My Thoughts · Panama · Panama City

Panamá City Delights: Being a Tourist & 14th Anniversary!

Lin & Larada at Panama Viejo - delight
Lin & Larada at Panama Viejo

Panamá City delighted us this week as we toured some local sites but mainly accomplished our goal: we applied for our e-cedula! And buried somewhere within our flight to Panamá City and everything—we celebrated our fourteenth anniversary!

I filled these two days with packing for five weeks in different climates. I packed items in my medium-sized bag and then put it inside my big suitcase. Yes, that big suitcase will be full when I return on December 2.

After two months, I finally got my hair cut in Boquete on Tuesday, and the stylist pleased me with the cut. In our Spanish conversation, she had a hard time understanding me wanting the top “spiked,” so it’s not as short on top as usual. Also, I learned something very interesting. She styled it with no gel or hairspray—just natural. OMG! I haven’t worn my hair that way in decades, and you can guess what I did the next day when I styled it—gel and hairspray.

Our dear neighbor, Ruth, drove us to the airport in David to catch a 9:44 AM flight to Panamá City’s Tocumen International Airport.

Joel, our trusty Uber driver, was there and drove us to the Marriott Panamá Hotel which is attached to the Albrook Mall. Our drive took longer because we passed two car accidents, but it gave us time to catch up. Joel pointed out the Tribunal Electoral de Panamá building to us as we drove by on our way to the hotel. Unknowingly, I booked our hotel about ten minutes away from where we needed to go on Friday to start the process for the e-cedula.

We settled in and immediately went to the mall to grab a late lunch.

Because the weather was iffy, we spent the day going through the Albrook Mall. It has over 700 stores and three food courts and lots of ice cream stores for Lin!

I love Albrook Mall - delight

In the Costo store, I found a bathing suit and went to try it on. Two young women stopped me at the door and spoke in Spanish. I asked if anyone spoke English; they both shook their heads no. The one speaking repeated her request three times, and I finally figured it out—I had to try the bathing suit on over my clothes! Very interesting. I ended up buying it because it was not too expensive, so if it didn’t work, I could give it away. When I tried it on back in the room later, I liked it!

Surprisingly, we found a Skechers shoe store, and we both bought a new pair of shoes. I bought bright orange. Lin bought a pair of wet shoes!

That evening we watched the Thursday Night Football game. Then we prepared for the big day—Friday, October 24. We’ve had this appointment for a couple months and anticipated it.

I connected with Joel, our Uber driver, early that morning. He’s so responsible. Joel had battery trouble in his car, so he called another Uber driver for us!

Thankfully, we arrived early and met up with our “Fixer,” Jennifer and her husband, Ariel. She also had another couple she was helping. I had dreaded this day because, Lorrie, our friend who went through this process last week, warned me about the picture requirements—wear a dark shirt, no big earrings, no bangs on your forehead and put your hair behind your ears. Jennifer also emphasized these items in an email.

Jennifer had folders of paperwork on each couple. My name was called first, so off I went to a desk with Jennifer with a handful of papers. The clerk, Yessica, asked for my passport and permanent visa. She welcomed me warmly and we had a lovely conversation as she worked. Yessica loved my red shirt with the square and round dance logo, “Life is a dance.” She read it to her co-workers and we all celebrating “dancing—bailar.”

Then, I moved over to another desk to pay $50 for the e-cedula card. The clerk asked me what my birthdate and blood type was. Before this process started several months ago, I would not have known it, but we have had to have a couple of blood tests, so I know it now.

Then I moved to another desk for the dreaded picture! Joshua, the clerk, greeted me with a warm smile. Then Ariel came over and gave me a clip he had on to keep his Yarmulke on, being a practicing Jew. I clipped my bangs completed over to the right. Then Joshua politely reminded me to pulled my hair behind my ear on my right side.

Joshua took four or five pictures, telling me to look left, then right, to tilt my chin up then down. When he finally decided he had one, a colleague came by and they both laughed at the picture. When I looked at it, I flinched! I have a large forehead I cover with hair—that’s all I saw!

But I was finished! And the rest of the group finished quickly. In fact, Jennifer said we finished the fastest she had ever experienced. We finished in less than an hour, and she had originally warned us it could take two hours. Our e-cedulas will be available in five days.

