Saturday, June 6, 2009

FInally got some internet

Saturday June 6, 2009

Hey everybody,

I know it has been a while but the past two times i have come to town to try and use the internet, it hasn´t been working. I had actually wrote a blog post one of these days to post, but of course i forgot to bring my usb drive, and camara, with me to town today. So i´ll probably just be writing about the past week, and post the older blog later (I´m going to be in la capital sunday and monday so i should be able to get internet) But life has been pretty good here in Yabonico for the past 3 weeks. I have been doing lots of walking around trying to get to know the people in my community better, as well as the general geography and layout a little bit better as well. As my campo is made up of a bunch of smaller regions, i have been doing a lot of walking, but it is really nice scenerio walking through the hills, crossing the river, or exploring some of the forests so i don´t mind. All of the people i visit are always nice and welcoming, they usually offer me coffee, juice, or some sort of food (i usually turn down the food though as i am full most of the time).

This past week i did get sick though which was a little bit of a bummer. When i went to bed on Monday night i sudennly didn´t start feeling that well and i had a fever for the entire night and hence didn´t get much sleep. On tuesday morning i just layed in my bed in my room for a while as i still wasn´t feeling well. The only bad part of this is that my room gets really hot durring the day because we have a tin roof, and i don´t have that great of ventalation in my room. My parents here kept telling me to go sit outside where there was a little bit of a breeze, but that meant i would just be sitting in an uncomfortable chair when all i wanted to do was lay down, so it was worth it to stick out the heat. Later in the afternoon i was feeling a little bit better so i was sitting outside under the enramada where the breeze felt nice, when my project partner stopped by my house to tell me that the saftey and security officer for the Peace Corps had been trying to call me (i don´t have signal at my house) and that i needed to call her back immediatly. So i walked up the hill by my house where i go to use the phone. I tried calling her (the security-saftey cordinator) but her phone was busy. But after looking at my phone i saw that i had 4 new voice mails, which is quite a bit more than usuall for me in one day. I had messages from my emergency cordinator, a receptionist at the peace corps office, the security lady, all saying that the pork flu had arrived in the Dominican Republic and that if you had a fever over 100 (mine was 101.6) you needed to call the Peace Corp medic immediatly. So of course i was thinking to myself why did i have to choose this day to get sick, i wasn´t so much worried that i had the pig flu as that they were gonna make me come in to get checked out. But i called the medic and she said that i just had to call her the next day to tell her if my fever went down (which it did) and that since i had only one of the symtoms (the fever) i was proabably fine. So after calling all of the people i needed to call, i walked back to my house and just kinda of relaxed for the rest of the day to try to get better.

Wednesday i woke up early to go to a meeting for CODECAS, an environmental origanization i´m going to be working with that meets in the pueblo here in Las Matas. Only 4 of the members showed up, which i think is a normal thing since the week before when everyone showed up, the other volunteer who is working with the group told me it was the first tiem in 8 months everyone was there. But i was more there just begin integrating myself more into the group, as i don´t have any projects to bring to them at the moment. THey are currently working on stove projects but in different communities than the one i live in. In the afternoon i was waiting around my house because one of my bosses was coming to visit (he was visiting all the new environment volunteers these two weeks) but I didn´t know at what time so i didn´t want to be far from my house. He ended up coming at 5, and stayed for a bit making sure that everything was fine for me at my house and the community, so by the time he left it was a little to late to go try to do much else, so i just stayed by my house and went to one of my neighboors house to watch a movie.

Yesterday though i did get to go do something a little more interesting. I went to go watch this little plays that some kids in my community and also some kids from another community (they traveld to mine by car) performed for part of the community. The little theater group is supported by plan international, which is a big orginization that works with development who i will most likely be working with as well. The skits where about social issues such as the rights of children, communication within the family, and about fighting ignorance and intolerance in the community. I was really happy that i went and it was also good to see that the youth here are already motivated to form groups and talk about these important subjects that are often overlooked, especially in smaller campos. IT makes me feel like i will have an easier time once try to form some youth groups of my own that there is already a base of kids who are motivated to work.

