Monday, January 31, 2011

El Asilo and Baños

Last week I had my first trips to the old folks’ home, called El Asilo (or Hogar) Corazón de María. I was sort of dreading it and was a little nervous. We got there and went straight to work. The six of us were sent to the therapy room where there were ancianos (old folks) who were just getting some exercise by walking around, or were getting joint massages, or were merely just coloring. I started talking with a man named Ramon Gonzalez (what a coincidence, one of my volleyball friends back home has the same name). This Ramon was 80 years old, was about 4 feet, 6 inches tall and weighed probably 90 pounds. So he was HUGE. He was extremely difficult to understand because his voice was so muffled and unclear. We talked for about an hour and I helped him with his coloring. In that hour I discovered that he was originally from Quito, he is un huérfano (orphan) and that his children never come to visit him. It was sad but I was happy that I was there to talk with him because he seemed very pleased to have a young person to talk with. After an hour, we went to go get him lunch in the lunch room and I helped pass around food and clean it up after too. This took the rest of the hour that I was there. Some of the men (was a men’s cafeteria) were very friendly and gracious while others were not so much. At the end of the meal, one man got up and started dancing with my friend, Meghan to the music being played. It was pretty cute.
Afterwards, we didn’t have time to go home for lunch so we went back to school and got lunch at a nearby hole in the wall restaurant. These restaurants sell almuerzos (lunches) daily for about $2 max and they usually offer two options of meat and then rice, soup, juice, and sometimes a postre (dessert). Last time I got a meal called guatita with some meat and potatoes and rice but I wasn’t really sure what the meat was. I’d had papas con cuero before which is potatoes and pig skin but this was a little different. I later found out that it was cow stomach. It had a very strange spongy texture but the sauce was good. It wasn’t like tripe, the normal cow stomach I’m used to but it was fairly decent.
Tuesday night Paul, Meghan, Danny, Zang, and I went back to Vista Hermosa in Old Town Quito (also known as el centro historico and Quito Colonial). This time it was night so we got a great view of Quito all lit up including many of the churches that I’ve visited like La Basilica, Santo Domingo, y San Francisco. I didn’t bring my little tripod so it was hard to get clear pictures of these places at night unfortunately. At Vista Hermosa we all shared some empanadas and canelazo and I decided to partake in the empanada de viento which had an amusing English description of “big pasty of hot cheese.” I had to try it of course. It turned out to be a huge elephant ear with melted cheese in the middle and it was pretty tasty. I’m happy to say that I’ve now experienced the big pasty of hot cheese.

Empanadas y Canelazo

My big pasty of hot cheese
On Thursday we had salsa lessons again which were great. We learned a few more moves like one where the guy and the girl switch place then another where the guy twirls the girl with a fancy little move then they switch places. I was pretty bad at first and I think our instructor hated me but then I had a eureka moment and got fairly decent at it. Afterwards, we went to a Vietnamese restaurant called Uncle Ho’s and found out that it was owned by an Irish guy who was pretty cool.
On Friday morning we embarked on an AWESOME trip to Baños, which is a small tourism/adventure town about 3-4 hours away. We got on the Trol-e bus at 7 which took us to the south Quito bus station about an hour away and we bought a $3.50 bus ticket to Baños. When we got there at around 1:30 we checked in to our hostal (inn) called Plantas y Blanco which costed $6.50 per night (pretty spendy, I know). They were pretty full but still had room for us. Eight of us ended up splitting up into 4 different rooms which we shared with other random travelers. I ended up staying with a guy from England, a guy from Canada, and a guy from Germany who smelled terrible. The English guy and the Canadian guy and I had a conversation later about how horrible he made the room and hallway smell.
Random restaurant at the bus station that likes Che Guevara

Paul and I ready to go
Quick snooze

This is the hostal we stayed at

Ok not really, THIS is the hostal we stayed at
Basilica from la terraza

La cascada de la virgen de aguas santas

            After we checked in, we went to lunch at a place called Swiss Bistro which was recommended by my teacher. It was an awesome cow themed restaurant and I got some pictures of it too. I ended up getting what I thought was going to be a sandwich with ham, pineapple and cheese but turned out to be a skillet of those ingredients plus potatoes. It was quite tasty.



