Barbados
Miami to Barbados. Now there's a phrase that has a pleasant ring to it, especially when it's coming from the intercom of an airliner during the welcome aboard spiel presented by a well groomed hostess.
I had boarded a plane the day before, in the subfreezing temperature of Redmond, that had taken me to air conditioned LA and then on to tropical Miami. When offered the option of a 12 hour layover in Florida or a 20 hour one during the booking process, I naturally chose the longer one. My body no longer handles time changes on the Easterly leg of a journey as it did during my younger days, and the idea of a full eight hours sleep, along with the thoughts of a leisurely dinner and breakfast during the voyage, was really appealing. I found myself listening to the welcoming speech while well rested and eager to get on with it. Of course the flight was delayed a bit.............
The wheels finally got long enough to touch the ground again around 10:30 PM Barbados time and looking around, I noticed the opportunity of a lifetime had presented itself to me. The airport in Barbados borders the ocean and there is an amazing breeze that flows through the open air portion of the terminal. Realizing I could enjoy the fantastic smell of that breeze and relive the simple pleasure of a carefree time when long ago, as a much younger man, I allowed the Good Lord to provide my bed where ever I grew tired enough to need sleep, I laid down on one of the many benches and slept soundly through the night.
It seems odd that such a simple act could turn back time so easily, but that act nullified lessons learned over many decades about such things as personal safety, the necessity of a comfortable mattress and the need to protect ones belongings from the lawless hordes. Of course, it helped knowing the most valuable item in the bags resting under the bench while I slept was clean underwear. And, yeah, my camera was small enough to fit in my shirt pocket. Forty years peeled off my age that night and I slept through the process. The vacation was off to a great start.
Never did I ever imagine I would find myself in the cockpit of the fastest commercial airliner in history, but when I woke, there it was, less than 1000 paces from me: I started the day off by climbing on board and visiting that treasured space. After several hours of peering into every place I could see, sitting in VERY comfortable seats that had previously been occupied only by the wealthiest among us, and of walking on every surface that would support my weight, I returned to the airport in hopes of finding a duty free shop. Barbados is famous for it's rum, and I wanted to drink me some!
After roaming around the place a while longer, I boarded another airplane. This one would take me to Kingstown, in the island nation of St. Vincent and the Grenadines, and to Blue Lagoon, where my sailboat was waiting.
I will be looking forward to your posts about sailing. Just got 3 firsts in a sailboat regatta yesterday. The old body found it hard work. Glad the races were on a lake and not in S.F. Bay. I have spend a lot of my free time sailing and racing a small boat, 12'-21/2" long not including bowsprit and rudder. So far 47 years of fun. Hope I can round off a century of sailing.
ReplyDeleteWelcome aboard! I'll probably raise the main in the next post. Forrest
Deletepooh! half a century
ReplyDeleteBest to you and your sailing adventure.
Ah - another old salt climbs down the companionway. Welcome. I can say half a century was spent in the left seat of an airplane - but not on the water.....Hope hauling on lines as part of a weight loss program keeps me in shape to put a century's worth of candles on my cake, thirty years from now.
DeleteForrest