Tags: jimmy buffett

Bahamas Art - Tooloose


Joe
01st July 2006

Keep your eyes open for a new blog coming soon to Big Blog Media focused on a creative dynamo, known in local circles as Tooloose.
dog house of blues

Whether it's a story, a song, a painting, or a stage set, Tooloose does it all.


His incredible talents turn paper and canvas into works of what I like to call Artoons. Tooloose plays in a band in Nassau and was nearly almost famous in his role as Norman Paperman in Jimmy Buffett's stage version of Herman Wouk's Don't Stop the Carnival.


Most people with an outside dog would be satisfied with any type of old covering for the animal to use when it rains. But not Tooloose. He created this for his dog:





It should be fun, so get ready!


Add to Google
Technorati tags: artbahamasbahamian artisland artjimmy buffettnassau
Flickr tags: artbahamasbahamian artisland artjimmy buffettnassau

A MacDuff’s Kind o’ Mornin’


Joe
22nd April 2006

It’s morning at MacDuff’s. Yes, we made it, finally. I’m having my coffee on the patio of the bungalow we’re staying in, while Little Miss Magic (as I affectionately call my 3-year-old daughter) plays with her bucket and shovels on the beach. The others are still sleeping.


Thanks to Captain Paul and his Piper Aztec 6-seater, we out-maneuvered several threatening squall lines, ducked under a few angry-looking rain clouds, and generally negotiated with Mother Nature for the 20-minute flight from Nassau to Norman’s.


However, the white knuckles and weather anxiety of the past few days seem like a nearly-forgotten nightmare right now, as I listen to the unbroken melody of ocean waves gently crashing onto the beach, and watch a sailboat make its way along the blue horizon.


Again, in the words of Jimmy Buffett:


And if it doesn’t work out,
There’ll never be any doubt,

That the pleasure was worth all the pain
(from The Weather Is Here)


Little Miss Magic began making new friends as soon as we arrived. Her new constant companion is Salt Salt, a 6-month-old yellow Labrador, who lives on the island. Their budding friendship seems unaffected by Salt’s habit of snatching up several of Magic’s plastic toys in her mouth and bounding away down the beach.


But Salt is not the only canine resident of MacDuff’s. She has a companion in the form of a graying Chihauhau pepper 2 about the size of an average hood ornament. In what should come as no surprise to anyone except those who have had an imagination lobotomy, Salt’s doggy companion’s name is . . . . (drum roll please) . . . “Pepper”!


Pepper’s modus operandi involves curling up into a tiny ball at night amid the folds of comforter on the bed, until the rumblings of her stomach prompt her to seek the kitchen. She has no use for human time, and scoffs at the notion of “morning” as a valid concept. She’s been known to defend her territory by ferociously yapping at shadows, anyone who happens to be in front of her, and passing clouds.


Salt, on the other hand, bolts to our door the moment the first shaft of light hits the window. She greets us with an expectant slobberyness, while knocking glasses off the coffee table with her manic tail-wagging, and stepping on everyone’s toes with her oversized paws. She loves everyone at first sight and without prejudice. Her unbridled enthusiasm never wanes.


Humans could learn something from Salt.


Add to Google
Technorati tags: bahamasjimmy buffettmacduff'snormans cayweather is here

Still Waiting, and Working Hard


Joe
13th April 2006

If you’re reading this and have been keeping an eye on this blog, you will quickly realize that the weather has, indeed, kept me grounded in Nassau for the time being.


While I wait for the wind and white caps to subside, I'm reminded of Jimmy Buffett's song, Trying to Reason With Hurricane Season (from the album, AIA):


Well, the wind is blowin' harder now
Fifty knots or there abouts,

There's white caps on the ocean.
And I'm watching for water spouts

It's time to close the shutters
It's time to go inside.

In a week I'll be in gay Paris;

That's a mighty long airplane ride.



Other than the Paris part, and the fact that it's not hurricane season yet (June-Nov), and wind speeds of about 25 knots, not 50, the lyrics are very appropriate. Hard at work 2


I was hoping to bring you beautiful scenes of idyllic Norman’s Cay, complete with scenes of hammocks, gently swaying palm trees, brilliant white sand beaches, and crystal clear waters. Sadly, I’m forced to bring you this:


Keep your eyes peeled on this spot in the next few days, though. I’m bound to get to Norman’s eventually.

x


Add to Google