Wednesday, December 19, 2012

Nature in November

Although I have no scientific proof, I believe the temperature in November dropped a few degrees.  My only evidence was that the amount of sweat on my body during the hours of 11am to 3pm had slightly diminished and my mood had drastically improved!  It’s wild what a few degrees can do to a girl’s state of mind!  I was running around like the happiest little clam.  The ‘cooler’ weather was reminding me of ‘Fall’ in Florida and was starting to get me really excited for the Holiday season.  My weekends in November were full of outdoor activities appropriate for such wonderful weather. 

At the base of the Volcano Momotombo, lies an adorable little rural town where I teach.  My counterpart teachers and community members kept telling me about beautiful scenic places to visit.  There are Laguna’s and multiple volcanoes to hike, but I wasn’t sure exactly how to reach them and for the first few months working there, I was looking for opportunity to go explore.  One day after class, while waiting for the bus, a nice couple offered me a ride back to La Paz Centro, cutting about 2 hours from my commute.  During the drive, this lovely couple, Ed and Aida, who own a small hotel in Momotombo, told me about the Laguna de Asososca and gave me directions.  Finally having solid directions, I invited some Peace Corps friends to come visit my site and spend the day hiking, swimming and exploring a new part of the country.  

Starting early on a sunny Saturday morning, we paid a nice moto-taxi driver just over $3.00 to drive the four of us from the city of La Paz Centro down a beautiful windy road for about 30 minutes until we reached the ‘fork in the road’.  Here we disembarked to begin our journey.  Ed had told me to look left at the fork and take the ‘small dirt road’.  So, we looked left, and took the only ‘dirt’ path that we saw.  





The directions were to continue down the dirt pathway veering left at every opportunity until we ran into a man named Renaldo. 

It was quite the adventure and we didn’t even get lost!  We found Renaldo like promised and paid him about $1.00 each to ‘enter’ the park.  


Renaldo
El Hoyo, Las Pilas and Laguna de Asoscas



The clean and pristine Laguna was as beautiful as promised.  Surrounded by volcanoes that haven’t erupted for thousands of years, the view was spectacular and the water was so very refreshing.     


Laguna de Asososca, La Paz Centro, Leon, Nicaragua





The next Saturday a PCV in Leon invited me to go on a volcano hike with an NGO that teaches environmental awareness to Nicaraguan youth.  This volcano, Casita, is extremely hard to access because it is on the private property of a coffee farmer who doesn’t like tourists walking through his coffee plants.  Since this was an environmental education trip with local Nicaraguan youth, they allowed us to enter their property.  I was so excited to have such an awesome opportunity!  It was my hardest volcano hike thus far, four long and exhausting hours to reach the top.






But the difficulty was quickly forgotten when I turned a corner and starred straight into the mouth of Volcano San Cristobal, the same volcano that erupted and caused me to be evacuated from my site in September.  What a spectacular and breath taking view.  This is when I decided I want to hike every volcano in Nicaragua during my time here.

Volcan San Cristobol, Chinandega, Nicaragua









In the same week, my counterpart from my school in Momotombo and I took our students on a field trip – to climb Volcan Momotombo!  


This 3 hour hike up the volcano was difficult because the ground was soft volcanic ash, very similar to the texture of beach sand, and it was extremely difficult to get good footing.  There wasn't a clear path up the mountain so I was relieved to be with a group of locals who knew where they were going.  Fighting extremely strong winds, we eventually made it to the top.  

Volcan Momotombo


The view of Lagunas, lakes, and other volcanoes was spectacular.  We sat at the top eating lunch and goofing around for a few hours.  I even fell asleep for about an hour under the shade of a tree.  First time peacefully napping on an active volcano!

My kids were so sweet.  They found everyone walking sticks and offered to carry my bag and the only other female student's bag up the volcano when the path got really steep and difficult.

On the way back to the school the kids took us on a ‘short cut’ which consisted of two students stripping down to basketball shorts and swimming across the extremely polluted Lake Managua.

 They retrieved an old rickety boat from the other side of the lake which they then insisted that I climb into, as they were feverishly dumping water out of the slowly sinking device.


  I held my breath as the boat almost flipped over 3 times, until I saw a view that I would only ever see from the center of the lake – a perfect view of Momotombo being reflected in the water.  Spectacular. 

