of the chandelier. I have a few inches of water in there now. I also noticed Molly happily licking the floor. The wind had driven the rain through the bottom of the foyer window and the bottom of the front door. The insurance adjuster will be out Monday I am assured. I have a brand new house that leaks. Hurray. This is becoming a Johnson tradition. Every time we move into a new house we get baptized.
The van came this week to deliver our stuff: 180 boxes of stuff. I am so sick of opening boxes. Every time I open one I make a vow that I will never ever ever ever move again, even if the house is crumbling around me. The worst chore was digging my way into the kitchen. They packed all the boxes labeled kitchen in front of the pantry door and cupboards. Luckily I could get to the fridge. When Doug comes home (yes, he has been gone for the whole week doing a show in San Diego, dont even get me started) he will get to unpack his office and the garage stuff.
The sun is shining and I have the windows open today and there is a wonderful breeze blowing through the house. This morning while drinking my coffee a large white bird, maybe an egret, landed on the railing of our deck. It takes my breath away to see wildlife so close-up. A few days ago while standing out there a humming bird almost slammed into my chest. There are so many different species of birds here that I must go to the birding center and start to learn to identify them. Or maybe just start making up names like, Oh look, a Beach Chicken. Gotta go unpack some boxes.
Love,
Janis
P.S If you should not want to get any further installments of the Sandy Toes Diaries just let me know, but you gotta be hooked after these two action packed chapters.

April 26, 2004

Issue 1

Dear Friends and Family,
It has been a crazy two weeks since leaving Cleveland. I will try to sum up what it has been like. First, I want to thank you for all your prayers, they really helped to get us here alive and safe.
We hit the road on Good Friday about 3pm with the Merc towing the PT Cruiser jammed with all the most important things we felt we would need: computers, bedding, my office files, clothes, camp chairs and a tool kit. It was not enough, we found out later. The rest of our stuff will arrive sometime next week. Towing the PT was nerve wracking. Pulling the added weight caused the Merc to swerve about 3 feet every time a truck passed and our safest top speed was 60 mph. Molly whined constantly while I cried tears of goodbye, looking for the last time at the familiar landscape along 480 and 71. We crossed the Ohio River around 8 pm and found a Days Inn (we renamed it Dumpster Inn) that takes pets. Pulling into a parking lot that had a dead end, Doug found out that one cannot back up a tow dolly. More wracked nerves. We walked across the lot and had a steak dinner at a Waffle House, watched a little TV, then slept like the dead until 4 am. Waking so early was a sign to get moving so we headed out.
Felt a little better after some sleep, and hoped getting an early start would give us some time to rack up the miles. But when we stopped at Burger King for breakfast we noticed a bubble on the sidewall of the radial tire of the tow dolly. U-haul has customer service tuned to the fine art of ancient torture. After many frustrating phone calls we drove to a U-Haul in Bowling Green Kentucky. Here they still couldn't help us, but told us to take it to a local tire dealer to get fixed, which we did after we got lost trying to find the place. We waited to be the last one to get in, and lost about 5 hours of travel time on this fiasco. While in Kentucky, Doug wanted to eat Kentucky Fried Chicken, so we stopped for a box for our lunch. Since Molly wasnt eating, I gave her a little too much of the scraps, which caused her to have a bad case of gas a little later in day. Phewee!
Molly was still whining non-stop so we tried a new arrangement and put her in the front seat and I took the back seat, and this seemed to help calm her down. We then drove through some beautiful rolling country side with redbud trees all in bloom. Doug now learned more about driving down steep grades with one set of breaks and two cars.
We put in a long day and made it to Little Rock Arkansas, about half way to our destination. We got to our room about 10 pm and about 950 miles into our trip.
Easter Sunday dawned cool and drizzly. Molly is getting really whinny and bored. Driving through Houston we nearly avoided a crash, Traffic stopped suddenly and on the wet pavement we couldnt. Doug made a quick lane change and God made sure there was no one in that lane. We finally made it to Aransas Pass on Sunday night and slept hard from exhaustion. Iin the morning we took the ferry ride over to our new home: Port Aransas!
On this monday morning we signed the papers for our townhouse and then suddenly the sun came out! Beautiful weather greeted us to the island and made us joyful to arrive. We are amazed we are here and falling in love with the island life and all its newness.
Today it is raining which is giving me a chance to sit down and write. The past two weeks have been so hectic. Every day we have a million things to do to get our lives back to normal and settled in to our new home. The very first thing we had to do was find a vet and a groomer for Molly. Sharp little stickers growing in the grass were sticking to her everywhere in her long hair and she was limping and miserable. A short hair cut solved that problem and gave us a happier pooch.
We went shopping every night and day for a week in Corpus, buying such necessities as a washer and dryer, vacuum, coffee maker and a toaster. My first morning here Doug served me breakfast in bed: a cup of coffee and toast with jelly. I felt like a queen. We are learning to appreciate the little things in life that we take for granted. We finally got our phones hooked up and on the Internet by the middle of the week. This week, after ordering on-line everything we needed, stuff started to arrive. The first delivery was a big pot, which we thrilled over like castaways finding booty washed up on the shore. Then a mattress arrived! What delight! We now have a dining room table and chairs and I am sitting in my office surrounded by the pieces of a filing cabinet I will be putting together later today. On May 6th our new living room furniture will be delivered and I will finally have soft chairs to sit in. This week sometime a truck will arrive with the contents of our house that we had shipped. Then I will spend my days opening boxes and finding places for everything.
Well, if you are still reading this, thanks for sticking with me. We miss our friends and writing this makes me feel like we are a little bit closer. We are looking forward to the day when this place will be done and we hope you can all come down and visit us. Meanwhile, we are learning about island life. I have attached a few pictures that I took when we first arrived. I have my morning coffee and feed the turtles, ducks and birds from my deck. Molly is having a great time running on the beach and chasing shore birds into the surf and the little frogs and lizards around our house fascinate her. At night it is so quiet and peaceful. From our house you can hear the faint whoosh of a hundred waves splashing ashore. The sight and sound of the ocean is so awesome. Dear friend, please do not feel I have left you. I have only traveled a little farther to find a special place that I hope to share with you someday soon. Until then you can go out on a clear night and find the brightest star in the sky and gaze up and know that I am gazing upon it too.
With love,
Janis