After a celebratory drink and snack with our group, Joel picked us up and took us to Panamá Viejo. Lin specifically wanted to go there to buy THE PANAMA BIRDING BOOK, An Illustrated Field Guide to the Birds of Panama. It’s sold in limited places only in Panama City. So we bought it immediately, and I even bought my own copy because I like to mark books up, and Lin hates that!

We had no idea what a delight Panamá la Vieja was! Joel, our Uber, driver had pointed it out as we crawled a long the way on Wednesday. Here’s what it is:

“also known as Panamá la Vieja, is the remaining part of the original Panama City, the former capital of Panama, which was destroyed in 1671 by the Welsh privateer Henry Morgan. It is located in the suburbs of the current capital. Together with the historical district of Panamá, it has been a World Heritage Site since 1997.”

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Panam%C3%A1_Viejo

So all dressed up in long pants and a warm shirt, I hiked to the top of the famous tower with Lin. We had a leisure lunch, entertained by the bird above. We met a couple from Philly and Lin immediately bonded with them over the Philadelphia Eagles. It was a beautiful day with no rain, but I was soaked with sweat!

On the drive back to the hotel, Joel told us about another attraction to visit, the Parque Muncipal Summit. He felt we would enjoy it on Saturday, so we took him up on it.

Joel picked us up at 9:15 AM and drove us to the Parque Muncipal Summit. As we traveled, the Panama Canal was on our left side, and we saw ships either coming or going. Camp Clayton was on our right and houses Ciudad del Saber, the City of Knowledge, a great use of the former military base. When Joel dropped us off, we agreed he’d pick us up at 1:00 PM.

The Parque Muncipal Summit “is a botanical garden with a facility for rescue and wildlife rehabilitation of exotic and native wildlife in central Panama.”

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Parque_Municipal_Summit

Our journey began with a luscious walk through tropical vegetation and flowers. What a treat! We saw a harpie eagle, Panama’s national bird. Then we wandered the lush green botanical garden, seeing a lonely jaguar who called for his friend, the puma, who they moved to another enclosure. We saw ocelots and so many monkeys. Many of these animals are rescued!

Somewhere in the morning we realized we needed more time, so I texted Joel to pick us up at 2:00 PM. He thought that was hilarious!

Three sloths eating - delight

I had two favorites attractions! Three sloths—in Spanish perezosos which literally means “lazy”—entertained us. We stood so close to them as they ate carrots and other goodies—slowly, methodically and deliberate.

My other favorite was the Butterfly Pavilion—Casa de Domo. They had two Blue Morpho butterflies. I had seen them in Costa Rica in 2020 and one landed on my hand. Of course, I wanted another to do that, but it didn’t happen.

Because we stayed longer in there, the attendant came in and gave us a private tour of the place and showed us butterfly eggs on a leaf and told us inside stories about the place—what a treat!

On the drive back, Joel told us the ships on the Panama Canal go from Pacific to the Atlantic in the morning, the Atlantic to the Pacific in the afternoon, and in the evening both directions. What a system!

Yes, the day was fantastic and a delight!

Today has been football day for us. Lin’s Philadelphia Eagles won and so did my Denver Broncos, so we’re good.

We made one last trip to the Mall and had ice cream at our favorite place. We just packed. Tomorrow Lin returns to David and then to Boquete (Jaramillo Abajo), and I fly to the US for a few weeks to visit my brother and friends in Albuquerque.

Being a tourist in Panama City delighted me, and I feel like we accomplished something by checking one more task off our list for our move to Panama. Life is good!

Larada Horner-Miller picture - delight
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MY LIFE · My Thoughts · Panama · Retirement · Travel

Seven Quirks About Life in Panama: I Still Love It!

As I’ve surveyed our life here, I have experienced seven quirks about life in Panama—new things I never encountered in the desert Southwest, but I still love it! I’ve learned a lot and I’m still learning!

Showering here has been quite an experience. In the shower I use, there are hot and cold control knob. To heat the water, it passes through coils heated by propane, so after turning on the hot water, I cautiously add the cold water. At one point in the warming the water, the scalding hot water could burn me, so I gradually increase the cold water and take advantage of the warm water as long as I can. But then it goes cold, so I have to start all over again.

At first, I dreaded showers because it took so long to get the water to the level I could enjoy, but I’m getting it figured out. I have learned to leave the water on and not cut it off with a switch on the hand spray. It stays warm longer and it doesn’t feel like a major quirk anymore.

