Woke up to this rainbow
Gleaming outside the window.
This pot of gold at the end of the rainbow is a blue lagoon.
Do you see the very faint double rainbow?
Gleaming outside the window.
This pot of gold at the end of the rainbow is a blue lagoon.
Do you see the very faint double rainbow?
I brought Sutton (my camera) along because since I started the Moments page on my site, I’ve been feeling motivated to photo journal more.
We arrived at the Fagatogo Marketplace a little past 7:30pm. I was surprised at how dim it was in there – most of the overhead lights weren’t working anymore, and they had one big floodlight on the ground that kind of made it feel like a dark busy alley. It gave off a slight ‘black market’ type of vibe.
Really loud music blaring from grainy speakers outside.
Glimpses of bright fabrics through the shadows.
The smell of fried food.
Fresh produce lining the floor on cardboards.
A low hum of chatter – people exchanging cash for goods.
We hadn’t eaten dinner yet so we headed straight for the Filipino food table and got a chicken adobo, rice, and lumpia plate for $4.75! Then purchased a couple of niu for $2 each.
Walked over to the parking lot by DMWR and sat by the Pago Harbor.
We watched the moon come up from behind Mt. Rainmaker. What a sight.
And I swooned at the moonlit ripples in the pitch black ocean.
I like going to First Fridays at the Fagatogo Market.
There are handicrafts to peruse (I bought an intricately handwoven pale for only $10! I plan to wear it on my birthday coming up in a few weeks!), different dishes to try (Filipino food, Mexican food, and Samoan food), and entertainment (usually an array of local church groups or small bands).
I snapped this photo of styrofoam piled up in the trash because it made me kind of sad. We had a styrofoam plate from our dinner that we added to the bin and I kept thinking I should have brought my own tupperware and my zero waste kit. Next time.
The market’s entertainment for the night was a small carefree band with an electronic piano. If you know island jams, you know da kine.
These 3 dancing kids were the real entertainment though. They were so unashamed dancing out there, and made a lot of us laugh.
We left close to 9pm, and offered to drive one of the market vendors – who was a friend of my parents – home to Nu’uuli since we lived nearby. We chatted all the way home.
It was a good night.
like a pig in a blanket
by which I mean he actually hogs all the covers and I wake up shivering.
he’s lucky he’s so cute