Saturday, March 31, 2012

A few adventure updates


(There are some corresponding pics on facebook if you want to check them out :) )          
  Dia de Campo- Last Saturday was the big celebration of Amauta (the school we go to here) in the campo.  All of our group and our families got together to have a huge game fiesta basically…which for those of you who know me well is really a dream come true.  Funny side note…again about Ecuadorian time…the day supposedly started at 10:00, but the first family arrived at 11:00 I think, my family at 11:30 maybe, and it wasn’t until 12:00 that everyone arrived.  We balanced limes on spoons and ran, danced musical chairs, jumped roped, Sam and I kicked some ass in a three legged, my brother and I danced with tomatoes,  my mom and I raced in hay stacks…and lots more.
            Manu Chao/Calle 13 concert: Last week a few of us went to the concert Manu Choa and Calle 13, two pretty popular and very different bands.  Manu Choa is currently working with indigenous groups against the the plan to drill Yasuni for oil that I talked about earlier.  Calle Tres is kind of a rebellious underground hip hop band. It was a ton of fun, and people from all over Ecuador and South America came.  The streets were full of hippies from the coast, brownies, rebels, etc…very different from your typical Cuenca.  We also ran into a friend that works at our school, and she and her friends happened to bring 5 bottles of zhumir, and I happened to have a Spanish exam the next day, which turned out to be a deadly but enjoyable combination.
            Soccer Game: Last night a bunch of us went to another soccer game…and Cuenca won again!!! (apparently…not that any of us had any idea after the game itself).  I found out after the game when a guy with three tape recorders came and what I thought of the victory…I froze up of course and I think I told him I was from Minnesota… (as Katy was behind the interviewer trying to tell me what he had actually asked…)  We then somehow managed to get a bunch of signatures from the Cuencan soccer hotties….
            Agua Rongo: The other day we went to a really neat mountain forest an hour or so from Cuenca, which is named after the plant Agua Rongo, an epiphyte that is pretty sweet….it gets huge and becomes a microhabitat for little lizards, bugs, spiders, etc., it stores water for the ecosystem during the dry season, and people make tequila out of it.  Agua Rongo is small, but it one of the best protected and least changed forests in Ecuador.  What’s really neat is that it’s not government or state protected…its surrounded by 5 communities who all work together to protect it, and they have done an excellent job.  It remains a pertinent water source for the country. 
            Flooding:  There has been some serious flooding all over Ecuador, including in Cuenca…on the Coast people were literally boating through the streets.  Crops everywhere are dying, and staple produce items have doubled in size.  Apparently, in Cuenca, in two hours, it rained more than it did all last year…wow.  When I got off the bus, the driver wished me “Buena Suerte” , as I jumped into a calf deep pool of water.  When I walked home from the bus stop, I literally crossed a rushing river in the street to my house.  A mile or so away from my house, a few people drowned in their house. 
            So we were going to have class and go to a museum but… then we ended up saving (well mostly our professor and his friends) a sea turtle. The sea turtle was taken from his home on the Ecuadorian coast and brought to a market in Cuenca to be sold.  Sea turtles are desired as a delicacy food, for their beautiful shells, and for their blood which is thought to have a number of special powers.  A number of sea turtle species, including the one we found, are now extinct.  Illegal trafficking is a huge problem all through out Ecuador and South America.  Many animals that arrive at Amaru (the zoo we volunteer at and have class at), have been rescued from the black market, and now have to live outside of their natural habitat because they no longer can survive in the wild.   Most of them aren’t so lucky, and many species are endangered because of illegal trafficking.  Luckily, this turtle is now on its way back to the coast to be released.

