Disclaimer:

The contents of this page, and all links appearing on this page, do not represent the positions, views, or intents of the U.S. Government, or the United States Peace Corps.

Saturday, February 25, 2012

The Craziness of Carnaval

Hola a Todos!

This past week flew by with all of the Carnaval celebrations. Although things have been happening for the past 5 or 6 weeks, this last week leading up to Carnaval was the craziest. Everyone was out and about throwing water balloons and buckets of water at any and all passersby. I stayed dry in Azogues last Saturday, although when walking around I went from awning to awning staying up against the buildings to avoid having water balloons dropped on me.  The bus ride home was hot because the bus had been waiting in the sun all day and we couldn’t open any windows for the first half hour or so because people along the side of the street were throwing buckets full of water at the buses trying to catch an open window.

Sunday was the big fiesta in Zhoray that was for all three of the “Amazonian  Parroquias” in the area. People came from all the communities of the parroquia of Zhoray, as well as many other cities and parroquias. There was a big parade into the center market with everyone dressed in elaborate costumes. All day there was a dance competition in the market with all traditional dances in traditional dress. In the afternoon there was the election of the “Carnaval Queen,” of course, and then there were live artists for dancing into the night. The fiesta went from about 9am until midnight, so I was exhausted by the end. Throughout the day, there were water and foam spray (carioca) wars, which I participated in occasionally. It’s a really fun, but also funny holiday because all the adults act like kids, playing in a giant water fight. I stayed around Suca’s store most of the day, helping with sales and enjoying the fiesta from inside. It was a great fiesta!

On Monday I went to Monay with Zoila and the huge extended family that came into town from Guayaquil. We had two cars packed full of people, and I was in the back of the pickup with several of the cousins/nieces. It was a cold, windy ride there as we were at the mercy of people staked out on the side of the road waiting to soak us with buckets of water as we passed by. We all made it alive, and had a great hike up to the waterfall. A few of us went into the freezing water and we all hung out for a while before the slippery, muddy descent back to the cars. The ride back home was even colder now that we were all wet and it was pelting rain, but it was a really fun trip. Once back at the house, we had a big cookout with even more family and fresh grilled lamb.

Tuesday was the actual day of Carnaval, but much more laid back for me. I went into Azogues and Cuenca trying to find internet to skype home, but EVERYTHING was closed. I think it might be the biggest holiday of the year here. Luckily it was a beautiful day so I just wandered around avoiding being hit by water. I went home with Zoila and had a nice dinner with Suca, Zoila and Nayeli for my birthday.

Everyone seems to be in recovery mode right now, so things are pretty quiet. As soon as they’re recovered, though, preparations begin for Zhoray’s week-long fiestas in the beginning of April. Hopefully I will be able to do some work before then, when everything shuts down again.

As far as work goes, Lucy is a proposing a big project that looks like it will go through. Right now, the president of the Junta is going to give us the room in the Junta Parroquial in the center and $10,000 to be equipment for a physical therapy/rehabilitation center for the disabled community members. There only option right now is to go for treatment in Azogues, but it isn’t possible for any of them, so Lucy and the subcentro staff is going to offer PT twice a week. If it goes through, I will also have access to the room to work with other groups and give charlas, etc. While I already have permission to use the space, if it is revamped into a rehab center, it will have more credibility and hopefully people will attend more of my meetings and charlas. I, of course, am also suggesting they get a horse for hippotherapy, but that one might take a while for them to be convinced. It sounds like a great project for the community, so hopefully it is all approved, financed, and actually started!

Living at the subcentro has been going really well and I’m very happy here. Lucy, Martha and Carmita all live here during the week now, so I’m only alone on the weekends. We split cooking days, which is working out, but I also have a lot of time to make my own food, which has been going great. This week I made pizza, veggie soup, corn salad (thanks Zoe!) and bagels. Next week there is quiche, spinach chicken, lentil burgers and cobbler on the menu. It’s fun to try all these new recipes, and to be eating healthy foods again. We hang out in the afternoons and evenings, chatting or playing games. Lucy and Martha have learned Bannanagrams and Set, both of which they love, and Phase 10 will be next thanks to Natalie! While I get to spend a lot more time with them, I’m still spending a lot of time in the town and with Suca, Zoila and Nayeli. I usually go down a few times a day to chat and see what they’re up to, and other times to collect Cora. She is in a new habit of running away if the subcentro gate is open and she isn’t tied up, but luckily I now know that she goes straight to Zoila’s terrace in search for Oscarito, the puppy who lived there for a few about a month. Oscarito has moved to Guayaquil with the family, but a new puppy, Shakira, was gifted to them today, so Cora still has a friend to run to.

