Monday, January 4, 2010

Looking Back on Our Trip

Nicole and I met up on New Years Day - The first time we've seen eachother since Peru!
I am happy to inform you that we are STILL BEST FRIENDS! Lol!  ...Travelling can add a lot of tention between two friends! We were able to manage! :) We survived the test! :) Lol!
Nicole and I are both very greatful for our trip to Peru in 2009. We had such an amazing experience. I would recommend travel for everyone. Especially if you feel like you need a shift.....

Victoria was an excellent host. Thank you for having us! :)  Thank you for showing us the rainbow! :)

We exchanged pictures from our cameras >  Here they are! Happy New Year you all!!! I know it will be an amazing year - Time for Change, Growth and Exploration of Possiblities and Making them Happen!

Simone








Wednesday, October 14, 2009

Another addition from my Journal!

I know it´s been a long time. I had limited internet access, but I wrote down a lot of my experience by hand in a journal. Here´s a lil´ bit from my journal!

October 8
Hi All! Well, Nicole and I are both feeling a lot better. I know that you´ve all been wondering about us, and we are doing fine. I am now in a city called Urubamba in La Valle Sagrada just 2 hours away from Cuzco. Nicole and I have been staying with Victoria, our new friend, for the last few weeks. Victoria is a Resident of Perú, she´s been here for 16 years and originally traveled to Perú with a group who travels to sacred places all over the world. She came to visit Machu Pichu with a group that visits sacred energy point around the world and has been here ever since! She is originally from Michigan and now stays in Urubamba, her new home. Victoria studies shamanism and has a few Maestros (teachers) including her friend Ruben, an Anthropologist and Archaeologist and Don Ignacio, an Auyasquero who lives in the Jungle. The Three of us have been having a good time together, and we´ve been taking it easy.


 Nicole left for Lake Titicaca with a friend and I decided to stay with Victoria in Urubamba. There are still things here in (near) Cuzco... for example Macchu Pichu that I would like to see...

Monday, October 12, 2009

Notes from my Journal

I know it´s been a long time since our last post... I had limited internet access, but I wrote down a bit of my experience. Here´s a lil´ bit from my journal! Just so you know, we are all disease-free, safe and well!

Also, Please Scroll Down and check-out new photos I´ve added, such as the Sept 17th Blog from our Adventures in Huacachina, where I added some photos from our adventures sandboarding!

note: These are notes that were taken before we got sick - my last post...

September 19 -
It´s Saturday! It´s nice to have the day off, especially when the last few days were full! We spent the day at the ancient ¿Inca? ruins called Saxaywaman. Now THIS is easy to remember : Sax-y-wo-man! ... sounds something like... ummm... Sexy woman! LOL!  (I use ¿Inca? with question marks, because there are many who believe that the ancient ruins here in Perú were not originally created by the Inca, but in fact were creations by a culture that existed BEFORE the Inca society. However, most books and tour guides, and yes, even historians give the Inca credit for all of Perú´s ancient creations). We got to ride mules up to see La Templa de La Luna (Temple of the Moon)... what a walk that would have been!  We rested for a bit on the Temple and I wrote down a few of my intentions... as it was the New Moon (in Virgo)! How magical was it to be at the top of a temple that was originally created to honor the Moon on the day after the New Moon! *One of my intentions is to start interpreting! (It´s about time, huh?¿!¿¡)

Templa De La Luna



Saxaywaman (Well, Two)


Sept 18 -
Nicole, Wilson (our friend from HelpingHands) and I went to El Centro (the center) de Cuzco to go shopping and such. I bought a gorra (hat) with Llamas on it and looked around a bit for other goodies.
Nicole and I drank some smoothies from the Mercado. *This might not have been such a good idea... (see post below).  At the Mercado I saw a flier that read ´Full Moon PsyTrance Party´and you know I was happy! I insisted that we go later, as I Love electronic music!  After dinner with a new friend, JulioCesar, another volunteer, Matthijis met us at La Plaza de Armas and joined us for a few bebidas at a few spots. We had a great time dancing and such. We went to Mama Africa, where there were a lot of Gringos, like us. Then of course I made sure we go to that PsyTrance Party, which was pretty fun... I could have stayed all night long, but I felt like I should rest because I had something to look forward to... It was very nice to know that I´d be returning to where I was needed once the weekend was over. I have something to look forward to... to be with the little kids again on Monday morning and teach English in the afternoons.