Sunday, March 18, 2012

weekend of adventures


            Last weekend….was full of excitement, oddities, and sillyness, as life often seems to be here.  We started out Friday at the zoo, as usual, doing our “volunteers”.  We all of course arrived promptly, and then proceeded to for about an hour (like usual), for our awesome biodiversity professor (owner of the zoo) to show up.  We were waiting on a busy corner, and of course being a group of 8 gringos, attracted countless stares and questions.  We first worked at the reptile, snake, iguana, amphibian, and fish zoo, filling up tanks and feeding turtles and what not.  Then we all piled into the back of our professor’s truck to head to feed the mammals at the bigger, newer zoo outside the city.  Before continuing to the zoo, my professor of course took us to his favorite panaderia, and we chilled in the sun for a half hour eating pan.  We then went to a produce and meat store, and he piled avacados, apples, cabbage, chicken feet, watermelon, corn, and such on top of us, and we continued on the way to feed the animals.  We made colorful fruit salads for the birds, threw apples and aguacuates at the bears, and watched Ernesto feed chicken feet to the beautiful new Puma.  Oh, and of course I spent a good time throwing bananas and peanuts at the monkeys.  Lindsey fed her Galapagos turtle love, who is partially blind and quite deformed, and requires a lot of help and time eating. 
            That afternoon we went to Cajas National Park, which is a whole different world only about a half hour away from Cuenca, and wow, wow, wow.  It part of the Ecuadorian Paramo, at a 9,000-13,000 feet elevation.  The paramo is the water ecosystem, in charge of collecting and dispersing water to the other ecosystems.  This was clear from the moment we stepped off the bus and sunk into the grass on the climb down to the lake.  We bounced and pranced around on the delightfully squishy, mossy grass and mud.  Cajas is typically pretty chilly, rainy and foggy, and is full of lakes, mountains, and strange vegetation that has adapted to live at its high altitudes.  It is also home to llamas and alpaca, hummingbirds, and false scorpians, and many endemic bird species.  Sadly, it used to be teaming with frogs…and I mean truly frog-fantastic, as in a frog every square foot.  But now many frogs in the paramo have become extinct, or are now endangered, and we didn’t see a single frog the whole time.  Ernesto, our professor at the zoo, is a frog finatic and expert.  He is currently running a number of frog conservation projects, which we have had the opportunity to observe a bit.  However, frogs are a species that haven’t been studied much, and conservation projects are difficult to figure out.
            We traveled to Cajas equipped with tents, hotdogs, marshmellows, and such, ready to camp, but Im embarrassed to say that we wimped out (especially after bragging how we are all accustomed to the cold, and camping would be no big deal for us).  After a few hours in the rain, fog, and cold, we weren’t really feeling the whole camping thing.  So instead, we went to an old restaurant/bar with our professor.  We warmed up with large pitchers of canalesa, which is warm zhumir (the hard liquor of Ecuador), and cinnamon, and large stacks of fried pork and beef and dirty mote.  A few of us then proceeded to camp in my basement and watch harry potter in Spanish. Later that night, while waiting with Julia outside for her to catch a taxi, we were joined by a very drunk man who drove up on the curb and almost ran her down.  He was soon joined by his employee who was attempting and failing to chase his drunken self down and control him.  The next morning, my plans of sleeping in quickly disappeared by the appearance of 5-6 men surrounding my room and in my roof, banging away and reconstructing on all sides of me at 630 AM.  I think I forgot to mention how strange the weather has been lately…tons of crazy rain, hail, and wind-storms.  Anyhow, our house, well mostly just my room, flooded…meaning a good few cms of water on the ground, which is pretty comical because I keep most of my stuff on my ground.
            Saturday, I spent nearly the entire day watching movies and TV with my family. Sunday, a few friends and I and my mom went to two nearby small cities: Gualaseo and Chordeleh with my mom, who does a lot of museum and church restoration work there. Gualaseo is a beautiful, tranquil, small town.  We were there on a Sunday, and wondering around the parks and rivers.  We were joined by a few friendly dogs on our adventure (so unlike any of the dogs I have met in Cuenca haha). We climbed trees by the river, and I chilled with a beautifully fluffy baby bird for a while.  Climbing the trees literally puts you over the rushing rivers due to the recent copious amounts of rain.  There are small playgrounds, parks, and gazebos lining the river, that slowly filled as Sunday church ended in the town.  Couples, families, and children gathered to play games, have grill outs, and relax for the beautiful day.  Alexa, Katy, and I proceeded to draw attention and make fools of ourselves, playing on the slides, swings, balance beams, and bars….the only gringos in sight.  Perhaps I haven’t mentioned…but making a fool of myself in every way possible has become a game I really enjoy playing here…given that I do so naturally, and I stick out regardless of if I am trying to draw attention to myself or not.  Anyway, we continued to walk, and stop to watch sugar making in process for a while….a man leading a horse round-and round with a grinder in the middle…about a block away more sugar cane was being made….but at a much faster rate with a mechanical machine…curious.
            We then stumbled upon an awesome small carnival amusement park type thing with a great ferris wheel, merry-go-rounds, tiny boat and plane rides, a giant dragon ship, and more…we played around the closed park for a while, joined by some local children, and then were told that the park opens at 11:00 and all rides were a dollar or less…you can imagine our excitement!  All of the rides looked pretty old and sketchy, and felt on the verge of breaking…however we had our mind set on returning.  We wondered around for a while, exploring a few Sunday markets, eating delicious fresh fruit as always, and visited a lovely and lively church service.  We met up with my mom, after she finished her work, and headed back to the carnival.  It was open now, full of kids, and blasting 80’s music.  We ran like little children to the ferris wheel ride, and boarded (while it was moving), and without being asked to buckle in anything.  My mom watched with a huge smile, giggling non-stop.  This ferris wheel was double trouble…while it spun in big circles, each cart spun in little circles as well.  The first few rounds were awesome, and I think we were all in childish glee, and enjoying the incredible view from the top of the city.  However, a few more rounds of spinning and I wasn’t so happy…luckily I got off in time to loose all my delicious fruit…ah back to childhood.  Katie, Alexa, and Lindsey proceeded to ride the giant swaying dragon, where they sat unbuckled in cages being shook around mercilessly as the ship swayed faster and faster.  My mom and I watched, and danced and sang to the 80’s music.  We all wondered together for while, and then head to the next town Chordeleh . This town is an even smaller artesan town, known for beautiful art, woodwork, silver, alpaca, and more.  On the drives there and back, my mom filled me in with a lot of cultural and environmental history of the towns and the rivers and mountains surrounding the towns.  My mom is some kind of combination of a museum/church/art restorer, an anthropologist, and a historian, and seems to have an endless depth of knowledge.  As we approached the towns, she told me about a mountain slide that occurred about 22 years ago.  It blocked the river and caused a major flood wiping out the towns and causing a number of deaths.  She also gave me a brief history about the Incans coming in and invading the Canari land.  This weekend we head to Canar and Ingapirca to learn more, and see the ruins.

