Saturday, April 30, 2011

My Class

At 6:00 in the morning we get up and dress, eat, and get ready for school. The bus comes at 7:15 to pick us up. The bus is tiny but we are able to fit like, twenty five people in a fifteen person bus. My schedule is pretty cool. I get taught by a woman called Maria Rene she is nice and kind. My other main teacher is called Ricardo he is the teacher of spanish. My other teacher's are teacher's for Pottery, Computer, P.E., Music and Drama. My Freinds are called Killia Eilleen and Alejandra. They were my best freinds because I sat with them at the beginning of the season. Killia is from England and she's funny, kind and caring but sometimes she is a bit crazy.

Eilleen is much more serios then Killia. She's playful and happy almost every minute.
Alejandra is small and is eager to learn almost everything. During almost every recess me and the rest of the girls play jump rope. We play a game called clock. It's where one person runs right throgh the spinning rope and thats zero and the next is one and then two and so on. During some of the recesses I go to the library where I spend my time reading book after book. Ausangate is a tiny school but I think that tiny schools are the best kind.

Friday, April 29, 2011

Sexto B 2011

It's kind of annoying to have to wake up at 6:30 am everyday but it is definately worth it! We are now into the second month and things have gotten so much better. Easier and less homework! In spanish with miss Karina we have finished our first unit in social studys and are working on our second. My ultimate success in the last unit was making a Power Point by myself all in spanish, on central america including the Aztecs and the Mayans. María José and I were partners and we both got 19 out of 20 on our presentation, which was the highest mark in the class!!! Right now our unit is on the choices of the government and how they effect the people. In this unit the first part is all about money. Things like, Where do they print money and who has the right to do it? Also, Why don't they print money all the time? For homework we are investigating economic models like capitalism and socialism. In language arts we are working on where to put the the accents on certain words. We had a test on the accents and I got 68 out of 78. I wasn't very happy at first but then not many people got over 70! Wednesday is now my favorite day of the week. We get computer in the mornings with miss Natie and then spanish. After lunch we have english but thats ok because all we do is math. Then after the big recess we have music and drama. Music is the most boring class in the world. Worse than Razonamiento Matemática which is math in spanish. We sing ¿Estrellita dónde estás? Which is twinkle twinkle little star in spanish. We also have baby games but at least that is only for 45 minutes! Drama is really fun and next week we are going to start doing little plays in groups of 6!!! We continue singing the national anthem every Monday and I am suprised that I've almost memorized it! Helen and I are still taking afterschool and my volleyball skills are improving rapidly! María José is now "mi mejor amiga" (my best friend). I think that is so great that a girl from another continent is as awesome of a friend as any of the girls in the U.S!!! My other best friend is Nicole from the other sixth grade class. She is really funny and likes to pretend she's a hippie fortune teller and reads palms. We always play volleyball together at recess and last Friday mister Wilson came out to play with us. We played really well so the camera man that is making videos for the school filmed us!!! In 2 weeks we have our "fall" break and we are going to go to the jungle!

Left to right.

Top row: Profe Wilson, Alessandra, Camila, Gabo, Adolfo, María José and Profe Karina

Middle row: Carmen, Alex, Renán, Catalina, Sabrina and Ana Lucía Casapino

Bottom row: Antonella, Josep, Daniela, Me, Ana Lucía Gomez and Stefany/Tófi

Missing: Isabelle

Friday, April 22, 2011

I ate the face!

Today we finally went to Tipon, one of the small towns outside of Cusco. The town is famous for two things. The beautiful ruins and the best known place to eat cuy (guinea pig). Once the bus dropped us off we took a taxi up past town to the ruins. Most of the park is grass and terraces but the attraction for tourists is the water in aqueducts and fountains. Almost every single place you walk you can hear the running water. We walked up the "Inca Road" to get to the top of the ruins. On that walk I saw the biggest spider in Peru. All over the trail are little holes that spiders live in. Mom and I were walking by one and mom stopped really fast. She motioned me to stop and took one of my feather dusters and put it close to the hole. The spider came out and he was about 2 inches long and 1 inch wide (not including his legs). It scared me so bad I almost screamed. Beside its huge hole was the baby hole that had a mini spider in it. We caught up with everyone else at the top of the ruins, right before there is a big mountain. Up there you have a beautiful view of all the valley. We stayed up there for a while to rest before we hiked back down.

