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Welcome to my adventures. Happy reading!

We ventured from Porto to the Vino Verde wine region, and stayed a few nights at this beautiful winery.  The sky isn’t smoky, it’s from sands from Africa!  This rose wine spritz with gin was a nice way to end the day, capped with a GF steak sandwich, and a fabulous salad.  Our room is affectionately known as The Shed, and is a free-standing structure a short walk from the main lodge and dining area/winery.  It’s a two-story room that has a private balcony, outdoor patio, and a living room/ kitchenette.  It’s a welcome respite from the bustling cities of Lisbon, Sintra, and Porto.  And a nice way to end the drive from Porto today.

I cannot describe the magnitude of the pyramids and the scale when seeing them up-close, and climbing around inside of them.  I know Kayla was as much in awe as I was.  Our guide picked us up from the Ritz in Cairo, drove us to the pyramids and then to see the Great Sphinx.  He made sure to capture many great photos of us, some silly… but all worth it.  We saw the highlights of the area and understood the important history behind these structures since we had such a great guide.  Perhaps heeled sandals weren’t the best idea for walking around in the desert but they sure looked cute with the dress!  It didn’t stop me from crawling around inside the pyramid and traversing some sketchy metal wire stairs.  We had a lovely late lunch at a local restaurant before heading back to our hotel.  

Multi-Group Winning & Placing, Veteran BIS, Multi-BIF, Norwegian CH, AKC GCHB DC Mia Bakhu Risky Business of Hallam, RN, MC, LCX3, LCM2, V-FCh, CGC, CA, HIC, GRC, VCX, ROM
How do I commemorate a dog that gave me the world?  13 years, 3 months, and 1 day – it doesn’t seem like long enough and we just weren’t ready to lose him.  My mind still hasn’t come to terms that he’s gone.   I’m grateful for the time we had and all our adventures, snuggles, and endless love between that dash.
The Caymanator, K-man, Cay-monster, Caymie, our handsome boy.  He lived life on his terms and we were lucky enough to be his people.
I didn’t plan on getting Cayman, he was gifted to me by Robert Newman and Pam Haig.   And if you know them, you don’t say no…although I tried.  From the moment I met him, I knew he was special.  I flew him home from Knoxville, and Matt was instantly smitten (he didn’t want another PH!)  Their bond was palpable: he was Matt’s favorite and Caymie adored him beyond measure.  He spent many hours willing watching golf with Matt.  
For about 9 months, Cayman could do a perfect show stack but offered no other behaviors.  Then daycare showed him a treat he deemed worthy, and he demonstrated his many tricks.  He was so smart.  He attended daycare until he was almost 3, despite being intact.  He played so nicely with all the dogs, and loved the water slide.  
He could open drawers and doors, which meant puppyhood was filled with chewed socks, the left heel of all my black sandals, and my mother in law’s Danskos.  He slept on the bed, nestled in his spot, from the time I brought him home.  I thought he was opening the kennel on his own, only to find out Matt was taking him out so he could sleep on the bed.  
He was a consummate counter surfer that rivaled my Weims – even managing to nab our neighbors foot long meatball sub when the painter accidentally left our gate open.  He loved to short sheet beds and toss couch pillows on the floor.   
Together, we traveled to 49 states and 6 countries… showing and coursing along the way.  He never met a stranger.  He had so many wonderful doggie friends, including Karma the Vizsla and Blueberry the Ibizan whom he traveled with often.  He loved everyone, especially kids.  He comforted people and children as a therapy dog and brought so much joy.  
Caymie was destined to be a show dog, earning his first of many group placements at 6 months of age after going BOB over specials.  He had a phenomenal show career, with his first year as a special with Trent Wilkinson and his second year with Brian Livingston.   He won veteran dog at many specialities, most recently in April of this year.  He was handled by many of my friends over the years, recently Lynn Miller piloted him to BOB, and his last time in the ring was with Heather Bakko.  
My favorite win was Robert handling him to veteran dog and the Final Cut in 2018 at the national in Kentucky, reprising their role from the 2011 national where Robert handled Cayman to his championship – he loved his grandpa and always gave him the biggest smile.   He won stud dog countless times at the specialties, and veteran dog/best veteran.   He barely had any gray hair.   My proudest moment was his veteran Best in Show, although the one time he deigned to take an obstacle in agility at a national was a close second.  Showing has never been my thing, yet Cayman made it fun and he’d drag you to the ring, eager to strut his stuff.  Every time I piloted him in the veteran ring, I’d tear up – he loved the applause and his admirers, but he loved that spin around the ring evermore.
The coursing field is where Cayman shined!  He was a natural and completely insane for the plastic bunny.  He set many coursing records and remains the only Pharaoh to be #1 AKC & ASFA in the same year.  He held ASFA #1 for 3 years in a row, only to be bested by his son.  He retired as #14 on the ASFA Lifetime Top 20.  He loved to chase that bag, and his zeal for coursing meant he didn’t want to let go of the bunny once he caught it!  I often had to bite his tail to get him to release it.  