Recent Political Action



            There has been a lot of recent political action in Ecuador…which has me realize what a radical indigenous population Ecuador has.  President Correa recently signed a contract agreeing to mine Yasuni National Park.  Yasuni National Park is one of the most biodiverse places in the world. Here, diversity of amphibians, birds, mammals, and vascular plants are at their greatest in all of the Western Hemisphere.  It also holds the world record for “local-scale” tree, amphibian and bat richness. .  In only 2.5 acres of land, more tree species can be found than in all of the U.S. and Canada.  In response, a large group of farmers, indigenous communities, women, workers, professors, students, etc. is protesting and marching for the defense of water, nature, labor rights, and the life and dignity of communities.  Open pit mining does irreversible damage to the forests, biodiversity, and species diversity.  It causes land erosion and air pollution.  It makes for serious health issues to the people living in the forests and nearby communities.  People are also concerned about the famous “Dutch Disease” that turn countries into importers, destroying local development.  Water, and the health of nature and people should be prioritized over the need for gold, copper, and uranium.   A few days ago the large march/protest passed through Cuenca, on their way to Quito in hopes of arriving there by March 22, which is International water day (Quito is about 10 hours by car from Cuenca).  The march was full of passion and excitement, in attempt of spreading awareness and opposing the governmental decisions.  In the main park of Cuenca, the government paid for pro-Correa speakers trying to convince and educate the public of the necessity to drill Yasuni.  They played cheerful indigenous music, and provided an upbeat environment.  It was fascinating to see groups side-by-side.
            Also, a week or so ago was “el dia de la mujer” or International woman’s day.  I had never heard of this day until I came here…I don’t know how well it is celebrated in other places.  In Cuenca, it is a huge event.  There are signs and banners all around the city.  Everyone gives the women in their lives flowers.  Groups of moms finally take the night off to go out to eat with each other.  Groups of young women go out for a bite to eat and then celebrate at the clubs.  The feeling in the city, and among women, was of great excitement, pride, and celebration.  It was a really neat day and holiday, however I found it a bit contradictory.  It’s kind of sad that it takes a holiday for women to finally relax, enjoy, and celebrate themselves. For many, only on this day, are they fully celebrated, respected, and served.  Couldn’t men cook and clean and celebrate women a few more days of the year…?