A Dehumidifier - quirks
A Dehumidifier

Because of the humidity here, our neighbors encouraged us to get at least two dehumidifiers to guard against mold. So on the second or third day we were here, we bought two: for the living room and our bedroom. A week or so later, we bought a third one for our office where we have all our technology and some clothes.

These amazing gadgets show the humidity level in the room, and a low level is in the high 30s and low 40s. Somehow it collects the humidity in that specific area—it’s magic! Then we have to dump them about three times a day. They give off heat, a side effect that caused us to turn the one in our bedroom off in the early evening so the bedroom isn’t so warm. Also today, I washed my band for my iWatch and some wool slippers I knitted. I had avoided doing that because I knew it would take time for them to dry because of the humidity. I found a solution: I laid them on the top of a dehumidifier and the heat dried them quickly—great solution!

Yes, it’s a quirk, but I drastically feel the difference as it collects the moisture in the air. These devices show this desert Southwest woman how much moisture there really is in the atmosphere here—unbelievable!

At first as a passenger, I noticed the road into Boquete from Jaramillo Abajo seemed narrow. Many of the drivers slow down when they meet someone. So, a couple weeks ago, I started driving, and I saw it first-hand. Yes, I slowed down too.

In Boquete, the streets are narrow and have vehicles parked with the large pickup trucks’ bumpers sticking out. So, again I go slow, but I’ve gotten used to them.

The real answer: go slow!!

We plan our days’ activities because of the rain this time of year. Currently, we are in the rainy season, and it rains most afternoons. All of outside activities we do in the morning: driving to David and shopping. Then we hibernate in the afternoon and do work on the computer, watch some of our favorite mysteries on the TV or take a cozy nap!

That mindset demonstrates the expat’s schedule. A few weeks ago we needed to get blood tests for our driver’s license, so we were out in the afternoon in the rain. What we noticed—the Panamanians do not stop their lives for the rain!

So that really is an expat quirk!

We’ve bought two umbrellas and keep them in the car—one is bigger than the other. The one I bought must have been a child’s because when I used it last week, my shoulders got wet. I ended up giving it to our landlord’s daughter, and she used it immediately when we dropped her and her mom off on Friday in a downpour. Yes, we were out and broke our usual schedule because we took our landlord’s wife out for her birthday and thought little about the rain.

I watched as they walked up the driveway home—the mother had her umbrella and her daughter had the one I gave her, and they thought nothing about getting drenched in the rain. Being Panamanian, they just continued the day we had enjoyed together. It was quite a lesson!

NordVPN controls our lives. I told you about this in a previous blog post! When we have it on, we mask the fact we are out of the United States because it shows us being in Miami. So it’s on when we are on our TV to watch any of the streaming services we have. It’s also on when we need to print. But it has to be off when we watch football games on dazn.com because that’s a sports streaming service for Latin America!

Watching mysteries on the TV—ON, watching NFL football on dazn.com—OFF and when I print something—ON! That is a quirk still for me, but I’ve written it down on my PostIt program, so I peek at it as backup.

This quirk has been a hard one for me. We enrolled in a service in Boquete, Servitechnics, and when we order something, our packages go to Doral, Florida. Then they are routed here either by a fast address or a slow address. The fast comes by air; the slow by ship. The fast costs more than the slow.

So when I first routed some medicine here I needed, I got confused and sent it to our mail service in South Dakota. Not a good idea! I also bought a printer on Amazon and sent it to that address. This shocked Lin because he thought I understood the process. Thankfully, I canceled the printer before they sent it, but the medicine went to South Dakota and then they sent it to a friend in Albuquerque. Whew! It didn’t get lost!

Lin received a package at Servitechnics last Friday. Thankfully I received an email yesterday from Servitechnics, and I have a package there, but I don’t remember what I ordered! I’m excited though because I did the name and address right apparently. They have a specific format you have to do for the name and address, and I worried about it, but I must have done it right.

The good news is we have friends here who have had Amazon delivered right to their house, so we have to learn how to do that.

A quirk—yes—but we are learning the ropes!

Today, I went out to the lavandería to look at our luggage—what we’re keeping and will use this week and what we plan to give away. We have friends with two children who are moving and will enjoy the two large suitcases we bought to move here. They can pack a lot of their belongings in them. This space has a locked open-air door to the outside, but the rest of it is open-air with open barred windows.

I looked at all of the luggage and I was shocked! We have MOLD on the two we plan to give away and my backpack/roller bag I use as a carry-on bag! MOLD—so many people have talked about it, but I hadn’t noticed it until today.

