Thursday, August 30, 2012

Here We Go One More Time

 I know that my first shot at being a dog mom kind of failed. But I am not easily dissuaded from such things. I know that Hoja was out of control for a couple of reasons. First of all she was out of her mind crazy. Second of all she and I had totally different ideas of the right way to behave. I wanted to enroll her in Chelsea's Mock Petsmart classes and have her behave like a dog in the states. You know, calm and obedient. She had different ideas. Hoja and I ended up parting ways after she crossed some pretty significant lines with my host family. All of this happened and ended by the middle of last November. It has now been almost a year. That is hard to believe.

So I had given up on being a dog mom for the moment. It just was not the time. But then in mid-June things changed. I had seen this little rat of a dog around my neighborhood for a couple of weeks. She was completely malnourished. Matted in mud, covered in wounds and in a loosing battle with scabies and parasites I decided I needed to try to at least give this dog a proper bath and meal. I had no intentions of anything else. But after I found out that her 'owners' had intentions to kill her because they had mistreated her and she ended up in her sad state, and after she slept for about a week straight on my porch, I knew there was no going back. I was a dog mom once again.

So this is Bella. (Pronounced Beya) It means beauty in Spanish. It was meant to be an ironic name since she was so ugly when she came to live with me. But it was also meant to be encouragement to her. I figured if I called her Bella enough, she might just live up to her name. She has made a full recovery in the span of two and a half months. Her scabies is gone. She lost all of her fur and grew in a new, beautiful and thick coat of fur. She could now be described as a little chunky.  

The photo above was when I tried to feed her a hard boiled egg. She failed at eating it. Bella loves all types of fruit, but especially mangos. During mango season I would come home and there would be 5 or 6 mango seeds and skins on my porch. That is a lot of mangos for a human to eat, let alone a little dog! Bella is still a puppy for sure. She has one baby tooth left and is growing. But since she is a mutt and I have no idea who her parents were, I do not know how big she will get. I think she will stay pretty small. Which is just fine by me. :) Also she can already sit on command and shake. My host family things this is fantastic, they have never seen a dog that could shake hands. haha We are still working on waiting and laying down. But poco a poco we are making progress.

 Bella is now super beautiful and so well behaved. I would like to think it is my excellent training skills, but I think she is just too afraid that I will kick her out to do anything too extreme. Some times when I pick up my broom or I walk towards her too quickly she will run away or flinch like she thinks I am going to beat her. It is so sad. She is so starved for love and positive attention. It is lucky for her that I have plenty of it.


Monday, August 27, 2012

Toddlers in Tiaras


I have a back up of stories and pictures to share with you all! I am going to split them up into two posts, for your reading enjoyment of course. Get excited there are some good ones this time. haha 

Sara on the way up to her site
An example of the fuel efficient stoves
They grow a lot of cabbage in her community
So high up we are in the clouds!
A few weeks ago I went to visit a fellow volunteer, Sara. She lives in the department of Chalatanago, near the town of La Palma. Sara lives at the highest point in El Salvador. Which is fitting because she is over 6 feet tall. Salvadorians always say 'La mas alta en la mas alta', which translates to 'the highest at the highest'. haha Sara has a new puppy, named Osa, she is adorable and we played with her a lot. Sara found Osa down by the river that runs through her town. Someone had just thrown her away, and Sara came upon her and rescued her. (Pay attention, this is a reoccurring theme). Sara is working on a fuel efficient stove project with her community, so we walked around to a bunch of the houses that have the new stoves so I could get a better feel for how the project works. I am also working on getting this project to my community. All in all it was a good trip. Her site is much cooler than mine is. We heated up water for our bucket baths, which is something that I have never once considered doing for my bucket baths at home. It is just too hot where I am.

What is wrong with this picture?