Saturday, March 3, 2012

coast trip/ayampe


         Our next trip was during our week of vacation, during Carnaval, to a small beach town called Ayampe.  The beach town was so relaxed, and slow moving, and very different from everywhere else I have been in Ecuador.  It was like life was on a constant pause…with no worries.  For example, there was one store in the whole town, and everyday the same men were chilling outside the store with piles of beers and games from 9am-to bed, and children are running around them playing their own games.  The beach was magnificent.  The current was one of the strongest I have ever experienced, and there were a lot of talented surfers to watch.  We had to constantly be swimming as fast as we could in order to stay in one place…so much fun.  One wave smashed me so hard to the sand that it chopped some of my hair right off.  There were so many neat tidal pools full of little fish, many-pointed starfish, and funny sluggy snail things!  Apart from swimming, we basically laid in the sun, napped, read, and played lots games.  We watched the sunset every night.  I think it was the most any of us have relaxed in a long time.  I also read the first harry potter in Spanish ;) (maybe cheating because I pretty much have it memorized…)  Our hostel was pretty great too…equipped with hammocks everywhere, an outdoor kitchen and chill area, a group of dogs that joined us everywhere, peacocks chilling in the yard, iguanas chilling on the roof, and frogs and crabs everywhere.  The people at the hostel switched every night, and we met a lot of fun people, with interesting stories from all around the world.  We attempted to play some crazy, fun instruments, attempted to understand long complex jokes, and failed at both. Every night we went out for the cheapest and most delicious seafood I have had in my life…(this is coming from someone who has always hated seafood with a passion)…shrimp, fish, squid, octopus, ceviche...We also went to a market in a nearby town one day, bought fresh seafood, and had a magnificent seafood grill party at our hostel.  We had fires on the beach most nights, my favorite, and were joined by a number of coastal friends and dogs.
         We took a few awesome day trips…first to la playa de frailes…which is a white sand, white water, incredibly beautiful beach pretty close to Ayampe.  There we found an awesome cave, and a few of us got a little too excited about the incredible shells inside, and almost got trapped by the incoming tides.  The cave and rocks were covered with more crabs than I have ever seen in my life…such funny creatures to watch scuttle about, especially with the rough, crashing waves.  We took a boat ride to isla de plata, which is an island that hosts a few of the same creatures found in the Galapagos.  We saw blue-footed boobies, and a baby booby (which incidentally is bigger than the mama booby and covered in white fluffy feathers.  We also snorkled a bit, but it was too rough to see much.  However, our boat was circled by sea turtles and manarays at one point.