So this afternoon, I googled what to do. I took the three bags out front and wiped them down to get the spores off. My favorite backpack looked the worst with blotches of mold all over it. Ucky!

Here’s what google told me to do:

So, tomorrow I have to buy some vinegar and get the mold taken care of.

Yes, I have experienced some quirks since we moved, but I have mastered most of them—and I do love it here! Quirks will never stop me!

Larada Horner-Miller - quirk
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MY LIFE · My Thoughts · Panama

A New Car & Driver’s Licenses: Life in Panama!

Boquete sign, car

This week, we bought a new car, a 2023 Kia Sonet, and I renewed my Panamanian driver’s license. Lin had to do more, and yes lots more this week.

We have to go to Panama City on October 24 to start the process to get our e-cedula card. So we started Monday off with getting our airmail tickets. It was complicated because we fly together to Panama City, then I’m flying to Albuquerque to spend about five weeks in the states, and Lin is coming back to David. The travel agent applied our jubilado discuenta (discount) of 25%, so the cost was $1000 less than what the United agent online quoted me! We thoroughly enjoyed her enthusiasm.

Afterwards, we went to Value Motors and confirmed with Victor we wanted to buy the Kia. He gave Lin the instructions on wiring money to him for the car purchase. New experiences everywhere!

Then we went across the straight to a clinic to get a blood test and letter from a doctor stating we had the cognitive facility to drive.

When we got home, we got the notification from our neighbor that our shelves for our kitchen were in at the DoIt Center in David, so we drove there and picked them up. Now we have a place for our dishes and glasses. Before we got the shelves, we kept moving them from here to there when we needed the stove or counter space.

Our new shelves for the kithen
Our new shelves for the kitchen

I have been leading my meditation game on Tuesdays for a while. Now, Tuesday is a loaded day. So I recorded the meditation earlier.

Then we went to the Tuesday market. We love the Tuesday market with all its color and possibilities. Lin buys his breakfast there normally. I bought a beautiful turquoise Alpaca shawl and blue striped pants. Lin bought a fun-filled Panamanian shirt.

Afterwards we went to one of the bank’s ATM machine to solve a problem. We have been having a problem with Schwab debit card. When we were here in May, Lin used it easily, but since then he hadn’t been able to use it. He had spent hours calling Schwab for support with no solution. So, we did it one more time, and he tried one thing different and it worked—one more solution this week!

That night Lin wired the money for the car—he said the process was easy to do!

I got up at 6:30 AM to be ready to leave at 8:00 AM—always a good idea to be the first in line at any of the government offices in Panama. Jason drove us to David to renew our driver’s license. He helped with the translation between us and the office workers.

After a couple hours, I got mine. As I sat there in the room waiting to hear my number called, I feared I would have trouble with the hearing test because of the hearing loss I’ve had with the ear infection. When they called my name—they didn’t call my passport number, I had two tests I had to pass: a hearing test and vision test. I passed both of them.

Immediately when we got in line and talked to one of the clerks, Lin found out he had to take the driver’s test because of his age, so Jason and he shopped and waited for me.

When we got back to Boquete, we took Jason out to lunch and had a delicious meal at a new restaurant to us—fish tacos. Then we went back to Value Motors to complete all the paperwork to buy the car. They weren’t prepared for us, thinking we were coming the next day. Victor let us know he received the wired money. He let us take the car anyway without signing any paperwork.

We started the day with a trip back to Value Motors to sign the paperwork for the car. They helped us with the insurance and we paid for it there online and away we went! It felt so good to finally owning our own car!

From there, we went to the Thursday market and bought a few things.

In the afternoon, Lin drove me to my AA meeting because we had an errand to do afterwards. Oh, course, it was raining. During the meeting, the rain continued and increased. The building has a tin roof, so we had to shout whenever we spoke!

After the meeting, we went by a pottery shop we had wanted to visit but had trouble finding. They weren’t open; it was raining. We looked inside and it didn’t have the size pots Lin wanted.

In the evening, we watched Thursday night football—Lin had a bad night because his Philadelphia Eagles lost to the New York Giants. We turned off the game before the end and watched one of our favorite British mystery shows, McDonald & Dodds.

Lin did a lot of preparation for the driver’s test because several people told him it would be parallel parking. That concerned him because he hadn’t done that in years! He watched YouTube videos and studied them. Lin even prepared a “Cheat Sheet.”

