Our sorrow over family members and loved ones in hospitals, nursing homes and care homes during times of COVID-19…

This buffalo was not happy to see Tom when he went for a walk in the neighborhood. He used no zoom to capture this photo when suddenly this monstrous agitated animal started to approach him. Tom ran like a “bat out of hell” to get away, telling me the story while still breathless from running.

Note: To all of our readers visiting our site via a smartphone, please click the “View web version” tab under the word “Home” at the bottom of the page to access the web version enabling you to access all of our archives on the right side of the page. We’ll be updating our site shortly, making these extra steps unnecessary. Thank you. 

Today’s photos are from June 24, 2016, while in Sumbersari, Bali, Indonesia. See the link here for more details.

We keep jumping around from year to year as we decide which photos to share on this particular month and day to ensure the photos are interesting. Undoubtedly, over the years, we were scrambling for new photos when staying in specific locations for extended periods. At times, they were simple, somewhat uninteresting photos of our immediate surroundings.

The buffalo snorted and stomped his feet, ready to charge.

However, today’s shared photos from June 24, 2016, are of particular significance when Tom had a scary incident with a large water buffalo in Bali that scared the wits out of him. See the story here. At the time, he was terrified, but a part of this made us laugh then and again now as we reviewed the photos.

So, enjoy these photos with us once again today, which are four years old, when nothing is more soothing during lockdown now than a good laugh. Perhaps a chuckle has significant meaning, especially today when I’ve had some bad news about my dear sister Susan, who’s in a care facility in Las Vegas, Nevada, unable to receive any visits from family during times of COVID-19.

This was a second buffalo who considered getting in on the action. The cow behind him seemed disinterested in what was transpiring.
A few months ago, I posted about Susan’s failing health and the need to move her from an assisted living facility to a nursing home with round-the-clock care due to her failing health. 
Susan, who is four years older than me, has been lying in bed for about 14 years with a wide array of diseases, including congestive heart failure, fibromyalgia, severe thyroid disease, and now, requiring oxygen around the clock, COPD. Sadly, she takes about 25 medications a day.
Several workers were involved in a road paving project.

She was moved to a new facility, a small, 10-patient nursing home with comprehensive care about three months ago. There is never a time a staff member isn’t available to assist her.

Over these past years of world travel, Susan and I have spoken on the phone regularly, often laughing and sharing stories of our mutual world travel experiences. Once she was moved to the new facility, her health and memory began to fade rapidly when conversations became more difficult.

This is the grassy path Tom took in search of photos, never realizing what lay ahead.

Since she’d moved, I was calling her daily, usually in the mornings, which was her early evening, knowing that nothing was more important to her (and to me) to stay in touch with her since no family members in the US could visit her due to the virus, which remains the case today.

Nevada is in about the middle of the 50 US states regarding the number of cases and deaths, with 14,000 cases and almost 500 deaths, although not as horrible as many other states. Nonetheless, no family members are allowed to visit. 

A sad part of her isolation has been that she hasn’t been able to see her beloved pet, Chase, an adorable Yorkshire Terrier who sat on the bed with her day after day. This fact alone has surely contributed to her going downhill these past months.

Cows were contained in this roughshod enclosure.

Over the past three weeks, I have been calling her both in my morning and evening, which are the opposite times of day in Nevada, never having her pick up the phone, which was always at her side. I left numerous messages to no avail. Surely, if something happened to her, the facility would let us know.

This morning, I called the facility directly, explaining she was not picking up the phone, regardless of when I called. As it turns out, they’ve taken her phone away from her. In her confused state of dementia, she’d been calling the fire department and police several times a day asking for help. (We don’t anticipate any abuse at the facility since family members know the owner and the facility is highly rated).

When I spoke to her evening caregiver, Ray, he explained about the phone being taken away. They preferred not to take the phone away, but they had no choice when the police and fire department told them she had to stop calling.

Cows often looked to see who was passing but seldom showed signs of aggression. 

Now, all I can do is call to get updates on how she is doing and leave a message to tell her I’ve called and that I love her. This breaks my heart and the hearts of our family members, who also cannot be in touch with her any longer.

But, we are not alone in these sad feelings when so many have loved ones with the virus and other conditions are in hospitals and care facilities, who are suffering from dementia and Alzheimer’s disease unable to take calls.

A dear friend experienced this same thing these past few weeks when her mum was hospitalized with a broken back and other conditions. Due to COVID-19 and her aging mother’s health status, phone calls were difficult and confusing, while getting reports from doctors was impossible. 

Then, the awful reality remains for the patients in hospitals and other isolated facilities and unable to spend time with and hug their loved ones. How frightening this must be. Our dear DIL has surgery again today and will be alone at the hospital. We pray for her health and well-being.

Finally, Tom returned to the entrance to the villas and the beginning point of the road under construction. He was relieved and grateful to have avoided injury.

Many of you who are reading this currently can relate to this sad scenario. Not knowing how a beloved family member is doing and their prognosis is frightening and frustrating. This scenario is rampant throughout the world now more than ever.

We can only continue to do our part in preventing the spread of the virus by wearing face masks, social distancing, hand washing, and avoiding crowds. We pray that in time there will be improved access to loved ones in hospitals and facilities.

This is hard for all of us, in one way or another. Love and prayers to all.

Photo from one year ago today, June 24, 2019:

We visited the tourist favorite Joyce’s Craft Shop and Art Gallery while on a drive in Connemara, Ireland. For more photos, please click here.

“Quarantime”…Weird perception of time during the lockdown…

As we began the drive to Benabbio while in Boveglio, Tuscany, Italy, in 2013.

Note: To all of our readers visiting our site via a smartphone, please click the “View web version” tab under the word “Home” at the bottom of the page to access the web version enabling you to access all of our archives on the right side of the page. We’ll be updating our site shortly, making these extra steps unnecessary. Thank you. 

Today’s photos are from June 23, 2013, while in Boveglio, Tuscany, Italy. See the link here for more details.

A weird phenomenon has befallen us as we spend more and more days in quarantine, another word for our status in the lockdown in Mumbai, India.
Now, some may say describing our situation as quarantine is faulty when we are in a state of lockdown, not quarantine.

The café and entrance to the only restaurant within a 30-minute mountain drive from Boveglio, Il Cavallino Bianco, was quaint and charming.

“Quarantine” is described in part in the Merriam-Webster dictionary as follows: “as a state of enforced isolation.” The common misconception of quarantine during COVID-19 is that one must be sick or potentially sick to be in quarantine. That’s us. See further descriptions here.

However, today’s story does not regarding the definition of the word quarantine. Instead, it’s about our perception of time itself while we’re in quarantine and lockdown.