Sept 17 -
Today I had a lot more energy, and so after the first session of class I decided to wash my laundry... by hand! It wasn´t my first time doing this... We had to wash our laundry by hand when my mama and I traveled to Spain. I didn´t realize how long it would take, but just for a few shirts, a pair of pants, and the essentials "pantelones pequenos" - as Nicole likes to call them, it took me about an hour and a half.
After washing clothes I got to meet the students who attend the second half of the program. We revised a few English the kids English. I had a lot of fun teaching and got the idea that I could do this more often! ¿¡Hmmmm!?...



Sept 16 -
We finally are a little more settled in our destination city, Cuzco (Cusco). Today we volunteered with kids from the ages of 4-6 in the morning. I felt a little sick and tired so I needed to stay back and sleep a little today while Nicole volunteered longer during the second half of the day. She helped kids from the ages of 7-13 with their homework from their school. When Nicole got back, she INSISTED that I eat, even though I felt sick. Thank you, Nicole! That made me feel a lot better! ¡¿What would I do without you, friend!?

Saturday, September 26, 2009

We´re on Antibiotics!

So, the word is that you´ve all been waiting for an update from Peru! (Thank you, Nicole for your post yesterday!) I´m sure you´ve all been wondering, "what were Simone and Nicole doing that was so important that kept them from writing in their blog for over a week?!" WELL, we have a very good reason... Actually, THREE good reasons: Typhoid Fever, Salmonella and Giardia!

Wow! After 1 entire day spent in bed (minus the multiple bathroom visits) and 4 days of continued mild sickness and exhaustion, I finally decided to go to the Doctor. Note *If you have diarrhea for more than 2 days, and are living in a foreign country, it is strongly suggested to go to get checked...because you probably have parasites!

