Wednesday, July 15, 2015

Day 17 - El Dia del Virgin Carmen Fiesta

Wednesday July Fifteenth
      The first thing I noticed this morning was that I had titled all the previous posts with the wrong month, June instead of July! Haha! It's so hard to keep track of time in the summer! I think I fixed them all know though.
         Today was a very exciting day at work because we were celebrating the day of Virgin Mary, or as she is known here virgin Carmen, and being a very catholic country the celebration was huge!
Here the teacher's assistant in my classroom Mary is doing my hair, and they also gave us the traditional clothes I am wearing!
The final result! Pretty cool ecspecially the hat ☺️
Me and the shrine for the virgin.
Just when you thought the kids couldn't get any cuter!
Not that they cared too much for the historical significance of the clothes as it hindered their ability to play!
Hunter with Christian who appropriately chose devil horns as he is a trouble maker! But too cute not to overlook that :)
Hunter with some more kids :)
Coincidence! Me and the other girl in the class called Adrianna happened to be wearing the same thing! Haha!

Finally found a picture of Matt...in traditional clothing.
     After a service by a priest who came specially for the occasion, a band started playing and unexpectedly, for me anyway, we all started marching out onto the busy streets with 80 three, four and five year old's, are we crazy?!
The first road we marched on which was relatively quiet, that is relative to the next one.
Then we went right out onto the main road, six lanes across with a median in the middle! What the heck?! Who planned this?! How insane?!
No one had told the traffic control or anything like that and being at the back of the parade I was constantly trying to make sure my kids weren't getting run over by the ominous mass of annoyed cars following us! Literally one of the craziest things I've done!
It was a little to far for Avril!
    I got home tired but very happy, what an experience! 
    When I got home we celebrated U.S. Caroline's birthday with some delicious cupcakes! She's one of the funest people! I hope she has an awesome year being twenty three!
     Then Colleen one of the other volunteers came over with some other big news, her boyfriend had proposed at Macchu Picchu! Isn't that the most romantic thing! What an awesome place to be proposed to, at the top of the world! If I ever get proposed to that would be the perfect way! 
     It was also Collen's last day so we took her last minute gift shopping and out to dinner.
Hunter, Collen, German Caroline, U.S. Caroline, and me at dinner! And yes that table is a fish tank
Here are the fish to prove it!
Actually it was just a really cool restaurant in general!
Pillows!
Bye Collen! I'm really going to miss you! Your so much fun, but also really smart! Thanks for sharing your experiences from running! Love this picture of you, 😜

Monday, July 13, 2015

Day 15 - We met Bambi and ate Starfruit

The Monday July Thirteenth
    I was the only one who decided to go to work this morning, with German Caroline's and Hunter's terrible bus ride experience, and U.S. Caroline still being sick (since she volunteers at a hospital it isn't the best idea to go to work sick). So I got ready and ate breakfast by myself trying to not wake up anyone else.
    I was really busy at the kindergarten which was good, I think I'm starting to find my place! But the language barrier is making it pretty hard to get to know the teachers well, my Spanish is still pretty bad.
Corali the little monkey climbing all over me! Aww :)
Guiliana found my sunglasses 
Edceline (isn't that the prettiest name) and Ariana photobombing :)
    After the lunch me and German Caroline went out to the mall and a zoo in the University across the street
And Caroline
At the mall! My face is so sun burnt from Lake Titicaca it's as red as the sign behind me! To bad it's so cold that's the only part of me that's going to be at all tan, the rest being shocking white from having been covered up the whole time!
At the zoo! Me and a deer we dubbed Bambi who followed us around the whole time!
A condor, which was cool to see as it is an extremely important animal in the Incan culture, having been thought to be the messengers to the gods. The Incan culture has three really important animals, the condor, the puma, and the snake. The snake represents the underworld like it does in most cultures.
The Zoo's Puma, they're literally the most terrifying animals! In traditional Inca culture the Puma is the lord of the earth, a sacred creature. 
And the most awesome talking parrot ever! He could say Hola so well me and Caroline thought it was a child for the longest time! And he could whistle, imitate our laughs, and say Aurrora! It was crazy!
    In the evening me and German Caroline decided that we had eaten too much carbs, rice/potatoes/bread/so much bread! It was time for something fresh, so we decided to go to the supermarket and buy every fruit we didn't know. This was the result
We also bought a jar of Nutella and made it a fondue night, just in case any of the fruit were too terrible to eat by themselves! Thank god we did!
We had papaya, pineapple, plantain, passion fruit, granadia, some orange berries, some weird lemony thing, that I was not expecting to be so sour!, a fruit that tasted like a clean bathroom, star fruit which was sooo sour, a fruit that tasted like apple but with a cardboardy texture, and cactus fruit! Phew that was a lot of fruit, but I didn't like any of it really it didn't even look like we'd eaten anything when we finished! 