At an overlook in the clouds
Three weeks ago the fiestas partonales began in my community. At last year's events, I had budgeted poorly. (You can revisit that here...) Needless to say it was not nearly as fun as I know it could have been. The main goal of the fiestas is to raise money for the church, so almost everything cost money. Games, food, raffles and church services make up the week. There are pupusas, pasteles (a very close relative to enchiladas)  and bagged cucumber and watermelon for sale every night. Along with an hour long church service, the week nights are pretty calm. People from neighboring communities are bussed in for the evening and it is generally a good time. 
Trying to win a madrina's kiss
Waiting for their turn
This was one of the madrinas... 
The last day of the fiestas is the biggest deal. There are a ton of games, more people are bussed in and there is an event called Carrera de Cinta. This is how it is set up. There are a bunch of men that show up on horses and the goal is to get a small stick (that they are holding) through a small quarter sized ring hanging off of a piece of tape hanging on a line. The riders must gallop at full speed and try to get their stick through the ring. Now the prize for doing this is you get a kiss, gift and sash from a 'madrina', which translates to godmother but in this sense it is more like a fairy godmother. Most of the girls were in their late teens, but there were some like the little gem to the left. Looks like stage moms are cross cultural. Another of the events is called the Arco de Noe, Noah's Ark. There is a huge pile of goodies ranging from bags of corn and beans to chickens, to candy and instant coffee, it is all laid out on a table. The way it works is you pay a quarter and pick a slip of paper out of a bucket. On the slip of paper is your prize. Everybody is a winner! Pretty straight forward. It is terribly addicting, and I ended up spending like $3 there over the course of the day. I mostly won these terrible candies that I dislike, but on my last go I ended up winning a watermelon.
Band that played good music, too bad nobody wanted to dance
Ring toss

Another volunteer, Alex, who lives near by came to my towns fiestas
My host mom, slacking off
My Salvadorian family

I won a watermelon at El Arco de Noe

Thursday, August 16, 2012

Belize + Best Mom Ever = Epic

I deduced something mildly life changing last week. I have the coolest Mom ever. Now not everyone can say that, so you should know that I feel pretty damn lucky. I have always known my Mom was awesome, but after spending an epic week with her in Belize I feel like I got to know a totally different side of her.  A jungle adventure having, tequila shot taking, island evacuating side. I apologize in advance if I over use the word 'epic' in this post, but it is the most efficient word to describe every part of the week, from human sacrifice to sharks and hurricanes, we did it all. 
Sharks at Shark-Ray Ally of course!

We arrived on a Saturday. We were staying on the island of Ambergris Caye, in the town of San Pedro. We flew in a small Cessna from the airport in Belize City to San Pedro. After a quick mishap with Mom trying to meet me at airport, only to have me looking for her at the hotel we quickly settled in to our hotel, the Blue Tang Inn. (Totally recommend staying there if you ever find yourself in San Pedro!) We followed my friend, Clement's advice and had a fantastic dinner at the Blue Water Grill. When we got up on Sunday we started hearing rumblings that Tropical Storm Ernesto was headed our way. So we decided to try and get as much done as possible before bad weather overtook our time. We scheduled a snorkeling trip to  Hol Chan and Shark Ray Ally. It was really beautiful. We saw all sorts of marine life like nurse sharks, a spotted eagle ray and turtles. Not to mention tons of fish, sea cumbers and conch shells. It was Mom's first time snorkeling and I cannot imagine a better place to be. When we got back to land, we headed to dinner at a local restaurant that served pupusas. Me, being practically Salvadorian these days, needed to try these pupusas out to compare them to the real deal. I was pleasantly surprised when they tasted just like the ones in El Salvador. That is probably because they were made by a woman from Chalatinago, a department in El Salvador.   

Lunch at Elvi's
Monday I did two local scuba dives in the morning. I had heard about how beautiful the dives would be, but it paled in comparison to the real thing. Tons of fish, a few more sharks, and some sting rays later, we were back at the dive shop. One of the most fascinating things I learned during this trip was about the lion fish that have decided to make the reefs off the coast of Belize it's home. Since these lion fish are not native to Belize, and they are eating all of the reef's cleaning organisms, they have been declared an invasive organism. The coastal citizens are trying to eradicate them by killing them off. So a few of the more experienced divers on the trip brought down spears and killed any lion fish they came across. The fish were then cut up and left to be eaten by something else. I did not expect to actually see any lion fish, but the group found about 4 or 5 and they were taken care of. By 1 I was back in the room and Mom and I decided to eat at the much acclaimed Elvi's Kitchen.

Getting ready for Ernesto...
It was at this point that people on the island were getting serious about TS Ernesto. Allen, who worked at the front desk at Blue Tang, told us that if the TS was upgraded to a hurricane we would be evacuated to the main land. As it looked like the hurricane was definitely going to be upgraded we decided to go ahead to make the plans to evacuate the next morning. As the next day was my Mom's birthday and we did not know what the day held for us, we decided to have her birthday dinner at a much recommended restaurant on the island, Wild Mango's. The food did not disappoint. The atmosphere was perfect for a restaurant wide rendition of happy birthday. After which Mom declared she was now old and a woman at the next table informed her that 50 is the new 30. Duh. I then worked some magic and daughter pressured her into a tequila shot. Epic.
Evacuation day!

