Enough!

imageSwamp Jungle, seeking the barkPrunoesque potionScars of the healingIt was a sad rainy morning, neither of us were happy, and our greatest comfort was mocking Wilder and laughing about the crummy situation we've paid to be in. Our list of concerns included but were not limited to, There being no running water in our hut for the last 6 days, having little to no fresh drinking water or food or to eat besides rice and potatoes, our hut being a mosquito death trap, and Wilder being a vicious lying scumbag. On the bright side of things I finished reading The Morningstar and was quite pleased with it as a whole.Lunch took till 1:30 to be served because they were waiting for Wilder and a new guest to arrive. It would seem they prefer everyone to mingle during meals instead of having them served on time. Regardless of how many times we've made clear to the cooks, guides and management that we want the food on time. After four weeks of the ayahuasca diet, the last thing you want to do is waste time waiting at the table for your bland food to arrive.Before the food came Wilder arrived and with him a self described Canadian red neck named Arthur. Right after telling us that he sat down and told us he was here because he was crazy, tried to kill himself by sitting in a car with the engine running, windows and garage door all duck taped shut too. But it was a hybrid car and barely used enough gasoline to put him down so he lived. He assured us however that he would not fail the next time.He went on to say that he was looking for a month long ayahuasca retreat like we were doing and wanted to know what we thought of it. We happily vented our misgivings of our Renaco lodge experience and he thanked us for it, leaving within minutes of arriving on the same boat he came with, back to Iquitos. The last thing we said to each other was that neither of us was leaving Peru until we had our minds exploded and spirits healed, and with that we bumped fists in the universal new age sign of brotherhood.Ricky, Christian & his apprentice (whose name I never got), a guide, Blake and I took a boat into the swampland forrest and gathered the bark from several trees found there. We returned, soaked them in water, waited several hours and then drank before dinner. It tasted like the pruno alcohol they make from fruits in jail, which one of our childhood friends got a taste for after a couple of extended vacations inside the joint.A swiss couple came the next morning, the women was originally from Bosnia and after getting to know us a little better told us of the horrors she survived during the Bosnian war. Although every war is hell, it always hits me hardest hearing it from the people who lived it.We had our ceremony at 8:30 till just before midnight. When Victor didn't show up with everyone else, as I had made clear we wanted him to be, I lost my temper and yelled at Ricky and Christian. They either didn't understand our request, didn't care, or couldn't make it happen. either way my show of anger tainted the entire ceremony. During which we drank twice the usual dose, I felt a little drunk but otherwise nothing special. Blake said he had pretty good visions though.The next morning while still laying in bed we had a chat about which people in our lives bring out the best in us, and what we needed to do to bring out the best in ourselves and others.At breakfast the first thing I did was check the "special cereal" that supposedly Caesar had made apart of our diet. It was a type of wheat and oats Kellogg's cereal id never seen before, and just as I suspected, packed with sugar. Ricky saw me frowning and shaking my head as I put down the box and said, "don't worry the water is working now." "No.." I said, "its not." He looked at me surprised saying, "Dennis told me he fixed it yesterday."I wanted to say that Dennis was a liar but Ricky already knew that, and Dennis was just walking in behind me. Trying not to loose my cool I just walked back to the table were Blake was peeling an orange and staring aimlessly into space. Ricky came in, I apologized for my angry outburst last night, he said it was alright and that he understood.Then he and a few other guys spent the next hour or so checking our huts source of water, a half inch plastic tube that went from camp to our hut hung on sticks 20 feet apart all the way there and duck taped together in several places it leaked from. I hoped they could fix it, but they gave up and Ricky apologized.Long before exploding I exhibit anger and frustration, but Blake's anger builds over a long period and you may not know your in the way of hells wrath before he's ready to explode. And if theres one thing that triggers him more than anything else is his food. Before lunch was served, all Blake said to me or anyone else was, "it better be on time.."When it finally came, late as feared, but as expected, I preempted the fury in Blake's near future and got up and went into the kitchen, telling Ricky, who was sitting at the kitchen table with all the workers, that we would be leaving tomorrow with the Swiss back to Iquitos, and walked promptly out. Ricky came out a few minutes later with Christian and said he felt very bad about everything, asking us to stay one more day to finish our last ceremony. We agreed, but only because we didn't want to leave on such a sour note and we wanted another shot at visions.