After that we went to one of the nearby adventure booths and found a guy that would take us puenting (bridge jumping) for $12. It’s not bungee jumping but rather swinging like a pendulum underneath the bridge from a rope attached to a harness you wear. I was super excited about it while most of the others were pretty nervous. We got to the bridge and saw how tall it was (90 meters!) and Paul and I volunteered to go first (two people jump from different spots at the same time). They strapped on the harness and we went to go stand on the railing. Once I actually got up there I got a little nervous. It was a little windy and it was at that point that I realized that I was about to do. Right when I jumped off I had the full realization of that I did and I thought to myself, “holy crap! You just jumped off a bridge. What are you thinking?” But after a second or two of free fall, I swung under the bridge and swung back and forth until they let me down to a ledge where I unhooked myself from the rope. Jumping off that bridge was the biggest adrenaline rush I’ve ever had in my life and it lasted for over an hour after. So far, it is my favorite thing that I’ve done here so far. Everyone in our group did it and there were several who were absolutely terrified at first (and especially when they stood on the ledge) but everyone enjoyed it immensely after they worked up the courage to jump. I took my camera with me and filmed the jump but I don’t think it turned out that great. The internet is really slow here so it’d probably take an eternity to upload it so I’ll probably upload a bunch of videos when I get back to the states. 

View from the bridge

view from ledge below the bridge

Weeeeee!
            After we jumped off the bridge we headed over to the thermal baths (reason the town is called Baños). The place was called La Piscina de la Virgen (Virgin’s Pool) and there were 3 different pools with different temperatures. One was pretty cold at about probably 65 degrees Fahrenheit. One was similar to a hot tub at probably a little under 100 degrees and the other was super hot at probably around 110 degrees. The pools were located right next to a waterfall called la cascada de la virgin de las aguas santas (waterfall of the virgin’s holy waters) and there were tubes that took water directly from the waterfall and came out in some cold showers next to the pools. We stayed for about an hour switching from pool to pool and the cold showers. The waters look very dirty and gross because of all the minerals in them but we didn’t really mind.
After that we went to a pretty nice restaurant called Pappardelle which served pastas for about $4-5 and steaks for about $7-8. I got a steak for $7 and when they brought it out I was shocked at how big it was. It came with potatoes and veggies and cheese on top and I actually got full from it. I was quite pleased. That night we hung out in la terraza (terrace) on top of the hostal and then went out on the town because it’s supposed to have a pretty good night life. Every discoteca we went to was super crowded so our dancing was confined to a small space. It was still fun anyway though.
The next morning we got up at 8 and ate breakfast at the terrace which turns into a restaurant in the morning. I got some eggs, homemade breads and jams, fresh fruit, fresh juice, and coffee for the whopping price of $3. It was all pretty tasty. After that we met at 9 to go on a canyoning adventure. Canyoning is something that apparently is unique to Ecuador where you repel down waterfalls. We went to the adventure booth and got wet suits and harnesses and bussed over to the location. We had to take a 20 minute hike to the first waterfall and when we got there we had to do some sliding down on our butts because it was too steep to walk. Thankfully the harnesses had little diaper-looking things that made it easy to slide down. We were basically going through a super narrow canyon filled with beautiful waterfalls The first waterfall was pretty small and was a good starting point. We did a total of 5 waterfalls which got bigger as we went on. One of the waterfalls we took a little zip line ride over and another was pretty much like a natural stone waterslide. The whole trip took about 4 hours because we had a fairly large group of 15 people with 2 guides so there was a little bit of waiting time in between each waterfall because we had to wait for others to finish and for the guides to ready the equipment for the next waterfall. Overall it was a really cool experience and I really enjoyed all the green scenery. I didn’t bring my camera but the guides took a bunch of pictures of us so when I get those I’ll post them.
After that, Meghan, Lizzie (a random traveler from California in our hostal), and I went to the zoo nearby. It wasn’t a really large zoo but for $3 we got to see things like Andean condors, many birds, monkeys, jaguars, ocelots, mountain lions, and some enormous Galapagos tortoises. We took a little walk up a nearby hill to get a better view of the canyon right next to us and that was pretty cool too.

spider monkey




We went out on the town again that night but the next morning we got up at 4:50am to go to La Piscina de la Virgen again because apparently it is a really popular thing for locals to do. We got there and the place was packed with families. The biggest pool was filled with families teaching their kids to swim and others just playing around. It’s something that you would see at a public pool in the United States but probably at an hour like 1pm. We stuck around to see the sunrise at about 6ish which was nice. We didn’t actually see the sun because we were at the bottom of a big mountain but we could see it hit the mountains on the other side which was quite pretty.
After that, Meghan, Paul, Dominika, and I went on a hike at 7:45 up the side of the mountain to a lookout point called Bellavista (beautiful view) where we could see all of Baños and the surrounding mountainous valley. It was a gorgeous view. We then hiked a little more because we were searching for a small village called Runtun that we had heard about from our teacher which was supposed to have a nice little café in it. We couldn’t find it so we asked for directions and a lady pointed the right way. We got there and took a look real fast but didn’t stay long. On the way back down we came to a fork with a sign pointing to a place called Café del Cielo which was 522 meters away so we decided to take that route. It turned out to be entirely uphill (very steep) and it was pretty tiring. When we got up to it, we realized that it was a café in the village of Runtun and that it was closed until 1:30. Lucky us.

