Sunday, April 26, 2009

pictures of Guacoca







me, my grandma, my great-grandma, elise, my brother, and my mom. (she's only 36 even though she looks much older!)


the coffee and corn grinder. when we got there they were grinding fresh coffee that they had picked. it was DELICIOUS!!
more cute kids from the community.

elise and kirzzia












cows that we milked








the CUTEST girl (maybe even in the world!)








my brother, Edgardo, on the left, and his friend, Josue, in the green, making funny faces!

























So the pictures are uploading in weird places again... so hopefully the captions make sense, but I'm sure you can figure them out!!
my grandma cooking over our wood burning stove. This is her making tortillas, but Elise and I did help.
cows and chickens eating dinner by the house




my great-grandma, she was 89!! filling water jugs for something from our sink.
sorry i know these didn't go on very nicely, but i dont feel like fixing them.







Saturday, April 25, 2009

Family & Guacoca

My family was here this past week. They came up to Nueva Suyapa with us to learn about microcredit and to see our companeros and book discussion and supper on Wednesday. Thursday morning we took a bus uptown and then headed to Tela, again! Our hotel was WONDERFUL compared to what I've stayed in since I've been here, but not quite what my family was expecting when we still had 2 cockroaches in our room. But it was good, the owners were really sweet! Friday morning we rode bikes to Lantecilla Gardens again and then just the beach. Saturday we went to Punta Sal, a national park. We went on a little jungle hike and saw some monkeys and crabs and such. Then we went snorkeling, but the water was not very clear, so we saw maybe 2 fish. That was kind of disappointing, but the beach was still fun! Sunday morning their bus left at 10:30 to go to the Copan Ruins. And I headed home to Teguc. It was kind of a short visit, but so good to see them again, and we had lots of fun together! Also fun to show them what I'm learning, as they had lots of good questions.

Early Monday morning, we all left for Guacoca, a small rural town in Olancho, which is the North Dakota/Texas of Honduras. They are all farmers and have big guns and pretty machismo and not as developed. The best way to describe it is like living with Laura Ingalls Wilder with TV and lights. Oh, first we visited Alice, a girl who works with Peace Corps in a different small town. She's been there for a year and a half, and it was interresting to see her work, as Peace Corps, or something similar, is something most of us are interrested in.

There is a Christian Reformed church in Guacoca, and the women of the church welcomed us into their homes. Elise and I stayed with our mom, grandma, and great-grandma who was 89! Our mom was married and they had an 12 year old son. We also had 3 hired hands who lived in our house. We visited the community to do research and just to see what life is like for many Hondurans. The whole community was super loving and welcoming. Elise and I helped (or at least tried to) make corn tortillas every morning. We also milked cows, made cheese, drank yummy coffee, and sat on the porch talking and spending lots of time with family and friends. Everything was very "tranquillo" much slower paced and more relaxed. We ate beans, rice, tortillas, eggs and cheese at almost every meal - not much variety, but it was good. We took bucket showers because they didn't have running water very often; so sometimes they had to go to the well or river to get water. Our pigs, chickens, dogs, cats and sheep lived in our yard and on our porch. We had to use an outhouse. Our 12 year old brother drove us in the pick-up to see other towns. The community just got electricity one year ago. Now, everyone has a TV, fridge and lights. I can't imagine how much their lives have changed in the last year! But other than those 3 things, they really still live very simply. I loved how everyone just visited eachother after they were done cooking and cleaning and working for the day. We spent so much time just sitting and visiting and talking and laughing together. It was very slow-paced and would be hard to get used to living like that all the time, since we're used to living much faster, but they really live in community with eachother. They were all so loving and welcoming and warm to us all too! So, it was lots of fun for a week, but I'm glad to be back at my house with my modern conveniences. We just got back this afternoon, and I forgot my camera in Elise's bag, so I'll have to put up pictures some other time.

Sunday, April 12, 2009

more pictures

I couldn't get more pictures to upload on my other one, but this didn't work the best either... oh well.


On the volcano. Our guide roasting marshmallows over the lava.







this is a rug made of colored sawdust. this shows more details.
a big church and the guys carrying the float.


Spring Break




These pictures are not going where I want them.
This if of the men carrying the float. The flowered one is a close up of the big rug with Sarah and Elise. the rugs were very detailed!
Happy Easter!


Last week Thursday, three of us left for Tela. The rest of the group came on Friday afternoon. It was pretty busy for Semana Santa, so we couldn't make hotel reservations. We all had a place to sleep, they were just not the cleaniest. Friday and Saturday, we just went to the beach and such. Sunday morning four of us rode bikes to Lancetilla Botanical Gardens. We saw lots of cool trees and plants. It was fun to ride bike even though it was super hot!


Monday, four of us left for Guatemala City. We met Elise who was visiting her host family from last summer in Guatemala City. Tuesday morning, we all took a bus to Lake Atitlan and Panajachel. The lake is beautiful and clear blue. It is also cooler in Guatemala because it is higher up in the mountains, so that was a welcome break from the heat in Teguc for a while. Panajachel was pretty touristy, so we didn't do much else. Wednesday we took a boat to Santa Catarina and stopped at some tiny hot springs on the way. Guatemala has a large indigenous Mayan population (I think almot 90%). Many women still wear tradition clothing. Especially around Lake Atitlan and in the rural areas, but even in the cities.


Thursday morning we took another bus from Panajachel to Antigua, the old colonial capital of Central America. So it still has many old buildings from the 1500s and lots of Spanish influence. It has huge Catholic celebrations and processions for Semana Santa. People make beautiful rugs out of saw dust and flowers on the streets for the processions to walk over. There are big floats of scenes from Holy Week that maybe 40 men carry on their shoulders through the streets. Good Friday is also celebrated much more through the Catholic church than Easter is. So Friday, there were lots of parades. Friday afternoon, we climbed Volcano Pacaya. It is still active, and often people see flowing lava. We only saw a little red lava under lava rocks. We could definitely feel the heat from the lava. Our guide even roasted marshmallows over the lava for us. Saturday we left at 4 AM to head home to Teguc. And my family comes on Tuesday!!!




an old church and float that the men are carrying. they all wear purple cloak things, and I think they are wealthy families who belong to the Catholic church. it's an honor to carry the floats and wear the purple.




Richard, Sarah, Carly and Elise in Antigua




three beautiful Guatemalan girls in traditional clothes. the style is always the same, with the skirt and shirt, but the colors are very different!






Sarah and Elise in front of the prettiest flower rug in the city




Lake Atitlan the volcanoes around the lake are water volcanoes