Houses we encountered as we walked through the town.

In no way do we diminish the difficulty of being in lockdown as being more challenging than others throughout the world. But, our situation with the lack of opportunity to be outdoors, let alone meander in larger spaces, feels for us more like a quarantine of those infected with the disease than our intent, coupled with stringent lockdown rules, to remain virus-free.

From the basis of this scenario, we have observed a peculiar sense of time passing: the days are long, the weeks are fast. After doing some research, I discovered this peculiarity is not so unique after all. What’s the deal with this?

Mustard painted house across from the restaurant.

It’s prevalent enough to warrant a story in the popular publication, Psychology Today which we found here, written by Dr. Casper Addyman, Ph.D., a psychologist and writer for the fine publication. Below is a snippet of his article oddly posted only a few days ago, on June 20, 2020.

Based on his analysis, the word has been renamed regarding lockdown and quarantine during times of COVID-19 to “Quarantime” not “Quarantine,” as commonly used in today’s media.

Vivienne’s grocery store, across the street from the restaurant.

“Quarantime: Why the Days Drag and the Weeks Fly By 

Research on time and memory explains why the lockdown distorts our perceptions.

Posted Jun 20, 2020, by Dr. Casper Addyman
Everyone on lockdown in their own home is experiencing a strange kind of relativity. Every moment seems interminable, but days and weeks are rushing by at a dizzying pace. Imran Khan, the head of public engagement at the Wellcome Trust, describes the feeling.
Strange lockdown time-dilation effect; days have become much longer, but weeks much shorter.
Any explanation for this?
@ImranKhan, 2:21 PM · May 14, 2020
As it happens, I have done a fair bit of research on time perception, so I have a few thoughts about this. First up, I think we should call it Quarantine. And then I am happy to report that there is a scientific explanation. Here’s what I tweeted back to Imran:
Quarantime!
My longer answer as a time perception researcher is that the passage of time as it happens (days) will be slower because of the monotony of your environment. But the memory of the time elapsed (weeks) will be shorter because time is made of events and there were fewer of those.

Time is memory

This is all to do with how your brain tells the time. Essentially, time is memory. Your brain tells the time by counting the events that pass — the more possibilities that occur, the more time has elapsed. So when you are stuck in the same environment with very little variety to your day, there will be two complementary effects.
First, the lack of events will make it seem that time is passing slowly. Because….. each…. external…. event…. that…. happens…. takes…. a…. long… time… to… arrive…. But your heart and physiology carry on at their average pace. So it seems like experience has slowed down and, additionally, it is just more boring. Those events aren’t incredibly eventful.
But then, when you look back upon that interminable and unremarkable day, you will find you have very little to remember. Perhaps enough things to fill half a day. Retrospectively, therefore, it will feel like your day has whizzed past.
At first glance, this seems paradoxical, but we have an incorrect notion of our own experience of time. For us, time is relative, which is weird because that’s not how clocks work (unless you accelerate them to close to the speed of light).

What tells the time?

There are no clocks in the human brain. Well, there are some quite clever timing circuits in the cerebellum that operate on a millisecond timescale. But there are no ticking clocks. At least none that work on the human experiential time scale of seconds and minutes. There are three big problems with the idea of clocks in the brain.
  1. Despite forty years of looking for them, no one has found them.
  2. A mathematical law called the Central Limit Theorem proves that human time perception is worse than any ticking clock would measure.
  3. If we did have clocks, we’d probably have to start one for each event we ever wanted to keep track of.”
A sign in the town square describing the village’s history.

The balance of this story may be found here. There are two aspects mentioned above of our lives right now that attribute to this peculiar sense we possess day after day:
1. A lack of memorable events transpiring throughout the day, making the days drag on
2. When we look back over a passing week when we had so few memorable days, they all seem to blend into one fleeting passage of time, whether in weeks or months

The interior of the church was austere and dark. 

Thus, the daily sensation of the slow passing of time, a week later, a month later, is all becoming somewhat inconsequential in our memory banks as a significant part of our lives.

As we reviewed our time in Marloth Park, when each day was an action-pack, days and weeks seemed to pass on a cohesive and consistent basis. As we review past posts, we can remember each day distinctly.

The organ was above this doorway on a balcony.

But, I assure you, the many months we’re spending in lockdown now will remain in our minds as one single experience with little to recall. Oh, we’ll remember the day the cyclone passed through, the walking in the corridors, the repeated room-service meals, and the endless hours we spent streaming shows to occupy our minds. 

The rest, which may prove to be six months long, will be a blur of one long and challenging period in our lives, in our travels, caught in a scenario we could never have anticipated.

The confessional.

May all of us, during these trying times of COVID-19, experience memorable days, weeks, and months that we’ll carry with us well into the future.

Photo from one year ago today, June 23, 2019:

At the Station House Museum in Clifden, Ireland two-wheel buggy was used over 100 years ago. For more photos, please click here.

Little annoyances during times of COVID-19 and lockdown…

We can’t imagine anyone would cut this down as a Christmas tree in Campanario, Madeira, in 2014.

Note: To all of our readers visiting our site via a smartphone, please click the “View web version” tab under the word “Home” at the bottom of the page to access the web version enabling you to access all of our archives on the right side of the page. We’ll be updating our site shortly, making these extra steps unnecessary. Thank you. 

Today’s photos are from June 22, 2014, while in Campanario, Madeira, Portugal. See the link here for more details.
This hotel, Courtyard by Marriott Airport Mumbai, couldn’t have been a better place for us to hunker down during the lengthy lockdown. They have been very kind to us and provided a haven while exercising caution and diligent procedures to ensure their few guests have been safe from the virus.
The previous night’s rains brought water to the creek.

The cleaning staff has done an excellent job of cleaning and freshening our room each day, and the food coming from the restaurant has been fresh and rarely disappointing, keeping in mind we each order the same two meals every day. 

Occasionally, I may change my entree to salmon, grilled chicken breasts, or Paneer Makhni, but my vegetable side dishes always remain precisely the same. Tom has the same order for both breakfast and dinner, never varying.

The tile roof, the greenery, and the sea create a scenic view.

In these trying times of lockdown for many of us, minor annoyances may become more apparent and significantly impact our state of mind. I think of moms, dads, single moms, and dads with kids being locked up together for months. 

The stress of their scenario can only be exacerbated by annoyances such as messes left unattended, school work not completed, loud fighting among siblings (and adults), and arguments over day-to-day life.

For all, we know this may be the fish guy from whom we recently purchased fresh tuna.