Amazon/Oriente


         So I seem to be a bit behind….but a few weeks ago we traveled to the Ecuadorian Amazon/Oriente for a week…the Southern part.  The trip was incredible, there is no way I will be able to do it justice in words or pictures. (I did put an album up on facebook you should check out...it takes hours to load pics on this blog so no more pics here unfortunately)  Anyway, before I give a recap of the trip I am going to nerd out a bit about Ecuador and how awesome the biodiversity is in Ecuador…so feel free to skip to our adventures…but I know some of my bio and science friends will appreciate lol.
         Ecuador is a biodiversity hot spot, one of the most diverse places in the world, and the Andes are the main contributing factor.  Vicariancia is diversity by the development of mountains.  More than 70% of the species are endemic (meaning they are unique only to the Andes…having very specific conditions and a very small range of distribution).  The Andes have many very different and extreme climates and microclimates, with many natural barriers such as the Amazon River.  On our trip, we set out to explore the differences and extremes.  The Andes of Ecuador hosts five main, distinct ecosystems, each located at different altitude…and each with very unique climates, vegetation, species, etc.  Starting at the lowest altitude is the Tropical humid rainforest, then follows the dry forest, next the mountain forests, next the cloud forests, and finally at the highest altitudes the paramo.  In our week-long trip, we hiked around and learned about each ecosystem, feeling the climates and studying the various species of trees, plants, and animals...pretty awesome.  The different ecosystems occupy an altitude range of about 4,000 meters…and the changes in altitude cause massive changes in the ecosystems…traveling just an hour on the road can take you to a seemingly whole new world.  The more gradients of altitude you have, the more types of ecosystems.  An altitudinal change of 600 M is equivalent to a latitudinal change of 1000 KM wow! These patterns hold true because Ecuador is smack dab on the Equator. So this helps explain the biodiversity in Ecuador…and the lack of biodiversity in places like hmmm flatland, sea level Minnesota.  Another interesting thing about climbing altitude is…in the lower altitudes the Density of species is greatest…in the mid altitudes the Diversity/richness is the greatest, and in the higher altitudes the number of endemic species is the greatest.
         Anyway, the trip…
         The first day we went to Susudel, which is a small very small town in a mountain forest.  We went for an awesome hike with an extremely knowledgeable man Fernando.  During the hike, he told us all about the native plants, their awesome adaptations, and their medicinal uses.  We stayed overnight on his organic farm, full of cats, dogs, chickens, and 3-week old kittens.  We ate deliciously fresh farm food…including their famous duck and chicken egg and bacon scramble with choclo and other beans.  The farm also makes its own jerkeys, salsas, jams, dried fruits, pickles, relishes, and hot sauces.  The farm and the small town had me thinking a lot about both the simplicity and challenges of farm life.
         The second day we switched ecosystems to hike in the dry forest.  We hiked under circling condors, encountered one of the most venomous spiders in the world, and possibly discovered a new species of crab.  We then moved on to a hike in a conserved mountain forest…completely different! So fresh, green, wet, lush, and full of life.  It is preserved by a nearby indigenous community that we also visited, called Saraguro.  The people living there still speak Quitchua, but also learn Spanish.  They have strictly defined traditions…everyone attends school, and then university to specialize, and then works for the community in their specific pplacements.  The town was beautiful and clean, with little parks and markets.  That night we traveled to Loja city, which is another of the largest cities in Ecuador.  We wandered around, exploring a few of Loja’s parks, churches, and bars and what not, and then back to the hotel for another game night.
         Day three we hiked in another dry forest, and learned about a lot of the awesome adaptations plants and animals have developed in order to live in such a challenging environment.  Lots of species are venomous and/or nocturnal.  We then traveled to our next hostel, which happened to have a waterslide, pool, and bar…so needless to say pool party time!  That night we went for an awesome night hike.  Standing on a small mountain, on one side we could see the sun setting (Incas), and on the other side we could see the moon rising (Canaris).  Due to some dirt slides, a few of us almost fell off the mountain, but (luckily?) I caught myself in a cactus.
         Day four, I went for a run near the hostel, and happened upon a big fire in the field with 20 or so firefighters at work…We then ventured to Podocorpus National Park, which is a national protected biosphere park, and a mix of a cloud forest and tropical forest.  There is something so cool about hiking literally in the clouds.  The park was so fresh, mossy, and green, with so many cool, diverse plant and animal species, many of which are endemic.  I really enjoyed the “Pajaro reloj” (clock bird).  The park is also full of waterfalls…the most powerful waterfalls I have ever experienced in my life.  Standing twenty feet away from one waterfall, we were all soaked within minutes, our boots filled to the brim.  Of course, puddle jumping and a mud fight followed.  There is something so powerful about waterfalls…cleansing for your mind, body and soul, a fresh start wherever you need it.  That night we were another hostel with a pool and waterslide (the waterslide without water) and took pool party to a whole new level.  We played “cheesestick”, and the losers had to run down the waterslide into the pool.  It was a rather cold night by the way.  Henry and I lost, and proceeded to begin the pool party…we all ended up “sliding” down the waterslide, playing water polo etc. We also attempted to teach our Spanish biodiversity professor some English drinking games which was a riot.
