We woke up super excited because our very dear friends D and S were scheduled to fly in to GHB around 1pm and we could not wait to see them. They came with us on out first trip in 2010, for our wedding and fell as in love with Eleuthera as we did. They have been back with us every trip since. They could not pull off an entire three week stay this time so we enjoyed a little "couple" time before they arrived but we were definitely ready for our partners in crime to come play. Since they were arriving mid-day decided we better stay in the vicinity of Caribbean Blue and the Airport while we counted down till their arrival. It was a pretty brisk stormy day so there was not much to do around the house since obviously we cant sit still for long. We decided would at least try to find somewhere calm for a quick snorkel why we waited for the second half of out tribe to arrive.
We started at good ole faithful, Twin Cove but it was way too stormy for even an extreme snorkel. After Twin we worked our way north toward the airport. After a few wrong turns and dead ends we wound up at the old dock at the far end of Alabaster Beach. J tossed about the spinning rod for a little while, until a torrential downpour forced him to hide in the car. After that we decided we would try to find the cove at the tip of James Point again since we were unsuccessful a few days earlier and it was not far from the airport. Our first attempt did not take us to the cove but it did take us to really nice spot to get view of the cliffs. The water was raging and the waves put on a pretty spectacular show as they slammed against the rocks. We moved on pretty quickly and after a little more wandering we finally found the cove. It was still way too rough to snorkel but it looked like it might be a nice spot for a calm beach day. We never did get an opportunity to come back again, maybe next year. Just down the beach there were about 10 hard working men hauling buckets full of rocks. They were filling up the buckets with mid-size symmetrical rocks from all around the beach and then dumping them in a huge pile at the end of the road. We guessed they were probably going to be used for home construction, and as we were leaving a big truck was coming up to collect them.
We started at good ole faithful, Twin Cove but it was way too stormy for even an extreme snorkel. After Twin we worked our way north toward the airport. After a few wrong turns and dead ends we wound up at the old dock at the far end of Alabaster Beach. J tossed about the spinning rod for a little while, until a torrential downpour forced him to hide in the car. After that we decided we would try to find the cove at the tip of James Point again since we were unsuccessful a few days earlier and it was not far from the airport. Our first attempt did not take us to the cove but it did take us to really nice spot to get view of the cliffs. The water was raging and the waves put on a pretty spectacular show as they slammed against the rocks. We moved on pretty quickly and after a little more wandering we finally found the cove. It was still way too rough to snorkel but it looked like it might be a nice spot for a calm beach day. We never did get an opportunity to come back again, maybe next year. Just down the beach there were about 10 hard working men hauling buckets full of rocks. They were filling up the buckets with mid-size symmetrical rocks from all around the beach and then dumping them in a huge pile at the end of the road. We guessed they were probably going to be used for home construction, and as we were leaving a big truck was coming up to collect them.
After James Point We still had about an hour to kill so we got “the book” out to see what else was close to the airport and decided on Sponge Cove. Despite how sheltered the cove was, the wind was blowing directly into the mouth of the cove so again it was way to windy to do anything but take a beach walk. Sponge Cove has a significant amount of beach grass so I doubt it would have been a good place to snorkel even on a calm day. As usual J brought his spinning rod with him, he never leaves home without it as you never know what might be lurking out there. Of course since he had it with him he spots a 4-5 ft shark really close to shore. It went back into the shelter of the grass before I could see it so he cast toward it to draw it back out. I don’t think he actually expected it to bite, since it looked like a nurse shark at first, but it hammered his lure. That shark dragged his line out so fast, I thought he was going to lose it all. Luckily it stopped just before it dragged all his line out and when he gave it a tug the shark finally bit off the lure. He was not rigged up to land something that big so he was lucky all he lost was his lure. It was his lucky lure he had been using on every trip since 2010, but it was getting pretty worn out and I think he had so much fun watching that shark go for it he did not care.
The shark fulfilled our excitement quota for the day so we decided to head to the airport bar and grab a beer while we waited for D & S. Earlier in the day Stanton had seen us drive by with our wiper blade flapping around in the rain so as soon as we pulled up he tracked us down in the bar to fix our wiper blades. We were just wondering where we would be able to find new blades so we were pretty happy that Stanton had found us and fixed them. He really did good by us this trip and we could not have been more pleased with the Jeep.