We remind ourselves how easy it is for us when we don’t have to deal with any of the above. We both get along so well and thoroughly enjoy each other’s companionship, even after these many months in the lockdown, making this experience easier for us than for many.

We don’t have to think about filling or emptying the dishwasher, taking out the trash, feeding the pets, or cleaning the bathroom. Add in financial stresses, and it’s no wonder so many people worldwide are in a state of anxiety and stress, coupled with concerns over contracting the virus.

We never tire of the scenery on the island of Madeira.

Our only “household” task for each of us is hand washing our clothes. The lack of such stresses leaves little room for annoyances. And yet, as we always say, “everything is relative,” and we’re no more exempt from feeling annoyed or frustrated than anyone, regardless of how grateful we feel to be in this hotel, under these circumstances.

Many have written to us asking how we’ve been able to stay upbeat. Surely, in part, it’s based on the lack of the above-mentioned daily stresses felt by most people.

This must be a variety of cactus.

As a result, we have little room to complain about any potential annoyances we’re experiencing during the lockdown. But, since many of you asked, here goes:

  1. Phone calls from the staff: With their thoughtful intention of keeping us informed, they call us way too often. In 24 hours, we may get five or more calls asking if we have laundry. Last night, after getting a call at 11:19 pm about the laundry (while we were sleeping) today, we requested they no longer call us about laundry. Also, from time to time, the kitchen calls asking if our food is OK, usually while we’re sitting with trays of food on our laps while dining. (There’s no table in our room). We appreciate the consideration, but not the frequent phone calls.
  2. The necessity of reminding the housekeeping managers that we don’t want any newly arrived staff cleaning our room unless they’ve been staying in the hotel for three weeks. With the frequent rotation of staff, we understand we may get someone new. However, over time, we’ve come to recognize the cleaning staff even with their masks on and have turned away several cleaners when we discovered they had newly arrived at the hotel from being in the outside world. With Mumbai as India’s #1 COVID-19 hotspot, new people present considerable risk, even if their temperature is taken daily.
  3. Inconsistency in items served with our meals: Often, the trays have arrived, missing forks, knives, and regular food items. Last night, my dinner came without my entree. Lack of consistency is a result of the turnover of staff. We understand, but they do have a list in the kitchen with all of our requests.
  4. Inconsistent items left in our room after cleaning: Here again, staff turnover may result in insufficient toilet paper, towels, soap, shampoo and conditioner, and coffee supplies.
  5. The majority of the occupied rooms on our floor are employees, not guests. Invariably, they leave their food trays in the corridors outside their rooms, often those from three meals a day, often for two or three days. I see these accumulating trays as I walk the corridors ten times a day. Two weeks ago, for the first time, I contacted management that trays left in the hallways with uneaten exposed food present a high risk for disease, insects, rats, and mice. Management, who previously had no reason to check this floor, had no idea. They immediately responded, and all trays were removed, and it has been much better since. Although I felt bad about complaining, they were very concerned with cleanliness and sanitation and were grateful for my input.
  6. Noise: All the laundry for this floor is kept in the suite next door to our room. The staff leaves the door ajar all day and night by engaging the deadbolt to prevent the door from locking when open and closed. This door bangs day and night from air pressure changes in the corridors. We have for this door to be locked at 6:00 pm and has been so since our request.
Oceanview from the road above.
These annoyances wouldn’t be noticeable if only staying in a hotel for a night or two. But this long-term stay changes everything. Tom says jokingly, “The only consistency is the inconsistency.” This makes us laugh every time!
 
Do our opinions in these areas impact the reviews we’ll write about the hotel when we finally can move on? Not at all. Overall, the way they’ve provided a safe place for us, along with their efforts and kindness, definitely warrants a high rating.
Hillside scenes were always fascinating.
These few minor annoyances would easily occur in any hotel, even those with five-star ratings during the trying times of COVID-19. We are very grateful to have stayed here and for their efforts to ensure a safe stay over these many months in lockdown.
 
May your day be free of as much stress as possible when hopefully, soon, life will continue on…

Photo from one year ago today, June 22, 2019:

A replica in the Station House Museum in Clifden, Ireland, of the biplane that made the first non-stop transatlantic flight by two British pilots from St. Johns, Newfoundland, to Clifden. For more details, please click here.

Online purchases in India…Did I make a mistake?….Happy Father’s Day to all the dads out there!…

This plant in Madeira, Portugal made me squeal with delight. Tom laughs at me and happily maneuvers the car for a better view.

Note: To all of our readers visiting our site via a smartphone, please click the “View web version” tab under the word, “Home” at the bottom of the page to access the web version enabling you to access all of our archives on the right side of the page. We’ll be updating our site shortly, making these extra steps unnecessary. Thank you. 

Today’s photos are from June 21, 2014, while in Campanario, Madeira, Portugal. See the link here for more details.
In February 2020, it was surprising to discover that Amazon has an online presence in India. When my Windows 10 laptop crashed in February while we were touring India I had no choice but to purchase a new device from Amazon India.
The ocean is behind this old vine-covered garage.

I ended up buying an HP Chromebook in order to get away from the less desired and problematic Windows 10. Now I realize I may have made a mistake, especially when it comes to managing, storing, and editing photos.

Using a Chromebook means using Google’s cloud for storage of almost all saved items including documents, files, and photos. This all would have been fine except with my over 20,000 stored photos, it’s a nightmare.

There is Ms. Goat posing for a photo while we drove by while she munched on the vegetation.

Also, using folders in Chromebook is tricky. Finding photos is tricky and, worst of all, I have no suitable means of editing photos and finding them easily after editing. In Windows, this was a breeze.

Recently, while working with the web developer to revise our site, she needed resized photos. This would have been an easy task in Windows 10. I spent hours trying to figure it out using Chromebook. Of course, I followed online instructions. But even so, the task seemed impossible. 

We discovered many homes covered in vines growing prolifically in this ideal weather.

I don’t want to spend endless hours online trying to figure this out. We had to make do with the photos we have and go from there. It’s a lot easier when using photos I’ve taken with my phone but with my phone which is also Chrome and it still is not an easy task.

At this point, I’m seriously considering purchasing a new, inexpensive Windows 10 tablet for photo processing, editing, and cloud storage.

Grapes were growing everywhere. Madeira is known for its wine including the popular pink Madeira wine many of us enjoyed in the ’70s and ’80s. 
This is the bush from which I took the shot of the flower in the following photo. Love this!

At least, most of the Windows 10 tablets are lightweight, many only slightly over 1 lb, .45 kg. Also, I’ve spent hours searching for an app that would solve this issue which is sufficient to work with the number of photos I need to access.

