The next day broke with absolute brilliance over San Salvador Island. We got up early and headed toward the north end of the island for a hike along the coral cliff. During the hike, I shot photos using my uncle’s cameras, etc. while my mind picked over events of the night before. Our Zoom date with the psychic had been a bit troubling. Hiking cleared my mind and let me rethink the previous evening’s meeting.

A deep purple sunset at San Salvador Island, Bahamas.
As the sun descended below the western horizon and the moon moved across the sky  …
My cousin, John, and his wife, sitting on the deck at night. In front of a burning firepit.
 …we settled in for our first ever session with a psychic medium. (That’s Gabe and John.)
The psychic, Tammy, on our computer screen. She's smiling.
Tammy

My mind was mulling all of this over that morning as we hiked the spectacular cliffs of the north end of the island.

The green covered cliffs along the shore of North Beach on San Salvador Island, Bahamas.
Waves crashing in the early morning on the coral cliffs of San Salvador Island, Bahamas.
Coral reefs surround San Salvador Island.

This was our final full day on San Salvador. By this time, I had connected with Garnell about her mom, the woman who said she knew Bill and Don. We were set to meet that evening in North Victoria Hill, a small settlement at the north end of the island. For now, our morning hike was nearing it’s end and we needed to get back to Cockburn Town to meet with Clifford Fernander …better known as Snake Eyes. Clifford lives at the end of a street past Dorette’s (just ask anyone). When we arrived he took us into his kitchen, through his well kept living room, and out onto the front porch.

Clifford Fernander a.k.a. Snake Eyes in Cockburn Town, San Salvador Island, Bahamas. He stands on his front porch, holding a portrait of him and his wife.
Snake Eyes shows us a portrait of him and his lovely wife, Mrs. Fernander. She is in the hospital in Nassau getting treatment and you can tell he misses her.

We sit on the porch and ask him about our uncle. Snake Eyes tells us our uncle and Don Diehl went on a deep dive one morning, over “the wall”. They came back up, got lunch, and said they wanted to go deeper. They were after black coral, which is expensive. After they disappeared, only a fin was found. The bodies were never recovered.

Snake Eyes said that he’d actually attended Don Diehl’s memorial. The family went out in a boat and placed wreaths into the water.

He explains that there are three items on the island that are protected by the government:

 – black coral

 – Lignum Vitae

 – Yellow Elder Flower

Snake Eyes is an excellent story teller. He was born in 1932 and told us stories of growing up on the island. He almost cries as he tells us of a time when his arm was injured while working on a generator at the USAF base. “They” wanted to take him to the U.S. for treatment, but he refused to go. He was worried they would keep him there and he would never return. He worked for the government for 27 years. When I asked whether there was any socializing between U.S. personnel and locals, he brought up a place in town called “The Rip”. He got excited when he spoke of it!

Vintage photo of "The Rip". Cockburn Town, San Salvador Island, Bahamas.
The Rip. Cockburn Town, San Salvador Island.

The band there was made up of skin drums, guitar and rip saw. It sounded like a raucous good time!

Snake Eyes gave us a history lesson regarding Christopher Columbus’ 1492 crossing of the Atlantic. One of the island’s major claims to fame is, it was the first landing point of Christopher Columbus. There are huge memorials on this tiny island, dedicated to that guy … and I think I forgot to mention it until now. No biggie. [It’s a biggie.]

Clifford Fernander a.k.a. Snake Eyes. Here, he's holding a photograph of the Christopher Columbus Monument at Long Bay, San Salvador Island, Bahamas.
Snake Eyes and a photo of the Christopher Columbus memorial on the west side of the island.
Clifford Fernander a.k.a. Snake Eyes, holds the Ferdinand and Isabella flag on his front porch at Cockburn Town, San Salvador Island, Bahamas.
We were shown flags (this one of Ferdinand and Isabella). He had a lot of flags.

He then spoke of the post-Columbus slave trade. When slaves left Africa, as they neared San Salvador, they would place a certain type of soap into their armpits. This raised their body temperature. The transported slaves were considered cargo or cattle. It was illegal to transport sick cargo, so the prospective slaves, proclaiming to be sick, were dumped off on the [at that time, scrubby and insignificant] island. They were free, but life was tough. [Later, when I was recounting this story to Bob his face lit up – to avoid going to Vietnam, he said, some draftees would put a certain soap in their armpits. The soap would change their metabolic rate. They would be considered 4F due to their heart “condition”.]

I think this history Snake Eyes recounted was the reason he didn’t want to visit the U.S. at first. He said he was worried he would never come back. When he did enter the U.S. in the 1950s, segregation was rampant. Simply a part of life. “If you saw a white girl, you crossed the road – or you could end up in jail.” He added though, “Some of the white folks were, well, friendly.”

We learned a lot from Snake Eyes. This black coral thing came out of the blue! We wished his wife well and left his home. That evening, our last on the island, was to be spent with someone named Juanita who had known our uncle.

You can keep track of updates and photos, beyond what I post on my site, on my Whatsapp channel “Outermost Uncle“. I also have a brand new Youtube channel I’ve been messing with and I’ll bet you can’t guess the name? “Outermost Uncle

A link to me reading this post.

I’m also @ outermostuncle on Instagram.

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