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 The one time I stupidly stood in his way of his prey, he broke my leg. I proudly bear the line burn scars from his enthusiasm.  Always up for a car ride, Caymie enjoyed tagging along with his “brothers” for their coursing adventures as he got older, and he’s still bark at the bag.  We let him chase the slow bunny, and he’d rip that bag to shreds.   
At one national, at Lake Matthews in California, I entered him in the triathlon which meant we got to grace the Beginner Novice obedience ring.   Never mind that it was outside – he nailed it, until the off leash heel… which he promptly bolted over the ring gate, down the hill, and into the lake to chase the ducks.  While he could complete the exercises, it was on his terms!  Which meant if it wasn’t fun, he was out.  
On one of our many adventures, Cayman and I hitchhiked in Sweden to get a rental car.  We drove all around the countryside, into Stockholm, and then toured some museums.  I’m sure he’s the star of many tourist’s photos.  
Cayman’s accomplishments and shenanigans aside, he loved Matt best.  He’d cry for Matt to take him on walks every single day at 11am, and Matt would oblige.  
I’ll miss his tap dance for walks, foot stomp for cookies, and head butts into my chest for snuggles.  Cayman groans were unbeatable.  And I swear I can still hear them.  
He went out on his own terms, snuggled with Matt.  I cannot believe my best boy is gone.  He was my first group placing, first group winner, first LCX, first top ranked in conformation, and first number one coursing dog.  His legacy lives on in his 17 kids and 36 (and counting!) grandkids.  I’m lucky to share my home with 2 sons and 1 grandson.  Rest well handsome.  Love you forever and thank you for one amazing ride.

Here it is, the end of 2015, and I have not made any progress towards by #60by50 goal (60 unique countries by the time I’m 50 years old.)  

But, I did reach my goal of visiting all 50 States!  Yay!  

While I have significant progress towards the #60by50, I missed an entire year of international traveling.  So, I have to buckle down and focus on making a dent in some international destinations for 2016.  Remember, slow and steady wins the race.  I have started my vision board list with this goal: visit 3 countries that I have not been to in 2016.  That is the GOAL.  I will not miss on this.  Utter commitment.  

Where do I start?  I have my list of all the places I want to see, ranked in order.  But now what?

Here’s what I did:

  •  Subscribe to e-newsletters/email lists:

– TravelZoo – offers weekly Top 20 travel deals

ProTip: Do Not subscribe to too many – you will be overwhelmed with information and cannot make a choice.   Notice, I only listed one – the one I subscribed to – choose wisely.  Most of these are FREE – some have premium options that require payment.  Before you commit to paying, be sure you find the content valuable.  Also, create a folder in your email, and send these emails there (use a filter,) so that your inbox isn’t cluttered. 

  •  Follow these pages on Facebook (Instagram was not in my plan, yet.)

 – An Airline – because they often post their deals on Facebook before you                     will get an email about it! Choose one (or two or three) that service your closest airport.  I chose Air New Zealand, lucky break – read on!

 – The Points Guy – he offers tips about how to maximize your airline miles, hotel points, etc.  He often shares offers and travel deals as well.  

ProTip: Do Not follow too many – unless you want your feed to be bogged down and then you get sidetracked, and then… oh, I don’t know what I am saying, there’s great deals on Facebook.  

  •  Joined these groups on Facebook

– Just Get Out of Denver – in the likely event you don’t live where I do, there are usually other groups in your area – search Facebook for your city.

 – Groups specific to my interests – I am not going to list these here, as some are private and some are about solo travel, which is not for everyone (and the subject of a future post.)  If you like birdwatching and travel, there’s a group for that.  If you like cruises, Disney, cooking, scuba diving, eco-adventures – there are groups out there for you to follow.  You can be inspired in these groups, or find information on how to travel for your interests.  

Now, I am being fed information about what I want to do – travel internationally.  And, I did not have to spend hours on the internet, scouring “deal” sites, nor did I have to chance it with a travel agent.  I am not against travel agents, if that’s what you want to do, cool – you do you. I like to research and plan my own travel, at my own pace.  More on that later.  

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