City tour

October 5th, 2025
At the sea wall

We joined a few folks from the embassy yesterday for a guided city tour – it was a lot of fun to get out and see different things around the city and afterwards we had lunch together at a good spot. We stopped along the sea wall to look out over the ocean with the blue, blue sky.

Manatee

Our first stop was to the city park where we fed the manatees. They are in ponds in the park because they were injured and rehabilitated; apparently there are 13 of them there and they love to eat the grass we fed them! We also stopped at a couple of museums – I was fascinated with a collection of skeletons at the National Museum, including this one:

Two-toed sloth

I enjoyed seeing all of the old British Colonial architecture around town. Many of them have these wedge-shaped shutters with ledges for holding ice back in the day. The porch at the anthropology museum on the second floor was lovely and breezy due to the shutters and openings below the windows, as well.

Window ledge for holding ice

Here are a few other photos:

U.S. Embassy, built in early 90s in the colonial style (yellow building)
Cows lounging in a park near a busy road (we regularly get small herds in our neighborhood)
Old lighthouse (when the Marriott Hotel was built, their building blocked the view of the lighthouse, so now there’s a lighthouse on top of the hotel)
Cool tree in the city park

Monday night, John and I went to the Amer-Indian Heritage Dinner in honor of the indigenous people of Guyana. We had traditional food and had some entertainment- it was fun!

The rest of the week was normal – walked early in the day around the neighborhood and spotted a few new birds, did some yoga with YouTube, and worked on administrative stuff. We had a kitchen and pool inspection by the embassy (since the house is designated for representational events). I had a good chat with Lea and Rachel S last Sunday, and Cathy Mc called me later in the week to catch up. I finished Kamala’s book “107 Days.”

I should say the week was normal for me — but it is not normal for John or my Foreign Service friends since the federal government shut down! John is working without pay, as is the majority of his American staff. Friends around the world are in various states of working or furloughed (or fired in July). John had to cancel two fun representational events since he can’t do things like that during a shutdown. Here’s hoping things get back to some semblance of normal soon, and federal workers can get paid for the good and important work they do.

Malling

September 28th, 2025

John and I hired a driver yesterday to run a few errands. There are two malls not far from the house, so we went to buy a new mattress (we gave our old one to the movers in Buenos Aires) and I needed to pay my cell phone bill (no option for online payment). At both places, the customer service folks were super-nice but the credit card machines were all down, so we had to make a return trip to Mall #1 after lunch at Mall #2 to pay for everything. We were ultimately successful so the outing felt like a win! We treated ourselves to a good hamburger for lunch.

This week I’ve been doing homework for a “consumables” shipment — because things are so expensive here and/or hard to get, we can have a certain number of pounds of pantry items to be shipped as a separate allowance. I’ve been browsing online at Sam’s Club and Walmart to see what I can put together for a shipment this fall.

John and I are also doing some vacation planning for the spring — let me know if you have any tried and true recommendations, especially anything involving wildlife. Top on our list is a river cruise on the Amazon but we’d love to hear other suggestions.

I finished Jeff Hiller’s “Actress of a Certain Age,” as well as Lauren Groff’s “Fates and Furies.” (I didn’t enjoy it nearly as much as her “Matrix.”) I started reading Kamala Harris’s “107 Days.”

A little social

September 21st, 2025

I was a little social this week, starting with dinner out with John’s colleague Chris and his wife Mariella. We went to a nice Italian restaurant on the top floor of a building (around eight stories). There was a big party going on in the outdoor section with lots of very dressed up folks – when we asked the waitress what the occasion was, she said they had come for brunch and just stayed!

Yesterday I went to a morning get-together for EFMs (i.e., spouses). It was fun to meet some new folks. I rode with neighbor Katline and another EFM Annabellee; on the way home we made a quick stop by the Mon Repos market, then did some grocery shopping. This was the first time I’ve gone to a market here. It was like those I’ve seen in a lot of other countries, with a mix of fruits, vegetables, clothes, household goods, etc – plus a big does of raw or smoked meats, including whole ducks and sides of pork, as well as live animals waiting to be slaughtered.

This week I finished reading “Matrix,” by Lauren Groff. Although I didn’t think it was a topic that interested me (a twelfth-century nunnery), I found it oddly good. I’m almost finished tearing through Jeff Hiller’s “An Actress of a Certain Age,” which I am thoroughly enjoying. I loved him in “Somebody Somewhere” (I think he just won an Emmy for it). It’s an easy read that has make me laugh out laugh and tear up a bit, too. I was excited enough when it came into my Libby queue that I set a re-reading of Groff’s “Fates and Furies” aside for it.

John and I are continuing to enjoy the new “Lynley” as well as the older “Inspector Lynley” series, as well as “Unforgotten.”

Administrivia

September 14th, 2025
Corn Moon

The full moon this week was gorgeous. Although you can’t see it much in this photo, it was a reddish hue and just huge. The photo above shows the big field that is the center of our small neighborhood – it’s my walking track each morning. The house in the photo has four small kittens – I had seen two of them before on my walks, but on Friday, the mother paraded all four over to a neighbor’s house so I got to see them all.

I had a fun catch-up call with Lea last Sunday but otherwise it was a quiet week. Our new housekeeper started work so that freed me up to do a lot of administrative things I haven’t had time or energy to do. I also finished reading Hampton Side’s “The Wild, Wild Sea” about Captain Cook’s last voyage – it was fascinating. It really made me want to go back to the Pacific Northwest and Hawaii!

National elections

September 7th, 2025

The big news this week was the national elections here in Guyana. Everyone was happy that, at least so far, there have not been any protests, riots, etc. The incumbent won again, and the inauguration was held today.

For me, it was a quiet week. Due to the elections, no one planned anything in case things went south. In addition, Monday was a holiday (for voting) and also Friday (Mohammed’s birthday). Despite the holidays, John was busy with work while I was happy to stay home and watch more tennis. Last Sunday I had a fun video chat with Lea and Rachel S., and Friday I had a nice long conversation with Mellisa, a consular officer, when she came to use the pool.

John and I watched “Thursday Murder Club,” “Anatomy of a Scandal,” and “Highest 2 Lowest,” the remake of the old Japanese “High and Low.” We really enjoyed Spike Lee’s version! I finished reading the amazing “The Lion Women of Tehran” by Marjan Kamali and started “The Wide, Wide Sea” about Captain Cook’s last voyage.

John and I have been enjoying the pool! It’s lovely!