Wednesday, August 8, 2012
Still Up For An Adventure
Friday, July 20, 2012
It's Raining...
Wednesday, June 6, 2012
When Worlds Collide
6. Pachamanca: I think Pachamanca has made it on a top ten list before but it’s because it is SO good. And this time, mom and dad were there to enjoy it! From the ground to the table, they witnessed the grandeur that is pachamanca. We were invited to sit on the benches which is a nice honor. Unfortunately, dad’s legs were too long and he feared stepping on the food. So he stood while a very insistent tía worried that we weren’t eating enough. But we assured her, we were stuffed.
8. Saturday church in Lima: We were able to attend at the Adventist church with Miguel and his family. And true to church-day tradition, we went out to lunch afterwards altogether. It was a wonderful morning for me because my parents were able to spend more time with this family who has come to support me like their own daughter beyond anything I could have ever wished from an assigned host family. The challenge was translating the conversation during lunch. There came a point where I said that I would have to stop translating or I wouldn’t eat anything! It was a beautiful day.
10. The jungle: Is there anything more I can say about the jungle? Well, yes. I could make a top 10 list just for the jungle. I love the jungle. Sure, it’s full of bugs that make you sleep in a mosquito net and hot and humid but it’s…the jungle! Along with coral reefs, it is among the most diverse ecosystems in the world and therefore a biologist’s dream. Being here in Peru, with the jungle so close, I am taking advantage of my travel here to go whenever I can (time and money allowing). So, I convinced my semi-reluctant parents to jump in a plane to Puerto Maldonado and on a boat to our jungle lodge in the Tambopata National Reserve. Although I was recovering from the marathon, I was determined to participate in everything our jungle tour had to offer: night walk, early morning walk to and vigil of a clay lick, kayaking on the river, ziplining through the trees, fishing with a cane pole and a night boat ride to spot caimans. We also saw capuchin and squirrel monkeys, jaguar tracks, capybaras and lots of big creepy crawlies! I knew I would like the jungle but I was a little anxious for my parents’ enjoyment of it. But Dad was in his element sitting in the ground blind. So what if he was looking at scarlet macaws instead of scanning for deer? And the American Fisherman found a cane pole and became the “South American Fisherman.” Mom was a good sport with the adventuring but I have a feeling that her favorite part was waking up in our bungalow with the relaxing sound of the rain on the thatched roof before we had to pack up to leave.
12. Aguas Calientes: This town is the train stop for all those tourists who want to see Machu Picchu and don’t want to hike there to do it. Its name also means “hot waters” and is home to a lovely hot spring. Wanting to get to Machu Picchu early, we went to Aguas Calientes to stay the night and get up early the next day. This meant we had some time to enjoy the city with some hiking and some shopping. Cuzco had been a little too hectic and in-you-face for us but Aguas Calientes was relaxed enough that we could enjoy the cloud forest we were visiting. The parents were exhausted but I took the evening to enjoy the hot springs. And it was glorious.
13. Machu Picchu: How could this not make the list, right? I mean, it’s Machu Picchu! To be honest, I was seeing it for the second time and I was sadly aware that I wasn’t struck with the same jaw-dropping awe that I had felt upon my first sighting of this world wonder. Instead, upon seeing it again, I felt peacefully nostalgic. Luckily for me, I was there with two Machu Picchu first-timers and their excitement was more than enough for me.
14. Lima layover: My parents last day in Peru we flew from Cuzco to Lima early in the morning and then had all day to spend in Lima before their flight home at midnight:thirty that night. It was such a wonderful day. We took a silly bus tour of the city which, although informative, was made sillier by wearing headsets that told us more information about the sites we were seeing. One last gourmet Peruvian meal at Chef Gaston’s restaurant, Tanta, and soon it was time to go back to the airport. We laughed a lot that day and it was a perfect end to such a wonderful vacation.
Tuesday, April 24, 2012
A Gold Star
Sunday, March 25, 2012
Better Late Than Never?
Thursday, February 23, 2012
Painting World Pieces
In my plan for summer school, I had included the world map project as part of a geography/ecology/culture class. As we know, my summer school plans fell through but from its remnants would rise the world map as a project all unto itself! (Did that sound epic? I wanted it to sound epic). In just one week I, with my battalion of niños, drew, outlined, painted, outlined, labeled and sealed a 1 meter x 2 meter mural map of the world.
Among other challenges, I found myself working with kids much littler than I had hoped. This proved challenging in a few ways. 1) The little kids couldn’t help my transfer my 8X11” drawing of the world to a 1X2 meter. So I found myself penciling Patagonia onto the wall myself and 2) The little ones couldn’t quite reach Russia. Meaning that they were a little too short to paint the countries further north. So I found myself stretching to paint Finland while the little ones painted Oceania a nice deep blue.
I could have found myself getting frustrated by plans going awry but to be honest, drawing and painting lost in the solitude of my iPod ear buds was incredible soothing. I was feeling productive and not overly stressed. As everyone passed by, they would flatteringly comment on my artistic abilities, asking for drawing lessons. The kids showed up on days I asked them to and they kept me company on the days that they were unable to help. And at the end, we had this wonderful masterpiece.
But the real eye-opening experience of this project proved to be learning just how much (or how little) my students and fellow comuneros know about the world. Most everyone could point out Peru on our map but ask about anything beyond South America and they were lost. Mention Australia and they are looking towards Greenland. Most everyone knows that I am from the United States by this point but not many people knew where that was.
Maybe most interestingly was watching everyone realize how small Peru is in comparison with other countries of the world. To people of a small town in the Andes, the biggest world they know is Lima. But when they saw the size of China, Russia, Australia, Canada and the United States, their world views expanded with their idea of what it a country can look like. And since we painted with sticky oil-based paint, hopefully the map can give some geographical perspective to the kids and any passersby for a long time. And just like that I took some baby steps back in to feeling impactful.
Blessings.