Other than this issue, I really like the Chromebook but, the reality remains, I may need one more device to assist with the long-term continuation of our site, especially once we “get back out there” and start taking new photos, some of which may need editing.

 I couldn’t get a perfect shot of this flower while we were on the move but it was fun to see.

When we were in Udaipur in February, I purchased an adapter for our large-sized camera memory card that works well for transferring photos from the camera to the Chromebook laptop.

The terraced farms and gardens planted in even squares and rectangles cover the hills.

So, the end result is this:
1. Figure out an editing app that works for Chromebook and is easy to manipulate, and store changes or, in the worse case…
2. Purchase a Windows 10 tablet to use for photo editing

Oh, gosh. After years of experience with computers and devices of all types, I truly am in a quandary. We often wonder how seniors with little to no experience can manage to use technology as it quickly changes in today’s world.

An old boarded-up house, uncommon on the island.

After writing this today, I feel motivated to try to find a Chromebook photo editing solution today. If not, we’ll have to figure out how to proceed from here.


Happy Father’s Day to all the dads worldwide. May you feel as special as you are today and always. Also, Happy Summer Solstice for those in the northern hemisphere and Happy Winter Solstice in the southern hemisphere!


For those uninterested in technology, we apologize for today’s post. 

_______________________________________

Photo from one year ago today, June 21, 2019:

 This is the sun on its final ascent in Connemara, Ireland. For more photos, please click here.

Killing time in lockdown…Reliving memories for present day joy during the lockdown…

A drive into the hills in Campanario, Madeira, Portugal, offered appealing scenery.

Note: To all of our readers visiting our site via a smartphone, please click the “View web version” tab under the word “Home” at the bottom of the page to access the web version enabling you to access all of our archives on the right side of the page. We’ll be updating our site shortly, making these extra steps unnecessary. Thank you. 

Today’s photos are from June 20, 2014, while in Campanario, Madeira, Portugal. See the link here for more details.

What better time than now to relive memories from our more mobile times in years past? If we lived a somewhat “normal” life in a home in the US and were subject to the lockdown, I have no doubt we wouldn’t do a whole lot different with our spare time than we are doing now in lockdown in a hotel in Mumbai, India. 

Most likely, we would have spent time organizing areas of our home, cleaning drawers, closets, and cabinets, cooking, and baking. In our spare time, under those circumstances, most likely, we’d have spent time reliving the past through old photos and reminiscing over past experiences along with binge-watching shows to escape from the lockdown and lack of social life.

Now, a portion of our free time is spent binge-watching favorite shows, which seem to be the best panacea for getting “outside of our heads.” Wrapped up in an excellent British mystery drama is a perfect escape on a typical afternoon. 

Nothing was more delightful than a clear sunny morning in Madeira.

At 3:00 pm each day, we’ve been watching “Endeavor,” a delicious PBS “copper” show with many episodes, mostly lasting for 90 minutes. Typically, we watch two episodes, stopping at 5:30 pm to order dinner, which often doesn’t arrive until 6:30.

We’ve been watching “Curb Your Enthusiasm” during dinner lately, season 9 with season 10 to follow. This funny Larry David show leaves us howling with laughter, a welcomed reprieve from the more profound mysteries of the afternoon.

Often during the early afternoons, once I’ve uploaded the day’s post, I go through the steady stream of email messages from our friends/readers. As they mention past posts and photos, we find ourselves rereading the older stories we haven’t thought about in years.

When we smelled smoke, we ran to the veranda to find a neighboring garden burning.

I can’t believe the positive feedback we’ve had from readers regarding once again seeing our old photos. With so much time passing since the onset of our travels, many more senior photos seem new to our readers and again to us.
In reviewing the photos and past stories, we found ourselves giggling over long ago experiences, some of which remind us how naive we may have been about world travel in the beginning years, and others that have stayed true to our essential criteria and beliefs. 

We are so fortunate to have this easy-to-follow online history of our lives over the past eight years and only wish we’d be posting years earlier, although the then source of fodder may have been mundane and boring to most.

The owner and architect of our holiday home, Carlos, lives next door with his family. I took this photo from the door in my bathroom into their backyard.

I’d considered writing a book throughout my life, even promising myself I’d do so once I retired. Without ever planning it, our site has become that “book,” soon approaching 3000 posts sometime in November 2020. 

After all of this fulfillment in sharing our lives with all of you, my desire to write a book is long gone. Everything I’ve had to say has been said here, and the ease with which I write here each day may be clouded by a struggle to condense it into a book.  After all, what book has 3000 chapters?

No, I won’t write a book, nor do I am interested in attending book signings, appearing on local TV shows, or acquiring a degree of celebrity that may go with it. 

Wow! The flowers would soon be gone as summer moved in, but I enjoyed taking photos until then.

After all, our story is somewhat peculiar in that we’ve yet to meet another couple who’ve been homeless, without storage, without owning a car or “stuff” other than that which fits into a few bags, traveling the world for almost eight years? Most people (especially of our age) aren’t crazy enough to do this for so long.
Adding to the peculiarity of our story is the fact I had emergency open-heart surgery in Africa and miraculously survived, and now and in the future, spending many months in a standard hotel room in lockdown in Mumbai, India. 

If someone had asked us several years ago if we’d be able to be confined to this degree for so long, we’d probably have said we couldn’t do it. But, somehow, we are pretty OK, filling the days and nights with a bit of this and that and finding great comfort in the support from our family, friends, and readers all over the world. 

I found this rose in a neighbor’s yard. Not wanting to disturb the neighbor’s garden, I shot this without moving the stem in front of what appears to be an almost perfect rose.

Stay well.

Photo from one year ago today, June 20, 2019:

Painted sheep grazing in a field in Connemara, Ireland. For more photos, please click here.

Questions from a reader regarding car rentals…Have policies changed due to COVID-19?…

My bathroom in the 300-year old stone holiday home we rented in Boveglio, Tuscany, Italy, in 2013. Tom took the smaller bathroom to our master bedroom. There’s no tub, and the shower was small, but it served its purpose. 

Note: To all of our readers visiting our site via a smartphone, please click the “View web version” tab under the word “Home” at the bottom of the page to access the web version enabling you to access all of our archives on the right side of the page. We’ll be updating our site shortly, making these extra steps unnecessary. Thank you. 

Today’s photos are from June 19, 2013, while in Boveglio, Italy. See the link here for more details.
We’ve been receiving tons of email messages from our readers, which has been such a support to us over the years and now, especially during this lengthy lockdown in Mumbai, India. 
The authentic Tuscan kitchen; no dishwasher, no microwave, no small appliances, no electric coffee pot but otherwise well-stocked kitchen with items used for making pasta, bread, and sauces. 
As mentioned in the past, we make every effort to respond to each message. Many of your comments inspire us to write a new story, as in today’s post, as prompted by this message we received yesterday.
 
