Rumors of my abduction by aliens are at least a little
exaggerated. My wife, as most of you know well, is an
...otherworldly... beauty, and on my 62nd birthday she
abducted me for another tropical vacation. Carol's sister Kathy and
our brother-in-law Bob were co-conspirators, and though the
Dominican Republic is a bit of an alien environment (especially for
white-bread boys like me) it was an alien world well worth
visiting.
The east coast of the island is an area called Punta Cana, where
the density of resorts approaches a weird sort of recreational
singularity. We landed at Secrets Royal Beach and stayed there for
a full week. Logistically, the trip was a polar opposite to
our second honeymoon on Grand Cayman back in May: In
the Caymans, we bought our own food, cooked, and kept house on our
own steam in a rented beach condo. At the all-inclusive Secrets,
well, they do pretty much everything except throw you in the pool,
and I'm guessing that could be arranged.
Our phones didn't work. Meh. Ask me if I care. We had to pay
extra for Internet, which we used a lot less than we expected. (My
increasingly cranky Win7 laptop didn't help.) I gained four pounds,
which for one week is close to a personal record. Much of that was
due to the neverending pina coladas, I suspect. What wasn't alcohol
was sugar, and in truth (this being an all-inclusive) there wasn't
a great deal of alcohol in the drinks unless you knew how to ask
for it. (We learned.)
The beach is spectacular. The white sand was like
powder, soft, and for some reason never too hot to walk on, even in
the brutal noonday sun. Some sea grass breaks loose from the bottom
and washes onto the shore, but the beach tenders were constantly
raking it up. The water was upstairs of 85 degrees. The resort has
chairs under the palms and under dozens of hand-thatched tiki huts.
Granted that this is their off-season, we had no trouble getting a
hut when we wanted one.
The Secrets staff were wonderful, with particular mention of
two: Angel and Marianny. Angel (a male waiter whose turf included
our spot on the "lazy river" pool) was hilarious, and kept the
drinks coming. Marianny worked at the beach grill, and she was
gracious enough to help me remember my Spanish across the 41-year
gulf since my last Spanish course. I wanted to say "bee" (abeja)
and almost said "abuela" (grandmother.) Instead, I buzzed. She
laughed, and told me the word. I could not for the life of me
remember the word for "breakfast" (desayuno) and one word that I
could say (conozco) I could not define. (It means "I know."
Heh.)
This was a (mild) problem throughout the week. I was never
entirely sure whether the staff understood my questions, and
therefore whether their answers reflected reality. Boy, I started
wanting a book that would be a sort of second-gen Exam Cram for
stuff you learned long ago and recall unevenly. Anybody want to buy
a series? The first title will be Take Back Your Spanish.
(The second might have been Take Back Your FORTH, but some
things are best left forgotten.)
Americans at the resort were outnumbered (I'd guess 2 to 1) by
Europeans and Canadians, and most of the people we spoke to were
British, Irish, or Russian. I had abundant opportunity to play my
private game of identifying overheard languages. We heard Russian,
Polish, French, and probably Portuguese. Here and there I heard
languages I had no clue about, though I think one was Turkish.
Peculiar cultural gaps kept appearing. A middle-aged British woman
asked me what sort of hat I was wearing (not the hat in the photo
above) and seemed poleaxed by the idea of an indestructable
terrycloth roll-up beach hat that (granted) looks like something
made out of a washcloth. She wanted to know where I got it, but
I've had it for at least 25 years and no longer recall. Another
woman from the UK had never heard of Kaley Cuoco, even though she
was a dead ringer. European women evidently wear bikinis well into
their seventies, a species of courage that I much admire.
Carol and I remarked to one another that we may be the last
people in the Industrialized West without tattoos.
The food was good. We ate most meals at the buffet, which had
its quirks but was generally excellent. We had uneven luck with the
a la carte restaurants. Language again intervened: I ordered a
steak at the resort's French restaurant, and asked for a glass of
red wine. The waiter said there was only white wine. I said ok,
I'll take a glass of white wine. Then he returned with the bottle
and poured me a glass of...red wine. The steak was terrific, and
the mushroom orzo spectacular. The wine was workmanlike, and hey,
however tangled the negotiation, I eventually got what I
wanted.
There are all sorts of things to do there, almost none of which
we did. People hanging from parasails were going by over the beach
constantly. I like kites and brought two, but I don't think I'd
particularly enjoy riding one. You could also get rides on these
little ultralight planes with inflatable pontoons, or, for more
money, rides in real helicopters. The snorkling was not good unless
you went out a lot farther than we wanted to go. (In the Caymans it
was right off the beach.) So we bobbed in the ocean and paddled
around the pool. I got another 150 pages through Richard Ellmann's
ginormous fine-print biography of Oscar Wilde. I now know that
Wilde had a 17-inch neck and a 38 1/2 inch waistline. It's that
kind of biography, and took Ellmann twenty years to write. I hope
to finish reading it in less.
Secrets is "adults-only" (which sounds disreputable but just
means the kids are in the next resort over) but the definition of
"adult" was slippery. There was deafening rappish tech/trance music
and much twentysomething horseplay by the big pool all afternoon
through mid-evening. Every time I turned around I was hearing Aloe
Blacc's technocountry (yes, I just made that up) hit "Wake Me Up
When It's All Over," to the point where I was absently humming it
over dinner. On Canada Day there was a marching band circling
around the pool playing "O Canada," whereas on the Fourth of July
there was a hot dog eating contest and a big machine spraying soap
foam all over the revelers in the pool. What this says about us and
the Canadians (or how other cultures perceive us) is unclear.
All of this is to say that we had a great time doing exactly
what we wanted to (splashing, reading, enjoying the company) and
little of what we didn't want to. The outing cost about a third of
what a week in Hawaii would cost us. The plane ride was five hours,
not eight or nine. It was hot. So? It was winter in Colorado until
fairly recently. Heat still has some novelty value. Overall, I'd
call the experience superb. Once the Polar Vortex starts landing on
you (and it looks like it's already begun in parts of the Midwest)
we suggest getting a couple of tickets on a Frontier starship and
heading to planet Punta Cana. Highly recommended.