Sweet Home Cabarete! How and Why We Left the Boat (For Now ).
6/02/2017The view from our deck in our new home-for-now, Kite Beach, Cabarete Waterfall near Jarabacoa, DR Climbing around on...
6/02/2017
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The view from our deck in our new home-for-now, Kite Beach, Cabarete |
Waterfall near Jarabacoa, DR |
Climbing around on big, slippery rocks in Jarabacoa. The man in the red shirt is Juan, our guide that day. See Hud helping Sadie up the rocks? Sweet boy :) |
This cabbage truck was piled high with more cabbage than I ever thought humanly possible to load onto a cabbage truck. PS This is a cabbage truck. |
This is how Viv always falls asleep in the car. |
In the DR, laundry is hung out to dry everywhere you look and the air is habitually detergent-scented. I love the smell of clean laundry! |
Laundry day on Moxie. Most of the time we use laundromats or pay someone on shore to do our wash, but sometimes we have to do it the old fashioned way. This was the delicates cycle. |
Ok people, LOOK AT MY HAIR. I haven't cut or colored it since August. Enough said. |
Moto Taxi!!!!!!!! We just can't get enough. |
Moog in a tunnel slide, in a place called "Fun World", outside of Cabarete. |
Lunch on the beach in Sosua |
This is Hud in his first Kiteboard lesson, learning to control the kite. It didn't take long for both Hud & Trav to become TOTALLY HOOKED on kiteboarding. |
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Kiteboardin' cutie |
Moog, fancy style. |
Enjoying jugos natureles on Kite Beach, Cabarete |
"Mom and Dad...make funny faces!" says Viv |
Pictured here with Hud & Viv is Alba, daughter of the owner of Big Willy's Kiteboarding School who instructed Trav & Hud. Alba is 4, speaks 3 languages fluently, and is our new BFF. |
Lunch in the making, Puerto Plata |
We love to buy fruit in the DR! Pineapples, watermelon, limes, mangoes, papayas, avocados, and more. Fruit stands line the highways. This was on the way to Cabarete. |
The condo building we moved into is full of cool metal sculpture and a has a little fish pond. |
First dinner in our new home |
Amazing breakfast at Vagamundo, in Cabarete |
The boys happily watch the kiters at dusk |
"This feels right." Trusting our mutually strong, instantaneous gut reaction led us to 18 happy years of building a life and a family in a community we now enthusiastically call home. That was a leap of faith that ended up really working for us, and it taught us an important lesson: when it comes to following your instincts, no matter how quickly or spontaneously, taking the plunge is nearly always a very good idea (ie: selling all of your belongings, leaving your job and moving onto a sailboat). Well, guess what, folks? It's happened AGAIN! That insta-attraction to a place, that immediate feeling of "This feels right", it hit us like a ten foot wave the minute we stepped foot into our new love, our latest obsession...Cabarete.
It was Trav's birthday and I wanted to do something special for him. We were on Moxie in Luperon, and I knew that Cabarete was a mecca for kiteboarding, a sport Trav has always wanted to try. My plan was to treat the family to a couple of nights in a fancy hotel and to sign Trav up for a kite lesson as a surprise. The only problem was, I COULD NOT find a place that worked for us. The fancy hotel I wanted would not take a large dog like Sadie (despite my valiant attempts to sweet talk the general manager and the staged photos I sent of Sadie looking smallish and practically catatonic). Other hotels were booked, others too pricey. Finally, out of desperation I ruined the surprise and enlisted Trav's help in the hotel search. We found a condo on Air B& B that seemed ok but for the life of us, WE COULD NOT BOOK IT. Technological difficulties or red-tape details kept stopping us from finalizing the rental. We were SO frustrated! We considered scrapping the whole idea and not going. Finally, we decided just to drive there and see what happened, and in retrospect, we now know that the reason we could not book a place, was because the RIGHT place in the spot where we are now happily convinced that we are MEANT TO BE, had not presented itself to us yet.