The Don Is Gone

Muck n stuffBlake left the hut this morning before me. When I put on my gum boots as usual for the mud ridden walk to camp, I felt something squishy under my right heel. I wasn't about to walk to camp with shit in my shoes, so I took it off and looked inside to see what it was. I jumped as I saw a big ass brown spider looking ready to leap out of my boot straight at my face.As I did my boot fell from the stairs landing in the mud, and the spider raced across the ground hiding under the fire wood we used to cook the ayahuasca. I got my boot on and walked over to checked him out. He was obviously wounded by my weight coming down on him, perhaps even mortally so. I felt bad, he just wanted a warm and dry place to sleep. Needless to say, from then on out I always checked my boots before putting them on.The rest of the day was entirely uneventful. I can basically qualify the second ceremony with Don Romano as a non event as well. He was so weak that it lasted less than an hour and we felt nothing yet again from drinking his ayahuasca, which Blake is convinced is nothing but 100% vine of the dead. From what we saw in the pot, he's probably right.The next morning I had the shits and although breakfast was good I was feeling worse and worse. I had to make myself vomit just so I could eat lunch. Which was probably a mistake because of how horrible the dish was. Some kind of rice and prehistoric catfish goulash, "muck n stuff" I called it.We informed Ricky that there would be no more ceremonies with Don Romano and that we wanted Victor or Caesar as our Shamans, no one else. We communicated this in the nicest possible way of course, and Ricky was sympathetic and agreed that Romano had very low energy. He called Wilder on the phone and told him the news. Wilder then talked to me and said that Caesars son would come instead of him because Caesar was in the hospital for his wife. I tried to tell him we were fine with Victor but he was insistent and assured me, if such a thing was possible..., that his son would be fine, then the line went dead. We called back, he repeated his assurances and again the line cut out.Ricky could see we were loosing what was left of our patience and suggested a boat ride to Liberta to search for Victor. The daily rains have begun to raise the water level of the river, opening passages that were previously too shallow to navigate, we would use such a passage. Blake strapped his mini boom box around his waist and blared rap and trance music as we slowly rode through the beautiful narrow river, seeing large families of monkeys, iguanas and rare birds.When we made it to Liberta Ricky requested more rap music and then got his groove on to the beets. He's actually damn good. As he busted out some skillful moves he told us about his youth, "Back when I was young, I was really crazy. Many times my friends and I were thrown out of the club, we got so crazy dancing and drinking, you don't know, so so crazy man. Oh my god!"He danced for 40 yards straight across the main walkway of the village until we reached the Scorpion house of Starch, where we hoped to find Victor, but he wasn't there so we returned to camp and decided to sleep in same hut that Wilder usually does when guests aren't using it. We quickly noticed It was the nicest room in camp, practically no mosquitos got inside, it had big windows with great airflow and low and behold a great working shower!It made me remember the first few days we were here, when Wilder showed us the hut and told us it was the best one in camp, "you'll like it here, there are too many mosquitos in our hut, you got a nice bathroom and it's quite, your lucky." Everything That man says just adds fuel to the fire and were the only ones getting burned.We were supposed to drink again tonight, but Victor it seemed had had his dancing shoes on as well and came back drunk from a party somewhere, thus no ceremony took place. The four of us did however play Casino and Blackjack by candle light. Victor won almost every game of Blackjack, but Ricky and I destroyed Blake and Victor at Casino. Victor told us some crazy storied about being in the Peruvian military 60 years ago, and of some wild horny women needing a Shamans special touch, which of course he was obligated to provide. He was definitely drunk..