View of Baños from Bellavista




Runtun

Mt. Tungurahua, an active volcano right next to Baños
We got back down to the bottom, took a quick shower and then made some food for ourselves in the kitchen of the terraza. We spent a dollar on ten huevos (eggs) and a dollar on some pan (bread). We were going the cheap route because all of us had nearly run out of money. (By the time I’d got home that weekend I only had $2 remaining of the $100 that I took.) After that we visited la cascada de la virgen de aguas santas to take some pictures then we headed to the bus station to catch the 1:40 back home. Mi mama said that the traffic would be terrible on Sunday but it actually took less time to return. I ended up sleeping the entire way because I’d gotten so little sleep that weekend. But in the end todo vale la pena (it was all worth it).

Fun random rhino truck

cool mural

preparing the sugar cane

pressing the cane to make juice

kid pulling taffy. I definitely bought some
This morning (Monday) I went to mi mama’s school where she teaches to play fútbol with her students who are nine years old. The inter-school championship tournament starts this weekend so she thought the niños would like it if I came in and taught them a few things and played with them. Some of them turned out to be very skilled and it was pretty fun. Mi mama said that on normal days, the cancha (field) made of cement on which they play (that is only about 30 meters long) will have 3 games going on at once using the same goal. 6 different teams playing in that little space is nuts! The space was really confined but the ball never really went “out of bounds” which was fun to watch because if the ball went up a few stairs they’d just keep playing as if nothing happened. One thing that sorta made me sad was that none of the girls played. I didn’t really expect that because when I’d went to the fields at the park, there were canchas that had girls playing on them. Perhaps next time I go I’ll try to get them involved.
I don’t have a plan yet for this weekend so I guess I’ll play it by ear and I’ll write again next week. One more thing, if anybody reading this has any questions about pictures or about what I write, feel free to ask in the comments section. I love getting comments. J

Tuesday, January 25, 2011

El Parque La Carolina, Otavalo, Lago Cuicocha, y El Curadero

Did some more walking around el Parque La Carolina last week and actually took some pictures. There are a lot of art sculptures/structures there which is kind of cool. Afterwards, we went to this coffee shop called El Ristretto. My friends, Kelsey and Meghan found it and it has THE best Americano con crema that I have ever had. The crema is almost like frosting in coffee. It’s terrific.
Dirt jumps


Full pipe with some cool graffiti

More of the skatepark



Rock sculpture type thingy

There is KFC (kah efay say) everywhere here. More than any other fast food place I think

Brick structure in park that apparently smelled bad




On Wednesday, we visited the place we’re going to be doing our service learning. It’s called El Asilo Corazón de María (Asylum/Refuge of Mary’s Heart). Basically, it is an old folks home that has over 200 residents that have either been just left their by their families or don’t have families. There are residents that function pretty well on their own and there are others that have physical disabilities or dimensia. Our role will basically be to spend time with them, plan activities, and be there for them because many desire interaction with younger people because either they don’t have family or their family doesn’t visit often or at all. Six will be going every Mondays and Wednesdays from 10-12 and the rest of us (six) will be going on Tuesdays and Thursdays. We’ll do a total of 30 hours and we have to keep a journal in Spanish of what we do and at the end we have to write a 10-12 page paper talking about our experience. All this is for one service learning credit.
Last Thursday a bunch of us rented a dance studio for an hour ($6 each) and we had a teacher show us how to dance la salsa. Some of us already knew how or had a pretty good idea of how to dance it but others, such as myself, had no idea what to do and started with no rhythm at all. By the end we all had a pretty good base though, myself included. I was pretty excited because I’m a terrible dancer. We learned some basic steps and how to do a twirly thingy. Definitely made a lot of progress. Pretty sure the plan is to go get lessons for the next three Thursdays so I’m looking forward to that.