The biggest news is that Internet has come to Zhoray! There is the big company here to build a dam, and they have an office set up in a house on the market with internet. They came to me the other day asking for English classes because the engineers in charge are coming from China and speak English, not Spanish. In return for giving them classes, hopefully they will share their internet and I’ll be a little bit more connected!!

That’s about it for now. Things are going well here and I’m feeling settled back in. I hope everyone had a happy Mardi Gras and that it was a little dryer and warmer than Carnaval here. Hello to all!

All my love,

Kerry

Saturday, February 18, 2012

Flying Water Balloons....

It has been a bit of a lonely 10 days since Mom and Dad left. It was so great to have someone to talk to 24/7, access to internet to talk to my friends, etc. When they left I was thrown back into the isolation of Zhoray, but now a little more isolated since I’m living in the subcentro and I got back just in time for the weekend when the subcentro staff leaves for Azogues. Luckily I get to keep the subcentro phone with me whenever they leave, so while I can’t call anyone, I can receive calls and got to talk to my parents a lot.

Last Saturday, two kids came up to bake bread with me. It’s nice because since I’m not in somebody else’s house, I can invite anybody I want to come up, so it was different kids than usual. I was sad that Nayeli wasn’t allowed to come up and that she has to suffer/be punished for the situation. Hopefully with a little time they’ll be over it and let her hang out with me again. Until then, I will hopefully make other friends in the community and broaden the group of people I hang out with.

While it is a little lonely at times, I really do like living here at the subcentro. The privacy is great and I was ready for it, and the conversations with the subcentro staff are much different than those in town. Instead of petty gossip about people, we have conversations about traditions, religion, consciences, and more. I didn’t realize how much I missed that until I was around it again.

The other thing I really love about the subcentro is my food independence. I have been baking and cooking again and am so much happier. Not only does it make me happy because it’s something I love to do, but just in the last week I feel so much healthier and stronger from having reasonably portioned meals full of veggies and steering clear of mountains of rice. I made pasta with chicken and fresh marinara and veggie sauce, learning that you actually have to COOK the tomatoes, not just blend them J. Once that happened, it was quite tasty! I also made chicken and black bean burritos on fresh, homemade flour tortillas. That with veggies cooked in mole powder and fresh mozzarella, mmmm, mmmm, mmmm! Almost like real Mexican food! As far as baking goes, I made a ton of banana bread, which is always a hit. I also tried an orange cake, which turned out well, and Pilsener (beer) bread, which was very good. The Pilsener bread was an even bigger hit when I made it into French Toast for the subcentro staff. While I’m making most of my own food, Lucy, Martha and I each cook one day for the others. That means I’m still at the liberty of some food, like the pig liver I had the other day, but overall it is working well and they are getting to try a lot of new foods.

It is Carnaval now, as it has been for the last 5 or so weeks. During Carnaval, people throw water balloons at each other, dump buckets of water, spray Carioca (a foamy spray), and all sorts of things. Thursday was the last day of work for the subcentro staff before the ferriado for Carnaval, so they won’t be back until Wednesday. Since it was there last day, we played Carnaval for most of the day. By the end, we were all dripping wet, covered with egg, flour, tapioca and yogurt. It was a sticky, fun mess!

After the subcentro staff left, Nayeli came up and got to try some of the French Toast, which she also loved. We then went down into town to hang out for a few minutes with Cora and the kids before mass. There has been mass twice a day all week for the Holy week here, so I went to a few of them. It was nice to go on Thursday to be around so many people instead of just being alone in the subcentro. Thursday was the procession through town, stopping for prayers at all of the houses that set out altars. It was a very nice mass, and the church was beautifully decorated.

Since the subcentro staff won’t be back until Wednesday, I have made a few goals to keep myself busy and not get lonely. There is a lot of baking planned with different kids from town, Cora is in need of some more strict training, and there are different Carnaval activities happening. Tomorrow is the huge Carnaval fiesta in Zhoray, so it should be a lot of cold, wet, fun! It supposedly starts early and goes well into the night. I’m still unclear about what else happens surrounding Carnaval, but I’m guessing there are more events because Tuesday is the actual day of Carnaval.

Hopefully after Carnaval, I will be able to be more productive with work. The holidays are definitely something I’m not used to and while some are fun, it is very frustrating as far as work goes. It seems like every other week there is another holiday or fiesta, so nobody is working, everything shuts down to celebrate, and all organization is gone. It makes it very difficult to have anything consistent happen, so I think I will have more success with individual charlas rather than any long-term groups. I’m still hopeful that a group with kids will be more successful than the older community members, but again, I have to wait until after Carnaval to be able to start anything.