I’ve removed the name of the kindly person who wrote to protect their anonymity. We’ve seen similar requests in the past few months and thought we should address them in today’s post. Perhaps, renting cars in times of COVID-19 has changed, and we will address this as well. See the email below:
The TV wasn’t working again at first but, the owner’s parents stopped by to install a new cable box. We never used it once during our three months on this property.
Hi, Jessica and Tom,
 
I have been reading your posts for several years now.  My sister and her son met you on an Australian cruise and introduced me to your posts. Recently, I introduced you to my traveling companion, who reads you every morning and has written you a couple of times. Thank you for the excellent travel tips and information.
 
For years I have wanted to rent a place in Europe for a month. You both have made me feel that this is possible. Posting your expenses helps so much. I love the pictures you have been posting lately and loved the ones today (home in Italy).   
 
Can you maybe post information that you have learned about renting a car overseas?  Do you have any problems driving? Do you usually rent from an airport? I assume you buy the company’s insurance. I also assume that you are keeping your U.S. Driver’s license current. Have you ever had an accident (fender bender), and how was it handled?  I’m sure you can think of information that wouldn’t even enter my mind.
 
I hope your antibiotics are working for you. You haven’t mentioned your tooth lately.
 
Keep the faith. You were so blessed to have found this hotel when you did.”
The master bedroom had a comfortable bed, good pillows, and blankets. With no AC or fans in the entire house and no screens on the windows, we had to open the windows at night for some cooler air. As summer progressed and it became hotter each day, we were plagued with endless numbers of giant flies and mosquitoes.
In response to our readers’ questions, one by one (our answers are in bold type):
 
1. Can you maybe post information that you have learned about renting a car overseas? One of our top priorities when renting cars throughout the world is getting the best possible price for a car that meets our criteria: ample room for our luggage; air conditioning; four doors; must be in good condition; and be available for rental in 30-day increments (see below for reasons why on this point). We often stay in countries for more than 30-days. We now only rent in 30-day increments to ensure our credit card insurance will pay when it only covers the first 30 day period. (See point #4 below).
Walking onto the patio required serious maneuvering over the side of a flight of stone steps, an action not for the faint of heart. The garden boxes provided us with herbs and some vegetables all summer long.
2. Do you have any problems driving? For me, yes. I have trouble navigating on the opposite side of the road while maneuvering a stick shift with my left hand when the driver’s side in most countries is on the right side of the car, not the left as in the USA. It boils down to a lack of coordination, although I know how to drive a vehicle with a manual transmission. As a result, Tom always operates under these circumstances.
 
3. Do you usually rent from an airport? Yes, we prefer this. At some airports, it’s necessary to take a shuttle to the car rental facility. In each case, we’ve had better luck selecting the most popular car rental companies instead of unfamiliar resellers, which we’d highly discourage.
Me and a Pinocchio statue outside of a children’s shop in the quaint town of Collodi where Carlo Collodi (pen name) created the much-loved character which has endured for well over 100-years.

4. Do you buy the company’s insurance? No, our credit cards provide insurance on the first 30-days. Adding the rental car facility’s insurance can double the cost of the rental. If you have car insurance in your home country, check for the coverage included for rental cars in international locations. Most rental companies require an amount “on a hold” on your credit card to cover the “excess,” which is everything beyond what your insurance will cover. Make sure they aren’t charging huge amounts that may tie up your credit during the rental period and beyond. If you don’t have any insurance for car rentals, it’s suggested you find some means of insurance before booking the rental.

Important Point: Take photos of the exterior (and interior if any damage) of pre-existing damage using a camera with a date stamp to show the photos taken. Make sure the rep notes all the pre-existing damage on the rental forms.

5. Are you keeping your U.S. Driver’s license current? Yes, we keep our US, Nevada (our state of residency), driver’s license up to date. Some states allow online renewal. In our case, Nevada allows an online renewal every other renewal period. Some travelers acquire an international driver’s license, assuming it will be in place of a permit from your home state/country. This is not the case. For more details on international driver’s licenses, please click here.
Another statue of beloved Pinocchio in Collodi, Tuscany, Italy.
6. Have you ever had an accident (fender bender), and how was it handled? We haven’t had an accident, although we did have a minor “fender bender” a few years ago and paid the rental car company out of pocket for the repairs. After we’d dropped off the car, pointing out the damage, they contacted us a week later with the charges they applied to our credit card. We didn’t need to dispute the amount since it appeared reasonable.
 
Please see the following link for a post we uploaded in September 2019 for reviews and some of our experiences with car rental companies. There is some valuable information at that link outlining some issues we’ve had, particularly in Ireland with a reseller located far from the airport.

Botticino, the little town where we purchased gas for $6 a gallon.
Also, we had quite an outrageous experience with a rental car company in Costa Rica, a franchised office of Europcar (which we’ve had good luck in other countries) which gave us quite a run-around. 
 
Since it wasn’t a corporate-run location, we didn’t discontinue working with Europcar. The issues were entirely due to how rental cars are handled in Costa Rica and Ireland, which are very different from other parts of the world. They wanted us to prepay INR 685913, US $9000, on our credit card. No way would we allow that sum to be charged to our card for a car rental! We used taxis for the remainder of our time in Costa Rica. Please see this link for this vital information.
 We were driving around Collodi on one-way streets.
The point remains, each country has its policies and conditions. When booking a car, regardless of the reviews and ratings on the rental car company, it is important to read the rental conditions carefully.
 
The most accessible and most affordable location where we’ve rented cars has been in South Africa, one more reason we’re partial to visiting the country.
 
As for changes after COVID-19? At this point, we expect prices to increase, partially due to the bankruptcy of Hertz and other companies suffering financial losses during this period. 

 The road as we were leaving Collodi.
Also, when renting a car after others have rented it, make sure you thoroughly clean and spray the interior with disinfectant products and disposable wipes. Although many sources are stating the virus doesn’t remain on surfaces for extended periods, there could be particles in the car’s air and on all surfaces, both on the interior and exterior. 
 
We’ll be asking how long it’s been since any particular car has been rented for added peace of mind and still conduct the disinfecting process, regardless of the date.
Houses high in the hills in Tuscany.
We hope we’ve answered our readers’ questions enhanced by including links from past posts. To answer the thoughtful question regarding the status of my tooth, the pain continues but is manageable with Paracetamol/Tylenol taken daily. No dentist in India is willing to work on it due to my heart condition and COVID-19. When and if we get to South Africa, we’ll have it addressed as quickly as possible. 
 
