So, Arella already told you some of what has gone on this last week. While it wasn't a tourist week, we got to see and do quite a bit.
Like she said, we went to Leon for a couple of hours. While we were there we went to the cathedral and to the Museum of Myths and Legends which is located in Jail 21. This jail was used during the dictatorship of the 80's and the unrest as a prison where people were usually tortured and killed. Unfortunately there is not a lot of information on the victims there, but pictures were drawn on all the walls to show a little bit about how it would have been there. The museum was instead mostly based on portraying different myths and legends that the people of Nicaragua have. There were figurines all around dressed up and with their stories written on paper sitting next to them.
In El Sauce we stayed at a nice hotel and then worked in San Calletano, a very small community which we had to take a very rocky bumpy road to reach every day. We built two stoves and made compost which meant we had to go collect cow dung. Unfortunately we did that in the pouring rain, since the rainy season started early. We worked along side community members who were fantastic to work with. They were very hard workers and showed just how much this project was important to them.
Given it had rained so much, the power went out. Since there was no electricity the water also did not work. We took a bath in someone's back yard using well water, which was kind of awkward with everyone together, but it worked. The power had been out since Sunday and by Thursday the people of el Sauce had had enough. They gathered outside the office for the power company (which happened to be right across the street from our hotel) and demanded that they get power back, or that the Spanish company leave so someone else can come do a better job. The company said they would have power back by midnight, and the townspeople then promissed that if there was no power by midnight, they would burn down the offices. They started a fire in the road and had fire crackers throughout the evening. Luckily the power came back on around 9:00 and the riot was able to end.
We celebrated Sarah's birthday which happened to be on the same day as our farewell party. It included a pinata for the children in the town we went to work with. There was lot of dancing and the people were great. We also had in the evening a cultural night where a local band came in to play some traditional music, before we then went out to the local bar with a couple of guys who work for el Porvenir (the organization we were volunteering with) to dance. We didn't decide to make Sarah partake in the traditional birthday egg breaking which is usually done here, which includes everyone breaking an egg on her head, and we settled for a birthday cake.
We toured the past projects which people had done with El Porvenir,which includes wells which are dug by hand, washing stations, tree farms and latrines. Before we headed back to Managua. On the way back to Managua we stoped at a vent for a volcano where we saw bubbling mud and smelled the oh so pleasent smell of sulfur. It was a very interesting sight to see.
hopefully more pictures will be coming soon.
Ngaire Honey
Sunday, May 10, 2009
After Week two
So Ngaire filled you in on what has been going on for the first week of our adventure here in Nicargaua. We left san carlos and adventured to Managua and then to Leon and El sauce.
El sauce is were we spent monday-Friday helping El povenir build up the community of el sauce and those around it. We worked on building concrete stoves for families homes, and we also made a huge compost pile to help the community with the enviromental efforts they are trying to do.
We loved the people we worked with and the people of el sauce it just got frustarting because sometimes we didnt have running water and electricity but we got through that and we made it
We are now going into week 3 of our leadership journey in Nicaragua. We now are meeting up with the other group and then we are off to san juan del sor and Granada.
Im signing off for now!
p.s Ngaire will probably be on to add to this post. :)
-Arella
El sauce is were we spent monday-Friday helping El povenir build up the community of el sauce and those around it. We worked on building concrete stoves for families homes, and we also made a huge compost pile to help the community with the enviromental efforts they are trying to do.
We loved the people we worked with and the people of el sauce it just got frustarting because sometimes we didnt have running water and electricity but we got through that and we made it
We are now going into week 3 of our leadership journey in Nicaragua. We now are meeting up with the other group and then we are off to san juan del sor and Granada.
Im signing off for now!
p.s Ngaire will probably be on to add to this post. :)
-Arella
Sunday, May 3, 2009
After a week in Nicaragua
Ok, so this blog site is being done by two people, just so you don't get confused. Arella typed the last few posts and I am Ngaire and I will be sure to sign all my posts.
I was quite excited for this trip before I came on it, given that this is the first country I have visited that my Dad has not been to, but also since it is another opportunity for me to see a Latin American country and practice my Spanish skills with a whole new dialect.
We have been very busy over the last week (thus there have not been any blogs). We went to Ometepe island where we went to a beach and went to a thermal pool that has formed at the bottom of a volcano. We saw lots of colorful birds including blue magpies.