The next day, I went walking along La Avenida de Los Shyris which is right next to el Parque La Carolina. There are a bunch of restaurants and stores that sell pirated movies. A lot of the restaurants have funny names like Chick: Pollo y Desayuno (chicken and breakfast) or look funny like Don Cangrejo (Sir Crab) that has a big sculpture of a crab and usually a guy outside dressed up like a crab dancing around. There’s also another restaurant called Grant’s Restaurant and it has a big picture of Ulysses Grant.

Speaking of food, I thought I’d talk about what I’ve been eating while I’ve been here. Every day, I usually have a breakfast of pan con mermelada (bread with marmalade), (tea, either apple with cinnamon or manzanilla con miel (chamomile with honey)), a fruit (usually a papaya), sometimes a hardboiled egg, and sometimes fresh jugo de maracuya, naranjilla, or tomatillo (passion fruit, orange-like fruit, tree tomato, or others I don’t know the name of), or un batido (milkshake with fruit). Sometimes I’ll have a sandwich with queso (cheese) and jamón (ham). I was under the impression that jamón meant ham but I guess it just means lunchmeat because lately I’ve been having jamón de pollo (chicken ham?). Lunch is usually very hurried for me because mi madre is a teacher at a school down the street and doesn’t get off work until 12:40 and doesn’t return until 12:50 with takeout food that I have to eat by 1:00 so I can catch the bus to school which starts at 1:30 in time. Usually this almuerzo (lunch) consists of sopa, arroz, y carne (soup, rice and some variety of meat). In Ecuador, they eat a TON of soups. Somebody said they have over 365 types. All the ones I have tried so far have been terrific. Some are similar to chicken noodle soup and most have big chunks of potato and either a hunk of meat like a chicken wing. One thing they do is eat aguacate (avocado) with almost everything. Often times I’ll either put half an aguacate en mi sopa or a banana (strange thought). Aguacate is SUPER good in soup though. The whole mix of hot soup and cold avo is so bueno. Para la cena (dinner), it’s different every night. Usually we have rice or papas (potatoes) and she mixes in some chicken with unknown spices. I asked her one time and she said it was hecho con solamente amor (made with only love) so she might not want to share her cooking secrets with me haha. I usually have half an avocado with dinner as well but if not there is usually a tomato/avocado/onion salad. Sometimes I’ll have a fruit afterwards too like a granadilla (weird fruit I’ve never seen before but it pretty tasty).

On Friday, we had a school organized trip to Otavalo at 4pm. We took a chartered bus on a two and a half hour ride to Otavalo, a small town to the northeast of Quito which has probably the most famous Saturday market in all of South America. It’s so popular that it’s also open every other day of the week but isn’t as big on those days. On the way there we stopped at a shop of masapan which are little clay sculptures that were pretty cute. Some were very small like bottle cap and some were bigger and very detailed with pretty colors. We arrived in Otavalo and had dinner at the hotel restaurant. They served us some soup (of course) and vegetables and some sort of meat that everyone was trying to identify. We later learned it was just beef with some cheese stuffed in it. That night we went to a discoteca (club) that played a lot of dance music and we also got to practice our newly learned salsa moves.

Dinner in Otavalo

Mi amiga, Dominika trying some salsa type thing with Elizabeth being disgusted in the background

Lit up church in Otavalo


Some pool before we went out to the discoteca

The next day we started by doing some activities (that might have amused a 4th grader) our trip supervisor planned which were pretty irritating because we wanted to go to market. We ended up getting 2 hours in the market which probably was enough but I could have used a little more time. For the first time in my life I actually enjoyed shopping! There was a ton of bartering that went on and I found I was only really effective if I really wanted something. If I wasn’t really sure if I wanted it, I didn’t try very hard. I ended up getting some cool gifts for friends/family and a few things for myself like a pretty nice wide-brimmed leather hat ($15 down from 25), an alpaca wool poncho ($18 down from 28), and an alpaca wool chompa (jacket for $14, down from 24). I also bought an almuerzo from a street vendor there for $1.25. This included sopa, rice, beef, salad, and juice. I didn’t eat the salad or juice though because if the vegetables/fruits weren’t washed sufficiently (they usually aren’t) I would probably get sick. For $1.25 it was quite the deal. There were many gringos (white people) in Otavalo so it was pretty evident is was a big tourist spot.

El mercado

El Mercado

Pinturas

Woven goods

Really cool hammock/chair things!