Volcan Momotombo, Leon, Nicaragua
On the other side of the lake, it was another hour long walk along the beach shoreline of Lake Managua until we reached the town sunburnt, sore and black from Volcanic ash.



On Thanksgiving Day, two girlfriends and I hiked a waterfall Cascada Blanca in the mountains of Matagalpa in northern Nicaragua.  

Here the weather is cool and the coffee is fresh and so very delicious.  
I used my 'light jacket' for the first time in 7 months while visiting Matagalpa!  
Casacada Blanca, Matagalpa, Nicaragua
The water was Freezing!  But it was definitely worth taking the plunge.  
(Thanks for these pictures Kacie)

My first Thanksgiving away from my family, I thought the day would be difficult.  But it turned out to be one of my best days in Nicaragua thus far!  It was a beautiful, relaxed, and perfect day!  We even convinced the hostel owners to let us use their kitchen to prepare a Thanksgiving dinner and I baked my first turkey!  Hugo, who came out of the oven moist and delicious!  


It was a one of a kind special Thanksgiving surrounded by beautiful mountains, hot fresh coffee and wonderful friends. 


Nicaragua is an absolutely beautiful country with so much to explore.  This is just the beginning of the adventure!  I am excited to have two years to venture to every end of this diverse little part of the world!  





Happy Holidays!  


Thursday, November 8, 2012

Natural Disasters and Competition Season - An Update from October and September

Central America experienced a whole bunch of crazy activity in September.  For awhile, I even considered renaming my blog to "Learning, Living and Serving in the land of Earthquakes and Erupting Volcanoes".  On September 5th, Costa Rica had a 7.6 earthquake that was felt throughout Nicaragua.  I was teaching at one of my rural communities when it hit and surprisingly, we did not feel a thing.  My host mom later told me that our entire house shook for 5 minutes.  We were put on a Tsunami alert and continued to feel small earthquakes and aftershocks for the following few days.  Lake Managua, which is very close to my site, produced over 17 tremors in only a 4 hour period.  I can now officially say I've felt an Earthquake!

Managua, the capitol city of Nicaragua, is sitting on 28 fault lines and historically has a devastating earthquake every 40 years.  The last two, in 1931 and 1972, were extremely devastating, killing over 10,000 people and leaving Managua without a city center to this day.  Well, it’s been exactly 40 years since the last big earthquake.  So, people were getting a little worried with all this activity.

The Cocos and Caribbean plates lie just off the coast of Central America and when they shift, the earth shakes, which not only causes earthquakes but also creates the risk of tsunamis and puts pressure on the volcanoes in the region.  There are seven active volcanoes in Nicaragua, three of which are in my department, Leon.  All this Earth moving activity was making  the volcanoes get all heated up starting with Telica, one of the three active volcanoes in Leon.  She started showing some stronger than usual activity on the 6th as the aftershocks from the Costa Rican earthquake continued.  On Saturday October 8th, while I was just about to start a full morning of laundry washing, I received an urgent phone call from my emergency Peace Corps contact telling me that Volcan San Cristobal in Chinadega had erupted and that I needed to get out of my site ASAP.  So I threw all my dirty clothes back in my bedroom, grabbed a quick overnight bag,   and caught the next bus to Managua, away from the erupting volcano.  Around the same time as this volcano started erupting, Costa Rica had another 5.6 quake and things just didn't seem to be quieting down.

Volcan San Cristobal erupting 


Picture of Volcano Eruption from Chinandega 


All the evacuated PCVs from two departments stayed in Granada while Peace Corps kept tabs on the volcanoes and earthquakes.  I was able to return to site after two nights but was told to remain alert and keep an emergency bag packed just in case.  Volcan San Cristobal continued to erupt for days but it is located far enough from me, about 50 miles, that I was safe staying in site.  Three other volcanoes were also showing signs of more than normal activity so we all remained on alert.  I was diligently keeping my eye on Volcan Momotombo which I can see from my front yard.  I told myself if I saw Anything funny coming out of the top of that thing, I would get on the next bus and skedaddle.  

Volcan Momotombo from my site.  


