So in case you're wondering what the hell that's all about, I got my first goal yesterday! Naturally it was a header, since I look like Kareem Abdul-Jabbar compared to most of the guys in my community. And naturally it was in the sunday youth game. But these kids are nastier than I'll ever be, so it made me feel really good to finally get one in. Also hearing them describe my goal when we were walking home and how high I jumped was pretty hilarious. According to them, I literally jumped over two kids and then did a Cristiano Ronaldo-esque full body header. So I got that going for me.
What else is new?
Well, it being "winter" here and all, the sky opened up a few weeks ago and it started raining like god wanted to start over with this whole earth and humanity thing. Basically being at the base of the mountains in Honduras and Guatemala, the valleys just funnel all that rain down to the poor little communities below, hint that's us. So we got pretty devastated. Roads turned into rivers. Houses flooded. It was pretty nuts. The picture below is of the road outside my house.
Also, because of all the flash floods, our community started eroding right before our eyes. This one road near my house disappeared overnight. There one day and then a giant hole the next. Pretty common here since the infrastructure generally sucks.
Anyway, the neighborhood came together and pitched in to rebuild the road and bug the hell out of our mayor's office to fix it. He ended up sending a bunch of rocks, cement, sand, and an engineer, and over the course of a week, we built a retaining wall and filled in the road. Pretty cool. Here are some pics.
Mixing cement. You basically make a giant mashed potato and gravy volcano. Except it's cement. Every kid's dream come true
Here we are collecting river rocks for the retaining wall. Just to give you an idea of how much water this one storm dropped on us, the river swelled so much is was touching the footbridge...
Movie night
Hmm, what else is new? Well half of the reason we PCVs are here is to make communities more organized and self-sufficient. Not always the first thing that comes to mind when you think about the rural health mission, but it ends up being really important, ie, organized communities often = more resources and dinero which = public health projects which = healthier people. Got it?
During training, we learned a really easy way to raise money is throwing a movie night. They're insanely easy to put on and communities love them. Especially little kids and teenagers since they get to gel up their hair and mack on the ladies. So I pitched it to our softball team and we were in business.
We borrowed the projector from the mayor's office, moved all my furniture (okay, basically my bed) over into the corner of my room, set up a ton of benches and chairs, and made a ton of popcorn. We were all set...
Until the rain came. F-ing rain. Literally half an hour before showtime, a huge rainstorm came out of nowhere and made it impossible to go outside. Obviously our turnout sucked. Bummer. But in the end, it was really fun and our team made 12 bucks. Decent!
We showed two movies. Ice Age 2 for the little ones and 300 (of course!) for anyone old enough to know where babies come from. Crappy photo but if you squint really hard, you can see the giant mastodon thing.
Stove Team factory
As most of you know, our stove project has been growing and growing. Up to this point, our community has ordered 100 stoves. Pretty amazing considering there are only about 150 families.
Anyway, last week Salva and I went to pick up the stoves my community ordered. Unfortunately, the factory isn't receiving as much support from the states as it did before and can no longer offer people credit. Crappy economy = less international help trickling down to salvos. It was really bad news for our community, since we're corn and bean farmers and they won't be able to sell their harvest for another couple months. But 25 community members scrounged together their 20 bucks and we were off.
The factory is down in Sonsonate, about two hours away near the coast. On the way, you pass through some really picturesque towns. Looking forward to my next trip at the end of November.
A worker pouring in pumice rocks
Cool sparky guy.
This is Francisco. He works for the mayor's office. Good kid. Loved riding in the back of the pickup... until we passed through the mountains and the temp dropped to 50 degrees. With windchill. Yikes. Anyway, he survived.
Later, Salva and I dropped off a stove he bought for a nearby family. He'd never lit the stoves before so we all thoroughly enjoyed watching him go through about 20 matches, the whole time reassuring us he knew what he was doing. Also, this girl's smile is ridiculously cute.
So that's it. Hope all is well up north...
G
11.01.2008
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Is the guy next to Spark-Man wearing an FC Barcelona jersey? That's awesome.
ReplyDeleteAlso, the election stuff was clearly amazing, plus you can watch full episodes of the Daily Show on comedycentral.com
Just thought I'd share the happiness.