Tuesday, November 30, 2010

Blogger's Choice Awards

Aloha friends and family.  I've been spending a fair amount of time researching the best blogs on the internet and came across the Blogger's Choice Awards.  For the Love of Waves started only because I thought it would be a fun way to update loved ones on the progress of the house and our life abroad.  About five months ago, I added the "Feedjit" widget that you see on the right hand side of your screen.  This allows me to see where my visitors come from and how they found the website.  As the content of this site has grown, so has it's placement on search engines.  When I first started out, you couldn't even google "for the love of waves."  Now, it comes up third and I've gotten visitors from India, Israel, Peru, and Portugal.  For the Love of Waves has gotten over four thousand hits and has generated about $70 using Google Adsense.  I'm asking my readers to take a second to sign into   http://bloggerschoiceawards.com/users/signup and vote for this site as the Best Travel Blog of 2010.  The higher up on the voting list we get, the more hits the blog will receive.  I appreciate everyone's support and have truly enjoyed my first blogging venture.  For the Love of Waves continues .... and I've been brainstorming a new project.  Stay tuned.

Wednesday, November 3, 2010

Mahalo Nui, Andy Irons

Since we left our best boards in Nicaragua, the first order of business was to make enough money for each of us to buy a stick for this winter in Hawaii.  That didn't take too long and here's what we got:



Ian got a sick Tractor board shaped coincidentally, for Andy Irons (yesterday was his passing - RIP Andy - what a truly devastating blow to the islands of Hawaii and the entire international surfing community.)  I got a JC.  Ian is madly in love with his new board and I'm getting used to the thinness of the nose on mine, but am loving the ease of duck-diving.  Unfortunately, neither of us are getting in the water as much as we'd like but I suppose that's the trade-off with work and also, the commute to waves.  

This project has made us feel like we brought a little piece of Nicaragua home with us.  Ian built a raised planter box a couple of weeks ago, and we've planted an array of herbs, vegetables, and strawberries.  Everything is doing really well, especially the tomatoes, the jalapeños and the manoa lettuce.  It's fun to check the daily progress of our plants.  The Hawaiian chili plant was struggling initially, but has somehow managed to pull through.  Bless this state and it's year-round growing season.  




And here are a couple of throw back pictures from our last couple of weeks in Nicaragua.  Jaime was visiting from Maui and convinced me to get on a horse, after the fin of her board gashed open her arm and put her out of the water for her last few days in town.  I'm glad I did because it was a blast.  Puna followed us the whole length of the beach, keeping an appropriate distance and I managed to get my old girl Canelo, moving at a jockey's pace.  What a beautiful sunset we got too.  



And that's that.  More to come.  The circus is arriving to the North Shore and the Rip Curl Pro starts this week.