Lin’s Driving License

Lin drove Jason to David to take the driver’s test. I stayed home and worked on my book business.

As the morning went on and on, it assured me that he had passed the test because of the waiting, the process of paying and getting your license.

When he got home and stepped out of the car, he said in a serious voice, “You have to be our chauffeur.” I challenged him and he laughed, “Yes, I passed!” Jason giggled through this whole exchange and would not look me in the eye! All Lin had to do was back into a space and then drive into it in seven minutes.

Larada’s Writing Group

That afternoon, I drove myself to a writer’s group I had attended in our May trip. It was my first time driving in downtown Boquete—whew! The streets are narrow. Drivers stop to do whatever they need to do. I didn’t hit anyone—yahoooo! When I got to the Hotel Central Boquete where they meet, I found out they weren’t meeting that day—I hadn’t checked my email that morning and missed the announcement. So, I went on a hunt! I want a hand mirror and have had a horrible time finding one here. I visited three stores and all they had were mirrors to mount on the wall or already mounted on a stand.

So I went home and picked up Lin, and we went to the Gelato shop to celebrate his license and my driving. Then we went to the Tigo office to change Lin’s iPhone and iPad to a Panamanian number. Wow! The process is involved, but we got it started. We had no problem with his iPad, but we still owed $25 on the phone, so we paid that off, but Hernon, the Tigo manager, couldn’t unlocked it. As we were leaving, Lin told Hernon we would return Saturday morning with coffee; he smiled.

We also got a storm warning about a big tropical storm hitting, “an atmospheric river,” so we prepared for it.

On the way home, we stopped at a big new pharmacy, and they had my hand mirror! Yahoo!

That night I spent thirty minutes on the phone with AT&T and we finally unlocked Lin’s phone.

Lin kept his promise and went to the Sandwich Shop next door and brought coffee for Hernon and us. The problems continued, so Hernon suggested we go somewhere while he worked on it.

So, we went next door for a delicious breakfast. We both tried something different by ordering two Saturday specials. I had two poached eggs, salmon, a salad and strawberry juice—yummy! Lin had a ribeye steak, an egg, a salad, fresh fruit and strawberry juice. Healthy and delicious!

When we returned, Hernon solved the problem and Lin has a Panamanian number now. You can contact him on WhatsApp.

Afterwards, I had a Zoom Afternoon— I attended my CoDA meeting from Albuquerque. Then I had a couple hours break. Then I met with my three friends I met in Loveland years ago. They scattered now: one from Arizona, one from Colorado and one from Arkansas. I love this time together. We have known each other for decades, and the conversation is rich.

While we did this our landlords put shelving in our closets in our office—they are so accommodating!

That evening we went out to dinner with Lorrie and Kenny, the couple who lived just miles away from us in the east mountains in New Mexico, and now they live about five minutes away. We ate at Retrogusto, the first restaurant Lin and I ate at when we first arrived here. The food was scrumptious! The conversation moved around the table with each sharing stories and history. We also started planning a long weekend trip to Costa Rica in December!

Because the Denver Broncos were playing the New York Jets in London, we had an early morning game at 8:30 AM.

But the start of the day was scary. Our neighbor had texted me and left messages on my phone asking us to take her husband to the airport in the David because her blood pressure was off the map. I have gotten in the habit of muting my phone all the time—not a good idea now!

So, I dressed quickly and ran over to see how she was! Jason, our landlord, ended up taking her husband to airport, but I felt horrible. I invited her to come over and watch the Broncos game with us and she did with her dog, Noche!

The game was back and forth, but we pulled it out and won it. I burned up my phone by texting two Bronco girlfriends.

The storm they warned about never materialized. We’ve had rain off and on, all weekend—heavy sometimes this afternoon, but not what we were warned about.

I feel like I’m carrying you along with me on this journey showing you our daily life. What a relief it is having our own car. It’s a nice size for here, and I like having a white car! Getting our car, our licenses and solving the Schwab issue has relieved us of several important items.

Larada's Emojo - car

I hope your week is full of love and laughter!


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MY LIFE · My Thoughts · Panama

Rain, rain and more rain! Life in Panama in October!

A rain storm today that has turned into a really big one!

Rain, rain and more rain during the rainy season in Panama, and it pours now in October. They say it’s worse in November! This desert Southwest girl is in awe!

