GRAND CAYMAN
ISLAND
Our second
stop was Grand Cayman Island. In 1503 the Cayman Islands were first coined
islands Las Tortugas by Columbus, who first discovered the islands following a
swarm of turtles. The island was uninhabited until the 1660s, when a few
British Army deserters made the Tortugas their home. Shortly after, the British
laid claim to the island and have maintained the colony under the crown to this
day. The main industry of the island was salvaging wrecked ships that collided
with the coral reef surrounding the beaches.
In Grand
Cayman, Tracy, Jesus and I walked aimlessly for about half an hour and then
decided to take a city bus to the 7 mile Island. The transit system on Grand
Cayman is markedly different than the bus systems I experienced in the US. The
busses consist of small vans that come and go on no particular schedule, while
making countless unplanned stops. Additionally the bus hosts a front-seat
worker next to the driver, whose main objective is to recruit any obvious
tourist or befuddled pedestrian alongside the locals that catch a daily ride to
work.
Grand Cayman
was mostly uneventful. However, the dramas on the boat were starting to
bud. There are three couples that are
filling our travels with entertainment and intrigue. The first couple to highlight is Bonnie and
Phil. We were paired with these two as
dinner guest on the third night of our trip. Bonnie is a handsome, petite, southern
bell in her late seventies, who currently lives in South Carolina. Phil is a former Motor City executive in his
early eighties, short and husky with a stunning crop of wavy white hair. Bonnie has one marriage, one divorce and two
grown boys under her belt. While Phil boasts two daughters, two ex-wives (one
of which was extremely wealthy) and countless “lady friends” through the years.
Bonnie and
Phil seem quite hip and have a surprisingly modern relationship. They
originally met in 2002 on a blind date that was arranged by the daughter of
Phil’s former lady friend, who had recently passed away. According to Phil, he had several blind dates
the same weekend he met Bonnie. This is not at all hard to believe considering
women live longer than men, which makes a healthy vivacious seventy some male
very desirable. Their first meeting went
swimmingly, as Bonnie put it in her sophisticated southern draw, “Phil didn’t
ask for an early bird or senior discount and didn’t use a coupon, so I knew he
was alright.” After a few months of back and forth telephone conversations,
Phil invited Bonnie on a cruise. When Bonnie took too long to accept his
invitation, Phil called Bonnie’s 99 year-old mother, Cici, to ask if, “Bonnie
could come on the trip.” Cici replied
with enthusiasm that. “If Bonnie doesn’t come along, then I surely will.” Phil chuckled recalling Cici and said, “I
couldn’t have kept up with Cici. She used to go so fast, zooming down the halls
nearly jogging with her walker.” Well Bonnie figured she better not let her 99
year old mom out do her and decided to come along. Phil and Bonnie have been
traveling together, seeing the world ever since. Between the two of them, they’ve
been to 7 continents and countless countries.
Nowadays,
Phil makes an eleven hour car ride from Detroit to see Bonnie in Charlotte. I
was amazed that he travels straight through and so far. I cannot imagine a much
younger man making an eleven hour drive to see me once, let alone on a regular
basis. They remain unmarried, because as Bonnie puts it, “it would never work
out. These old men are high maintenance and expect you to wait on them.” Phil
summed things up by saying, “She loves to see the headlights coming and the
taillights leaving.” I can only hope someone can tolerate me and I them in my
latter years.
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