         Day five, I woke up early for a peaceful beautiful run around the hostel…the bird calls are unbelievable in the tropical rainforests in the morning when everything is quiet…but my peace was disturbed a clan of very angry dogs, and I had to sprint down the mountain like there was no tomorrow.  This was the start to quite an adventure day…the plan was to drive a few hours to a river, and take a river boat down the Amazon to a Shuar village and to an area abundant in fossils.  However, there was a mudslide that got in the way bit…when we arrived, there were 20 or so busses and cars, and more and more joined the hold up.  Some had been waiting over night for upwards of 10 hours!  We stopped, watched, and played in the mud while tractor upon tractor arrived and attempted to take care of the mess.  Most failed, and simply pushed the mud up and down and back and forth, only for it to fall in to the street again.  After about three hours, we were on our way again.  Next, we tried to cross a river with our van, but our van got stuck and broke the crossing plank thing.  So we were stuck there for a while too…we proceeded to pile the 13 or so of us in the back of a random pickup truck and drive the rest of the way.  We finally made it to our boat, and it began to downpour, like really downpour.  This meant none of the river animals would be out unfortunately.  Also, at this point we were so behind, that we didn’t have time to make it to our original destinations. So, we road the river boat for a while, filling our boots and boat with rain, explored a Shuar community for a few minutes, and turned right around.  The river was awesome though, so full and rushing, with waterfalls and towering trees lining the walls.  We also acquired a locally made alcohol in the small river town, called canto claro, which is one of the worst alcohols on this planet probably, but proceeded to drink it the whole way back.  When we got back, completely soaked to the bone, we were locked out of our rooms because the hostel had decided to make copies of the keys.  Then, for dinner, Narcissa ordered us 5 courses of meat…chicken, pork, tongue, ribs, and liver.  What a funny day.
         Day six…we woke up at 5 for bird watching and listening, and a hike in the rainforest!  It was so peaceful in the morning and we heard the bird calls of 20+ species.  My favorite bird was the orpendula bird, which makes beautiful nests in which the entrance is from the bottom to prevent hungry predators from stealing their babies.  Stepping into the tropical rainforest is a whole new world….it is so dense and layered with plants.  Everything has adapted to climb up, into the canopy, which hosts 90% of rainforest life.  We swang on the vines, and ate live termites straight from a palm tree (they taste kind of like moving almonds…)  When we got back from the hostel, Amy and I stumbled upon a few cows, and fulfilled Amy’s dream of milking a cow before leaving.  I went for a run, and got myself into another pickle like always…I encountered the same angry dogs, but this time was surrounded by an angry cow on the other side…I ended up jumping into a muddy swamp/lake to escape…(I could probably write an entire blog about running and dog encounters at this point…)  That night we traveled to a town called Gualaquiza (spelling?), which has been probably one of my favorite towns in Ecuador.  It was simply full of life and good energy.  Everyone on the streets greeted us with smiles and welcomes, and everyone seemed to be enjoying life.  The town was also decorated with great murals painted by the town’s children.  It also had this magical somewhat hidden Narnia park that ran along the river, full of incredible trees and so peaceful.
         Day seven…we traveled to the Shuar community.  We drove along windy, dirt roads for a while, until the ended at a bridge.  Herman, his wife, his son, and his donkeys met us at the bridge, and we hiked with them through the Amazon to their community.  The Shuar, who used to be a semi-nomadic tribe, have now settled in communities around the Amazon.  The community had a number of houses, separate round style kitchens with center fireplaces, a few classrooms, and large farms.  We sat in the kitchen with them in the kitchen for a few snacks and meals of fresh pineapple, cooked bananas (pan de bosque/bread of the forest), plantain chips, yucca, and rice, all staples in the Shuar diet.  We also brought and cooked spagetti, which was a very peculiar concept for them, that they had never encountered.  The foods they eat come mostly straight from the land.  We learned about past traditions, and how things have changed, and what have been preserved.  They also had never seen a person from Asia (Amy), or a blonde person (me).  We next went for an incredible day and night hike lead by Herman.  We explored another part of the tropical Amazon rainforest, full of life and diversity, layered and packed with plants and trees..also bullet ants more poisenous than snakes and spiders.  We swam and cooled off in a small but powerful and refreshing waterfall.  In our night hike, we searched with our headlights, and found a number of awesome frogs, snakes, and a spider.  We heard the sounds of many more animals, that probably saw us, even if we didn’t find them.  The next day we made the long journey back to Cuenca.