Sunday, July 12, 2015

Day 14 - Food poisoning round one

Sunday July Twelfth
      I just couldn't face eating another enormous meal the family had made for breakfast, I thought my stomach might explode, so while they weren't looking I slipped one of the two giant loaves of bread we were given into my pocket.
      I was sad to leave Amantani, it was such a picturesque rustic town, I wish I could volunteer there instead!
Me with an adorable lamb we found!
The horizon from the island in Hunter's glasses.
     We said goodbye to Juana and it was all going well, until the boat ride, and then I just started feeling bad, really, really bad. I wasn't the only one though, Hunter was also having terrible stomach problems, and we soon realized it was something we ate. Eventually we figured out that it was the cucumbers that we had had yesterday for lunch, as Caroline was the only one who didn't eat them and also the only one who wasn't having stomach problems. Food poisoning! 
      The boat stopped at an island called Taquillo next (nothing to do with tequila) but neither Hunter nor I could really enjoy it.
It was another rural island, and it is interesting because they still uphold many of their ancient ancestors traditions and their religion. One such tradition is to wear a super long stocking hat and put the tail on one side if they are unmarried and the other if they are married.
A sign post in the main square, telling me just how isolated we really are.
Entrance into the main square. Once there our tour guide pointed to some random guy and said he was single if I was interested, he then explained about the stocking hats they wear. I went over to a bench to curl up and lie down in misery.
An old clock tower. I really don't have that many good photos due to how bad I was feeling. Food poisoning really sucks!
A cool tree we saw at lunch, where you can see those Bolivian mountains in the background again. I barely had any lunch, and poor Hunter couldn't keep the little she had down. I at least just had to wait for it to pass through my system. 
    On the boat ride back to Puno I slept almost the whole time, and woke up feeling a thousand times better! Just in time to enjoy the seven hours we had to kill before our bus ride to Cuzco! Great... Why couldn't this have been the time I was feeling bad instead of the island!
Me in a restaurant, trying both the deserts we got, where we spent four of the seven hours, very slowly eating our meals and getting dessert, so that we could enjoy they're free wifi (or as it is pronounced here we fee!) and warmth, as it was freezing cold again, to maximize the time before they got annoyed with us.
Some of the taxi's here are just tiny!
     We seemed to be waiting forever at the bus station, but when the bus finally arrived and we went to board we were told we needed to buy a sticker from the bus station for $1.50 soles for some unexplained reason. We then ironically whished we had more time as we ran through the dirty station trying to find where you buy the stupid sticker. We finally found the tiny stand, only to discover the line must of been at least half an hour long, and we knew we only had about ten before our bus left. So we were forced to cut in line, which I felt bad about, but as we ran back to our bus we made it on, so it was worth it. 
     Hunter and Caroline just had the worst time on the bus, it was so ridiculously hot, and there was hardly any oxygen! The ride was both bumpy and loud, but it is one of my special talents to be able to fall asleep pretty much anywhere or anytime so I slept almost the whole way. We got home at four in the morning and as I climbed up to my top bunk, the sunlight was just begging to stream through our window, and the birds were just starting to chirp, I fell asleep again.

Saturday, July 11, 2015

Day 13 - The lake that looks like the sea

Saturday July Eleventh
    I woke up FREEZING! My nose was ice cold! And getting changed was actually the most terrible experience, I had to take off my nice warm clothes and expose my skin to the icy air before putting on equally cold clothes that just sucked any warmth I had managed to keep in me, out. I was an actual icicle by the end. It was about 20 degrees farehinet inside since there was no internal heating, and colder outside. I put on two pairs of pants and leg warmers, and then on top I put on four layers, two being incredible warm alpaca jerseys, then big socks, hat, gloves, and scarf, but I was none to warm! I also felt like a giant pillow! 
      After we finally finished getting dressed we headed of for our lake Titikaca tour.
      Lake Titikaca: at 12,507 feet above sea level lake Titikaca is the highest navigable lake in the world, and also the largest lake in South America. In fact parts of the lake is actually in Bolivia. Nestled in amongest the Andes, many of the mountain range's peaks have become barren, grassy islands in the middle of the lake. Grassy as most trees can't grow this high.
It's easy to forget it's not the ocean when it goes on past the horizon. 
Those snow capped mountains are actually in Bolivia!
A picture I found on the Internet of the mountains!
     Then the two day one night tour of lake Titikaca began with a long boat ride
Me freezing on a boat :)
    Our first stop was a floating island, made from nothing other than grass roots and straw!
How crazy would it be to live on one of these things!
The whole village only consisted of five families, and four buildings.

