Monday, October 25, 2010

Pictures!!!

Well..it has been so long since we put pictures up I figured I would just let all of these pictures do the talking for this post. Finally..here is our home and community!



Double Click or Right Click the pic above for a good view. It is our house!

Our First House
Our Kitchen

The Kitchen Table, Couch and a very cluttered bookshelf

Another view of the table and couch, behind the sheet is our bed and clothes


Bed

Clothesline and Latrine (btw...washer and dryer definitely the best inventions of all time)
Kitchen Sink/ Laundry Tub...Shower is the blue thing to the left

Flowers in a hot sauce bottle...students bring me flowers every day because the know I love them
Aren't they gorgeous??

This gets a lot of use

Beautiful birds right outside our house






Orange tree right over the fence


Quick Commute from Home to School (Blue painting on the right is Boqueron Arriba School)


Field where Sean plays baseball with the kids


World Map Project at Arriba
J. did the majority, we helped and will finish




El Rio Boqueron



Tuesday, October 19, 2010

Well, I suppose we could use...

Hello, Hello!

Sean and I  made a quick trp to the US to see my brother Brian and his (now) wife Tyler get married. It was a beautiful ceremony and a great time to see most of my family.  We were so happy to be able to be there for such an important day!

It was also nice to eat Chipotle (hands down the food I miss the most) and get random things we have been missing down in Panama. It was also a short enough trip that we didn`t get too used to the hot shower/comfy mattress/ access to everything and anything we needed/ wine, etc. while we were in town. That means heading back to Boqueron will not be too much of an adjustment.

During the weekend I chatted with many people who asked if there are things we can use in site.  Now, I know that it costs a lot more money to send packages of things over 4 lbs down to Panama, so I have been trying to think of light, inexpensive things that could be used in our projects, etc.  Here is what I have come up with so far:
  • Friendship bracelet string
  • Kids books in Spanish
  • Coloring books
  • Markers and Crayons
  • Jacks
  • Dominoes
  • Other lightweight toys ...they have lots of marbles, though
  • Bananagrams (ok I might use this one as much as the kids, but I could definitely make it a learning tool!)
  • Beads and Jewlery making things
  • Stickers
  • Old magazines (these are more for me for classes- pictures and paragraphs I can cut out)
  • Any lightweight outdoor things- jumpropes, hackey sacks, frisbees...other things I cannot think of
  • Connect Four
  • Any kids easy game ideas you have that do not require many materials
You guys get the idea...I do not want to ask anyone to go and buy lots of things or spend lots of money, but just because many people have been asking me if they could send things... these are examples of things I know the kids would love and would not be too heavy to send. The address is on the righthand side of the screen and we would be very thankful for anything you had.  I should stress the importance of Books in Spanish...the children do not have access to many books ( I am working on that!) and any books you had in Spanish would be absolutely amazing. I have enough low level reading books in English. Again, we are thankful for anything anyone wants to send but please don`t feel pressured to send anything!

And...things Sean and I would always love:
  • Jolly Time popcorn (kernels in a bag we cook on the stove..no microwave!)
  • Propel, Gatorade or other drink packets that do not need sugar
  • Magazines with current events (not entertainment magazines...)
  • Pasta Sides
  • CANDY
  • Pictures of our friends and family
  • AAA and AA batteries (for headlamps and camera respectively)
  • 'Votive' candles...maybe about 2 inches. We burn through these wuickly!
Obvioulsy this list is less important...but another one that has been requested :)

OK, time to head out. Finally bought a camera so the next blog post will have pictures. Promise!

Monday, October 4, 2010

you say goodbye, we say hello (hello, goodbye)

After 27 months in site the volunteer who we are following up in Boqueron has left for the states.   J was an awesome volunteer and his loss will definitely be felt in the community. Of course we hope that our being there helps soften the blow a little bit, but he was a very busy and very successful volunteer and the community has had no qualms with telling us that we have big shoes to fill.

Not only will the community miss him, but we will miss him too! During the last few months he has shown us the ropes,  gave us the low down on things it took him months/years to learn and supported our beginning efforts within the community. It has been an amazing (and very unique to Peace Corps) experience to have him in site during our adjustment period. I think it also has benefits on his end as well, as he can leave knowing that the projects he began will continue...and that he is leaving the community in good hands.  It was also a very interesting juxtaposition being in site and having all of these 'new-volunteer, new-site' emotions and listening to his 'almost-leaving, 'old time volunteer' emotions. In some ways very similar, and in most ways very different. We are just in two very very different stages and it was crazy seeing where we will be int wo years- though it seems like a lifetime away. We have definitely become friends over the last three months and will be keeping in touch as he goes on to whatever next adventure life has in store!

Though we are sad to see him (and his fabulous dog) go, we are very happy to have pruchased his mattress, wooden bench-like thing, pots, pans, spices, shelving and other random things that have made our lives better. I cannot possibly explain how amazing it is to have a mattress again after having slept on a sleeping pad for the last three months. It is nice for him ot not have to worry about getting rid of things when he is trying to get out of site, and definitely nice for us to get some much needed things for our house without having to worry about transportation or cost...

Speaking of which, we obviously have a house. It is our first home :) maybe a little small for a first home, but we love it. It is all one big room and we put up a giant sheet to seperate our bed/clothes from the 'kitchen and living room' area. Our main seating is provided by 5 gallon buckets which also double as rat-proof food containers. Another 5 gallon bucket serves as our sink outside...and during the day as the water collection system for the leak in our roof. Sean connected our house to the water system in town, connecting all the tubes and making one faucet for the kitchen sink and another for a shower. He also made us a beautiful stone floor shower outside. Pretty handy! The showeri s great, though sudden bursts of wind make the covering unreliable enough that I definitely still have to shower in my bathing suit. Still feel cleaner doing that then bathing in the river though!  Our stove is a three burner stove that is connected a gas tank that we just change out whenever we empty.  This means we can cook rice and beans at the same time! Or lentils and beans, you know, depending on the day.

Everything else is going well for us. Things are really starting to get underway and any of the nerves we had at the beginning have been replaced by energy and excitement- almost an overwhelming excitement for all of the things we are hoping to have a chance to do during our two years. Two years feels like such a long time but to realize three months of it has already gone by...it just makes it obvious that to accomplish a tenth of the things we want to it is time to get moving.

We have introduced a Logo and Slogan Competition keep the community excited about the trash project while Sean continues to wait for some of the agency approval needed to get started. We have announced it to the students and a good number of community members and are hoping for a good number of entrants for the big day (end of October). 

My classes continue to go well. I have a soft spot for my adult classes and really like the location of Bowueron Arriba for two reasons: 1) that is where our house is so the walk home is a lot shorter and 2) during class Sean plays baseball with the kids in the community. It is amazing- these kids really have nothing else to do during their time after school and they LOVE playing baseball with Sean. They spend the days in between classes talking about the last, and the next, game. It has gotten to the point where kids whose parents are not in the class are playing and a local dad has stepped up to help coach...obviously we are going to see if we can organize this energy a little bit, but right now it is pure music to my ears when I am teaching. And the parents love it too!

OK, a lot for right now, especially since I can't provide pictures (camera broke about 2 weeks after we got to site)..miss you all a lot! Hope you are all doing well....sending much love from here