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First day without Internet: Read Bradbury’s From the Dust Returned. Went out on the boat. Swam with dolphins. Or rather, saw a pod, jumped in the water with them. Eight surged out of the murky blue, their high-pitched squeaks all around, and then, with a concerted flick of their tails, disappeared, begging us to give chase. Got back in the boat and played with them by motoring around. Leaps and twists and flops galore. Hopefully, now that the pc is up and running again, [livejournal.com profile] mana_trini  will upload the video of it. Went to a party. Actually decided to be charming and had fun.

 Second day: rugby x3; necklace x 1.5

 Third: Rearranged and organized office; sorted wood for crafts. Fished for calamari; caught two. Jasmine petals, candles, white-chocolate massage lotion... Um, not for me. For Julien. Yeah, I'm a nice wife like that.

 Fourth: Morning walk on the beach. Cooking! (Sausage Rougail, spicy tomato relish, mango chutney, mango ice cream.) Helped Julien make a dining table. Finished 0.5 necklace from Day II. Rugby. Started a bracelet.

Fifth: Morning walk on the beach. Made papaya jam. Did laundry; made two cushions. Finished bracelet; made a pair of earrings and a necklace (not happy with it). Still reading The Hunchback of Notre-Dame, still slow going, but I’m making progress despite the book being only bathroom reading. Just hit a huge Dickensonian coincidence. Ah, the things writers used to get away with.

Sixth: Phone call from mil, who said her flight had been delayed a whole day. Tried to fix blah necklace. Made it passable, but it’s not something I’d buy for myself. Made two pairs of earrings and another necklace. Watched a lot of crap television while making said jewellery. Cleaned the windows. Did tons of laundry; ironed and re-hung clean curtains.

Seventh: Wrapped (with wire) about a dozen sea-polished shells. Played a couple of grids of Sudoku. Bought fabric and made cushion covers. Laughed and joked around with Julien. Read a few pages of Notre-Dame.  A rather lazy day since the m-i-l was supposed to arrive and didn’t.


Eighth: Cleaning! Can’t have a messy house when the m-i-l is coming (not that it was messy anyhow). Julien went spearfishing; brought home two huge groupers. Picked up m-i-l, went grocery shopping; watched rugby. Started making the Cinnamon Roll Cookies from [livejournal.com profile] theblackoven ’s blog.

 




Ninth
: Fruit, vegetable, and handicraft market in Coconi on GT. This is the market where I want to sell my goods. It comes around only once a month, and the next one I can participate in falls on the first of Nov. Hope I have enough stuff ready by then. I’m seriously lacking in materiel. L  After the market, bought a grilled chicken and ate it at a picnic area overlooking the bay just outside of Sada. Got home in time to finish the cinnamon cookies and eat them (delicious. Will def make again. Hopefully they'll be prettier the second time around) during a game of Scrabble. Watched rugbyX2. Between games, made banana ice cream.

 

Tenth: Julien had to work, so the mil and I took a morning walk up the Vigie to the lookout point. Came home with a 15-pound sack of mangoes, fresh off the tree. Picked up Hervé (friend from la Réunion) at the airport and invited him over for lunch. That afternoon we went to Moya II Beach. Tried to start Shadowbridge, ending up visiting with mil instead. Had a cup of tea upon returning to the house. Were joined by the curious landlord.

 


11th
: Julien dropped mil and I off at the base of the Dziani crater on his way to work. The green of the lake was stunning, as usual. While walking the rim, we saw a whale on the ocean side, not in the sulfurous waters of the lake. *g* She leapt and leapt, all down the coast until she disappeared behind the point of Petit Moya. Even when she was right in front of us, my mil thought it could be a dolpin, so far away was she. It wasn't until I pointed out the whale's size in relation to the boat tracking her that my mil believed me. Being that the whale was so far away, all my pictures are rather disappointing. That's what I get for not taking the correct lens. :(

We hiked to the Belvedere de Moya, and headed back home through manioc fields, down gullies, up the Vigie and back down through immigrant shacks and rank, sloping lanes that resembled giant gutters. Went to Moya in the afternoon with mil and J. Played Scrabble and ate fresh cookies. Ah, the beauties of being able to freeze your cookie dough.