After a night on the island we spent the next night on a ferry. We had a 12 hour ride on the deck of the boat. We had been told we would be sleeping in hammocks, but instead we had beach chairs tht we were not allowed to recline. The deck of the boat filled with water and we had to move all of our luggage so it didn't get soaked. There was also a ton of wind with mist in it and everyone bundled up in their rain ponchos and tried to get through the night. We all made it, but most of us got very little sleep.
When we arived at San Carlos we ate breakfast and then we headed out to start working. Breakfast was very good and was made up of eggs, beans and delicious pineapple. We drove out to one of the feeding centers about an hour away. The center was basically a barn with cement floors a few cribs and some portable dividing walls. We painted the walls bright colors and put numbers, letters and pictures such as a picture of tweety bird on the walls to make them more kid friendly. We also raked the back yard in order to prepare it for the ovens that the other group coming after us is going to build. The center was definitely not a place I would want to take care of children, especially not 1-3 year olds (which is the age group of this center). We ended up helping 3 different centers during the three days we have been here. None of them seemed quite safe for children in my opinion, but they are certainly better than nothing and are better now thanks to our cleaning. The last center we went to had rusty nails and broken glass all over the yard. Unfortunately it will be necessary for the members of the community to learn to not break their beer bottles around the center before the cleaning we did will really make any type of long term change.
On Friday we went on a boat ride down river to the rain forest. The boat was mostly filled with people who live in the small villages along the river. One lady had her chicken casually sitting next to her feet with no cage or anything. We got off the boat at el castillo after about 3 hours on the boat. This was a fort built by the Spanish in the late 1600's to protect against pirates and other countries such as the British. The fort was built in an idea location along the river for stopping incommers up the river.
We then kept going for another half an hour on a smaller boat to our very nice hotel. The hotel was right on the water and all the rooms were all on ground level and facing the water. There were lots of beautiful flowers of different colors and fruit trees which were used to freshly squeeze our juices for our meals. There was also a large gazebo with hammocks to sit in, which all of us took advantage of at some point.
On Saturday we started our morning with a hike through the forest, where we saw two types of poisonous frogs (one red and blue, and the other kind was green with black spots), monkeys, lizards, several types of lizards and colorful birds as well as butterflies. We also tasted a plant used for anesthesia which we just touched to our tongues to make them go numb for a few minutes. We headed back to the hotel to rest and read in the hammocks before lunch, which was fresh fish and rice with fish soup.
After lunch we went swimming in the river which was quite cold, but very refreshing. For dinner we had one of my favorite meals: shrimp! It was freshwater shrimp and they were huge. a lot of the girls were not fond of shrimp, so I got to eat a ton of my favorite food. We then had our first desert of the trip, which was called yucca. It was a fried yucca plant with cheese in a sweet liquid of some sort.
After dark I went with one other girl to go searching for alligators with a guide. We saw two right away in the water near the hotel. They got away before we could catch them. We then saw another one that also got away before we left the area right around the hotel. We were in a motor boat and shining a flashlight along the shore looking for the little red eyes right above the water which is the sign of an alligator. Eventually we were able to sneak up on an alligator and the guide reached into the water and grabbed it. It was about a four year old female. Her skin was scaly, but smooth to touch. The guide showed us how to safely hold the alligator by her neck and we could then take a picture with her.
Wednesday, April 22, 2009
Sunday departure!
Friday, April 3, 2009
Getting Ready to go...
I have a lot left to do before the trip, but I am excited.
I've never been out the country so I'm excited fro this new adventure.
I'm going to gather the remainder of my things during Easter break as well as tour week break.
I'm 1/4 Nicaraguan so its like this trip is a look into my culture and ancestry, my roommate is going on this trip with me and I'm happy because we can invade this new culture and traditions together. I am also looking forward to meeting new people and expanding my horizons as a student and a leader. Overall I'm excited and nervous...
I've never been out the country so I'm excited fro this new adventure.
I'm going to gather the remainder of my things during Easter break as well as tour week break.
I'm 1/4 Nicaraguan so its like this trip is a look into my culture and ancestry, my roommate is going on this trip with me and I'm happy because we can invade this new culture and traditions together. I am also looking forward to meeting new people and expanding my horizons as a student and a leader. Overall I'm excited and nervous...
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)