While the MV Explorer was docking in San Juan during its Amazon Enrichment Voyage, we took a walk through town.
Music video by Luis Fonsi performing Aqui Estoy Yo. (C) 2009 Universal Music Latino
Highlights from our vacation to San Juan, Puerto Rico August 12th-14th (Right before Hurricane Irene) By: Pozativ ProMotions, LLC 2011
Tony Bourdain in Puerto Rico.
Video Rating: 4 / 5
8mm home video that I acquired on Ebay of a trip to Puerto Rico in 1962. Shows scenes from a local hotel in Puerto Rico and scenes at the San Juan, Puerto Rico International Airport.. No sound.

Now 1600 miles from New York city! Two days of ocean travel was fun, but now it’s just nice to walk on land again. San Juan had a real Spanish feel to it, at least down town where we were. There were lots of street vendors selling things like cigars, jewellery, and ice-cold water (man, it was hot). We climbed up to the old fort and poked around. Both camera batteries died, so we missed some nice shots – like Orion’s purchase of a custom-made T-shirt from a local artist. Sierra got some “fruit art” for her room and a nice necklace. We found a Mexican restaurant on the waterfront and had a few (too many) margaritas and some good chips & salsa. That did it for us – we got back to the ship, did the Jacuzzi thing, and promptly fell asleep. I needed some acetylsalicylic acid the next day!
My wife and I went on an amazing 7 night cruise with family and friends. Our stops were Nassau, Bahamas St. Thomas, USVI San Juan, Puerto Rico and Grand Turk, Grand Turk Islands. It was an incredible time and we can’t wait to go on another one! Music is: Kings and Queens by 30 Seconds to Mars, For your love by Chris Brown, and Waiting by Dash Berlin. I do not own any rights to the music all rights to the artists and record companies.
Video Rating: 5 / 5
Part 2 of Baby $ qwirl and da homies in San Juan, Puerto Rico ridin around and hittin up da klubs
Video Rating: 5 / 5

“Puerto Rico” de Jose Chiquitin Morales. MONCHO LEÑA Y LOS ASES DEL RITMO. RECORDED IN 1958. Don Mon was born in Mayagüez, Puerto Rico (at the Rio Cañas Arriba “barrio” in the outskirts of the city, close to the place Eugenio María de Hostos was born) in 1899, and lived in the working class Barcelona barrio of the city proper. He was a janitor and handyman at the nearby University of Puerto Rico – Mayagüez for more than 40 years, and was well loved by the campus community. Known as “‘Rate” by his closest friends, Don Mon gained a strong reputation as a composer of plenas, a musical genre considered the “musical newspaper of the barrio”. He assembled impromptu plena jams in the neighborhood, which were so widely known that they were preserved for posterity in the documentary film “Plena ” (1956) by Amilcar Tirado (Don Mon appears at the last segment, improvising lyrics). Two of Don Mon’s most famous plenas, “Askarakatiskis” (sometimes referred to as “Karacatis Ki”) and “El Gallo Espuelérico” (loosely translated as “The Spurless Rooster”) were humorous takes on real life events. On the first one Don Mon told the story of Rafael, a gambler who loses all his money rolling dice and is then assaulted by his wife Luz María with a broomstick, while their daughters laugh the incident off (one of the girls’ laughter is the basis for the song’s name). “El Gallo Espuelérico” tells the story of Américo, a guy who brags boastfully about a gamecock he carried with him to a fight. The …
What an awesome time my family and I had in San Juan and vicinity during Christmas 2009. Highlights of our visit included Old San Juan, the El Yunque Rain Forest, Culebra Island and the Bacardi Rum Factory. We stayed at the La Concha Renaissance Resort and really liked it. The waves at the beach were great for body surfing and regular surfing too. The end of this piece has a montage of various birds I photographed on Puerto Rico and Culebra.
