Trip to Puerto Rico

BuckeyeChuck

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Tonight is my last night in Puerto Rico, where my bride and I will have spent six nights. We came here for a friend's wedding and have spent the rest of our time driving around the northeastern part of the island, and the past two days hoofing around Old San Juan. It has been a great trip.

Driving here is a different experience from how we do it in the U.S., but I find it very intuitive. Position is 9/10 of the unspoken law of the road. If you have it, you're in control.

I love the food. So much of it is fried, which suits my palate. We've eaten a lot of native food, and while most of our meals have been good or better, a couple have been forgettable. We made a point to eat at the little roadside eateries. On Saturday we were driving back to Fajardo from Ceiba, when I noticed a small truck by the side of the road. Next to the truck was a barbecue with a motorized spit, and I noticed quite a few locals. We jammed on the brakes, pulled over, and proceeded to have a delicious meal of barbecued chicken and beans and rice. The woman in the truck was very friendly, and we managed to communicate about why we were there, and where we lived, despite my impotent Spanish and her nonexistent English.

The kioskos at Luquillo were a great place to find traditional fried fare. We went twice!

The beach at Luquillo was very nice, so long as you stayed away from the beach behind the kioskos. The beach in Ceiba was not from which to swim, but there were many native fishermen, and one of them showed us the catch in his cooler.

Old San Juan is very different from the smaller Puerto Rican towns. (We spent four nights in Fajardo, and two about 2 miles from OSJ.) Today we toured the two major forts in OSJ (took more than three hours combined) and watched a very large cruise ship enter the bay and dock. We've eaten very well in OSJ, including a great lunch today at Barrachina. Barrachina claims to be the place where the pina colada was invented in 1963. I recommend the mixed mofongo and of course, a pina colada. I get mine without rum, as my bride of 12 years and I are both teetotalers.

I do not exaggerate when I say that I have not yet met an unfriendly Puerto Rican. The shop keepers love to have your business, and the locals love to talk about their homeland. At least one Puerto Rican asked if my wife was Puerto Rican, but one glance at my pasty white face, blue eyes, and blonde-ish hair, and they assume (correctly) that I am not Puerto Rican.

I am awed by the complete lack of winter! One native Puerto Rican with whom I conversed extensively at my friends' wedding said he had never seen snow. Two inches of the hated white stuff fell during our absence; I hope it has all melted by the time we return tomorrow evening. I have always said that desert living would be my preferred climate, but this tropical island stuff ain't far behind. I do not like the beach (and the water here is very beautiful), but there are plenty of places on an island of this size to enjoy the heat and humidity without suffering in the sun and sand.

I suspect we will be returning. There is a lot more of the island to explore and experience.
 
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I was stationed at Ramey AFB in 1970 for almost a year. As a niineteen yr old away from home for the first time...I had a VERY good time! LOL.

A Winter weather system consists of rain in the early morning and the daytime high barely reaching 70, or worse yet barely 60! They FREEZE.

Nice people, I agree on the native food as well.

FN in MT
 
I was there on a temporary assignment for 9 months after our company purchased a packaging company there.

I liked it. I remember the humidity hitting you in the face as you got off the plane. Old San Juan is a really cool place to look around. The CFO there was a gun guy and took me shooting a few times. He could only shoot at his gun club's firing range. This was 25 yrs ago. He was amazed that we could go out in the country side here in the states and shoot, with the owner's permission.


Charlie
 
This one is for anyone from the Bronx....

What do you get when you cross a Puerto Rican with a Jew?


A super who thinks he own the building.

I can tell that joke because my brother in law was Puerto Rican...:)
 
That was funny, until it got serious. your joke reminded me of an I.T. guy who travelled with us in PR. He said PR was like the Bronx with Fla vegetation.


Charlie
 
True story. I was in PR around 81-82, stayed right next door to the Dupont Plaza which burned down a few years later. There were some seedy charactors hanging out near the hotels and on the beach hawking their wares. Saw this guy all dressed from head to toes in this bright yellow floral outfit. A couple months later I was visiting a few friends I knew who lived in the South Bronx near 149th St, a big commercial hub in that area. The area is very heavily Hispanic. Low and behold, I see the same guy wearing the same outfit :eek:. I knew because the outfit was unique. What are the odds of that happening?
 
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Ladder-13

That would have been Dec 1986. My buddy and I were staying AT THE DUPONT PLAZA the second week in Dec '86. They were having a labor dispute and a couple of guys walked thru the casino pouring sterno on the floor. they got to the casino doors, turn around and torch it. I heard they locked the doors behind them. Just google it - 97 died.

Another guy from our company was staying there at the time, had walked down the street to change his plane reservations (remember Eastern Airlines), was walking back when it went up. He turned around, went back to Eastern and got the next flight out. Left everything behind.

I learned from the employees down there that most PR's worked on the island for a few years, then went to NYC or Miami for a couple yrs, then back again. Kind of a way of life for many. Guess that helps explain you seeing the same guy in both places ... except I don't know what was going on with the clothes.


Charlie
 
Charlie
I would never have recognized the fella, except for the clothes. The getup was quite unique, for a man. :rolleyes:;)
The cab drivers in PR make the ones in NY look courteous.
 
I spent a week in PR in '98. Was very unimpressed. The beach resort on the north side was nice enough, but the rest of the island we visited was poverty stricken and filthy. It was the first time I'd ever seen bars on the windows of a Burger King. Roads were in terrible shape. After spending a day in San Juan I had the opportunity to visit with some local LEO's. They advised me not to hang around after dark.

I've had the opportunity to go back several times but I have always passed on them. In all fairness, maybe they've cleaned it up since then.
 

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