April and Kevin in Kuna Yala, the northeast coast of Panamá

Saturday, July 28, 2007

Fun / Interesting Panamanian Moments

So, I am a bit sick. Just diarehha, but that is enough to be a problem when you have 7+ hours of travel ahead of you. So we have put off going into our site for a day, and thus I have a moment to post about some fun stuff that I have seen / noticed here in Panama.

Taxis: Wow, taxis here can be and are, any make/model/year of car. A taxi is marked with a registration number on its side and (most of the time but not always) a taxi sign on top. They can be brand new or an utter clunker complete with bad sounds, rust and flapping fabric. You never know what you are going to get until they actually stop - but you don't have to get in if you don't want to.

There are no meters in the taxis here, just a flat rate or an agreement depending on where you are. Peace Corps tells us to talk to the driver about where and how much before getting in. Taxis will also stop and pick up more passengers as they go along, so if you are alone you tell them that you want the taxi to not pick up anyone else before you get in (safer that way). For the most part taxis here have been a safe and easy way to travel...but more expensive. A taxi might be $1.50 for a ride where a bus would be $.25 a person. You just have to weigh all the options and pros/cons and do what is best at the moment.

Fashion: Well, I should start by saying I am not an expert on this, and I do not have good fashion sense in the States...but I have noticed a few differences here worth telling you about.

First, women here seem to love clothes that sparkel. Beads, bangles, sequins, glitter, enbroidery are all a part of normal everyday fashion for women here. I don't know that that will be as true on the island, but I have seen examples pretty far out into the countryside. I would think that it would make the clothing harder to wash, and in many places the wash is done by hand. They do look nice, but most of you know that I am not a very sparkly girl.

Second, shoes are important when trying to look nice. Shoes may or may not be practical in nature. They definitely have and use work shoes, but would not wear them to a public event. Many kids and sometimes adults go barefoot a good deal, but when appearance matters the shoes should be nice, and they should be clean. Our host in Santa Clara during training would on occasion remove our shoes from our room and wash them. I was starting to worry about mold on my boots and had to ask her to not wash them because I was having a hard time drying them.

Third, Sizes are different. I haven't been shopping for clothes here yet, but when I do go it should be an adventure. I am considerably taller than most Panamanians - male or female. (To be totally accurate there are some men Kevin's size, but they are not overly common.) Anyway, I think that I will just say that my definition of "what fits" me is probably a bit different than the culture here. Sizes here tend to run smaller (other volunteers tell me) both because the people are smaller in stature, and because clothing is often worn snugger.

Mold: Hum, where to start. We have had some fun with mold here. This can be a fairly wet and humid climate. It is not hot or humid all of the time, but when it is cool things don't dry. They best way to dry things is out in the sun on a clear day. I have some money that I have been saving....yup it grew mold. Turns out that moldy money is kind of soft and powdery feeling. Somehow I can't see myself putting it all out in the sun for a day to kill the mold, so I am stuck with it. I think that the active mold growth has stopped, but I am still thinking about turning it in to a bank just to be free of moldy money.

My black birkenstock leather sandles have been rescued from mold growth twice. They grew mold (a pretty gray mold) on the surface of the leather and on the leather top to the birk footbed inside. Yum. Another Volunteer (or PCV in PC lingo) lent me some waterproofing wax that should stop the mold - I hope that he is right. Before we left hiking boots on the island we put them out in the sun to get good and hot for a day. They are also stored near the roof in the house that they are at - supposed to be warmer there.

The final mold indignity came the other day when we opened up the computer to use it for the first time in a couple of weeks; there was a fine smattering of mold on the wrist rests and screen. Kevin cleaned it off, but who knew that a computer could grow mold. We are now on the look out for those re-usable de-humidifying packets. If you know how to get them please email me! In the mean time, we may go shoe shopping and steal some silica packets.

Interesting advirtising:
I am just going to let this one speak for itself. Enjoy.



