Wednesday, February 1, 2012

futbol game, family barbeque, hike


         We started off the weekend by wondering to a bar near our school called the beer house, which seems to be the only bar in Ecuador where you can get dark beers…which seem to be a weird concept here.  Although beer is huge here, there are only a few kinds, all of which are light.  It’s a strange contrast to abundance of choices in the US, and the plethora of different breweries in each state.  Anyway, the beer house is my favorite bar in Cuenca at the moment.  It has a sandy area with hammocks to drink your beer…need I say anymore?
         We then went to the first fĂștbol game of the season, my brother, his friends, my cousin, and my friends.  The season kicked off with an introduction of the players, a ton of music, fireworks, crazy fans, beer and excitement.  Cuenca also won against Peru.  It was pretty fun and exciting, and I caught a soccer ball.

         Constantly throughout the week, my mom reminded me not to make any plans on Saturday, because we were going to go to a barbeque at her cousin Nora’s house in the early afternoon (Nora is a wonderful, funny, crazy, caring woman, I have instantly bonded with here).  Of course, due to Ecuadorian time, I definitely could have made plans during the day, as we didn’t leave the house until 6ish.  It was a really fun night.  My sisters, brother, and cousins, and I played rounds of pool, ping-pong, and wii, which by the way it is impossible to learn the controls in Spanish, and I got my ass kicked.  Nora also has an open bar at her house, bigger than any bar I have seen in Cuenca thus far.

         It was a barbeque, so when my uncle brought a round of delicious, pesto hotdogs, I figured that was dinner, and I was pretty full and content.  However, I was quite wrong, and a sit-down dinner of chicken, rice, corn salad, etc was still to come, along with dessert.  It was all fantastic, and we all left stuffed to the brim.  It was especially fun to see my host mom with her cousin.  Nora is a wild, non-stop talking, funny, awesome women, who definitely brings out the crazy in my mom.  Together they are non-stop stories, disses, laughs, and craziness.  Finally we were able to break the two-apart, and returned to the house around 1 in the morning.
         A few hours later, the next morning, I dragged myself out of bed at 4:45 am to go on a hike to Cerro Punay, Chimborazo.  I still have no conception of where this is or what this is, but it was pretty neat.  My friend Katie and I signed up to go with a local hiking group.  It was three hours away from Cuenca, in some beautiful mountainous area.  We met a lot of fun people, many Ecuadorian, and many from other random parts of the world.  The hike was up and down the mountain of Cerro Punay, which back in the day, when the world was covered in water, was the only peak that stood above the water.  At least I think that is what our guide told us in Spanish…  We also saw some remenants of Incan creations, including… and small “stadiums” Climbing up and down was really neat, because the ecosystems changed drastically.  We climbed from dark green leafiness to brown prairie like grasses.  As we learned in our biodiversity class, climbing vertically 600 meters is equivalent to traveling horizontally 1000 kilometers as far as ecosystem and climatic changes…pretty neat.  Other than that, I can’t tell you too much about the hike, because we were in complete fog and rain, and could barely see a few feet in front of us. Going down the mountain, every step felt like you might step off the mountain.  It was also a steep down, and complete mud, and everybody slid and ate shit numerous times, myself included.  The hike was fun, beautiful, and interesting, and it was really nice to be away from the busy city for a day.