Water Mission

At 6am I started writing down my dreams, didn't think I had slept very well but there was no fatigue in my body to speak of and my thoughts were clear. We read in the morning and arrived right on time for breakfast to be served. We scarfed that down and played a quick game of criminal punch before going right back to the hut to read.Don Romano, his son and Ricky were already there preparing a new batch of ayahuasca in a 1 and a half-foot wide black cooking pot. All we could see inside was the vine of the dead, the MAO inhibitor containing element of ayahuasca that allows the DMT to be used orally, which is normally not possible because our stomachs contain an acid that breaks down DMT before it can be used by the body, and that's a good thing because nearly everything contains DMT. Otherwise everyone would be tripping everyday and never be normal enough to function.We were supposedly going to be taught how to make the ayahuasca brew and how it all works, but all that they did was sit there and talk among themselves, occasionally stirring the brew. This was all happening under our hut while constantly fighting off mosquitos, and meanwhile Ricky, who was not needed as an interpretor, was laying down in the hut safe and sound.The Argentinians came to visit us then and we talked for a while about their country and what places were best to visit, they gave me their contact information and even offered us a place to stay while we were there. We shared lunch with them at a small table looking out over the water, which was moved there because the workers were fixing the holes in the dinning hall roof, of which there were many.Victor was clearing the entire camp of unwanted brush and helping the workers with moving lumber, as he did everyday before we woke up and until just before dinner. He and Ricky came up to us, smiled and asked if we wanted to go to another camp to get drinking water. "Drinking water?" I asked Ricky. "Yes we are out." I laughed, and we accepted the mission.Ricky stayed behind to manage the camp, since Wilder wasnt there he was next in command. We picked up the cross-eyed soccer kid at the first camp we went too, which was able to give us 4 gallons or so of water. Next we went to Liberta village and were given mixed fruit lemonade. While Victor talked to the owner of the establishment a guide came in and showed us the scorpion he had just caught. He let it out of its bottle cage on the table and the soccer kid was putting his face up to it and pushing the guide into it while he tried to capture it again. Victor had no patience for such things and asked us to take the boy outside.We took the kid out of the village and he showed us a pathway into the jungle where many different trees and crops wed not seen before were growing. The path was full of sharp sticks mud and spiny plants, im glad we had our gum boots, but the boy went barefoot totally unphased. When we reached the village the boy ran off into a house and we rejoined Victor, who was drinking KR cherry soda and watching the local girls play Bingo. We joined in on the game and only once got close to winning. We might have had better luck if we had anymore than a 3 year olds understanding of the spanish number system.We then returned to camp, having succeeded in our mission for water, a mere 4 gallons. We had noodle soup for dinner, of which I ate far too much, and played a few great games of criminal punch with Ricky, who loves card games and shows a whole new personality while playing it, just like Wilder does. New people come tomorrow, I can't wait to meet them!

Cards & Conversation

This morning we went to camp and had or usual pre-breakfast ritual of cards and conversation. Laura was already there and joined in. We taught her criminal punch and got into a very deep conversation with her about each of our childhoods, our reasons for being here in Peru seeking ayahuasca, and what we wanted to bring back home with us to our family and friends.Ricky came in when breakfast was over and invited everyone to join him on a mission to the other villages, only Blake accepted. David and Yuka went on a wildlife tour with a different guide, leaving Laura and I alone at the table to continue the conversation.We talked about our early years and the lovers in our lives that changed us, for better or worse. How each new love was a shadow of our first, who we hoped could replace them, or a hopeless opposite that taught us exactly the kind of person we couldn't be with. We talked about our dreams for the future and what we were doing to see them come true.Whoever had the cards would shuffle them endlessly while they talked for a long period of time, it served almost as a mediation, giving each of us something to do with our hands, allowing the mind to concentrate on remembering the past or considering the future.Before I knew it, two hours had gone by and I looked past Laura to see that everyone was returning from their journeys away from camp. "They're back..." I said, rather disappointed. Laura looked, then turned back to me and said, "I think the they're shuffled enough," referring to the cards, and perhaps our thoughts and emotions as well.We talked about meeting up in California where she might visit in January - february or Europe, a possibility I admitted was very likely, considering my plans of returning to Europe for the first time in 5 years, when Blake and I were there last in 2009. That's a whole other blog that I never got around to finishing...Laura and David were leaving in less than 30 minutes and had to pack up so we ended the conversation there.Wilder came back from Iquitos with Don Romano and his son, who as we were surprised to find out, would be replacing Caesar as our new shaman. We were told this was because Caesar had to tend to his wife who was in the hospital. Don Romano was younger than both Victor and Caesar, but he looked like he already had a foot solidly planted in the grave. Anyways, we didn't understand why Wilder surprised us with this instead of letting us keep using Victor who we really enjoyed.At this point it was obvious that two more months of this experience would be far more detrimental to our health and wellbeing than it would do any good, so we sat down with Wilder and informed him we would only be staying a month. As We did, the blood in his face could easily be seen draining away, and his eyes stared through me blankly as if towards some terrible fate that awaited either him or us in the near future, I couldn't tell which.After that he got up and went into the kitchen to call Moisess informing him of our decision, walking away with his head slumped as though wounded by a sudden stomach pain. Ricky came in from outside with a big smile and a ready joke, his usual self when he isn't relating the darkest moments of his life. "Want to learn a new card game? It's called casino!" Having reached the limits of fun playing 13 and thirsty for new games to play, we easily accepted.As he was laying out the cards and explaining the game to us Wilder returned from the kitchen and spotted us playing. He walked over to us and instantaneously changed his mood as he recognized the game. "Casino?" He asked Ricky. Ricky looked up at him as though he'd just been challenged by an old rival and smiled. "Yes.. Im teaching them how to play." Ricky replied. Wilder slapped his hands together and rubbed them vigorously with a genuine smile beaming from him that I hadn't thought possible, "we will teach them together!" He announced, and sat down beside Blake looking at his cards. Ricky looked at me, winked, and nodded his head at Wilder with a laugh.Ricky played against Blake, explaining the best options to me as he went, and Wilder basically made Blake's moves for him, explaining things precisely but too quickly to be of any use. Blake, I mean Wilder, ended up winning. The next game was just him and Ricky while we watched. I've never seen Wilder so happy and animated before, he's obviously very good at cards.We skipped dinner and sat down for ceremony with Don Romano, his son, who helped him with all but handing the cups to us, and Ricky who translated. We drank and I asked for the true spirit of ayahuasca to flow through me. I was very happy through the whole ceremony, but otherwise was totally normal. The ceremony, if you could call it that, was only an hour-long as opposed to the normal three and Don Romano barely chanted or did any rituals for us. All he did the whole time was smoke heinous amounts of tobacco and cough. Blake denies it but I swear I saw him fall asleep 30 minutes into the ritual. Neither of us vomited and we both went right to sleep.