The cab ride back down to town was gorgeous but I was so excited to eat cuy I didn't look around much. We went to the restaurant "Escondida" which means hide and seek (or hidden) in Spanish. I guess it wasn't that easy to find but the locals knew exactly where it was. They had one of the huge ovens that could fit about 20 cuy in at a time. We got a big one for everyone to split (I got dibs on the head) even though not many of us ate a lot. The inside was stuffed with an herb that none of us liked but the leg was good. It was almost exactly like a chicken leg. There wasn't very much meat so I got the head to nibble on. The cheeks were the best part but David thought I was nutso. IT WAS GOOD!!! Everyone that thinks "Oh my gosh that is so gross", it is just the opposite!

Thursday, April 21, 2011

Choco Museo




Today we went to the Choco Museo with David and Nancy. It was where you could learn about chocolate, but we went there for a special tour to learn how to make chocolate. When we got there a delicious smell filled the room. I looked upstairs and there were exhibits that told you all about chocolate. Once we heard that it was time, we hurried into the kitchen. There was a man standing there. He told us tha he was Alan. Then he took us upstairs to see the cocoa beans. There was a big fake tree that had fake cocoa beans. After that we went back to the kitchen. Alan took out a bunch of cocoa beans. We took them over to the stove and heated them. I stirred them around and then we took them back and started pealing them from the skin. We put the beans into a large glass bowl. He gave us the tools that we would need, a mortal and pestal! I had never used one before! We each took a handfull of the beans and crushed them into the finest dust we could, but it wasn't good enough. Alan said that it needed to be a little more soft so we put them into a grinder.
After it was very soft, we added water and mashed it up and drank it just like the Mayans used to. It was the most disgusting drink ever. Nobody liked it except David.
Next Alan took out melted chocolate that he had already made and he took out molds. He gave us each one bowl of chocolate and we were to put it into the molds. Once I was finished, my mold was covered in chocolate. Once everybody had finished (Meghan was the last because she had two molds) we were going to come back and get them. I had so much fun at the museum!

Monday, April 18, 2011

Fiesta de los Temblores



The Lord of the Tremors emerged from his home in the Catedral today for his annual procession around the center of town today. Led by priests, carried high on the backs of 30 men, protected by armed guards and followed by musicians - the slow (very, very slow) and somber march lasted all day, visiting 4 churches before returning to the cathedral in the evening. This statue of Christ on the cross, darkened by years of candle and incense smoke is believed to have calmed earthquakes and is now honored each year in this grand display. David, Nancy, Debby and I caught a glimpse of the early ceremony at the alter of the Catedral, the huge front doors were opened for the first time since we have been here. Everyone was standing gathered close to the alter with the choir accompanied by violins and harps in the center. The music was incredible. Debby later went to pull the girls out of school early that day for the procession and we all met again as Senor was leaving the plaza on his way to the Iglesia de Santa Teresa. During the entire procession, red flowers of the salvia plant are thrown to his feet, body and crown of thorns from the thousands on the streets and balconies. We all stood on the street in a crowd and watched in amazement, the brass band never broke the mournful music, the smoke from the incense and the flowers always in the air.

Thursday, April 14, 2011

Patacancha Village


David, Mike and I went with the local quechuan guide Wither on a day-long adventure up into the mountain communities. It started in the morning with a taxi ride from Ollantaytambo that was over an hour long. We took only one road the whole way, passing lots of fields, sheep herders and cows, but very few other cars. Up and up and up we went, up the switchbacks and on and on. It is the end of the rainy season so the road was very muddy and washed out, narrow with scary steep drops off the side. In fact, at one point we had to get out of the car to lighten the load so we didn't get stuck in the muck, and Wither and the driver walked ahead and asked the road repair crew if they could bulldoze a large section so that we could pass.

We drove literally to the end of the road, winding up in a village called Patachancha. We hiked through the village, which consisted exclusively of grazing land and potato fields. There were no more roads, only animal and human pathways crisscrossing the hills, with manure and ancient lichen-covered rock walls everywhere. The hike was hard due to the thin air and the steepness of the land and we had to stop to catch our breath a lot. We were way up in the high alpine fields, at the last town before the mountain pass and you could sense the jungle just on the other side. There were fields of lupines accenting the landscape with their beautiful flowers, wild creeks and streams all around, and beautiful and unusal heirloom chickens scratching in the dirt. We passed a bunch of traditional houses that had stone walls and thatched roofs, some of which had been occupied consistently for hundreds of years, maybe more.

