I've already explained the significance of the knitting of these socks:


Right here:

On the the trunk of a palm tree (sorry, no handknit bikinis):

Here in the shade, while being served up fresh from the tree (the ground, actually) coconut by C, the resident expert with a machete (this picture of your handsome, sweet son is for you GB!):


while watching these boys happily playing in the surf:

These socks kept my toes warm and toasty on the chilly night we spent in the Newark Airport last week. I could never have known over a year ago that I'd be finishing these off, weaving in the ends, so close to where the yarn was sent from by Cassie in the Unloved Sock Yarn Swap. This sock yarn is now well loved by my two feet, and the pattern is beautiful to boot. (No pun intended. Really!) It's the Uptown Boot Sock from the Winter 2003 Interweave Knits, now also published in this book.
Other serendipitous happenings in Panama:
*** Finding ourselves staying in a cabin next to the two who wrote the book on cordwood masonry (which has a place on a shelf in our home, thoroughly read and thickly highlighted in the years before we built our house) and many others on alternative building techniques, and spending a couple of great days snorkeling with them.
*** Meeting up with some people C had met briefly during his and R's trip in September, partly so that our kids could get together and play with theirs. They picked us up in town and took us by boat to their aptly named resort, Tranquilo Bay, gave us a tour of the gorgeous grounds, and then took us on from there to the most incredibly beautiful Carribean island with perfect sandy beaches and turquoise blue water. They insisted we didn't need to bring anything along and they provided boogie boards, ocean kayaks, beach chairs, a cooler full of beer and another filled with sandwiches and snacks. Their son and nephew played with our boys for hours on the beach and in the water. We visited and found how they came to be where they are, an amazing story. An extraordinary day. I felt coddled and spoiled.

*** Stepping out of the domestic airport in Panama City (population: over 1 million) on our way home and walking right up to the same taxi driver who picked up C and R there last September.

*** The first time we were in Panama City last year, C and I went out for dinner and found ourselves seated literally back to back at an outdoor table in a restaurant with an old neighbor of ours from 'two doors down' in Montana who had moved away to a town in the mountains of Panama a few years prior. What are the chances?
*** Rifling through our bags at the Newark airport, looking for anything we could find in there to keep us warm. Fortunately, we each had a queen sized sheet packed with us to wrap up into and we had a few towels to lay down to insulate us from the cold floor. Best of all: we overlapped the last couple of days of our trip with a couple of friends from home and before leaving we swapped some of our gear. They took our snorkeling gear and sent us home with a bag of clothes they found that they wouldn't need. I hadn't bothered to look in the bag until that night in the airport. Inside? A polarfleece hoodie! A sweatshirt hoodie! A pair of long pants that fit over the thin pants I was wearing! In other words, enough to swap out between ourselves and the boys to keep warm in.
Maybe there really is something to that Six Degrees of Separaration idea.
L and G, where ever in the world you may be now, if you're out there reading this, we're looking forward to hearing more of your own "quirky" stories from your travels.