Ricky Ricardo

Insanely Political

Our reading materialNew arrivals came today, as well as the books Wilder had promised us. Yuka from Japan, who works as a spare parts distributor to Dell and Ybon a Peruvian Chinese mix whose great- great grand father was sold as a slave in Peru way back when. We quickly got to know each other by playing cards and by the time lunch rolled around we were already getting political.We talked about 9/11 being a false flag operation. (meaning a covert staged event to blame an opposing political, economic, or religious group; well-known historical examples of which include, the gulf of Tonkin, Hitlers burning of the Reichstag, the burning of Rome by Nero to blame the christians, remember the maine. So on and so forth.)9/11 was most likely run by Black ops factions of several agencies and organizations, such as the Central Intelligence Agency and Mossad (israeli intelligence) but we may never know. Ybon knew a good amount about it all but Yuka was a deer in the head lights the entire conversation. She said she had never heard about any of it but was very interested, and also that she was sorry she couldn't communicate that well with us, which no one held against her, especially while on the subject of conspiracies, which no one considers polite conversation.Antoine and Marilou had made a deal with Wilder to have an Ayahuasca ceremony that night with Victor. Once we had finished dinner we walked together with them to our hut, and since we believed that you should only be present in a ceremony if you are drinking or interpreting we wished them all the best and excused ourselves to lay down. From what we could hear of the ceremony it was much different from the ones we had with Caesar. The ceremony went until 3 in the morning and we hadn't eaten dinner until nearly 9pm because everyone including the camp cook were partying for the 2nd round of soccer games in Liberta, so neither of us slept well.In the morning Antoine, Marilou and Ybon Prepared to leave. Wilder would be going back to Iquitos as well to get more Ayahuasca, or so he said, we've decided to keep his words in the fantasy folder of our trip until further notice.Before lunch was served a new boat arrived. Blake and I were sitting at the dinning room table playing cards, as we usually did before and after meals. I turned my head around to check them out and guessed out loud that they were German and French. One of the guides we knew from last week came in from their boat and said hello. "Where they from?" I asked him, "not sure, German and French I think," he said as he walked passed us into the kitchen."Howd you know?" Blake asked. The Germans were easy to spot, all wearing Birkenstocks, thin smart-looking glasses, sweat paints and well maintained emotionless gazes, totally textbook. The French were wearing much more relaxed and adventurous clothing, and the guy was smoking a cigarette as he got off the boat, it was a split choice really, between France and the US, I just went with what seemed the most realistic. Not wanting to go into all the details of my observations though, I just smiled and said, "lucky guess."After being shown to their rooms, each group entered the dinning room to eat and we introduced ourselves. Three of them were from Germany, 1 was from France and the other had lived in France, her father was French but her mother was Peruvian, but she grew up in Texas.. So I guess I was right either way. I didn't see the 2 other people at the back of the boat though, they were Argentinian.While eating lunch the first thing I asked David, the French guy, was about the proposed 100% tax rate in France. He said he wasn't rich so it wouldn't affect him, and he could give a shit about the French government anyways. The conversation spiraled out of control from that point on, no one but David, Laura (the french, peruvian American girl) Blake and myself even said anything, everyone else hung back and watched the spectacle.Before dinner Blake and I had yet another plant water sauna that we had helped Victor make. During dinner we weren't so chatty as before but we did play a number of card games with Laura and David. Getting to know each other outside of the political sphere, which is always nice. Blake and I started reading the books that came today and were happy for them.