Saturday, January 28, 2012

My family


Pictures to come...!
         My host family is awesome.  They are truly warm, fun, and friendly people.  I love being in my house hanging out with everybody, and given how many people there are, there is pretty much always someone home to hangout with and talk to.  They include me in all their conversations, and fill me in with everything I need to understand the topics of discussion.  They constantly feed me with information about living in Ecuador, customs, culture, food, and other random things to be aware of.  They graciously answer my endless questions, excited to share their knowledge and experiences.  They also question me and show endless interest in my life and experiences.  The house is always full of conversation, stories, laughs, and smiles.  They invite me everywhere, from clubbing with friends, to barbeques with family, to errands to the Mercado or Centro.  At a cousin’s birthday party, I met a host of cousins, aunts, and uncles, each as enthusiastic and welcoming as the next.  All welcomed me to the family, exclaiming “prima” with excitement.
Mi Madre Marlene- My mom is a busy, busy women, and lives an active and interesting life.  She mothers her four children in their 20’s, and now me too…and constantly has to pick up and drop off various people at various places, along with the cooking and cleaning in the house.  She also works a ton.  She is a museum restorer, her job is really neat.  She has an office by my school, that I often hangout in.  I do my homework, and she works on various art restorations.  She also travels a lot of different cities in Ecuador to various museums and churches for restoration projects.  My mom is so funny…because she has so much to do and so much to keep track of, she is a bit scatter brained.  She is pretty much always late, and often forgets what she is doing, or that she had to plans to pick people up and what not.  But that’s only because she has now five kids, that she has to keep track of and take care of, along with all her work and house work.  I have so much respect and admiration for her and all she manages.  Plus, she really gives people her care and focus all the time.  She is also a really fun, friendly and humorous, and great to talk to.  We have a lot of interesting conversations, and she has already taught me a lot.
Adriana is my sister I have spent the most time with so far.  She is 23, majored in fashion designing, and is currently working two jobs in Cuenca.  She is the most talkative and outgoing in the family, and loves to go out, dance, party, and hangout with friends.  I have gone out a few times with her and her friends, and its always a great time.  She always invites me out, and offers to take me around the city, or shopping, or to her favorite clubs and bars.  She and her friends are really bubbly, fun, and inclusive.  Adriana is incredibly helpful, and always explains everything to me, and has shown me how to get around in Cuenca.  She studied in the U.S. for a year during high-school, so she knows the experiences of an exchange student first hand.  She is also just a lot of fun to talk to and hangout with…my time spent with her is always full of stories, jokes and laughs back and fourth.
Andrea, my 24 year-old sister is an architecture major, and currently finishing her thesis.  Thus, right now, she and her thesis are attached at the hip…although we were successful in separating her and her thesis the other night to go out to her cousin’s birthday party J  Andrea is always at the dining room table, with a furrowed brow, gazing at the computer.  I usually sit at the dining room table too, doing my homework, and have thoroughly enjoyed her company, and that of her friend Fernando.  Although they work hard on their thesis’s, we all chat and hang around, listening to music and sharing songs and videos.  They are really fun and talkative, and full of stories and interest.  Andrea has a pretty serious side, but also a truly playful and silly side.  She is a very curious and engaging person, always looking to learn more about people and the world.
Juan Marcelo is the same age as I, and in his third year of engineer school.  He has been in exams the last few weeks, but still seems to have less work than I, as he pointed out the other day when trying to get me to watch a movie and ditch my homework.  I don’t think he likes to study all that much haha…he more prefers to watch sports, TV, and movies, and go out with his friends and party and dance and what not…and thus is often under cleaning punishment of his mom.  He is a really fun and warm guy, but speaks very, very fast, and does not pronounce words, so I often have a hard time understanding him… I can’t wait until my Spanish improves enough to actually understand him without having to ask him to repeat himself 5 times.  He is really welcoming, and always invites me everywhere. He took me to the first Futbol game of the season last night, and it was a lot of fun.
Mayra is 19, and also in engineer school, and also in the midst of exams…but she is a bit more studious, and pretty busy.  She is the most quiet and shy of the family, but truly warm-hearted, friendly, and nice.
El Conejo- My family also has a bunny…who is a bit of an oddball to say the least.  You will often find him sitting in a potted plant, or nibbling at your feet as you hang laundry.  My family feeds him all sorts of fruits and veggies and bread and what not, but instead he breaks into my mom’s garden and devours the entirety of her hard work.  Thus, there is a bit of a war between the bunny and my mom, and the bunny is unquestionably the winner.
My house is really comfortable, and beautifully decorated, given my mom’s passion for art.  It has not taken long for me to feel at home…also because my family is so great.  People usually hangout in the kitchen and dining area, at the table, in my mom’s room watching TV, or in the basement rec room area.