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Thread: Sunsets, Rum, Sand and Gizzadas 97 Days in Negril

  1. #251
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    Re: * * * * * * Sunsets, Rum, Sand and Gizzadas – 97 Days in Negril * * * * * *

    Is his name Eric? Persistent guy? I think I met him ( no I don't exchange $ with the "boys")
    Last edited by Lady Jane; 01-02-2014 at 06:23 PM.
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  2. #252
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    Re: * * * * * * Sunsets, Rum, Sand and Gizzadas – 97 Days in Negril * * * * * *

    On the Coconuts International pic: Sadly, they had no brownies yesterday evening - I didn't ask about the mushrooms. Just a tease I guess...
    Last edited by Onceyougo; 01-02-2014 at 08:58 PM.

  3. #253
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    Re: * * * * * * Sunsets, Rum, Sand and Gizzadas – 97 Days in Negril * * * * * *

    heh heh on the 'change money?' guy; I've been here a few years and he still calls to me

  4. #254
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    Re: * * * * * * Sunsets, Rum, Sand and Gizzadas – 97 Days in Negril * * * * * *

    Wow, I miss my Negril! I haven't been home for 3 years, and haven't been on this forum for a long time.
    Thanks for posting! Everything looks so different.
    I have to get back soon!
    Thanks again, and cheers.

  5. #255
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    Re: * * * * * * Sunsets, Rum, Sand and Gizzadas – 97 Days in Negril * * * * * *

    Quote Originally Posted by Lady Jane View Post
    Is his name Eric? Persistent guy? I think I met him ( no I don't exchange $ with the "boys")
    Didn't ask him his name. Persistent?!! Yes, as persistent as a mosquito in your ear in the middle of the night.


    Another beautiful day here in Negril. It hasn’t rained for a few days now, so the humidity is down and it feels cooler. Cooler in relative terms, of course. Back home it’s -27C with a -39C wind chill. When it’s that cold, the snow crunches when you walk on it.

    If I was back home I would be in hibernation mode – sometimes, when the weather is real bad, I don’t leave the house for three or four days. So I’m happy to be here in Jamaica! The windows are all open, the birds are singing and I can hear children playing in the yard next door. And we have another two months here

    We’ve noticed that things have quieted down quite a bit since the big, frenetic lead-up to Christmas and New Year’s. No more loud music coming up from town and the frequency of the ‘advertising cars’ driving through the neighbourhood – the cars with loudspeakers on the roof – has dropped right off. Even the dogs have chilled out. Quieter is better.

    This morning we were walking up Hermitage Road, returning with our daily haul of groceries. I was feeling like a packhorse; sweat on my brow, trudging up an incline, my backpack loaded down and carrying heavy black grocery bags in each hand. We rounded a curve and someone called out, “Hello, Bea!”

    It was a male voice. I glanced in the direction from which it had come. I didn’t see anyone, but we were walking past a small raised clapboard house. It was perched precariously on pinnacles of mortared stones. The windows were slatted, half open. I assumed the man had called from within.

    “Hi!” Bea called, and waved toward the house.
    “All right,” the voice answered.
    “Who’s that?” I asked
    “Mikey,” she replied.
    “Mikey?”
    “Yup, Mikey.”
    “Who’s Mikey?”
    “Oh, he saw me walking alone the other day and he walked with me a bit and asked me if I had a Jamaican boyfriend.”
    “. . . and?” I asked.
    “I told him I was all set.”

    A white woman walking alone in Negril is likely to be approached by a Jamaican man (or a steady stream of them!) and propositioned. They are constantly on the lookout to recruit a ‘sugar momma’ from foreign who will provide them with money and trinkets for their ‘company’. The ideal situation for the man would be to have a virtual harem of several sugar mommas who wire him money throughout the year and bring presents down when they come to visit.

    We have a new friend, Toya. A young Jamaican woman. We’ve had some interesting conversations with her. More later.

    Likkle more . . . .

    This is a new store on the Sav road across from the bus park. They mashed down a big block house that was there before. Check out the parking. The owner is related to the Chiny Man store owner in town.
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    Perfect palm, perfect sky, perfect day - Negril
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    Sometimes I wish I had a better camera for opportunities like this.
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    My Books:

    Walk Good - Sunset Negril - Night Nurse
    Available @ www.amazon.com - search 'Roland Reimer'

  6. #256
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    Re: * * * * * * Sunsets, Rum, Sand and Gizzadas – 97 Days in Negril * * * * * *

    “Hi!” Bea called, and waved toward the house.
    “All right,” the voice answered.
    “Who’s that?” I asked
    “Mikey,” she replied.
    “Mikey?”
    “Yup, Mikey.”
    “Who’s Mikey?”
    “Oh, he saw me walking alone the other day and he walked with me a bit and asked me if I had a Jamaican boyfriend.”
    “. . . and?” I asked.
    “I told him I was all set.”
    Too funny!

  7. #257
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    Re: * * * * * * Sunsets, Rum, Sand and Gizzadas – 97 Days in Negril * * * * * *

    "Sometimes I wish I had a better camera for opportunities like this."

    Everytime you post pictures I wish I was the guy behind the camera taking them, even with your camera :-)
    Last edited by Jamadian; 01-03-2014 at 09:32 PM.

  8. #258
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    Re: * * * * * * Sunsets, Rum, Sand and Gizzadas – 97 Days in Negril * * * * * *

    And the next three post are quotes.....

    "A white woman walking alone in Negril is likely to be approached by a Jamaican man (or a steady stream of them!) and propositioned. They are constantly on the lookout to recruit a ‘sugar momma’ from foreign who will provide them with money and trinkets for their ‘company’. The ideal situation for the man would be to have a virtual harem of several sugar mommas who wire him money throughout the year and bring presents down when they come to visit."


    really???????

    i hadn't noticed this before. Is this why the line is so long at Western Union? Is this why beach boys get territorial when speaking to a white chick?

    Seriously though, I cannot even imagine how some of these dudes do it. Vick's Vapor Rub?


  9. #259
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    Re: * * * * * * Sunsets, Rum, Sand and Gizzadas – 97 Days in Negril * * * * * *

    Quote Originally Posted by booger View Post
    And the next three post are quotes.....

    really???????

    i hadn't noticed this before. Is this why the line is so long at Western Union? Is this why beach boys get territorial when speaking to a white chick?

    Seriously though, I cannot even imagine how some of these dudes do it. Vick's Vapor Rub?

    I know, for people who have visited Negril I'm stating the obvious. But when I'm writing I have a particular reader in mind, and that person knows very little about Negril.

    By the way Booger, your comment in another thread about a 62 year old person in the context of a senior citizen hurt me, bro. Cut me right to the quick

    Vick's Vapor Rub!? I'm speechless!
    My Books:

    Walk Good - Sunset Negril - Night Nurse
    Available @ www.amazon.com - search 'Roland Reimer'

  10. #260
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    Re: * * * * * * Sunsets, Rum, Sand and Gizzadas – 97 Days in Negril * * * * * *

    Lol
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