On this gorgeous Saturday (no rain, finally) we took coastal highway 165 into San Juan from Dorado, a beautiful drive along the waterfront without any traffic whatsoever. We first explored a little stretch of land called “Isla de Cabras” (Goats Island) which is a tiny island strategically located at the entrance of San Juan Bay. Its historically significant position is evidenced by a fortification called “El Cañuelo” which is not accessible to visitors. The island was even used as a leper colony in the late 1800s. From there we drove back past the main power station and the Bacardi Rum factory to the Ferry Terminal in Cataño where we took a ferry across the bay into Old San Juan. I rediscovered many of the places I had already visited earlier, including the fortress San Felipe del Morro and the adjacent San Juan Cemetery. I was enchanted by the narrow, cobble-stoned streets with their brightly coloured stuccoed houses. In the courtyard of the historic building “El Cuartel de Ballaja” I came across a major festival for guitarists who play the local “cuarto” guitar, and two teenage boys played a little Spanish song for me on this unique instrument. I even caught images of a local wedding right in front of the Cathedral of San Juan. At dusk the Christmas lights on the Plaza de Armas and along the Calle Fortaleza came to life. As the sun was going down I positioned myself on the Plaza de la Rogativa to catch the sunset and then walked through the Puerta de San Juan for a …
Video Rating: 4 / 5
Our last few hours in Puerto Rico had arrived. We left Dorado and took coastal Highway 165 again for a pleasant stress-free drive into San Juan. We had just about two hours before we had to return our vehicle at the airport and decided to visit another couple of areas in San Juan that we had not seen before. We drove through an area called “El Condado” which is a busy ocean-front community with many high-rise hotels, somewhat reminiscent of Fort Lauderdale or Miami Beach. We then drove further east to another San Juan district called “Isla Verde”, a beachfront suburb that also features many condominiums and some highrise hotels. After returning our rental car we were ready to check in our luggage when the US Airways representative informed us that our flight to Philadelphia was cancelled due to the winter storm that had been blanketing the northeastern US and Canada. Fortunately he found a flight to Charlotte, NC, that would connect us with our destination of Buffalo after all. We had to race to the plane as everybody was already boarding. We finally arrived at about 10:30 pm in Buffalo, and not surprisingly were greeted by a continuing snowfall. Our car was buried under several inches of snow and after finally finding a gas station in Buffalo we crossed the border into Ontario at midnight. Having arrived at 2 am in our driveway in Toronto, we couldn’t even get our vehicle into our driveway because the snow was so deep.
This is for all my fellow Puerto Ricans, but especially for my Dad, Harold Calderon. Happy 39th B-day!
I started the morning off early with a walk through the extensive grounds of the Embassy Suites / Golden Sands resort in Dorado, and around mid-day we made our way into the Puerto Rican capital — San Juan. Old San Juan is a beautifully restored colonial city and was founded in 1521. We parked our vehicle close to the Puerto Rican Capitol and started walking west towards Old San Juan past Plaza Colon which features a statue of Christopher Columbus. After my initial explorations of the popular shopping street Calle Fortaleza I discovered the Governor’s Mansion (la Fortaleza) where two local policemen enlightened me about the significance of this building. Then I came across the Parque de las Palomas where hundreds of pigeons swarm the tourists who feed them. Walking north I explored the Atlantic waterfront, the Old San Juan Cemetery and one of San Juan’s most imposing fortifications: Fort San Felipe del Morro, begun in 1539, which today is a UNESCO World Heritage Site. I even hopped on the free open-air tourist trolley to get a more comprehensive view of Old San Juan and caught a nice sunset, looking south over the Bay of San Juan.
The most wonderful part of San Juan, Puerto Rico is Old San Juan
Video Rating: 4 / 5
Fuerte San Felipe de El Morro – Discover an array of historical sights and opportunities for natural adventures and quickly conclude that giving up the beaches chaise (at least part of the time) may be a wise move.
Driving around the island gives visitors a taste of Puerto Rico’s exotic beauty, while a visit to Old San Juan reveals how thoroughly the island is steeped in history. A walk through Old San Juan should include a visit to Fuerte San Felipe del Morro, a sixteenth-century citadel which lies on the islet of San Juan. http://www.map-puerto-rico.com/el-morro.html