These are elevator doors and interior in a mojor mall in Panama City. I thought that they were pretty funny. In case you can't read it they do talk about Parental Controls.

Thursday, July 26, 2007

Swear-In Photos


Despues de hoy,
estamos voluntarios de Cuerpo de Paz en Panama.
Groupo 59 de voluntarios en Panama

Swear-In went fine...almost all in Spanish so I had to pay good attention. The oath was in English, so at least I know what I agreed to. Thus starts our 2 years as Volunteers

Swear-In Day

So today is the big day.

In about 2 hours we will be heading to Panama Viejo (old Panama city) for the swear in ceremony and officially become volunteers (we have been trainees up until now). The Ambassador and Panamanian dignataries will be there and local press. It will be very official, but not very big.

After that we will be full fledged volunteers. This means that we will (for the most part) be free to schedule our own work, life and free time! Training has been hard at time because there has been very little feeling of control of my own life. The introverted part of me is tired. Living with host families is great for learning, but boy does it leave me tired.

After Swear In we get 2 days of free time and then we head into our island site to start living and working there on Sunday. On one hand we are ready to go and get started, and on the other hand I could sure do with a couple more days of down time.

So how am I feeling about Peace Corps right now? I am happy, tired, glad to be here, occasionaly fustrated with training, occasionally very happy with training. I am loving the expereince, but not looking forward to hauling all my stuff around on Sunday. I am looking forward to exploring the island and learning more about the community there. I am not looking forward to the chitra - or no-see-ums that bit us up last time we were there. I am very much looking forward to finding a house and setting up house keeping of my own in a couple of months. I am happy to be here. This was the right choice for me, I am happy to be spreading my horizons and learning new things.

I would like to say a quick thank you to our host family in Santa Clara. I know that there were occasionaly rough times (learning a language always makes getting to know people harder) but there were many good times, and we learned a lot at your house.

Also, just a fun note for the bird lovers out there: we got to see a Harpy Eagle yesterday. He is a captive education bird with a program that raises and releases Harpys in Panama and Belize. We even got to see him fly. VERY cool! Harpys are about the size of a Bald Eagle or a bit bigger for females. Thier wing span is not quite as big, but they are heavier and stronger (more lbs pressure in talons). They eat primarily sloths. Kind of funny to me that this majestic power consumes one of the slowest animals for 60% of it's diet.


And now we're out of time and off to Swear-In!

Saturday, July 21, 2007

Contact updates

Hello to all.

We officialy swear in as Peace Corps Volunteers on Thursday of this coming week (up to now we have been trainees). We will then, on Sunday, be going to the island to live for our two years. We will have less internet access after Sunday as the internet will be a boat ride and bus ride away (2-3 hours travel). We hope to be able to post to this blog every 3-4 weeks from now on.

Many of you will be amused to know that we now own our first cell phone (yes the irony of going to the Peace Corps and getting my first cell phone is not lost on me). It is VERY expensive to use cell phones to call out here, $.83 to the states. But incoming calls are free... so we will be welcoming calls. Other volunteers tell me that an international prepaid calling card in the states brings the cost to $.05-.08 cents a minute for you. The phone will not always be on as we will be running it on solar power and we don´t know what type of signal coverage we will have. I do not wish to post the number on the net...but just email me if you would like the number.

Also, our mailing address at the bottom of this blog has been updated for the new home location. Please switch to the new address. Also, volunteers do find that Jesus stickers and "Praise God" sayings do help the packages to arrive intact...especially when Jesus is across the seams where you would have to cut to open the package. ;)

All in all we are doing well and looking forward to getting going on the next and biggest step in this marvelous adventure. Love to you all.
April

Monday, July 16, 2007

The Island Report

We are back in Santiago, en route back to our training community for another week. We´ll be late getting back to our host family tonight, but we definately wanted to post some information about our island, the people we met, how our week went, and what we think it portends for the upcoming two years.