***If you are in (Cuzco) Perú and Get Sick and if you have these same symptoms as above, go to get checked!
Here is the Process:
1. Collect poop sample (heces)
2. Bring sample to a nearby Clinic - I went to the Clinica Paredes, just located near the Centro. It was suggested to me by a few Peruvians because it is typically cheaper than going to see a Doctor. If you´re in Cuzco, ask any taxi driver for "La Clinica Paredes" and they´ll take you there. There is also the Clinica Pardo, which I´ve heard is a little more expensive... but oh well, it´s all still a whole lot cheaper than any Clinic in the U.S!
3. Go to the Clinic´s Laboratory (Laboratorio) and Get a blood test and give the technician (Nurse = Enfermera) 70 Soles ($25 US) and oh, don´t forget your lovely smelly sample - which I carried via taxi in a plastic disposable cup wrapped in a plastic bag - doubly wrapped. Twice!
4. Option A. Go to the Dr. to get a Prescription. Here´s the tricky part - The nurse advised that my sample contained a $%i&load of parasites aaah! and that I needed to get antibiotics intravenously and that I needed to see a Dr.
However, I had told La Enfermera beforehand that I did not want to go to the Doctor, as I was a volunteer and did not have that much money. But she strongly suggested that I go get more money from my house, since I only came with 100 Soles...
So I did... and I picked up Nicole along the way and told her to come with and get tested with me, because, even though she didn´t have the same symptoms as me, we had been eating the same food and she probably had the same yucky things that I did!
We both got tested, and both test showed that we had the same yucky things, except for my exams contained 3x as many parasites as hers! Gosh, was I lucky to feel as good as I did with test results as nasty as those! Because I knew I had so many bacteria and parasites, I was nervous and therefore, the nurse talked us into going to the Doctor.
4. Option B. If you´re traveling through Perú and you´re totally strapped for funds and you get sick and would like to get medicine cheaply, I would suggest avoiding the Dr.
*** Note: The U.S death, I mean, health care system is a lot different than apparently many other countries, including Perú. Unlike in the U.S, in Perú you do not have to go to the Dr. before getting lab tests. You can go straight to the Lab, get your test, your results and then go to the Pharmacy from there. (Pharmacists are trained to know about diseases just as much as Doctors so they totally able to prescribe your medications!) ***
This time around Nicole and I decided to go to the Doctor...But if I have to do it over again, I will now know that I can avoid the Doctor´s fees by going straight to the pharmacist (farmacóloga).
5. Go to the Pharmacist and get your meds! (We paid about 60 soles for 2 types of antibiotics for all 3 diseases. I bought 2 pills of tylenol for my fever, and we also bought electrolyte packets to put into water to help with dehydration which cost ed .50centimos each).
....While on the Meds...(and from now on while in Perú):
The pharmacist advised that we only eat cooked food: vegetables, chicken, rice, beans; and that we must prepare our own meals, because it is common for people to not wash their hands here (there is rarely soap in public bathrooms). If we do go to a restaurant, we are supposedly supposed to ask the waiter to wash their hands! (yeah right!) If we are to eat fruit, we must only eat fruit that we can peel (ie. bananas, oranges). Oh, and then if we eat any other types of fruits we must thoroughly wash the fruit with bottled water. We were advised not to eat onions because they absorb bacteria and parasites... but they didn´t mention potatoes, which also grow underground... hmm?...
We could have gotten Giardia from brushing our teeth, as all the water here contains Giardia. It usually dies when you boil the water. I have a hard time believing that ...? The typhoid fever... from unwashed poopy hands, and the salmonella... we´re not exactly sure, but another friend of ours that stayed at the same hostel shared a Pisco Sour - the drink from Perú that contains egg whites!! With all of our restrictions, we are happy to say, Mamas, that we now feel safe and comfortable while we are staying with our friend Victoria, a friend of Emily´s. Along with a nice place to stay, we have a beautiful, clean kitchen to prepare our own food and the comfort of a nurturing friend!
*Thank you, Emily for Your Wonderful Magical Connections!
*Thank you, Victoria! You offered your house to us at perfect timing!

Friday, September 25, 2009

Helping Hands Cusco

Holaaaaa!!!

This is my first official entry into "Our Experience Volunteering in Peru!" - not only that, but my debut blog post!

We have been in Peru for just over two weeks, and the experience has been rewarding, challenging, educational, fun and inspirational. I think both of our spanish-speaking (and comprehending - for me!) have rapidly improved with all of the daily practice we get being surrounded by the language.

Having a few days in the beginning of our trip to travel a bit and experience new places was wonderful - though a bit stressful at times as flying by the seat of your pants... oops I mean traveling... always is. Since arriving in Cusco, our main site for this trip, we have felt like part of the community we are living in, Los Nogales of San Sebastian, a district of Cusco.

We arrived at the bus station in Cusco to find Mario, our contact and the director of Helping Hands Cusco, waiting for us with a sign. We were pleased to find him to be a very kind man, as we had expected from our correspondence via e-mail. We took a taxi to the "volunteer house," dropped our bags, and walked two blocks to the school to meet the morning class of three- to five-year-olds. They nearly knocked us over with all of their hugs and excitement! Still acclimating to the altitude (approximately 11,000 feet), we were exhausted, short of breath and had to retreat back to our room for a siesta.

Since our arrival, we have had a pretty regular schedule with volunteering at the school during the week and living in the volunteer house. This house belongs to a very, very kind and hospitable family, the heads being Julian and Gloria. All of their three children live in either a room or apartment add-on with their own spouses and children, needless to say they are very close. In the front of the house is an Internet cafe/copy shop, which is very convenient for us(!). In addition to housing their immediate family and running a business, Julian and Gloria also rent guest rooms to volunteers from Helping Hands Cusco, and Simone and I are lucky enough to have their space. Our room is very simple with two twin beds, a night stand, a table and two chairs with one light on the ceiling. Our door opens to a courtyard of sorts that has clothes lines, a plum tree, and various pens for roosters and hens (no, we don't need an alarm clock), ducks and four dogs. All of this animal noise took a little getting used to! Gloria, Julian and their sons Estiv and Julio have been absolutely wonderful to us and have treated us like family. We feel so lucky to have their support while in their neighborhood.