Starch Wars

Sucker got cluckedBlake finished Psychology of the Transference in the morning, a great book for us to have read while on this journey, especially since were both dealing with our psyches in our dreams and in the psychedelic realms.We shared lunch with the Canadian God cousins, played 13 and spoke more about the New World Order and about our lives at home. When 4pm rolled around everyone in the camp was given the choice to either visit liberta village, the one with the paved roads and working street lights, to watch the soccer game, or effectively to stay in camp alone, naturally we all decided to go.When we arrived Blake was already hungry again and walked off into the village looking for fruit to score from a tree or generous mind reading local. I joined him and on the walk we found Victor rummaging through the bushes gathering plants, we told him we wanted some fruit and his keen eyes instantly bounced back and forth between the houses, trees and bushes surrounding us, then he walked off without a word.A moment later he had returned with a bundle of bananas, of which Blakes share was gone as soon as it landed in his hands. Victor grinned his two tooth grin and asked if we wanted more. We told him we did and he waved his fingers toward him indicating that we should follow. We got one each from one house and some more from another, but at that house they asked Victor to ask us if we wanted to "see their work" we didn't know what that meant and weren't really interested but they had given us free food so we went in the hut to see none the less.The women started pulling out necklaces and bracelets from a bag and we understood. I found nothing that fancied me but Blake got 3 protection bracelets for 10 soles, giving one to me, for which I was thankful. They are made up of little oval nuts painted half red and half black and are used to protect babies from evil spirits and the jealous negative emotions of others. We thanked them and left the house.We had already eaten a few bananas each but Blakes hunger was insatiable, so when we joined the others who were watching the game and eating salt slathered Chinese rice and chicken, we ordered the only thing we could from the kitchen, saltless rice, 2 boiled eggs and yucca, dry as the desert and plain as day. I asked the lady for a lemon, she nodded as if she understood and disappeared behind the counter, a moment later reappearing on the deck where she sat down to watch the game. Wilder told me later that lemons all had to be brought from Iquitos and were something of a specialty item here. In the end we didn't even eat half the rice on our plates. Our stomachs hurt after as well, so even the fact that the food was dirt cheap didn't smooth things over much.Music was playing then and Blake broke out into a funky dance alone in the middle of the room, with me joining in soon after. I only danced a few minutes and then stopped, but Blake went wild, doing the inch worm body roll, moon walk, saturday night fever twist and more, he was off the hook! When he finished we gathered in the corner where Marilou and Antoine were eating.Marilou was having a hard time with her chicken because sitting on the ledge above them was a hen staring murderously at her as she half heartedly picked at her meal. Their guide was not tall enough to get rid of the hen so he enlisted Blake to do the job for him, which he did with a cold and calculated smack to its face, which amazing it rebounded from, but not so with the second strike, which knocked it off the ledge and down the outside wall of the establishment. Everyone thought this was real funny, but in spite of it all Marilou was no longer in the mood for poultry.Afterward Blake, Wilder, Nick(Moisess son) and   I played soccer with a wild cross-eyed local boy, probably no older than 7. When that was done we all piled on to the canoe and headed back to camp. On the way home a pod of dolphins surrounded our boat and jumped all around us, there wasnt much light in the sky then, but it was a beautiful sight all the same. For dinner we had noodle soup and after that we took plant baths that Victor had prepared for us before we left. Sadly, we didn't sleep well at all, too much damn starch!

