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The day began with a hot, flat slog across the bay to Cape Palinuro, but I had faith the wind would start blowing. I’d just had a swim when a swordfish leapt from the water in front of my boat. It kept jumping and I managed to get a video of this amazing creature.
I reached the headland and just sat floating there taking in the coastline. I think it’s easy to become desensitised to the beauty of planet earth. As a children we walk around wide-eyed, looking at the world around us in awe. But somewhere along the way, a tree becomes just a tree, the sea just the sea, a fish just a fish. We give these things names, and then before the brain has a chance to stop, observe, look deeper, it just says ‘that’s a tree’ and moves on.
For me, staying in one place is like looking at a picture, but travelling is like watching a film, and what’s playing on the reel is the beauty of the earth. I’m trying to see the world like a child again, to look at a tree blowing in the wind and appreciate how amazing and beautiful this living thing is. It’s not just visual either – it’s the taste of the sea when it sprays up from my boat, the smell of the dirt baking in the sun, the sound of a moth buzzing in my ear, the sensation of surfing down a wave, of the sun on my skin, sand between my toes. Neither my words or pictures can do it justice, but it’s all just wonderful.
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Downwind did come and the 50kms to Policastro flew by. Mariano, who I met in Gaeta at the sailing regatta last week, met me on the water and we paddled to his club together.
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Mariano is in the Navy and works on Sicily so perhaps we’ll meet for a third time when I get there. We sat in the tranquil shade next to the river and I ate a feast of roast chicken, potatoes, meatballs, bread, watermelon and plums, all cooked by Mariano’s mother. Nothing like home cooking!
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Mariano had to head back to Sicily, but left me with the club as my home and an invitation for dinner at Coco Bongo, where I had a delicious tuna steak and salad. Thank you Mariano, and I hope we meet again.
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Diabetes
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That’s what a my blood sugars look like on low carb – a beautiful flat line in the range of a normal person – 4 to 8 mmol/L. If I do go low, I’ve got such a tiny amount of insulin in my system that it takes only a few grams of glucose to bring me back up. I had a little spike after lunch, but got back on track nicely.
You can see my dexcom sensor failed at around 5pm, it only had 2 days left anyway. I’m not sure why they’re being so unreliable, usually I get the full 10 days out of each sensor. Perhaps the salt water and heat? Anyway, I’ve got 5 sensors left – 50 days worth – so easily enough to get me to August when I’ll resupply at in France at insulin360.
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