enchanted island
kelly | 21 March 2007 - 9:23pm
About now a year ago we were in Puerto Rico, where we spent some time before catching a Caribbean cruise. We explored San Juan, a place I found to be quite charming. Our hotel was located in Old San Juan which is the quaint, historic part of the city. Winding cobblestone streets, 17th century Spanish architecture, forts with an imposing presence, and an old stone wall that still surrounds much of the city are the trademarks of Old San Juan.
What I liked the most about Old San Juan was its many juxtapositions - the colorful houses that began as soon as the drab gray wall of the fort ended, modern architecture mixed with old, and a language that wasn't so much a juxtaposition as a harmonious coexistence of Spanish and English. In front of the San Cristóbal fort is a large field and as we approached we saw that it was filled with people flying kites. To see the kites dancing gracefully in the air above a stalwart stone fort...that was Old San Juan.
Our first night in Puerto Rico we took a kayaking tour in a bioluminescent bay. This remains one of my favorite experiences - not just of the trip, but of all time ever. The tour took us into the bay at night. We hopped into two-person kayaks and made our way silently down a narrow tree-canopy-covered creek that led to the bay. As we got closer, we began to notice faint bioluminescence in the water. Wherever the water was stirred, the micro-organisms reacted to the disturbance by glowing. As I dipped my paddle in, there was a bluish glow, and as I pulled it through the water, a glowing trail followed my paddle's path. This was but a hint of the magic we were about to encounter.
In the bay itself, the entire body of water seemed to faintly glow blue, and a bright blue emerged with every swish. The dart of a fish looked like a shooting star. I leaned over the side of the kayak and wrote my name in the water with my finger - the letters lingered for a moment, as if written in blue ink, before fading away.
We slipped out of the kayak to swim. I laid back, floating, and moved my arms and legs across the water. "Look, Rob," I said. A glowing snow angel.
And when we cupped our hands underwater and then pulled them above the surface, the water we'd contained sparkled as it slid down and around our hands. Each droplet was a white-blue gleam, liquid diamonds that twinkled as they trickled one by one through my fingers.
- 487 reads
Navigation
- topics
- archives
- image gallery
- search


Ok, I officially hate you. I worked for a prof in college who raised colonies of those luminescent organisms and made kits for elementary school teachers. I got to go in the dark room every day and swirl flasks of the amazing creatures. It was one of my best part-time jobs. Ever since then, swimming with them in the ocean has been on my life list. So I don't really hate you. I'm just jealous.
You really have remarkable experiences.
i so wish you had photos! it sounds beautiful.
It really does sound magical. I think I would love to do that someday.
I say 'think' because a part of me is really weirded out and scared of the ocean and the ocean at night is scarier than during the day. But maybe I could just stay in the kayak and write my name with a stick, and I'd be all set. ;-)
Nature can be so amazing.
It's amazing how some experiences, no matter how small or insignificant they may seem, stick with us forever.
Ern, tell me you've swum with dolphins and we'll be even. :)
Yeah, William, we've been fortunate.
Believe me, geeky, I so wish we had photos! But they wouldn't have turned out since it was dark. Not with a crappy camera, anyway. D-Fiddy would have been up for the job, but there was no way we were taking D-Fiddy on a kayak!
I think you'd be fine at this place, Danielle, because since it was in a bay the water was perfectly still. But the dark element would have been a bit creepy except that with what was going on in the water, the dark made everything seem more magical.
Indeed, TKW. And it's nice to have a few that bring an immediate inner peace when you recall them.
I love sparkly things.
God, I sound retarded.
But I do. And this was lovely.
I've always wanted to swim in biolucent water, how cool. I wish you'd taken photos as well.
Nope, never swam with dolphins. So you're still ahead. :)
What a breathtaking post.
You are SUCH a talented writer. I can SEE it!
*jealous*
Beautiful, Kelly. Just... beautiful.
Ah yes. We went to Vieques, PR for our honeymoon and the bio bay was the best. Those tiny points of light sliding over your skin was so amazing!
Gorgeous picture painted with such elegance in your words. I can see every droplet.