D & S arrived right on time and were ecstatic to be back "home" on Eleuthera. They had a very very long series of flights. They took the red-eye out of MT at 7pm the night before, had a few hour layover in FLL then directly on to the flight to GHB. S thought that they be able to sleep better on the red-eye if they both had isle seats, but she accidentally picked the ones behind the exit rows not realizing they did not recline. I don’t think either of them had slept at all in about 30 hours. To top it all off I had texted them to say they served cocktails on the flight and that it had a restroom, but it turned out that was only on the larger weekend flights, not the weekday ones, oops. They were pretty darn happy when they walked out of the airport and we immediately took their bags and handed them ice cold Kaliks.
D & S arrived right on time and were ecstatic to be back "home" on Eleuthera. They had a very very long series of flights. They took the red-eye out of MT at 7pm the night before, had a few hour layover in FLL then directly on to the flight to GHB. S thought that they be able to sleep better on the red-eye if they both had isle seats, but she accidentally picked the ones behind the exit rows not realizing they did not recline. I don’t think either of them had slept at all in about 30 hours. To top it all off I had texted them to say they served cocktails on the flight and that it had a restroom, but it turned out that was only on the larger weekend flights, not the weekday ones, oops. They were pretty darn happy when they walked out of the airport and we immediately took their bags and handed them ice cold Kaliks.
We headed straight back to Caribbean Blue and soon we had them settled on the porch with a couple of spunky monkeys and we worked on whipping up some salad and pork chops for lunch. The rest of the afternoon consisted of lounging around and cocktails on the deck. We had a wonderful sunset meal of fish tacos made with the schoolmaster J got the day before.
Here is the recipe. We pretty much wing it when it comes to cooking so I am just estimating how much of each ingredient I use. Feel free to modify to your own tastes, we like things hot.
1-2lbs Fresh fish fillets: (grouper, snapper, lionfish, etc) seasoned with lime juice, chili powder and old bay.
Let sit and marinade while you prepare the rest of the toppings.
White Sauce:
1 cup mayo
1/2 bird or goat pepper finely chopped
Juice of 1 lime
1/2 tsp oregano
1/2 tsp dill
1/2 tsp cumin
1/2 tsp chili powder
Spiced Tomatoes:
Chop approx 5 large tomato's, about 4-5 cups
1/2 bird or goat pepper
Juice from 1/2 lime
1-2 Tbsp finely chopped onion
1/2 tsp Chili powder
1/8 tsp Cumin
Salt to taste.
grill or pan fry the fish until flaky and break into mid sized pieces.
Put a couple of pieced of fish in a tortilla shell and top with white sauce, spiced tomatoes, thinly sliced cabbage and avocado slices (if you can find them).
I found soft taco sized flour tortillas at Burrows in the standing freezer closest to the register. The only place we saw avocado's was at the roadside fruit and vegetable stands.
Here is the recipe. We pretty much wing it when it comes to cooking so I am just estimating how much of each ingredient I use. Feel free to modify to your own tastes, we like things hot.
1-2lbs Fresh fish fillets: (grouper, snapper, lionfish, etc) seasoned with lime juice, chili powder and old bay.
Let sit and marinade while you prepare the rest of the toppings.
White Sauce:
1 cup mayo
1/2 bird or goat pepper finely chopped
Juice of 1 lime
1/2 tsp oregano
1/2 tsp dill
1/2 tsp cumin
1/2 tsp chili powder
Spiced Tomatoes:
Chop approx 5 large tomato's, about 4-5 cups
1/2 bird or goat pepper
Juice from 1/2 lime
1-2 Tbsp finely chopped onion
1/2 tsp Chili powder
1/8 tsp Cumin
Salt to taste.
grill or pan fry the fish until flaky and break into mid sized pieces.
Put a couple of pieced of fish in a tortilla shell and top with white sauce, spiced tomatoes, thinly sliced cabbage and avocado slices (if you can find them).
I found soft taco sized flour tortillas at Burrows in the standing freezer closest to the register. The only place we saw avocado's was at the roadside fruit and vegetable stands.