Re-usable boarding passes, what a concept
Getting felt up by an iguana
Tuesday morning we got up and were evacuated to the inland town of San Ignacio. We stayed at a sister hotel to the Blue Tang Inn (or the Blue Tang Clan as my Dad called it... Get it Wu Tang Clan? Common now!)  Since it was Mom's birthday and we were in Belize, we decide we could not just mope around the hotel all afternoon. So we visited an iguana preserve that we had heard about. It was pretty cool. We also chatted with another family who had done a jungle adventure and highly recommended it.  They gave us the card of the tour guide who had taken them and when we got up in the morning we decided it might be worth seeing if the guide was free.

Hey, you, over there. You have something in your hair!
Mom being a good sport with our guide
As it turns out, Orlando, the guide was free and agreed to pick us up in an hour. Our recommended packing list for the day was intriguing, a change of clothes, a towel, socks and no camera. After picking up a packed lunch in town, the three of us started our journey with an hour long car drive, mostly on dirt roads. At the end of our car ride we got out and were given bug spray and helmets. We took our socks and lunch but nothing else. Orlando led us to a path that led directly into the jungle. We hiked into the jungle for about 45 minuets, wadding (up to our waists)  across a river three times before we reached the entrance of the cave that had been our destination all along. We had a quick snack and bathroom break before we began the second part of our journey.

Pretty!
The second part of the trek began by swimming into the entrance of the cave with our head-light equipped helmets. The water was so deep at this point that I could not touch the bottom. For the next hour and a half we hiked, waded and climbed deeper and deeper into the cave. At some points we were up to our necks in water where as at other parts we had to hold our heads in a certain position just to make it through the tight spaces. The cave was so dark that head-lamps were necessary to move anywhere. About an hour and a half in, Orlando asked us to take our shoes off and we put on our socks that had been protected in his water tight bag. We continued to walk until we reached an area that was determined to be a location of Mayan human sacrifice. Orlando explained that over 1000 years ago the Mayan population was suffering from an extreme drought which led them to take some pretty extreme measures to get back in the good graces of their gods. They started with blood letting and eventually ended up sacrificing 14 members of their society. During our time there, we were shown 5 skeletons, 4 partial skeletons and one full skeleton, who they called the crystal maiden. The whole trip was really quite incredible. It is amazing that tourists are allowed to enter the cave at all. All of the artifacts are in their original locations and the only thing separating the artifacts from the tourists are small lines of tape that have been placed on the ground. The cave is called Actun Tunichil Muknal, in Mayan, translated it means Cave of the Crystal Sept. Another epic day.     
Drinks with the Binders, a little blurry, but proof is proof.

Since the hurricane had moved on, when we got up on Thursday we headed back to San Pedro. It was a relaxed day that ended with drinks with a family we were neighbors with in Alexandria who happened to be in San Pedro the same week as we were. Neither of us knew the other would be there until my Mom saw pictures they had posted on Facebook. Oh the magic of social networking.

Time to go diving!
Friday morning I got up early and went for a full day of scuba diving. After a two hour boat ride I dove the infamous Blue hole that was discovered by Jaque Coustaue. It is hard to explain what the blue hole looks like under the surface. But basically it is a huge underwater cave with stalactites bigger than a school bus. Oh and sharks. Visibility was not very good so it gives the sharks that much more of a scare factor. It was the deepest dive I have been on yet, ending around 130 feet down. The second dive of the day was equally as cool but a total 180 from the Blue hole dive. There were tons of fish and coral on the second dive. Along with more sharks, rays and turtles. Also on this dive there was more lion fish killing. But what made it more interesting than on my first day of dives was that we were followed by a barracuda that must have been 3 feet long, eating the lion fish as the dive leader killed them. Just when you think it had gone away, there it would be right underneath you... After the second dive, we stopped on a small island for lunch. The island is home to a Red Footed Booby Bird sanctuary. Pretty cool. The last dive of the day was at a place appropriately named the aquarium. I was less than impressed and getting pretty tired at this point when the leader of the dive took out a bag of left over rice and beans from lunch and shook it into the the water. Almost immediately our group of divers, myself included, were in the middle of a feeding frenzy. Though I do not know the type of fish they were, most were as big as my head and there must have been a couple hundred of them. This dive may have been my favorite. Once again a fantastic day. 
Island where we had lunch
Not sure why I was the only one who found this funny
You can just see the outline of the blue hole












 Saturday morning came too soon and Mom left to go back home. I had an extra night in San Pedro so I used it wisely and locked myself in the air conditioned room, made some shrimp for dinner and watched the beginning of Shark Week. I begrudgingly left the next day to head back to reality. Vacation is great, especially when you have an awesome Mom to share it with!



Prince Charming?
Yes, this happened...