Thank you, dear reader(s), for your inquiries and thoughtful messages. We all continue in our goals of making our way through these trying times!
 
Be well.

Photo from one year ago today, June 18, 2019:

Ruins of a castle in Connemara, Ireland. For more photos, please click here.

Striving to use more social media for our new site…

Tom in the doorway that walks out to the garden at the new holiday home in Boveglio, Tuscany, Italy, where we stayed for three months in 2013.

Note: To all of our readers visiting our site via a smartphone, please click the “View web version” tab under the word “Home” at the bottom of the page to access the web version enabling you to access all of our archives on the right side of the page. We’ll be updating our site shortly, making these extra steps unnecessary. Thank you. 

Today’s photos are from June 17, 2013, while in Boveglio, Italy. See the link here for more details.
The back of the property.

Almost every day over the last few weeks, I have been working with our web developer to redesign our website, updating its features, and making it easy for our readers and, hopefully, more manageable for me to edit and update daily.

Can you picture this table filled with friends drinking wine, talking loudly, and dining on homemade Italian food? Unfortunately, no one spoke English in Boveglio, leaving us little opportunity for socializing other than a few occasions.

Using the Blogger app over these past eight years has been tricky. Line spacing and editing have been difficult not only to use but often weeks or months later. A previous post will have lost its original editing with peculiar and unpredictable paragraph and line spacing.

This is the clock tower that chimes at odd times, next door to our home.

Our new site, using WordPress, which is a popular web tool used by millions of sites, will make your viewing as easy as it was in the past and our process of preparing the posts less complicated and cumbersome. 

An old wishing well in the yard. No bucket.

Our advertiser’s links will be new, and our links for Twitter, Instagram, YouTube, and Facebook will be easily accessed with one click. Of course, mine and Tom’s email links will be simple to find and use with just one click.

Another fountain in the garden.

We wrote a new “About Us,” which we shared a few days ago, as shown in this post, which we’ll update each year. Once we upload the new site, it’s normal to find some necessary changes over the first few months with feedback from readers and observations we make. We’ll look forward to any comments from you.

The road outside our holiday home.

With this new site, it will be easy to find our archives on the home page on your smartphone, where, in the past, these weren’t accessible without a few extra steps we’d been explaining and posting each day at the top of each new post. Plus, we’ll continue to have a translator link for our non-English speaking readers.

Yes, we fit all of our luggage in this tiny Fiat we’ve rented for the summer, and this was when we had 18 pieces. Now we have six, including carry-on bags.

We’ve discovered that more readers read our posts on their phones than on an iPad, tablet, laptop, or computer. Many have mentioned they read our posts while sitting on a bus to and from work while waiting for their appointments at a doctor or dentist’s office or other places of business.

The spaces between the houses were too narrow for cars but were suitable for horses and buggies many years ago. Photos of our walks in the area will continue as we explore.

Each time I’m forced to wait for a meeting or appointment, I know that the first thing I do is play with my phone, read various posts, play games, and check social media.

View from our veranda and the best spot for a WiFi signal was impossible from inside the house.

Speaking of social media, as mentioned above, over the past eight-plus years since we began posting on March 15, 2012, I haven’t made any effort to use Instagram and Twitter, although I have an account for each platform.

The view to a part of the garden from the veranda.

I realize I am years behind in using these prevalent forms of social media. Why didn’t I pursue these excellent means of promoting our website? It all boiled down to having already spent so many hours a day online researching new locations, managing photos, and preparing our posts. I was uninterested in spending more time online.

For Euros $23, US $30, we purchased enough food for a few days: four pork chops, one bag of jumbo shrimp, four pieces of swordfish, one pound of sliced ham, two heads of Bibb lettuce, one pound of carrots, eighteen eggs and one tube of mayonnaise (yellow box on the right). The villa has seasonings, olive oil, red wine vinegar, and balsamic vinegar.

Lately, we wouldn’t have much to share when staying in this hotel in Mumbai, India, for the past 87 days. However, in the future, regardless of where we may be or if we continue to remain in lockdown for months to come, I’ve decided to start using both Twitter and Instagram at least once a day. 

Right now, I am too busy to start, but once the site is live by the end of this month, you’ll easily be able to click the links and hopefully, if you prefer, follow me on those sites for snippets of information. It’s an easy way to communicate with all of you.

Continuation of the walk in the area where there are other homes is located.

Of course, my tweets won’t be politically motivated. They will all be about our site, our current situation, and our travels yet to come. Luckily, I am not particularly obsessive about communicating online, so hopefully, I won’t get overly engrossed in posting/tweeting once the new site is up. 

Today? Not much is new. We’ve both been sleeping later, often until 8:00 am, which seems to make the day go more quickly. By the time I finish the day’s post, usually by 1:00 pm, I spend a few hours handling various business tasks and, when done, may play Scrabble online, a quick and easy way to pass the time. With my hourly walks and some reading, the days seem to fly by.

Flowers, herbs, and vegetables were planted everywhere for our enjoyment while there.

We hope you are doing well, feeling well, and able to get outdoors for some fresh air.

Photo from one year ago today, June 18, 2019:

What a view in Connemara, Ireland. For more photos, please click here.

India’s international flights opening soon???..Facing reality…More 2013 photos from Venice…

With the hot sun, the massive crowds, the going rate of $125 to $150 a couple, and, as evidenced here, the gondola traffic jam, we decided to forego the 30-minute ride in the congested canals.

Note: To all of our readers visiting our site via a smartphone, please click the “View web version” tab under the word “Home” at the bottom of the page to access the web version enabling you to access all of our archives on the right side of the page. We’ll be updating our site shortly, making these extra steps unnecessary. Thank you. 

Today’s photos are from June 17, 2013, while in Venice, Italy. See the link here for more details.
Hard to resist. Fun to see.

More news on COVID-19 in India at this time:

From this site:
“MAHARASHTRA’S (state where Mumbai is located) Covid-19 death tally surged by 1409 on Tuesday, taking its total toll to 5,537, following a data reconciliation process initiated by the state government. Of 1409 deaths, only 81 deaths were reported on Tuesday. The remaining 1328 deaths have occurred since March and have been added to the numbers now.” 

 Inside the courtyard of the Universita Ca, Foscari was a decoration made of trash.

The above numbers contradict those we’ve discussed below taken from the Worldometer tracking site. We often wonder how impossible it is for the records to be accurate under these dire circumstances. But, what else do we have to determine the risks in various countries?

Leonardo da Vinci exhibit was being held at the museum.