Sometimes if you stood in one place for to long it would sink and fill with lake water and you the locals had to come over and covered it up with a pile of new straw! How do they sleep?
Little replicas of their houses, they have to cook on a stone so that their whole island doesn't burn down!
    It was super fun playing volleyball with this local boy, but one time the ball rolled down into an area of the island that had sunk and filled with lake water, and when Hunter went to get it she got soaked! I laughed a little but then karma came when I too got wet going after the ball!
     I felt a little weird though, these people were living like this because foreign tourists wanted to come see them, I felt bad, like I was responsible for their tiny houses and isolated location, is this how they really want to live? And they were just begging me to buy their goods...
      However they could also be very happy people getting to preserve their ancestor's way of life, language and religion. They believed the lake was sacred and would always offer it some of their drink and food before eating it themselves! Their location was also stunning, and they could probably make good money from their goods so I can't really speak to their happiness.
    Our next stop was an actual island called Amantani where we would stay the night
A map of the lake, our journey had thus far taken us from Puni to Amantani.
Amantani: Rural, freezing cold, and very steep
My host grandmother Juana, I also stayed with her husband Jorge and their grandson Oliver. She took us up this incredibly steep hill to her house, and the cobblestone roads were beautiful. I was struggling and out of breath the entire way up, she lived on one of the highest outskirts of the tiny town, but she was just walking ahead, knitting as she went!
    Our host house was also extremely rustic and beautiful.
The entrance 
The courtyard where all the rooms meet.
Our tiny room with everyone bundled up
The view from our room
Me on the balcony
One of the few light bulbs in the house, there was barely electricity (no outlets) and the only source of running water was a hose outside the house! Luckily I had brought a battery to charge my iPhone from as it had run out of battery by the end of the day because I took so many photos! 
      We ate lunch in their tiny kitchen where their stove was a camping stove on the ground. There were tons of flies buzzing around too but Jorge could kill them with a rubber band! How cool is that!
       The kitchen and dinning room 
The meal was so huge! Delicious but huge! We had homemade quinoa soup for the first course, and when I say homemade I think Jorge grew the quinoa himself! And then we had three giant potatoes each, lettuce and cucumbers, and an omelet sized piece of squeaky cheese. When you ate it it squeaked against your teeth so loudly you could hear it in other people's mouths! And the texture was so unsettling, like rubber! I had such a hard time finishing it all but I didn't want to be rude and leave food they prepared so carefully for me! Especially when it was pretty obvious they didn't have much. With the three giant potatoes left I was already stuffed full, by the time I finished the last one I was not sure if I could move, or if I was going to throw up. It was worse than last Thanksgiving!
      In the afternoon we went for a hike up pachapapa the mountain in the center of the island which was just beautiful! It was also incredibly hard hiking uphill at 13,000 feet, as their is just no air! We were panting and panting and had to stop a few times. There were two mountains, papacha and mamacha, the mother and father of the island.
Me hiking up the brown grassy mountain that kind of reminded me of the brown grassy prairies of my home state of Colorado! However I never forgot how far I really was from home.

These street vendors are everywhere! Even at the top of this mountain! Trying to sell tourists hats, scarfs, knick knacks, brackets, and anything else you could want! Even our host family had tried to sell us some of their goods which was actually very rude, and a pretty awkward situation for everyone involved.

Hunter, me, and then German Caroline at the top of the mountain at sunset!
Me, appreciating this adventure to lake Titikaca at sunset. 
     After sunset it got very, very cold I was already wearing three or four layers in that picture but I was freezing on the way down and my fingers were numb by the end of it. Those street vendors selling warm alpaca clothes on the way down were on to something!
      Dinner was another fricking massive meal, and I was still stuffed from lunch! It was miserable at the end trying to finish all those potatoes while simultaneously trying to smile and look like I'm enjoying it for the host family. 
       Then after dinner they had a surprise for us, traditional clothing that we could wear to go to a traditional dance down in the town. So me and Hunter got dressed up, while Caroline decided it was too much of a tacky tourist thing for her. 

Hunter, our host grandson Oliver, and me at the 'local' dance. Which turned out to be as Caroline had thought, the most tacky tourist thing ever. About fifty or so tourists pretending to be Peruvian natives while trying to dance to the traditional dances, but actually just looking like they were having a seizure. By about the third dance we had all given up actually trying to do the dances and just formed a giant Congo line. The reason Oliver doesn't look so happy in that picture is because he had to sit through all of it waiting for us. Poor guy! Although tacky the giant Congo lines were actually a lot of fun!