Thursday, May 26, 2011
Huacachina
I wont lie, there isn´t a whole lot to the ¨town,¨see pictures of how small the place is on the previous post, and I almost dismissed this trip as a waste. then I did the sand buggy tour.
My friends had talked this up quite a bit, so I was expecting a lot, and it delivered. Being in the buggy feels like being is a rollercoaster. You are just like, there is no way we are going up there, and then you do, then you can´t see the other side and have no idea if you are going straight down, or what! It is so much fun.
Then you get to try sand sledding on the board and then actualy boarding if you can stand up on the board. I was in a group of three people, the other two were girls from Denmark, and we got to stop several times to sled. It is so much fun, and I posted a video. You get really sandy. The sand is like fine beach sand which makes trying to walk up the dunes very interesting.
My attempts at standing on the sandboard was pitiful. My first time down I had a record of ten feet before falling, and the second time I made it a little further but then had a serious wipeout.
A couple of times on the trip I had to empty my shoes of sand because they were a few sizes too small due to how much space the sand was taking up. Then showering after was fun because there wasn´t enough water pressure to actually get the sand off.
In all, the town isn´t that great, but sand buggying is totally worth it!
Next step: back to the mountains. My goal is another trek (we´ll see) and rock climbing!
Pictures in chronological order
Monday, May 23, 2011
Pictures- in reverse order as always
Salkantay and Machu Picchu
Tuesday, May 17, 2011
The adventure continues
I finished my Peace Corps experience on May 13th. It was also the day the trainees swore in and became real volunteers. There is something poetic about that. The last week was in Tegucigalpa finishing reports and medical tests. There is just something degrading about having to poo in a cup.
Before that I had a bunch of good-byes. Two weekends before, the volunteers in the department of El Paraiso threw me a good bye weekend. We went to two small towns that I had never visited. We had a barbeque at hot springs in one town followed by fresh strawberries at a freezing cold pool at the second town.
My host family threw me a pupusa and margarita party my last night in site. My whole host family was there and it was a really calm night just talking to everyone.
My last night was actually at the lake, where I met a close volunteer friend. We spent one night at a hotel, then the next day went to a giant waterfall.
THe next night, I didn´t stay in the hotel in teguc, but with friends. It was good to spend a calm night with them and talk.
So, after doing the paperwork and tests, I left! THere are both happy and sad feelings about that, but I don´t have time to express all of them.
The first night I had a 13 hour lay-over in San Jose, Costa Rica, where I met my friend Ryan. He had left two weeks before me and was on the last night of his travels, while I was on the first night of my travels. We went to a chinese place for dinner and just chilled, I got in too late to see much of the city. I will say though, that it is very different from Tegucigalpa, it is developed and has highways, and green in the city.
Finally, on Saturday morning, after an hour layover in Panama, I flew to Lima. This is when the giant panic happened. Apparently, my bank limited how much money I could get out, and I didn´t know this, so I flipped because i couldn´t get money out, i was in a foreign country and couldn´t get in touch with the guy I was couchsurfing with. I had friends who were on their last night of travelling in Colombia and Peru, and I had an idea where they were staying with, so I charged the overpriced airport taxi to my credit card and went to their hostel.
I had a good conversation with the taxi driver (yeah for speaking spanish) and because the hostel was on the other side of the city, I got to see a bunch of the city. I get there, start rehearsing how I am going to talk my way through the door and immediately see one of my friends. She was online trying to get a message to me, so seeing me was weird. At that point, we dropped my stuff off in their room, I used to internet to try and get in touch with couchsurfing guy, then we went out. We went to find an atm, my card still didn´t work, tried another one- no luck, and then went to email couchsurfing guy again, because the number he gave me didn´t work. We went to eat, at one point I called couchsurfing guy and that finally resolved itself.
At night, CS guy met me at the hostel and we all had a beer in the restaurant there, then I went to his sister´s house. We stayed there a little bit then went out for a walking tour of the historic district of Lima. It was really nice, so safe and so different than Teguc.