In other news, we’ve heard numerous comments on TV news regarding the possibility of international flights resuming in India. A discussion will be initiated in July by the powers-that-be. 

Water buses along the Grand Canal.
With June more than half over, it’s possible we could know something in 3 to 4 weeks. Based on our reading and research, our expectations leave us wondering if it could be 4 to 6 months until international flights resume.
Tight quarters.  Lots of boats.
As India’s virus case counts continue to rise, we’re doubtful the lockdown will be released any sooner than September. Each hour, as I walk the corridors, I stop and peer out a window at the end of one of the corridors, the only window on my walking course.
This was as close as we got to the gondolas.
From morning to late afternoon, I can see an area where numerous men congregate to drink tea and talk. Few of these men, as they sit nearby, are wearing masks or social distancing.
Murano glass figurines from a shop window.
The above comment is not intended to single out “men.” It’s purely a cultural aspect of life in India. Women work, shop, and keep the home, while many men congregate in public areas, whether working or not.
Clock Tower.
This fact alone may prevent India from reducing its number of cases for a long time to come. It may be only possible through “herd immunity,” which may take one or two years to achieve. For that reason alone, even if we could go outside, we would not. We don’t want to take the risk of being included in the tally of herd immunity.
Piazza of St. Mark’s, impressive, eh?
Based on tracking of COVID-19 on this site which we’ve been watching daily, as of yesterday, India had more new deaths than any other country in the world. With a total of 2006 new deaths, compared to the #1 country globally, the USA has the highest number of cases and deaths, which had 849 recent deaths. 
Basilica di San Marco.
India now is #4 in the world for the most number of cases and deaths. With the massive population of over 1.3 billion, it’s entirely conceivable that India will surpass the US in the number of cases and fatalities and reach the dreadful #1 position in the world. The total population of the US is 328 million, almost one-quarter of the people of India.
A great shot at every turn.
Are we prepared to wait this out? At this point, yes. We’re holding our own. We hope all of you are as well.
Views along the waterway on the return to the ship.

BTW, if you are looking for an engaging, addictive, binge-watching series, search for Australia’s “A Place to Call Home.” It has 60 hour-long episodes. We love every moment. It’s available on Acorn TV on Amazon Prime, which offers a one-month free trial. 

Photo from one year ago today, June 17, 2020:

Ruins of a castle on the drive to Balleyconneely while in Connemara, Ireland. For more photos, please click here.

Looking back to Venice Italy on this date 7 years ago…Then on to Tuscany for three months…

As our ship made its way to the port of Venice, our mouths were agape in surprise at the historic treasure before our eyes.

Note: To all of our readers visiting our site via a smartphone, please click the “View web version” tab under the word “Home” at the bottom of the page to access the web version enabling you to access all of our archives on the right side of the page. We’ll be updating our site shortly, making these extra steps unnecessary. Thank you. 

Today’s photos are from June 16, 2013, while in Venice, Italy. See the link here for more details.
As shown in today’s photos, while on a cruise on this date in 2013, we spent a day in Venice, Italy, a location we’d looked forward to visiting as we considered some of the world’s most exciting points of interest.
We noticed one historic building after another.

The memories of that day are as evident in our minds today as if it was only months ago, not the entire seven years from this date. We’re often surprised at ourselves for remembering finite details of touring renowned locations such as this. But, we found ourselves in awe of this and, of course, many other such sites throughout the world.

Many of our readers have written to us over the years sharing their experiences in places such as Venice, and in each case, they’ve loved it too. No doubt, we did as well, although one missing element has been our lack of interest in shopping.

The waterways were exactly as we had perceived them, crowded with a seemingly never-ending maze of canals.

In my old life (before traveling the world), I would have been over the top with excitement to shop in a place like Venice. The colorful little shops lined the narrow walkways with a plethora of tourist-type and specialty products.

Whether it was hats, scarves, leather goods, artwork, or jewelry, the stores, with relatively high prices from paying high rents to have the opportunity to be located in this area of constant tourist traffic, all was appealing to the eye.
Over the years, we’ve found a degree of enjoyment simply from window shopping as we did in Venice so long ago.

Check out the crowds!

In 2013, cruise ships were allowed to dock at a nearby pier that only required a short shuttle ride and about a 15-minute walk to arrive at the canal city. Over the years, that has changed as indicated in this article below from this site:

“The Italian government has announced it will be rerouting cruise ships away from central parts of Venice. This move follows a long campaign by residents to stop large ships from docking in the Unesco-listed city.

Every direction we turned, there was another waterway.

On Wednesday, Italy’s transport minister Danilo Toninelli said that cruise ships would be diverted away from their current route, reported the Financial Times, therefore banning them from entering the historic grand canal.

Toninelli said he had been looking at temporary ports “to avoid witnessing more invasions of the Giudecca by these floating palaces, with the scandals and the risks that they bring.”

What a view!

In 2018, 502 cruise ships brought 1.56 million passengers to Venice, contributing to the overcrowding already swamping the narrow canals and walkways.

Meanwhile, there are environmental concerns about the impact of ships passing through the Venetian Lagoon and along the Giudecca Canal.”

The buildings along the canals were often unique, but more were attached.

In June, a collision between 2,150-passenger ocean cruise ship MSC Opera and Uniworld river cruise ship The River Countess (four passengers were injured) heightened calls for a ban. Italy’s environment minister Sergio Costa tweeted that the incident confirmed ships must not pass the Giudecca area.

Next month, some cruise ships will dock at the Fusina and Lombardia terminals away from the city center but still within the lagoon. However, from next year a third of cruise ships will be rerouted away from the city.

The cathedrals were breathtaking.

A plan to reroute cruise ships dates back to 2017 when an Italian governmental committee decided that cruise vessels weighing 96,000 tonnes or more would be prevented from docking in the lagoon in front of St Mark’s Square.”

After spending several hours walking the streets of Venice with tired legs, we decided to take a water taxi back to the ship. I imagine that in recent years, passengers were being transported to the area by buses or taxis. 
As our ship continued to our docking location.
I’d be curious to hear from any of our readers who’ve visited Venice by cruise ship about how they arrived at the canals in the past few years. Feel free to post a comment at the end of today’s post, anonymously if you prefer.
 
Our favorite points of interest while on the self-guided walking tour was visiting St. Mark’s Square and the Bridge of Sighs. We’d considered embarking on one of the romantic gondolas in the canals, but the price at that time was INR 9480, US $150, per couple for a 30-minute ride, more than we cared to spend. 

All these photos were taken from our ship as it maneuvered through the main channel approaching the cruise ship pier in Venice.
This type of tourist activity generally doesn’t appeal to us, especially when we notice the gondolas were stopped in “traffic” for extended periods. It made no sense to spend that kind of money to sit in a gondola. It may have been more worthwhile in the evening, but our visit occurred during the daylight hours.
 