More woven goods


Sopa con chicken wing :)

After Otavalo, we went to el lago Cuicocha (Cuicocha Lake) which was about 10 miles away. This is a crater lake with some islands in the middle that look like cuy (guinea pigs, hence the name). It was pretty cloudy which was unfortunate because it’s supposed to have a good view of the country on clear days. Apparently the water looks really blue on clear days too but since it was cloudy we missed that part. It was still pretty though. We ate lunch at the restaurant on the lake then some took a 40 minute boat ride around one of the islands for $2ish. The rest of us took a little walk down to the water then up above the crater and got a pretty nice view of the lake and the country on the other side. It started raining on us which was nice because I hadn’t been rained on the whole time I’d been in Ecuador until then. It was refreshing and I had my new trusty hat to protect me.
Restaurant at Lago Cuicocha




Then came the rain :)

Danger

Me and my new sombrero


Viwe of country from top of the crater


She stole mi sombrero

After that, we went to a nearby town that trains curaderos (healers) and got to see a slightly modified version of a cleansing ritual that gets rid of evil spirits and bad energy in your body. My friend, Zang volunteered although she had no idea what she was about to experience. The curadero started by getting some aromatic plants and filing up a bottle of some kind of liquor. He lit two candles and put on a necklace that looked like it had teeth on it. He swished around the liquor in the bottle saying some sort of prayer type thing. He then drank some liquor and put a spear to Zang’s forehead and started spitting the liquor all over her. This was the first of many unexpected things. After he was done spitting on Zang, he spat more liquor on the aromatic plants and brushed them all over her body several times saying some incantation. Then he took two eggs, spat liquor on them, brought them over Zang’s head like he was about to smash them, then brushed them all over her like he did with the plants except this time he whistled while he did it. Afterwards, he told us he could hear the contents of the eggs swishing around inside so he knew bad energy was present. This is when it started to get weird. He put a red cloth over Zang’s head, put more liquor in his mouth and grabbed two candles. He then stood about 7 feet away from her and spat the liquor through the candles and blew huge flames at the front of Zang’s body from head to foot. He then said espalda (back) and she turned around and he blew flames at her back as well. The craziness continued. He took a white flower and a red flower and started eating them then put some wine and another fluid in his mouth with the flowers. He put a rock up over Zang’s nose and eyes and then spat the flowers/wine all over Zang’s forehead. Pretty much all of us started some silent giggling. It didn’t stop there though. He got more flowers/wine but this time opened Zang’s shirt and spat them on her chest. More giggles. He did the same on her back and in her hands and told her to rub it all over her body. He then lit up a cigarette and blew smoke in her hair and all over her body saying incantations. At the end, he told us that usually the ceremony involves 12 men and 12 women who are all naked and instead of eggs, he uses a guinea pig to brush all over their bodies. At the end, the guinea pig dies because all of the bad energy and evil spirits it has accumulated.
Cerdo outside la casa del curadero

Zang, about to get fire blown at her

Ready, Aim, Fire!

CHICKENS

That night we got back to Quito and at 11pm we got on ANOTHER bus although this one was a little different. It was called a chiva and it was an open air bus that drove us around colonial Quito and served us canelazo (cinnamon and naranjilla drink) and blasted loud music along the way. It was cool because we got to see all of the lit up churches. We also passed an alley where some young Ecuatorianos were having what looked like a gang fight. Two groups were going at each other with knives. Little scary.
La Chiva

On Sunday, Meghan and I went to el Parque El Ejido which has tons of artists on the weekends who put their art out around the park to sell. Many of the artists had original works but many of them had also copied popular paintings of artists such as Oswaldo Guayasamín and others. Apparently many of the most famous Ecuadorian artists like Guayasamín started selling their artwork in this park. In the interior there was another market similar to the one at Otavalo except it was much smaller. It sold many of the exact same things that I saw in Otavalo. Made me wonder how much of it was woven or made by the actual vendors.







This painting is a view of La Iglesia de la Compañía de Jesús from the steps of La Iglesia de San Fanrcisco. In my earlier post about our tour of the city I posted a picture that had this almost exact same view.

Many duplicated paintings


Paited feathers

Etched Leaves


Apparently this train going through the air and the horse carrying a bell is a major theme in Ecuadorian art? I could be wrong about that but there were several different paintings be different artists with these things in them


La Calle de la Ronda

That sums up most of what I’ve done lately. Tomorrow (I’m writing this one Monday but will probably post it Tuesday afternoon)  will be my first day of service work at the old folks’ home so expect to hear about that in the next post. I’ll be going to Baños this weekend as well which is a pretty popular tourist spot that has a lot of hiking and other outdoor activities. Pretty excited for that. ¡Adiós!