Last week, we had a day at a conference center with our giuas (guides) to our new community, during which we got to know them, went over their expectations, and ours, and made plans for the week in-site, with the Peace Corps Training Team supervision. (We also took a walk to the ¨nearby¨ beach near Decameron Resort, which turned out to be about an hour each way; but a lot of opportunities to talk between Trainees and Guias.) Kevin´s guide is named Efrain, and he is a pescador (fisherman) and cattleman; April´s guide is Maria Luisa and she is a pescadora and owns a tienda (small store) that was actually the smallest we´ve seen here in Panamá (about 6ft of shelf space in her kitchen/living room area). The photo is of Efrain and Maria Luisa. Much thanks to them for a great week, they clearly worked hard to be ready for us and to support us!!

On Wednesday, we loaded up our stuff (including a fully packed, very heavy, suitcase of the notebooks and such the Peace Corps has given us since we´ve arrived; one of our biggest recommendations thus far: pack one fewer suitcases than you can carry and bring a spare for the extra stuff you´ll get) and got on a bus with our guias for Santiago.

From there, we caught a bus to the district capital, where one guia gave us a tour of the agencies we´ll work with (environment and agriculture, one of whom had a map where we realized the island is actually about 6 miles across, twice what we´d thought), post office, and other important places, while the other headed to the port town. We caught up with him after a great seafood lunch looking out onto a muddy river and his boat of about 20-25 feet.



It was after 1pm when we loaded into the boat under a bright sun and headed down the river. The horsepower on the motors aren´t big (15-25 generally, all under 45) and we putted along, slowly passing mangroves, some other islands, and generally trying to take it all in. Finally, Efrain pointed to long stretch of land (we were never out of site of land) and said it was our island. However, we couldn´t see the entire thing because of the fog/rain that was rolling up from the east.

We went past some of the main points / collections of houses of the island, going three-quarters of the way round to see things and drop off Maria Luisa, and finally made it to Efrain´s house around 4:30, thoroughly drenched after running through waves of probably 3-4 feet. (We of course were wearing our Peace Corp-mandated lifevests, so don´t worry mom´s. :) Efrain´s house view is above.

View of the Isla above.


Once safely on dry land (Kevin took a Dramamine every day, and was fine), we met Efrain´s wife, and brother and father, who live in the house very next door. There were three or four other houses down in their collection of casas. Over the next few days, we found out just out ¨close¨any neighbors are on the island.



Day two, several of us from Efrain´s collection of houses went back to Maria´s (probably 20-30 minutes by boat), picked up Maria and a few others from her collection, and went across the bay to a small town in Soná, where VivaMar and another environmental group was having a meeting with local pescadores about restrictions and regulations around Isla Coiba (a protected nature preserve several hours away by boat; any tour book on Panama will have more). It was a lot of Spanish and not being sure what we were doing or where we were going, but eventually we returned everyone (dry, this time) and talked into the darkness after dinner on Efrain´s porch.



Another isla view...it is too big for one photo.



Oh, that reminds me. There is running water on most of the island, thanks to a pretty good "aquaduct" system, but no electricity. However, nearly every casa has been supplied with a solar panel and (car-sized) batteries through an arrangement with the government. So some houses watch an hour or so of TV in the evening, or, as in Efrain´s, we had a florescent light in each room to make it easier to cook, get ready for bed, or get up. Que bueno!



Friday, we left the boats behind and started hiking across to Maria´s, by way of some of the other residents´ houses. It took about two hours to get to her house, and that wasn´t even our final destination. We cut inland and although the highest point on our island is supposed to be 112 meters (about 350ft), it sure felt like we went up and down that 112 meters several times. We finally reached the school to find that the teachers (two of them, who live on the island during the week and head home on the weekends) had left the previous day. So, our school meeting was cut a bit short. But we met the president of the Padres de Familia (the PTA), who is also the correigadora, or appointed local government representative, and got to see the chicken project and school garden (or rather, where the space is for a school garden, once the weeds and debris are cleared again).


View on the boat.