One of the most exciting parts of that day was when our ship sailed into the magnificent Venetian Grand Canal when we had our first glimpse of the canal city. Our cabin was on the ship’s right side, allowing us a bird’s eye view as we entered the area. 
As we approached the pier for the cruise ships, we noticed they were lined up back to back.
At times, our “occasional” readers may presume we only get excited about wildlife and nature. However, we’ve experienced many stunning locations, such as Venice, that will permanently be emblazoned in our minds over the years.
 
For the balance of our first published posts regarding our visit to Venice, please click here. Tomorrow, we’ll share Part 2 of our visit to Venice. Please check back.
 

Be well.

Photo from one year ago today, June 16, 2019:

In Connemara, Ireland, this horse was fed by passersby when she got as close as she could when we stopped for a photo. For more photos, please click here.

Earthquakes and aftershocks in Italy…Heartbreaking loss of life…Our own earthquake memories from the mountains in Italy…

BBC news photo of earthquake rubble as rescuers search for victims of this week’s 6.2 earthquake. See details below.

Some of our readers may assume we’re so far away from civilization at times that we don’t hear what’s happening in other parts of the world. Without a TV in many locations, we’re still easily aware of world news from online announcements we receive and when reading online news and watching videos each day.

In most cases, we’re aware of news as readily as those in the more populated regions of the world with news available 24/7. The Internet also provided live video news feeds and broadcasts from around the world. Many who only watch news on TV may have never utilized online news. 

It’s as detailed and up-to-date as any broadcast news, keeping us well informed. However, local news feeds here in Phuket are behind some of the international reporting services throughout the world, as we’ve seen with the recent bombings.

The 300-year-old building we lived in during three months in Boveglio is near the clock tower in the top right in this photo. Certainly, none of these homes were earthquake proofed.

We were shocked and saddened to hear of the earthquakes in Italy that occurred on Wednesday (Thursday here) reported again this morning on BBC news, a source we often use:

“The 6.2-magnitude quake hit in the early hours of Wednesday, 100km (65 miles) northeast of Rome in mountainous central Italy.

The worst affected towns – Amatrice, Arquata, Accumoli and Pescara del Tronto – are usually sparsely populated, but have been swelled by tourists visiting in summer, making estimates for the precise number missing difficult.

More than 200 people died in Amatrice alone, Ansa news agency reported.”

View from the living room window of other historic homes where we lived in Boveglio, Italy in the summer of 2013 where, we experienced a 5.2 earthquake without significant damage.

For today’s ongoing story of the earthquakes and aftershocks in Italy, including photos and videos, please click here.

We send our heartfelt sympathy and prayers for the families, friends, neighbors and tourists for those who lost their lives, for the rescue and healing of those injured and, for those hundreds, if not thousands of citizens who lost their homes, their livelihood and their sense of history and heritage as many historic buildings crumbled to the ground. 

Also, we pray for safety for the many rescuers who risk their own lives in the process. Many have traveled from around the globe to assist local rescue services.

In summer of 2013, we lived in a very similar village in Italy, in Boveglio, high in the mountains of Tuscany in a 300 year old stone house as shown in a few of today’s photos.

A short walk in the neighborhood where every building was old and most likely not earthquake proof.

Only four days after we arrived in Boveglio, Italy, we experienced a 5.2 earthquake in the region described as follows on our site with seismology statistics we’d discovered at the time Please click here for details.

For our story of the experience, please click here for our post of June 21, 2013.  For Tom, it was the first time he’d felt an earthquake described in that post:

Halfway through writing our blog today, we experienced a 5.2 earthquake as we sat on the veranda.  Having grown up in southern California, this was a familiar sensation for me, although  it was Tom’s first experience.  We reminded ourselves as we ran for cover, that we are in an over 300-year-old stone house, most likely the safest place to be. Wow! The adventures never cease to amaze us!”

Little did we realize at the time that the 300-year-old building didn’t provide us with a safe place to be during an earthquake described in the above BBC news story. Apparently, many of the historic buildings provided no safety for the residents and tourists of the above listed villages devastated in this week’s 6.2 quake. 

Apparently, many are angry and frustrated that building codes didn’t require “earthquake proofing” of the old buildings. Sadly, for many of the owners, had such requirements been imposed by regulatory agencies, they’d have been unable to afford the costly upgrades.

It was required, we walk up this steep set of stone steps to gain access to the living quarters of the 300 year old stone house in which we lived for three months.  To hang laundry we had to maneuver these steps to the ledge shown on the left to get on the veranda, a very tricky and dangerous proposition.  Can you imagine trying to escape during an earthquake?  Most likely, many of those trapped under the rubble were faced with similar scenarios.

This is sad news. Should one wonder if further investigation isn’t necessary when staying for long periods in historic buildings or in living in high risk areas where crime is rampant or with a high risk of many types of natural disasters?

Good grief, we could go nuts trying to avoid what appears to be transpiring throughout the world. No place on the planet is exempt from some sort of risk or another. Undoubtedly, risks may be higher in certain areas which we attempt to avoid. But many seemingly safe regions present their own versions of risk.

We can only continue to book venues and locations considering many aspects of safety. Honestly, other than avoiding high risk areas of civil and political unrest, we continue researching our next leg of our itinerary. 

At this point, booked through March 18, 2018, we’ve decided to wait to add onto our itinerary until we arrive in Tasmania in December, 2016.  While there for three months, we’ll have a good WiFi signal and be able to concentrate on the future. It is during this research period that we’ll have an opportunity to study a variety of risks for each new location.

From the road below in the mountainous area, we took this photo of neighboring houses.

As an aside: As we prepare today’s post, for the sake of our Minnesota readers, Tom is listening to Garage Logic on KSTP 1500 radio, broadcasting from the Minnesota State Fair which opened yesterday. Over the remaining five days in Phuket with a good WiFi signal, we’ll be listening to the two-hour show (which is on live weekdays only, but can be listened to at any time via saved podcasts on the website) including another few hours of Sports Talk.

For our readers who aren’t able to attend their local, state fairs, most states and counties broadcast information and stories on similar radio shows that can be found online and listened to via a podcast. If you need help finding such a broadcast for your state fair, please write to us and we’ll try to help you find the link.

Enjoy the day and be well.

Photo from one year ago today, August 25, 2015:

We were shocked to see the reasonable price on this exquisite flower arrangement at only AUD 20, USD $14.20 at the farmers market in Cairns, Australia.  For more photos, please click here.