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We found out from one of the women in orange, that there was no longer a shuttle bus service from the airport to Old San Juan. She asked where we wanted to go and then wrote out a voucher, one copy to go to the taxi driver and the other for us to keep. "Do you speak
Espanole?" the driver asked after pulling away from the curb.
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surroundings did not look familiar. Since we had not personally been
here before, the images we recalled were from the internet. "Hotel two
doors down," he pointed. Perhaps we were seeing the side of the
building. We got out and paid the driver, all the time holding up
traffic behind the van. Two doors down there was a door to a hotel but no sign with its name. "El Convento Hotel," the receptionist advised us. This is not where we were supposed to be. She gave us directions to the Howard Johnson and we set out walking. The first blast we had of San Juan’s hot humid air at the airport repeated itself as we stepped out of the air-conditioned lobby and began our walk. Immediately we were thankful for the opportunity to walk the streets of Old San Juan as we passed beneath lights which cast dim shadows upon pastel-coloured buildings punctuated with outreaching balconies. We reached the Howard Johnson far too fast and looked forward to putting our things in the room and heading back out as quickly as possible ... even though we were tired after 13 hours of travel and the time nearly 22:00 local. |
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A downpour of rain came quickly and caused waiters to grab seat cushions from the stools at the open air bar. In a few minutes the rain was gone leaving only puddles and muggy air as a reminder of its passing. We knew it was time to get some sleep. Our introduction to the Caribbean had us excited about getting up early. |
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| At one end of Plaza de Armas
there is a bandstand. Pigeons ... lots of pigeons ... were roosting on
the roof, floor and railings; others were pecking for breakfast between
the square’s cobblestones. At the other end of the otherwise quiet square is a round coffee kiosk with tables and chairs scattered out front. They were doing a steady business supplying coffee ‘to-go’ to cell phone toting customers. Everyone we saw seemed to have a cell phone in use ... everyone except the fellow who had arrived to power wash the square starting at the coffeehouse and working towards the pigeons. |
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As with most Spanish colonial
development in the New World, planners used the Spanish model of streets
radiating from a central square or the plaza of the mayor. Being the
capital, Old San Juan had several plazas. We caught a free
hop-on-hop-off tourist trolley to make a round trip of the old city and
get our bearings. We soon realized the tourist trolley was also used by
locals commuting to home, work, markets and their favourite bars. One
friendly, local character boarded the trolley near La Perla. La Perla is a narrow stretch of slum which sits between the old city walls and the rocky ocean shore. In the 19th century graveyards and slaughter houses were not permitted within the city walls so soon workers and farmers and their families built homes next to them. Today in its oceanside location, where most cities find their highest priced real estate, San Juan’s La Perla is home to illegal drug trade and criminals ... activities which also infest the old cemetery next to it. We heeded the warnings about daylight and nighttime muggings in both places. Instead we watched as two girls bounded up the stairs, as they might from any other neighbourhood. |
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| We walked
up to Castillo de San Cristobal; Puerto Rico’s largest fort. It was
completed in the 1780s to guard the only land access to Old San Juan.
This massive structure covers 27 acres and is part of a system of
fortifications which enclosed the city. The same trade winds which
Columbus used to discover the New World led Spanish vessels to the safe
harbour of Puerto Rico and the island became the "key to the Indies".
Today, along with El Morro, it is a United Nations World Heritage Site. It’s nice to be driven around but it is even nicer to walk the narrow pastel-coloured streets of Old San Juan and stop into Tio Danny for a light lunch. |
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| We could hear music and sporadic cheering. There were police at every street corner. People were heading uphill towards the noise. We stopped to ask an officer what was happening; he shrugged his shoulders, so uphill we went to the bandstand end of Plaza de Armas. |
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| Finally the focus of the rally, the candidates, arrived on the cab of a truck. Speeches were accentuated with upbeat music, then patriotic singing; deafening rumba music and more patriotic singing. When the speeches were finished, candidates moved to street level where they shook hands, hugged supporters and stood for photo opportunities. To be amongst such political passion was stirring. |
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| We had
promised Roman that we would return to the bar at Barrachina’s for a
Pina Colada; and we like to keep our promises. Roman wasn’t on duty; behind the bar was 26 year old Luis. We asked about the invention of the Pina Colada and Luis told us how, in 1963, the head bartender at Barrachina concocted the first Pina Colada. "There is a plaque outside," a waiter interjected. The actual genesis of this delicious rum, coconut cream and pineapple drink is disputed; but there is no disputing that the drink Luis made for us was most delicious. |
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| Conversation turned from drink creations to the main topic of discussion these days - the US presidential election with contenders Obama and McCain. Then the topic naturally turned to the likelihood of Puerto Rico becoming the 51st state. Luis was very candid giving us a well balanced picture of the pros and cons of San Juan exercising such an option. He told us that one of the men we had seen earlier was running for mayor of San Juan ... a position which is often followed by a trip to the Governor’s mansion. The incumbent mayor favours becoming a state, while his challenger feels keeping the status quo is in the best interest of Puerto Rico. A vote for one or the other would indicate the feelings of San Juan’s population. Feelings Luis felt would be evenly divided. |
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| We came back to our cool air-conditioned room tired and happy. Tomorrow we would move on to the islands of St Thomas and St John in the US Virgin Islands. |
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and
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