Wither, our trusty quechuan guide, suggested that we try to meet some of the locals. He said people in this village rarely saw outsiders and they were very hospitable to travelers. So here we are, a group of total strangers wandering around this pastoral little village and we walk right up to a family in the midst of harvesting some potatoes. The soil was black and moist, you could just see how fertile it was. Wither spoke with them in quechuan for a bit and somehow we wind up with an offer of local potatoes for lunch. The farmer tells us he only grows native potatoes and that he doesn't use any chemicals. I wonder just how long his ancestors have been propogaing those potatoes. Whlie the wife and grandmother set to making a fire and boiling up some just harvested potatoes, the father demonstrates to us the tools he uses to plant them. It is the same exact tool we have seen in the museums and in the ancient murals at the ruins. I guess it still must be just the right tool.

The eucalyptus fire is going and the potatoes are cooking. The family invites us into their courtyard and the mother takes out her weavings. The mother and father gather handfulls of plants and moss and explain to us which ones are used for which colors. The weavings are made from alpaca and sheep wool that they have cleaned, carded, and spinned into yarn, then hand-dyed with the local plants and woven on simple wooden looms. It's easy they say, and all I can think about is how many hours go into this before the weaving can even begin. The mother takes out her loom and ties it to the courtyard bench, weaving while her daughter sleeps on her back. They are all so friendly and kind and beautiful and happy. They are dirty in the sense that they are intimitely connected to the dirt. I am jealous of the beauty of their village, of their self-sufficiency, of the peace of the place, of their familial closeness. There is a sense of no-time here and the day stretches into eternity. As is tradition, we give them offerings in exchage for their hospitality - brown sugar, mangoes, pencils.

Lunch is ready - boiled potatoes and manzania tea. Each potato is a different color: yellow, red, blue, purple. I've heard there are hundreds of edible varieties, also many poisonous ones. I wonder at the blue and purple ones and question how many I, a non-native who has not co-evolved with these plants, could safely eat. Or do those colors represent something else, some rare and special nutrient? These are the freshest potatoes I have ever eaten and I suddenly understand their world-wide status as a dietary staple even that much more. After lunch we talk of where we are from, drawing maps in the dirt that surely do not adequatel convey the scale of the world. Before long the language barrier restricts converstation too much, as Mike tranlates our questions to Wither in spanish, and Wither translates to the family in Quechuan. Still, despite the language barriers we are all friends by the end of the day. The father tells us how much he has enjoyed our cultural exchange and gives David three leaves of cocoa to ensure his safe journey home. As we leave I am sad to think that I may never see these kind people again. Or will I?

Monday, April 11, 2011

Bring Us Nachos


We are here! Its beginning of our second day in Cuzco. Travel from Atlanta to Lima was painless. We spent the night at Hotel Kamana in the central district. To demonstrate how hard the bed was Nancy leaped on it while I shot a video; unfortunately the bed was even harder than we anticipated and she yelped when her head met the mattress. We left Lima (the city that smells like old shrimp) in the morning. Mike and Helen picked us up at the airport and we went straight to the Vance’s awesome apartment. I was doing fine but Nancy was already feeling the altitude. From there we went to the Plaza De Armas and had a great lunch of classical Peruvian dishes. I can tell I will like the food here, but I soon found out that I am not the “Andrew Zimmern” type.


After lunch we walked to the market and Nancy stopped at the pharmacy to pick up a pill for her developing headache. She asked for ibuprofen and unbeknownst to us they gave her the same pills that we were all ready taking for preventing altitude sickness. After visiting the market it really hit me that we are in that we are in a foreign country. I thought I was brave but there was no way I was eating the charqui (original word for jerky) as it looks like deloused road kill, and I don’t see myself settling down for a plate of half dried cow face. Nancy’s headache got worse as the combination of altitude and a yet undiagnosed overdose worsened so we went back to the Vance’s. By the time we were about to start dinner Nancy was in bed crying from the pain of her worsening symptoms. Megan helped us call a doctor from the yellow pages that specializes in altitude sickness. It was so weird to hear her Spanish with a perfect accent flowing so smoothly. The doctor was here in 15 minutes. Take that American health care system!! The doctor took one look at Nancy’s meds and convinced her to get a shot of pain killer in her butt. It only cost $80 for a house call. I stayed with Nancy for 40 minutes till she passed out. After a good nights sleep everything is back to normal and Nancy is doing fine and downing lots of electrolytes.