The next morning we did the walking tour during the day and got to see more and I was able to take photos. Then, I tried my debit card and decided to take a giant wad of money out so that I would never get stuck without money, well at least for a few weeks.
Lima is really nice, but it was so good to have a local guide. I can imagine that alone it wouldn´t be as nice. It is also pretty cheap, not as cheap as Honduras, but that is the price of development. Speaking of development, my friend told me that ten years ago the center was a bad place and that the government and investors spent a lot of money on it, and in my opinion it paid off.
I had dinner with his whole family, and then went to bed early because I literally could not keep my eyes open.
I then went to Cusco. I again had to pay a lot for the airport taxi only to get dropped off below the hill from my hostel. Not cool. I had my giant bag, and then there is not too much oxygen up here. We are around 3300m, or over 10,000 ft. I thought my heart was going to pound hard enough to explode. I got my room, dropped my stuff off and then went exploring.
I like exploring Cusco alone. I can go anywhere, spend as much time as I want people watching and having fun. I found the market, which turns out to be the cheapest place to eat lunch. I am going to need to control myself on how much I buy here though. I can´t help it, there are just that many things for sale that I really like. The one thing stopping me is that my bag is already full and heavy, so i don´t want more weight.
Oh, and my first night here, I lost the key to my lock! I had to make due with what I had in my purse for the night, then headed out early to buy a twin to my lock to be able to change and shower.
I leave early tomorrow for my hike, so it will be six days before I can post again.
Jill
PS photos will have to wait, i don´t want to load them now
Tuesday, April 12, 2011
Pictures- in reverse chronological order
Sunday, April 10, 2011
what's up
It has been a long time since I have done a real post. I thought today would be a good day to catch up.
Now, I have no idea when was the last time I wrote a blog entry, so forgive me if I repeat a little bit.
The trainees are in my town again. I went to see them in the training center north of Tegucigalpa for a few days and help out with some activities. Since coming here we have gone on several field trips. A lot of my time has been planning those trips and future trainings. Since I live here, I have the contacts to do that, and it is my job. At the very least I will be qualified to be a peace corps training specialist in my future, if nothing else pans out.
In the training center, we went to visit existing water systems, to show the components and explain all the names in Spanish. Let me remind you that some people come into the Water and Sanitation project with political science degrees or something like that, so we have to get down to basics. The next day was the practice abney level topo study. This was also the day of return of the ticks, apparently it is tick season again. I was really glad I had done several abney level surveys in my time here and that I had figured out how to problem solve in the field because there were several problems with the abneys.
Once they came to site, we did chlorination systems and went out to see two tanks with chlorination, and a new treatment plant they are building for three communities. Then we did a bad water system day and were able to give advice to the community on how to repair their water system.
We have done more, but my mind is a blank, I am very tired.
My good friend came down last week to go over GPS-GIS with the trainees. I went to the mountains that day and believe I have already written about it. We went with all the El P women to Danli to party it up for K´s birthday.
The next week I went to Olancho and got to see a pretty neat cave. The cave runs more than a mile into the mountain. It was very pretty and there were metal railings to protect the cave from foot traffic, and they did not detract from the caves like other places I have seen in Pennsylvania.
I am trying to teach the housekeeper´s granddaughter some basic things, like which shapes are which, how to draw them, along with colors and numbers. I have no idea how to teach this, I am just hoping repetition is the thing. I feel like Count Dracula on Sesame Street. Una, hay una crayola. Which is One, there is One crayon. Her grandmother is completely illiterate and cannot help her, and I don´t know where the daughter is.
Ultimate Frisbee with the kids is going really well. M and I started up an Ultimate Frisbee club a little over a month ago. The kids really like the game and it is so much easier to teach than baseball, plus a lot less equipment. They are learning strategy bit by bit, but they got the basic rules the first day. Only those who participate and let everyone play come back every week which is so much easier. There were a few who didn´t want to play with the girls and were really disrespectful, so having them gone makes the practices a lot easier.
That is about it, not too much else going on.
Jill