After that, we headed up to see a fuente de agua, or water source for the community. It wasn´t as far as we´d feared, considering it was now noon and we´d been hiking since 7, and it was enlightening for both us and them, since it was running a bit slow. Reforestation above the fuentes de agua is likely one of Kevin´s projects.



We then hiked back to the school and off to another house, where it turned out we were to eat lunch finally. When we went to leave lunch, the tide had risen, and we were unable to walk along the beach paths. So the husband of the woman who provided lunch gave us a lift in his boat the 10-15 minutes up the island to the next house. This proved interested for Efrain´s dog who doesn´t like boats but had hiked all day with us, but we eventually got him in the boat.



This second house turned out to be one of our future host family houses. (During the first three months in site, we live with a host family to get to know the community, etc. We will actually spend time with three different families, in different parts of the island, one month each.) We weren´t quite prepared for the discussion when we realized this, but April came through brilliantly with her Spanish and we figured out we need sheets, but other than that, everything should be taken care of. (We´ll update on that during the first month, as we later found out that not all beds fit April and I. :) That month will actually be with the PdF president / corregidora, which should be a very informative opportunity.



When we left there, the tide was still up and so her husband gave us another ride (again, succes getting the dog in the boat), this time to Maria Louisa´s sister´s, next door, so to speak, to Maria Louisa´s. We enjoyed a breeze and a view and eventually decided to hike home (the direct route, a bit shorter) from there, having eaten and refreshed since our earlier hiking.


A mangrove crab.

Saturday, Maria Louisa hiked to Efrain´s house and then we returned to the boat to cover the one quarter of the coast we hadn´t yet seen. Immediately when we get in the boat, it started to rain, and we headed for the first port (well, other boat) we saw, waded through mud to our calves, and took shelter under a shed roof. Then it turned out we weren´t actually just sheltering there, but walked up the hill to meet the representante, who is the elected representative for the district. We drank some warm cinnamon creama and talked for a while until the sun finally came out (and the chitras and picas, the little bugs that drove the both of us nuts) and then eventually the four of us (Efrain, Maria Louisa, and us) were served an 11:00 lunch; the representante and his wife did not join us, just served us. After lunch, we went to the boat and continued around the island.



We stopped in another small community to see a second potential host family, but the lady of the house had to run into Santiago and the man of the house wasn´t interested in talking about it, so we wandered down to see some other folks on that stretch of beach (there were actually 5-10 houses there, in close proximity), before getting back in the boat.



We went about five minutes before pulling in to see the "house" the community has offered us to live in for free for our two years. We´ll post more on that later, but it definately had some great features and some drawbacks. (As a side note, the community is so excited to work with Peace Corps, they are offering us the house for free, as well as the first three months in the host families for free, which considering the cost of food for a family here, is pretty impressive. Of course, if we just eat rice and fish or chicken all the time, it may not be that expensive here. :)


A bay crab.

Continuing on, we passed the dock to the main town and the school, then back to Maria Louisa´s sister´s, where we ate another lunch around 2 and realized that they, along with Maria Louisa, are to be our third host family house. Finally (or at least mostly) understanding everything after three days, we headed home by boat.



Sunday dawned bright and hot (or maybe it just felt that way since we slept in until past 6, nearly 7). We probably shouldn´t have given everything else a chance to get moving. April got up, shook her pants, put them on, then picked up her shirt to shake it, and dropped it with a yelp. Upon further inspection, assisted by Efrain, we discovered an inch-plus long scorpion in her shirt tails. We think it just gave a warning sting, but it was a moment of fright, and we think the first scorpion sting in Peace Corps Panamá Group 59. She survived fine, with no side effects.



Kevin walked up to see Efrain´s (and his father´s and brothers´) cows, in a pasture that included a beautiful view including water on both the north and south sides of the island. The rest of the morning included some paperwork for Peace Corps with our guias, a quick horseback ride for April, and lunch. Then, because Efrain had to run errands all day Monday, we boated back to Maria Louisa´s for the night and so we could see the Passing of the Virgin this morning (more below).



A boat in the floatila for the Virgin.