I’m sure you’ve been told that it rains a lot in the tropics! Now, I can tell you I have witnessed it. But most people adapt—do your outside business in the sunny beautiful morning and then stay inside in the afternoon and enjoy the rain.

At first, it seemed overwhelming, especially when I witnessed a rainstorm that left 6 ½ inches in two hours on our scouting trip in May!

Because the rain is increasing, we altered our schedule this last week and it worked.

In the morning, we drove to David to get more specific furniture: we needed night stands for our bedroom, a table between our recliners and shelves for our kitchen.

But before we left, I had struggled with the name we had of that store— EP Furniture. We had bought Lin’s desk and my file cabinet there and hoped to find what we needed there, but when we went before John, our neighbor, drove us, so we had no idea how to get there. And when his wife went with us last week, we ended up not going there—she wasn’t sure where it was.

So, Lin found a receipt which said, “Econo Precio Furniture,” (Economy Prices Furniture) so when I googled that name, I cheered! I got the directions to the store in David!

We needed a specific size for the night stands because our bedroom is small. It had to be about 16 inches wide only. After extensive searching there, we found our new night stands.

So then we went to the DoIt Center, looking for shelves for the kitchen but we didn’t find anything. Then we went to Conway’s and found this beautiful table.

Our new little car we rented held all of this, but we ended up going home in the rain after lunch at a fonda, Mily’s. A fonda is a inexpensive restaurant, featuring Panamanian food. Wow! The food was delicious!

On the way home, we stopped at a couple shops along the way to check them out.

I ended the day by joining my Colorado writing practice group for the first time since July 14. It was so good be back with my writer friends.

Last week, we met a couple who were visiting Boquete for the first time with plans to move here. We hooked them up with Jason Lara of Jason Lara Tours, so he showed them around the area on Saturday, like he did for us.

When we first met them, we told them we would take them to the Tuesday Market—helping new people here, a tradition that’s so wonderful of “Passing It On” like our neighbors did for us.

As soon as we got to the Tuesday Market, we started introducing them to people we knew. Lin took them to his favorite stand where he gets a breakfast sandwich. They hadn’t eaten breakfast, so they jumped in.

I left the group and got a thirty-minute massage from Monique. She focused on my right ear—I’ve lost hearing in that ear and my right leg because of the dog attack. I loved it and plan on going to our office for more massages.

The new couple went their own way, so Lin and I shopped around. We bought an Eggplant Parmigiana dish from an Italian vendor who’s a riot. He says he only knows four words, then he easily talks more.

The couple we brought had other plans so we didn’t take them home. So, on the way home, we went to a Garden Center we had passed several times. Lin bought a couple plants.

I messed up and didn’t take my gabapentin, so I slipped into a negative space for the rest of the day. Oh, of course, the rain continued.

We left Boquete at 7:15 AM and went to David with Ruth and John. They asked me to join them at Immigration Office to help with any translation needs. We talked about what to buy for shelves in the kitchen, and they showed us shelves they had bought at the DoIt Center. We decided they would work, so we added that stop to our game plan for the day to be home before the rain started.

So, we went to Immigration Office. I helped a little with the translation until we found out the clerk spoke English. We waited for a while, and our friends fulfilled the requirements and paid the fee for registering their address.

Our first stop afterwards was PriceMart where I easily bought gabapentin at the pharmacy. We all got items we wanted.

Then we went to the closest DoIt Center, but they didn’t have the two tall shelves we wanted, but they did have a short one, so we bought that one for our bedroom. We will buy another one and use it for our clothes because of the threat of mold in drawers.

Shelf for clothes - rain

So we went to the other bigger DoIt Center, convinced it would be there. They didn’t have any, so we ordered two like the one above but taller and are waiting to hear they have them.

Lin treated us to a coffee and sweets at a coffee shop. We had a relaxing fun time talking and taking in the scene.

It’s raining like crazy right now! It started about 3:45 PM here, and it’s almost 5:00 PM. That’s why we plan inside activities during the rain.

When we got home, we watched a couple episodes of “Sister Boniface” on BritBox. She’s one of our favorites. It was our inside time—check email. I worked on book #2, so I only have the last section to do, and I will be done with the layout!

It’s Thursday, so it’s the Thursday Market. I need to limit my buying to $20 there, because it’s so easy to spend lots more because of all the vendors. It’s the smaller of the two markets, but we’ve become friends with people there.

