Wednesday, April 27, 2011

A Week In

When I visited Amaguaña for a week back in March I saw an encouraging sign that confirmed this place as the perfect post for my two years of service: a rainbow. I hadn´t seen one since I left Glen Brook last Fall, so the sight of this one made me feel a little more at home. Last Wednesday, when I arrived in Amaguaña for good - after swearing in as a volunteer - another one of nature´s phenomena greeted me as I hopped off the bus with my duffel bag and guitar: a giant crack of lightning (followed, of course, by torrential rain). I´m not sure what biblical significance the lightning may have regarding my service here, but it seems to compliment the softness of the rainbow, for sure.

Amaguaña sits about an hour south of Quito in Los Chillos Valley, and its slightly high elevation gives you some great views of the rest of the valley on clear days. The volcano Pasachoa sits right outside our town and rises 13,766 ft. above see level. My house is somewhere between 7,000 and 8,000 ft. and the volcano really towers over our town.

I live with my counterpart, Rafael. Counterparts are basically community contacts for PCVs who´ve requested the PCV´s service from PC/Ecuador. Rafael´s a young ecologist who runs an environmental education foundation in Amaguaña called JASDUC. He´s already taught me alot about native plants, but more importantly he´s taught me the ecuadorian way to make soup (possible topic of a future blog post). He´s been great about showing me around town and such. So we´re getting along fine. Rafael´s house is simple, which I like. But I´ve been noticing some things seem to be missing, like a table to eat at, chairs, and a sink in the bathroom. But as they say here in Ecuador, ¨No pasa nada,¨or ¨Fuhgeddaboutit¨ if you´re in Brooklyn. We have no hot water, a leaky roof, and a cement floor that holds alot of moisture, but like I said, no pasa nada.

Each PC site gets a maximum of three volunteers (six years of service, total). I´m replacing another volunteer in Amaguaña who had served for the last two years up until a couple weeks ago. Following her has made things alot easier for me. For example, during my site visit in March, she showed me around town - where to get good deals on avocados, how the buses work, etc. I also appreciate all the things she passed on to me, including a bed, a refrigerator, cookware, books, dvds, a shower head heater, and best of all a French press (with a bag of real coffee!). This has been tremendously helpful in making me feel at home in Amaguaña. I like the sense of continuity that following another volunteer brings, and it will be nice in two years to welcome the third volunteer to serve here (and pass on the invaluable French coffee press).

In terms of work, I´ve made some good progress the past couple days. My counterpart and I have decided to start out by working with two communities that live on the slopes of Pasachoa, about an hour hike from my town. Because the slope are steep and folks only grow corn, there is a fair amount of soil erosion and poor soil quality. We´d like to work on these two issues and hopefully introduce some simple organic fertilizer sprays that can easily be made with home materials. I have a meeting with the presidents of the communities on Friday, so hopefully we can get the ball rolling. In the meantime I´m going to see about starting a smaller project. Rafael´s foundation has an educational park called Cachaco. It´s a beautiful spot next to the San Pedro River with alot of native vegetation and bird activity (pictures to come). We have a tree nursery there where we raise seedlings for various reforestation projects in the valley. So, we´re going to use a portion of this space to experiment with various types of homemade organic fertilizer sprays, which I´m really excited about. The soil there is fairly poor, so it´s a good baseline from which to measure progress.


Thursday, April 21, 2011

Address

This will be my mailing address for the next two years:

PCV Daniel Foster
Cuerpo de Paz, Casilla 17-08-8624
Quito, Ecuador

Please send me mail! But don´t send anything more than 4 lbs, and don´t declare a value.....




Tuesday, April 19, 2011

Quick Update

Tomorrow, our group of trainees, Omnibus 105, will take the oath to protect and defend the Constitution of the United States and become Peace Corps Volunteers.

Soon after the swearing-in ceremony, we´ll split up and travel to our posts where we´ll serve for 24 months. Our close-of-service (COS) date is April 20th, 2013.

My Program Manager found me housing today in Amaguaña (just in time, right?), so I´m excited that everything is set for me to get started at my site. So many great opportunities lie ahead!

Hopefully I´ll be able to provide a good description of the upcoming events of the week - and some pictures, too. Swearing-in and Holy Week, crazy week.

Sunday, April 10, 2011

Tech Trip on the Coast

This past week we split up into groups of 11 for our second technical trip of training. My group went to a small city called Arenillas, down near the coast on the boarder with Peru in the province of El Oro. The bus ride down took about 12 hours and cost $10 (eat it, Greyhound). I´m kind of glad we took a night bus because I couldn´t see all of the cliffs I´m sure we almost fell off, but we probably missed some great views, too. All of a sudden we found ourselves surrounded not by mountains and volcanos but fields and fields of banana plants. It was kind of like driving through the US midwest but instead of seeing corn as far as the eye could see, it was bananas. It was bananas!

The trip consisted of alot of training in a variety of topics. We visited a shrimp farm and learned the process of getting shrimp wheels to Stop n Shop and Hannaford´s in the States from the Ecuadorian farmers. Like most industrial operations, it´s complicated, and the workers and the envrionment tend to suffer the brunt of the cons while the owners and middlemen get all the pros. The boat ride out to the farm was really neat though. It was great to be on the water - riding through the mangroves. There was alot of bird activity too, and we could see groups of the predator birds soaring in thermal columns at several points along the way to the farm.

We also visited a dry forest that forms part of the border with Peru (and so the military runs it, not the environmental agency). The trees in this forest drop their leaves in the summer as a way to protect themselves from the intense heat - basically the opposite of why our tree drop theirs in the fall in the Northeast US. The heat was definitely distracting - for pretty much the whole trip - but the seco (dry) forest was a really neat environment.

Our last day of the trip we took a hike through another national park, further up the coast this time, in the province of Guayas. This forest was really beautiful. Dense vegetation and really wet and humid. The mosquitos and spiders were more than made up for by the howler monkeys, who we definitely heard before we saw. They make these incredible grunt noises and can be heard from really far away - kind of intimidating. But also cute. We saw several carrying their babies way up in the canopy.

We did some other things on the trip (actually loads), but my brain is having trouble processing it all at the moment. We got back at 8am Saturday after another nauseating bus ride - still exhausted - and I´ve been popping Peptobismal like its candy - a small price to pay for an incredible experience.

In other news:

I´m reading The Alchemist, but in Spanish this time...

Only have a week and a half before I move to my post in Amaguaña...

... But I don´t yet have a place to stay there (my Program Manager is working on it)...

I´m on quest for a fiddle..