Unfortunately, the afternoons seem to be storm time, and we were soaked from salt water by the time we unloaded from the boat and ran up the hill to Maria Louisa´s, getting soaked by rain in the process. (We´ll have to get a water proof camera at some point, because the rain on the waves was just amazing out in the little boat.) Luckily, we´d left those Peace Corps books at Efrain´s. The rain finally abated about 8 or so, in time for bed, after some of the best fried chicken we´ve had (eating food from Maria Louisa´s may be a pretty good thing :) and some time with a two month old cat.



This morning, we headed out around 8:30 or 9:00 when the flotilla of boats carrying decorated versions of the Virgin Mary circled the island. It is a district holiday, and we fell into the midst of about 7 boats, with singers and general fun, all the way round to the dock, where the Virgins processed to the small church. We went up and were introduced to the two teachers, and then finally headed out for the two hour ride to our port town.


An example of the statuary that was a part of the flotila.

After climbing the hill to catch the bus (the one road into town was closed for the celebration), we rode into Santiago and now need some (very late) lunch and to catch a bus back to our training town, where we´ll obviously arrive much later than we´d anticipated. We hope you enjoy the recap and the images April has inserted. Hopefully more in a week, before we enter our site for that first three months.







The common questions with answers

This is April...the computer just thinks that it is Kevin since he was the one to log in.
What do we eat?

We eat a ton of rice...almost every meal. Lots of starches in the Panimanian diet. Lots of beans, lentils, some corn...but not like any you know...starchy corn. Some plantains and bananas for Kevin. HOt dogs are a favorite for some reason and there are many ways to cook them. I have eaten more hot dogs here than in the past 10 years in the States.

We eat lots of fruit including mangos, pifa, pineapple, banana, papaya, coconut, and others that I am forgetting the names to and have never had in the States. Panamanians tend to like fruit mostly as a juice or frozen treat....btu they eat it regular too. Fried food is a favorite. In short most PCV women here tend to gain a little wieght (which is not thrilling) and most PCV men tend to loose a little...how in the heck that works out I do not know.


How is your health?

Good. Very little in the way of health problems. I have had diareahh just a couple of times...usually when I have to get on a bus or boat soon which is a thrilling type of stress. But stomach issues have been very minimal. The water here is good to drink in most areas straight from the tap.

We have had some thrilling bug bites. I have had bites a couple of times now that have grown to be 7 inches wide, slightly raised, hot, and hard. The one time it felt a bit like chicken skin on the surface and lasted about two weeks. The second time was different and when way in 4 days but was fun until then.

I was stung by a small scorpion (body about an inch long without the tail) the other day when I picked up my shirt. Very suprising and not fun but not awful. It hurt good for 15 minutes and then hurt dully for 20 minutes and then that part of the finger was without much sensation for the rest of the day. They tell me that scorpion stings can also make your tounge loose feeling but I did not experience that.

Kevin joined me in the insect fun this past week on the island. He had more bites than I did for once in his life. THey were mostly no-see-ums. Looked a bit like a bad case of chicken pox. But those will go away soon.


What is the temperature or weather like?

Not as bad as I expected to be very honest. It can be very hot and humid....but that comes just before the rain storms....so you know that the humidity will end at soom point. The temps are not bad...not as high as Baltimore last summer. THe rain cools everything down. It rains almost daily, quite often as a thunderstorm, which I love. Usually in the afternoon, but sometimes in the morning or at night. I can´t complain because it is not as bad as Baltimore was with days around 100 and high humidity last year. I was prepared for that to be true here as well but so far that is not true. THey tell me that summer (Jan, Feb, March, April) will be quite different so I will update you them.

Monday, July 9, 2007

On our way- first island visit

Hello,
This is just a quick note to let you all know that we are doing fine. We are currently on our way to meet our "community guide" a person who will show us around our new community. We will go with them to the island for the first time this Wednesday and will stay there until Monday. I hope to post info and pictures of our new home then.

Until then...
Love to all.
April