Lin bought us lunch from a Jamaican man. A couple weeks ago, I bought lunch from them, and it was delicious, so Lin jumped in quickly.

I ended up buying a wooden soap stand for my shower and black bean hummus.

I changed leading my meditation group from Tuesday to Thursday because of the couple we were taking to the Tuesday Market. But this also complicated this day too.

Again, it was an inside afternoon with rain.

We relaxed and enjoyed our morning, playing cribbage during breakfast.

I spent the rainy afternoon trying to get airplane tickets for our flights at the end of the month. We have an appointment in Panama City on October 24 to finalize getting our e-Cedula card:

“The ‘E’ in the Cédula indicates ‘Extranjero,’ meaning foreigner, signifying that the holder is a non-Panamanian permanent resident. This card is essential for those who wish to fully immerse themselves in the Panamanian way of life, as it allows for uninterrupted living, working, and even participation in some forms of local governance.”

https://www.ndm.com.pa/permanent-resident-card

We decided I should go back to the states from this time in Panama City and Lin would come back to Boquete, so the tickets were complicated. At first, I tried to do it on the internet, but I couldn’t, so I called the airlines. Finally, the agent gave me a cost, and I realized it was expensive because we delayed so much. Then he asked me to login to my account. Then. . .he gave me an altered price of $700 more because of “my personal information.” I hung up!

Then I went outside and ranted and raved to Lin, our neighbors and our landlord working in the yard!

At 12:45 PM, I left to drive in the rain (a downpour) to go to my knitting group for the first time. I cautiously made my way there. I sat next to a friendly woman and told her about my experience with the airlines the day before.

That’s always a good thing to do here—talk to people about any problems you’re having. She told me she uses a travel agent in Boquete, and by doing that she gets her 25% discount (jubilado discuento) for having a pensionado visa. I gasped! I had completely forgotten about that. She also said if you use an airline, you might get the discount but it’s complicated! What a God Thing this was! She also said book hotels directly in Panama City and you’ll 50% off with this visa! What a gift!

When I got home, our amazing landlords put up a coat rack in the kitchen, Lin’s German cuckoo clock and our drapes in the living room! Oh, what a difference!

Our new drapes
Our New Drapes!

The thunder and ran continue here at 5:30 PM—more rain on the way!

Because several places close by the time we get going, and also it rains every afternoon now, we got out earlier and went by the travel agent I learned about, but they are closed on Saturday. Then we went to our favorite restaurant, The Sandwich Shop, for breakfast. I had pancakes with pineapple. I drank strawberry juice and coffee of course—what a delicious breakfast for sure! Lin had strawberry pancakes and papaya juice. These pancakes overflow with fruit!

Again at this place, we met another couple from the United States and hooked up with them. They are fellow New Mexicans. Afterwards we did errands in Boquete and came home.

It was my nephew’s birthday so I called him in California and we caught up. I saw him and his daughters in Colorado at our ranch this summer. I love to connect with him on his birthday and see what’s going on.

Then we spent the rest of the day watching college football and the Philadelphia Philles play the Dodgers.

Lin got up early to watch the game coming from London. I cooked breakfast. Then I went to church online using Facebook Live.

I had already dressed up in my Denver Broncos uniform—Bronco leggings, Peyton Manning jersey, a fluffy orange and blue scarf and my hat. In this outfit and Lin dressed in his Philadelphia Eagles stuff, we went out and showed our landlord, his wife, his daughter and our neighbors. They all joined in the fun of us making a big deal about the Broncos playing the Eagles.

Right after church, the game started, so I brought it up on my desktop to remember how to do it, but first I had to disconnected NordVPN. Lin didn’t do that on the TV, so he couldn’t get it there. So I got it on my laptop, so he could watch it. Eventually the service I subscribed to worked, and we watched the game on our big screen TV.

We really had a calm time watching the game. We each cheered for our time, but Lin didn’t do any of the crazy antics to get me going. And I texted my friend in Albuquerque throughout the game!

And the end: the Broncos beat the unbeaten Super Bowl Champions, the Eagles! Yahoooo!

Tonight we got a warning from our landlord about the volume of the rain, and he and his uncle worked in the field behind us to divert the rain!

It rains most afternoons this time of the year. The thunder blasts right now! This desert Southwest girl has had to make a major adjustment, but truthfully I marvel at the volume of rain here, and yearn for it on our ranch in southeastern Colorado, so I’ve adjusted!

Larada - AuthorHeadShots - rain
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