We start our days at the school, Helping Hands Cusco, also Mario and his wife Rosa's house, for breakfast at about 8:30 am. The classroom is on the first floor, and the living/dining/kitchen area is on the fourth floor - I can never make it up all the stairs not short of breath with the altitude! Either Mario or Rosa's mother Nelly cooks the meals and they are usually quite delicious. My favorites have been the veggies with eggs for breakfast (Simone loves the pancakes, though more like crepes) and veggies with eggs for lunch/dinner.

At about 9:15, some of the kids in the 3- to 5-year-old age range come in to start school. I still haven't figured out exactly what time it is supposed to start - we usually get going with everyone in attendance at about 9:45. Rosa is the main teacher and Simone and I, along with some other volunteers, work with small groups of the kids on projects like coloring, workbook lessons, learning how to tie shoes, left from right, etc. Some days we take the class to the "pampa," which is a scrappy park nearby, to play outside. We taught them Red Rover, but they also love futbol and jumping rope. All of the kids are adorable and have won our hearts... they all have their own quirks and personalities and give us so much love! We have learned about each one's home life - some good, some challenging - and try to give lots of hugs and attention that some might not get at home with working or busy parents and big families. At the end of their class day, about 12 pm, the volunteers walk home with the kids to make sure they are home safely and not playing in the street with stray dogs (and humans!) nearby. It has been really wonderful to meet the parents and become familiar to them, and receive a "¡Gracias, Profe!" when we bring the kids to their homes.

After morning classes, we have lunch at Mario and Rosa's and then have until 3:30 until the 6- to 12-year-olds come. This is a place for neighborhood kids to come after school to work on homework and of course hang out with their friends, which makes it a bit challenging for volunteers to figure out what to do in this time block! There are some days where only two kids come and we work on learning english, and other days when 10 kids come and each has their own homework to do. One girl had some square root math homework that I had completely forgotten how to do, I had to refer her to Wilson, one of the other volunteers from Utah, for help! The days where we can work closely with them on learning english has been the most fun for me.

We usually eat dinner sometime after class at Mario and Rosa's and chat with them, their daughters Brenda, 10 and Andrea, 3, and the other volunteers (Wilson, mentioned above, left recently after a month of volunteering for a two week hike in Arrequipa, Matteis from Holland, Tracy from Australia and her boyfriend Coco from Peru). We can use the computer here or go back to the Internet cafe at our house and pay 1 Sol per hour (about $.35). There aren't a lot of places for us to go in walking distance at night, which is why we stick around our house or Mario and Rosa's. We are, however, just a 30 minute bus ride or 15 minute taxi ride into the center of Cusco and the beautiful Plaza de Armas.

We have been having great experiences and learning a lot in our time here so far... Thank you for reading our blog and supporting us!

Thursday, September 17, 2009

Our Travels & Adventures in Lima, Ica & Huacachina

1 Dia en Lima - After the sea lions we went to the water park (Parque de Agua)... but it wasn´t a typical water park. There were water fountains that you could play in. It reminded me of a movie I saw some time ago. ? The hostel that we stayed at was great! See the link below if you´re going to be in Lima & need a place to stay.
2 Dia - 6-hour bus trip to Ica 30Soles/$10 - We stayed in a hostel in a near-by town -just 5 minutes away-called Huacachina, which is known for its Lagoon and beautiful sand dunes. We were lucky -or not so much- that the hostel had a dance floor so we got to "exercise" a lil bit on the dance floor! They played a lot of reggaeton, salsa, cumbia, and my favorite música electrónica! The highlight on the dance floor was when we got peruanos, americanos, ingleses y israelís to dance the Macarena!


                                                 Sandboarding in Huacachina´s Sand Dunes





 

We´ll Always Be Silly Little Girls!