Literally, the first place we saw as we pulled into the Cabarete town limits was the Kite Beach Hotel. The rest of the story is a series of perfectly magical universal-smiling events that fell into alignment like a line of dominoes, tumbling satisfyingly and precisely, one by one. The "hotel" was really condos. They took dogs. The place was stunning and immaculate and affordable. It had a pool and a cool restaurant/bar. It was right on the beach, right in the middle of all the kiteboarding action, and the sky was swarming with kites. It was adjacent to the best kite school ever, which just happened to have availability right that very minute. We checked in at 3:30 and Hud & Trav began their first kite lesson at 4 pm. While they kited, Viv and I relaxed on the beautiful beach, and she instantly made a friend. Post lesson, Trav and Hud were wearing the biggest smiles I'd ever seen on them - they were now officially kite junkies. Trav and I had a mojito at the bar, we all went to dinner, and by 7 pm we had decided to move to Cabarete to wait out the hurricane season. Easy as that.
And here's where the synergy/synchronicity of this whole thing gets really crazy...
The next morning, we got lost while driving through town. We turned around on a side street and found ourselves stopped beside a rental agency. In the time it took us to read the sign on their door, a sweet lady named Maria had come out of the office to greet us. She thought we might need directions. We asked if she had any dog-friendly condos for long-term rent on Kite Beach. She said yes, but she only had one. We made plans to see it the next day, and weirdly, it happened to be the unit directly above the one where we were currently staying! The condo for rent had the same view we had fallen in love with, and was overlooking the pool our kids had fallen in love with playing in. The price was right (a screaming deal! We haven't paid this little in rent since our pre- Telluride days! Plus the place is a monstrous 2 bedroom with high ceilings and a giant deck) and we immediately booked the place through the end of October. In November, once the hurricane season has passed, we will return to the boat and start sailing again.
Once we put the deposit down on the condo we literally RACED back to Luperon and closed up Moxie as fast as we possibly could. The process took us three days, sweating in the oppressive heat of the windless harbor. We rented a car on a month-to-month basis. We hired someone to watch Moxie, to open her up periodically and air her out, and to keep her bottom clean. (And she's only 1.5 hrs away so we'll be checking on her now and then as well).
We've been in our new home for 3 days, and it feels surreal. After 7 months living in an extremely confined, constantly moving space, all of this room to breathe (and not always be climbing over one another) feels decadent. It also feels really amazing and new to be stabilized, not rocking and shifting from the wind and waves. I now sleep in a bed that can be accessed from all sides, and I don't have to climb over Trav in the middle of the night if I need to pee. We can prepare meals together at the same time, and we don't have to constantly stress about running out of water. (Although I will tell you, living on a boat teaches you to CONSERVE. I can't take a shower or wash dishes the way I used to anymore. I'm WAY too aware of how much I'm wasting. The kids are, too. This is a very good thing.)
The moral of this blog post? Don't be afraid to trust your gut and follow your instincts. Take the plunge. Society often tells us we need to consider everything from a million angles, to scrutinize all options with utmost care, to write up 100 page pro and con lists and then sleep on them for months...or years. I'm not one who makes a habit of dispensing unsolicited advice, but I feel compelled to tell you this: I see too many people wishing and planning for things they dream of and long for instead of DOING THEM. I can't tell you how many people have told us, "I wish I could do what you're doing, but... " What was it that Yoda said? Something about not thinking, but DOING. I think people would be happier if they did more doing. (And now you should look up the correct version of Yoda's quote and follow that, because after all, he is a fictional Jedi, and is obviously a source of guidance to be taken seriously.)
Thank you, as always, for reading. And one more thing! Will you please officially follow our blog? If you go to the home page, there's a place on the right where you can sign up to officially follow us. Once you've done that, you'll never have to worry about missing another episode of Moxie Family Adventures again. And please feel free to comment on the blog page, we love to read what you have to say. xoxo