Into the Darkness with Antoine and Marilou

One of thousands we sawWe've been sharing our dreams every morning now, which is easier to do because the plant baths have given us many more than usual. Breakfast was fish with veggies, and our usual addition of bananas and oranges to hold over our growing appetites.Before lunch was served Wilder asked me if I wanted to help Dennis get something, I thought he ment around camp so I said yes, but that wasn't the case. What we had to do was take a boat to the mouth of the yarapa river and dig yucca out of the ground to feed the camp. It was the same friend of Wilders who gave us yucca and squash a while back, but for some reason we never got any of that.We arrived said hello to the elders and got to work getting the goods. One of the yucca plants was so firmly embedded in the ground and it took the wife, Dennis and myself all pulling on it to bring up the roots and thus the yucca. On our way back there was another transport delivering two new guests, I didnt know where they were going, there were at least 3 other lodges on this part of the river so it could have been anywhere.When We got back I was happy to see the two new comers pull up beside us on shore. Dennis and I handed the yucca to Wilder, I told him that we actually wanted to have some of it this time and then joined Blake for lunch, which was barbecued catfish and tigerfish. During this meal we were introduced to the young pair.Conversation started off with the standard fare, where are you from, how long will you stay, what are you interested in doing? That kind of thing. Well, they were from Canada, they will stay until January then move on to different countries and they were interested in expanding their spiritual, emotional and experiential horizons through travel. This being their first trip outside of Canada, I thought they were well on their way having decided upon Peru, a mecca for such things second only to India.Once the proper introductions were made the topics of the afternoon inevitably fell upon psychedelics and our experiences with them both at home and here in Peru. Before we had even given our names we were all sharing personal experiences and insights into the human experience, as those who delve into the  psychedelic realms usually are keen to do.When we had each shared something meaningful to us and finished our meals, Blake and I asked them if they wanted to play cards and then introduced ourselves before teaching them to play 13. Their names were Antoine and Marilou from Quebec and Montreal, ages 20 and 18, the first self identifying god cousins i've ever met. We finished one game, started another and it was Antoine who made a comment in passing about everyone thinking things were so bad In the United States with poison in the food and water. Blake nodded his head in agreement and said, "hell yeah, fluoride in the tooth paste too and all that." Antoine and Marilou looked at each other with a surprised look and turned to us in unison saying "you're the 3rd travelers to tell us this." It was almost as if they hadn't wanted us to agree with the statement.Being the wealth of maddening conspiracy information that I am, I had every compulsion to share with them what I knew on the subject, but I've learned over many heated arguments and outright violent confrontations that the best way to share such things is to wait for when they seek the knowledge themselves. In the spirit of this I told them that If they cared to hear more I would happy to share.They seemed interested but the conversation was put on hold because their guide came in to take them on a jungle hike. Then we went on our own hike through the jungle with Wilder, Victor the and the cook to gather medicinal plants for our next sauna, we also chopped down some small trees to use as supports for the new sauna Victor was building.Just as we were getting into the boat the cook lost her balance and grabbed on to my pony tail to prevent herself from falling into the river, which thanks to my hair she succeeded in doing. Everyone had a good laugh and we returned to camp to have our first go in the new sauna, which was 4 sticks in the ground surrounded by a plastic sheet with blankets thrown over the top and a large boiling pot with 2 wooden blocks beside it that we used to stand on. As per Wilders instruction the sauna could only be used naked, and so it was. It was definitely a great improvement upon than the previous model.After dinner with the Canadian God cousins they invited us to join them on their night hike in search of a giant tarantula, something we had yet to do, for that and because we liked them we accepted their offer.  We saw more spiders that night than any of us cared to realize were there at any given time. The coolest things we saw were giant bull frogs, the size of an obese uptown house cat, and a black scorpion resting on a tree.Just in case you think there's something missing from this story your intuition serves you well, for what day or night walk through the jungle would be complete without the incessant vampirism of the mosquito legions!? There were so many sucking face with me that every time I slapped at them I was wiping my own blood from my face. Just as we got back into camp the guide pointed his light on the roof over the walkway of the camp and there it was, the pink tarantula we had set out to find. Although it was late Antoine and Marilou were not ready to sleep and wanted to hear more in regards to our previous conversation, so we played 13 by candle light and really got into the nitty-gritty of the New World Order.