gopherit
I'm not in the book, you know.
- Joined
- Sep 21, 2003
- Messages
- 1,327
Laurabearz said:We wanted to do the Pirates of Calibougue but I forgot to sign us up yesterday and at 8 am this morning it was all full with 8 families on the waiting list. The PoC is a treasure hunt run by B'Lou. Your family (all decked out in pirate gear) must follow clues around the resort to find the treasure! It is a must for next year....
Once again I would like to remind everyone to bring bug spray AND afterbite stuff. The bugs are wicked.
The bikes have NO hand brakes. I find this quite distrurbing and I am tottally freaked out every time I ride them! LOL I plan on locating a rental company that offers hand breaks for next year.
We havent, and wont attempt riding to the beach this trip. The girls barely made it back from the harbour ice cream trip, so the beach house is out. They might make it there, but they would never make it back, and quite frankly I dont want to hear them gripe about it. LOL
That's the report from Hilton Head this evening!
Is the Pirates of the Calibogue only offered on certain day ofthe week (Wed?)
Wonder if those new t-shirts that are bug repellent (LLBean) would work down there -- of course, you would still have the REST of your exposed self to worry about, lol... Is there a particular repellent you think works best? WHat about on the kids? We use some of the cutter and "off" brands out on the soccer fields in the fall when the biters are bad... THe "Skin SO Soft" just doesn't seem too work for us, either as the regular lotion or as the intentionally bug-repellent spray. Maybe bugs have grown immune to it -- I recall a study by Consumer Reports wherein they showed the lotion itself didn't really have "repellent powers" per se... it was the year after that Avon marketed the "bug Repellent Skin So Soft" stuff with extra repellent additives thrown in.
As for bikes -- what did you end up getting? We are hoping to get two kid bikes for the boys (10 and 9, pretty good riders) two adult bikes, and have one of the adult bikes fitted with the "tag-along" someone on these boards mentioned for dd (5).
And as for bike brakes -- you may be stuck. Hand brakes require a braking cable, which is a metal cable inside a plastic sheath... which, for bikes left outside in the salt air and sandy conditions, won't last long before they are locked tight with rust and such! I know my brother was forever replacing his brakes cables every year after a trip to the beach (that, and his wheel bearings -- rust and salty-sandy-crud-o-rama.) Maybe technology has advanced to create a "seasiders cable" (or even just slather the metal cable with a heavy layer of protective lubricant or grease...) The coaster-brakes are no doubt easier for bike rental places to maintain, I'd say.... but you're right, it does take getting used to... the phrase "Easy as riding a bike" never applied to the brake system I guess!
<a href='http://www.smileycentral.com/?partner=ZSzeb008_ZSzeb04242US' target='_blank'><img src='http://smileys.smileycentral.com/cat/7/7_9_5.gif' alt='Bike Riding' border=0></a>
THanks so much for your reports! BTW -- during what hours of the day does the lodge have cookies and lemonade?
I am starting to get a bit concerned here -- sounds like there is TOO MUCH TO DO at HHI! I was hoping for a relaxing week at the beach (a REAL beach, too -- I'm from S.C. originally and those tar-ball laden boardwalk-busy rocky churny narrow strips of shoreline my DH affectionately calls a "beach" up north are just NOT the same by my definition!

<a href='http://www.smileycentral.com/?partner=ZSzeb008_ZSzeb04242US' target='_blank'><img src='http://smileys.smileycentral.com/cat/28/28_1_15.gif' alt='Children Playing' border=0></a><a href='http://www.smileycentral.com/?partner=ZSzeb008_ZSzeb04242US' target='_blank'><img src='http://smileys.smileycentral.com/cat/28/28_1_16.gif' alt='Sandy Beach' border=0></a>