There is a company coming into to town to build a new hydro-electric dam, so 300 men are supposed to be coming to live and work here for 3 years. That will significantly increase the population of the community and should be interesting. The good news with that (although I still am not holding my breath) is that Lucy said we are supposed to be getting Internet because the company is bringing Internet for the men. We’ll see if it actually happens, but it sure would make staying in touch a lot easier!

I miss everyone very much, but things are still going well here overall. My computer weather update for C Springs is stuck at 20 degrees and snow from when I last had wireless, so I can’t say I’m missing the cold, but I hope it’s warming up a bit for all of you! A very, very happy Carnaval birthday to Mary and hello to everyone there!

All my love,

Kerry

Thursday, February 9, 2012

Mom and Dad visit the middle of the world!



I hardly know where to begin because these last few weeks have been so trying, busy, and exciting! I certainly continue to feel the roller coaster of emotions, as the training staff guaranteed us in training.

Two weeks ago there was a little incident and I ended up moving out of my house and into the subcentro. Sadly, Pablo accepted a job at a different subcentro, but it is lucky for me because there was then an open room I could move into. It was a tough few days because my family didn’t want me to move, it was difficult to explain to them the move, and I had to readjust to a new place. My room in the subcentro is very quaint and cute, now nicely organized and ready to live in. I have a bathroom right next door, and there is a communal kitchen that I can now cook my own food in. Thanks to Mom and Dad, I have a toaster oven I am bringing back with me, so there are a lot of plans for baking and cooking delicious food that I miss! Little Cora is SO happy at the subcentro because we keep the gate closed and she can ran around the fenced in area all day. There is also another dog that likes to hang about, so they play and frolic together for hours on end! Everything happened just a few days before Mom and Dad came, so I haven’t gotten used to it yet, but I’m ready to go back to Zhoray, settle in, and live peacefully with my pup at the subcentro.

Mom and Dad just left after a fantastic 10 day visit in Ecuador. I met them in Cuenca last Monday, where we explored a little of the gorgeous city, hiked in Cajas National Park, went to some surrounding little towns, and hung out with some of the other PCVs. The weather was beautiful and I think they loved being around all the brilliant flowers and hummingbirds, especially when we saw that Boulder got 24 inches of snow!

From Cuenca we ventured into the campo of Zhoray, which was quite the experience for them. It was so great to finally show them everything I try to explain during phone calls and emails. It can never fully be explained until it is experienced in person, so now they have a good sense of what my life is like in Zhoray. We spent a lot of time with my host family, ate way too much food (resulting in stomach sickness…), hiked around the area, went to a waterfall, and had some quality dog training time J. It was a great 3 nights, but I think we were all ready to head to Quito come Sunday.

In Quito we stayed at a lovely old hotel in the historic district that was more like a museum with so many old paintings and artifact type things. The historic district has nice old buildings and incredible churches. On Monday we went to the Presidential Palace where we got to see the changing of the guards ceremony, which was very elaborate, patriotic and fun to see. The president and VP were both there that day, so they came out onto the balcony to greet the crowd, which was a neat tradition. After the changing of the guards, we went and climbed the Basilica, which I have now done 3 times and don’t get sick of! There is a great view of the entire city from the top of the towers, and the inside stonework is amazing. That night we got to meet up with Mercy to visit the Panecillo, statue of the virgin, then go for a delicious dinner.

On Tuesday, my Mom gave a talk on public health and the environment at a university just outside of Quito. A lot of people attended (including several Peace Corps staff/volunteers), and the overall presentation was great! We got to have lunch with Mercy before she had another meeting, then we went to the Peace Corps office. They got to see the office, meet much of the staff, and we got a lot of things worked out.

We got up early on Wednesday to go to “Mitad del Mundo” with Katrina, which is the site of the equator, the “middle of the world.” It was a fun little touristy activity and we took lots of pics before bussing back into Quito. Mom and I explored the artisan market, avoiding the torrential downpour, then we were able to have dinner with Mercy once more.

I am now in the Cuenca airport using a little internet before I go pick up Cora and head back to Zhoray. Mom and Dad left at 5:30am this morning, which was hard. I already miss them, but it was an incredible time with them here and I feel ready to go back to the campo and continue working. Work began picking up the week before they came, so I think I will start being more productive now.

We are in Carnaval season so I will be trying to stay warm by avoiding water balloons, but I guess it still isn’t as cold as in CO! I hope you are all surviving and enjoying the snow!

Ciao,

Kerry

 Lake at Cajas National Park

 Waterfall at Monay in Sangay National Park


 Walking the grand-baby Cora in Zhoray


 Basilica in Quito


 Cora definitely isn't spoiled or well loved....


 Panecillo in Quito


The Mitad Del Mundo