Fortunately, after about the 15th, things calmed down and everything more or less returned to normal.   It was quite the adventure!  In regards to our host families and our communities, the Nicaraguan National Guard sent in trucks to evacuate the 3,000 people living within 5km of the volcano. People within 13km were highly recommended to get out. My family was safe living 80km from the volcano and only experienced a little smoke on the first day of the first eruption.  Most of the smoke was blowing southwest, which is away from my site.  The only causalities I heard of were a few cows who got hit by molten rock.

Map of initial eruption 


Other September highlights:

The Ambassador of the United States, Ambassador Powers, visited my site!  She came to see our wonderful youth center, Norwalk, and see the work my environment site mate Cindy has been doing with her students. 

Ambassador Powers looks at student's recycled art 


While I was evacuated from site, one of my host families dogs had 7 puppies.  I enjoyed their company for 5 1/2 weeks.  I named them all after Nicaraguan volcanoes, since they were born during the eruption, and spent my free afternoons out in the backyard playing with them.
Newborn Pups!

Telica
Azul

Cerro

Mombacho
*Warning, this story has a bad ending*

They all seemed healthy and happy and then sadly, they all started to die.  I carried the last three survivors across town to the vet and got them medicine and stayed up with them for 2 nights feeding them syringes of re-hydration suero as they all died one by one.  My little guy Blue, who I was planning on keeping as a pet, made it a week longer than his siblings.  I thought he was going to be the lone survivor but he sadly passed away as well.  I think I'm done with pets in this country... :-(

(sorry for the downer story)

Nicaragua celebrated its independence from Spain on September 15th.  My host sister and many of my students participated in a march through the town. 

My host sister Linda on the right holding the National Flag




October brought in the Business Competition Season.  Peace Corps Small Business Volunteers all work in the secondary schools teaching students business and entrepreneurship skills.  The students create a business and learn about market studies, accounting, financing, and marketing during the school year.   At the end of the year, the students put all of their work together to form a business plan and compete in a local, regional and national competition.  We held the Nagarote local competition on October 25th.  Ten teams competed and did an awesome job presenting their businesses.  Four judges decided which two teams were the strongest based on creativity, business plans, finances, marketing and presentation.  The two best teams advanced to the regional competition to represent our municipality.


First Place Team

Their cheese was delicious!
Second Place Team






Shirts with company slogan  



On October 31st we held the regional competition in Leon.  The local government from my site donated money to provide a bus to take my two teams, my counterpart and I to the department capitol of Leon for the competition.  

My two teams from Nagarote off to the Regional Competition!

My student’s didn't win, but I truly believe they learned So much that will benefit them whether they continue on at the University level or enter the workforce after they graduate this December.




The competition was amazing!  We had great judges, great sponsors and two national television stations report on our event.  They interviewed my Peace Corps co-worker Lauren and one of my students!  It was on the national evening news!  
One of my students being interview by National T.V.!
Lauren, a fellow small business PCV being interviewed

PCV's from Leon and our boss Georgia

My counterpart Georgina and I
On the 27th, Peace Corps Small Business hosted a Gala in Managua to raise money for our national competition in November.  It was an awesome event with the Ambassador and other foreign dignitaries in attendance.  PCV’s from all over the country came into the capitol for the event.  We stayed in a nice hotel and enjoyed a fun, fancy weekend with sunshine, good food and good friends!

Nica 59 reunited!

Spending the day in the pool before the big event!


PCV's checking guests in

PCV Carly, my Site mate from
La Paz Centro, Julie and I at the Gala

On the Friday before Halloween, Masaya celebrated the Fiesta de los Agüizotes or Fiesta of the Bad Omens.  During this festival people wear masks and scary costumes and there is a procession through the streets with live music and people blowing fire.  We had a great time parading through the streets admiring the costumes and enjoying the good music.
Fellow PCV Laura, and RPCV Paul who served
in Peru and now has an NGO in Nicaragua




The school year is quickly winding down to an end.  Only one more week of regular classes, two weeks of review and then it’s over!  This semester flew by.  I am excited to take advantage of my extra time in December and January to get more involved with the two NGO’s in my community before the new school year starts in February.



My new laundry machine - a few buckets, a washboard, elbow grease,
sunshine, and at least 4 hours of free time  :D

Host family preparing dinner in the backyard!

Baho, a delicious Nicaraguan meal!




Thanks for reading!