3 Dia - Huacachina - We decided to stay a day longer, as we found really cool traveling partners who talked us into staying a day longer and doing some fun adventurous things. We went to the Museo in Ica, then went sand boarding in the Sand Dunes! Wow! Was that fun! ... if I hadn´t discovered my courage of swimming with sea lions, i don't know if I would have been able to be courageous on this adventure!
4 Dia - Bus to Nazca to see the Lines of Nazca, one of the 7 wonders of the world! Some people say that these lines were created by aliens, but that isn´t giving any credit to the advanced civilizations and peoples that existed before us! (i´ll post pics!) We made the mistake of going to a ticketing agency right next to the bus station and ended up paying an additional $15 more ($65 total/each) to see the lines by plane. Other people that rode in our airplane said they paid only $50. We were simply too exhausted to walk around with our heavy load and search for another company. It did warn of this in our travel guide, but since we made friends with the bus driver and his helper, we figured that they would pass us on to the right people. Oh well, this shows that you should never assume, huh?
After eating in Nazca, we took an over night bus to Cuzco! It left Nazca at 8pm and arrived in Cuzco at 11am the next morning. We were pleased to see our friends from our hostel in Huacachina on the same bus just 2 seats in front of us! ...Wow... this bus trip was so exhausting, as we were traveling throughout the Andes mountain range in altitudes of 10,000 feet +... I woke up many times throughout the night feeling cramped, my arms and legs were tingling and I had a headache. Nicole comforted me and reminded me to drink water and eat - this helped indeed. Mario (the president of the organization that we are volunteering with) mentioned that I should wear clothes that cover my hole body next time. I have no idea how this helps, but usually the most rarest advice is the one that mysteriously works the best! I´ll try it next time... however, there might not be a next time. If we can find a cheap airplane ticket, we´ll be sure and spend an additional $60 or so to fly back to Lima!

Saturday, September 12, 2009

sea lions

Hi guys! Well, Nicole and I are about to leave for Ica, which is South of Lima about 4.5 hours. Yesterday we went swimming with Sea Lions (Lobos!) Dios Mio! I was soooo scared to get in the water, but I made it out alright! We took a boat out to an island that was an hour away from land. The ride was really tough. Nicole got sick and I felt a little sick. I just tried to imagine myself being rocked my mother nature and tried to release my body, as I was really tense. This helped a lot. When we got to the island, the Sea Lions FILLED it! It was covered in Lobos!! And they were all screaming at us! It sounded like a crowd of people screaming at a baseball game, it was the most bizarre thing ever...  
When the guide told me to put on my wetsuit, I put it on while trembeling with fear and frio! It was cold! I was really nervious while putting it on, but I just did it, with out fixating on thinking about it. Poor Nicole was laying on deck sick from the sea... Once all of us swimmers got to the edge of the boat, I was a little nervious to jump in the cold sea!  But I just did it, again with out stopping to think about if I should do it or not... Once I was in the water, it was very cold and I was nervious. The guide helped settle my nerves, and finally, we swam closer to the lions. It was the most incredible thing ever! And mostly scary! I knew they wouldn´t hurt us, but I still had to ask my guide ´they won´t hurt us!?´ The closest they got was about 3 meters away... they were so curious and very loud! They were showing their teeth everytime they opened their mouths to scream... it was so scary! I knew that they sensed our fear, because for a minute, when all of us swimmers were relaxed, they came very close. Once our nerves took control of us again, the sea lions reflected this and swam away! Man, once we turned around to go towards the boat, there were sea lions behind us. That was intense... however, I knew that they felt comfortable enough to go between the boat and us swimmers. Plus they were preoccupied with the boat. As soon as they saw we were approaching, they swam away... We swam back, and once I got to the deck, I couldn´t get up I was so exhausted from the cold, the fear, the rush of adrenaline, and nerviousness from being in water (I´m usually scared to swim in a Lake! let alone the sea! with a bunch of monsorous animals swimming around me!) Wow! Intense!! But I did it! Thanks, Nicole for getting pictures. I´ll try and post some pics soon! . Simone .