12th: Morning walk around the towns of Petite Terre (Labattoir and Pamandzi). Stopped at the fabric store, stopped by the electricity guy who wanted to know if a) I’m married, b) we had gotten the mess straightened out (which it’s not certain that we have), stopped a second time by him (yes, Petite Terre is petite) so he could express a wish to maybe go out on the sea with Julien and me. Hmmm.

13th:  Off to Reunion Island. Another post altogether!

*sigh* I had some pretty pictures to share of Dziani and the Moya beaches from the belvedere, but my pc is acting up. I'm going to have to reboot and see if that doesn't solve the problem. I'll post this bit for now so it doesn't get lost.

 

Date: 28 Oct 2008 01:01 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] mindseas.livejournal.com
Dolphin and whale sightings sounds delightful, and as usual, the blues/blue-greens in the ocean photo take one's breath away. The papaya jam sounds good too!

Date: 28 Oct 2008 02:16 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] mnfaure.livejournal.com
Sadly, my mil didn't get to see any dolpins and only the one whale sighting, so far away. Still, that's better than nothing, right? :)

Date: 28 Oct 2008 09:45 pm (UTC)
pjthompson: (Default)
From: [personal profile] pjthompson
Sounds like an infinitely superior alternative to the internet.

How do you cook that grouper?

Date: 29 Oct 2008 07:15 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] mnfaure.livejournal.com
How do you cook that grouper?

Several different ways. :D Julien filleted it (it made 8-10 portions), and we put it in the freezer. One of our fav ways to eat it is just pan-seared, seasoned with salt and pepper. It's just so darned tasty like that. But I'm soon (I keep saying that) going to post a delicious Parsi recipe. For Julien's birthday, I wove a basket of lemongrass and pan-seared it in that. It was fantastic. Nice juicy fish, subtle hint of lemongrass. We also use grouper when we make fish in a coconut sauce. Yet another recipe I've been meaning to share.

Oh, and the grouper is good on the grill (whole and unskinned). Lovely smoky flavor.

Date: 29 Oct 2008 11:35 pm (UTC)
pjthompson: (Default)
From: [personal profile] pjthompson
Sounds good. Is grouper a fishy fish or a meaty fish?

Date: 30 Oct 2008 10:07 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] mnfaure.livejournal.com
As in the taste of it? It doesn't have a strong fish flavor. Its lovely white flesh can flake, but it holds its form well.

Date: 30 Oct 2008 04:53 pm (UTC)
pjthompson: (Default)
From: [personal profile] pjthompson
Yeah, as to taste. I'm not crazy about fishy fish. I like things like swordfish and shark okay, but I'm just not much of a fish eater.

Date: 30 Oct 2008 06:39 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] mnfaure.livejournal.com
I think grouper is very good and very mild. I used to think I didn't like fish, but now believe that was mostly a matter of eating the not-fresh, overcooked variety.

Date: 30 Oct 2008 07:38 pm (UTC)
pjthompson: (Default)
From: [personal profile] pjthompson
I'm sure that's true most of the time, and fresh caught does taste better. But I've eaten fresh caught and still didn't care for it much. Such is life. I wish I did like it. Shellfish, otoh, the stuff that's not as good for you--I'm all over that. :-)

Date: 31 Oct 2008 06:39 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] mnfaure.livejournal.com
*lol* I understand you on that. :P

Date: 29 Oct 2008 11:18 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] kmkibble75.livejournal.com
I'm kind of in need of another vacation after reading everything you did... Some day I'll find out how you manage it.

Date: 30 Oct 2008 06:51 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] mnfaure.livejournal.com
And yet, I lead a rather low-key life. ;)

Date: 2 Nov 2008 01:31 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] footlingagain.livejournal.com
It sounds like a splendid time was had by all. Stunning pictures!

ate fresh cookies. Ah, the beauties of being able to freeze your cookie dough.

And yet, I've never thought of that. Beloved has been waiting about 8 weeks for me to make ginger biscuits because somehow the mood just faded.

*dons "Bad Wife" badge"*

OTOH, if he's so keen, he could just make his own biscuits. They'd probably come out better than mine, anyway *g*

Date: 5 Nov 2008 10:48 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] mnfaure.livejournal.com
Frozen cookie dough is great. One of my friends even freezes all of her cookie dough before baking it; she's sure it's better.

I especially appreciate being able to do it here in Mayotte where the cookies get soggy in the space of a day if not eaten immediately.

And yeah, he can make his own biscuits. ;)

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