But thats about it for now. THis upcoming week i´m going to the capital on sunday to begin Kreyol language training on Monday at the training center there, and then we are going to go to a batey (a small hatian communit, which usually form to work in the sugar industry) in the south to do more training there untill friday. So hopefully monday i´ll be able to put up the few pictures i got and try to take some more this week. Hope everyone is well back at home. Adios

Wednesday, May 13, 2009

Off to my site

So last week I finally figured out where I will be spending the next few years here in the Dominican Republic, and visited it over the weekend. I am in the region of San Juan and am locatated in a campo that is a little bit north of Las Matas de Farfan, the closest bigger city to me. My host family there is really nice, I live in a house with a host mom and dad, and one of their neighbors, an older women who lives alone, always is at my house helping with the cooking. My site is pretty dry, it doesn't really rain to often there, and its hot, but at least i am used to the heat from living in Florida. My community is pretty rural, most people have some farm land where they grow, sugarcane, yuca, juandules (they are pea like things that grow on little trees), and other root vegetables. Also a lot of people have cows and cow pastures, there are "gangs" of sheep and goats that roam the street, and tons of chickens at almost every house. Also most people have either a horse or donkey as their main mode of transportation (as well as the occasional motorcycle). I have electricity pretty regularly (but there are no internet cafes, its pretty remote place) and also water coming from a hose because a former peace corp volunteer helped to build an aqueduct there in previous years. I have cellphone signal when i climb up a little hill, but not in my house. I use a latrine for my bathroom, and also bath ouside in a little shed thing using water from buckets. I like my site but i think it'll take me a few weeks to get used to life out there, especially being more isolated than i have been the past 2 months. But there is a lot of projects i'll be able to do there.

Today we are going to be graduating and tomorrow we have an all volunteer conference where all the volunteers in the country come to Santo Domingo, which will be fun to get to meet all of the other volunteers. Then on Friday i go back to my site. But we are about to start the day, so thats all for now. Hope everyone doing well back home.

Sunday, May 3, 2009

back in Santo Domingo

So we arivied back in Santo Domingo this past Tuesday. It was kinda sad to leave La Cumbre because i really like it there and like my family a bunch, but now we are one step closer to arriving in our actually sites. We actually won´t know what we are doing or where we are going untill tuesday, then we will go there for 5 days starting wednesday, then come back to Santo Domingo for a week, and then go back to our sites to live for two years. I really want to know where i´ll be going, i wish they would tell us sooner then the day before we go there... but what can you do.

This week we have been going to visit a volunteer who lives about an hour out of Santo Domingo and works with a national park trying to promote tourism. The park is on the beach and also includes a coral reef in the sea, and so the main revenue for the park is getting people to come in to go Scuba Diving. We actually got to go snorkeling one afternoon, but it started raining about an hour into it which didn´t make it quite as fun as it could have been, but it was still really cool. Also at the park they have some burial remains from the Caribe indians so we got to see some of the bones in the ¨museum¨ they had there.

One friday we went to a cave that was by his site and walked around in there for about 2 hours. The caves were cool but there has been lots of damage done to them on account that people go in to take the stalagtights to make carvings out of them to sell. That night we also went camping, but not in what i would consider in the traditional sense becaus we basically just set up our tents on the driveway of a person who lived by the cave. But it was still nice since all of us evnrionment volunteers were all haning out together for the night by the fire. But i´m gonna try to put up some more pictures now and will try to update again when i know where i´ll be living the next few years.



This is us during a trip to Santiago to visit one of the host sisters who went to the university there. We are at the momonument of heros.




Picutre of us in front of a map mural we painted at the school in La Cumbre




Picutre of my host mom in La Cumbre making cheese




finished product



Picutre of me and my host family

Monday, April 13, 2009

Another week in la Cumbre

April 12, 2009

So I had another full, busy week full of activities. We had to do a mini-diagnostic in groups based on the communities we live in (there are 4 communities with a total distance of 9 kilometers between the first and last) that we have to present on Tuesday. I am pretty much finished with my part but we are meeting tomorrow as a group to go over all of our stuff one more time. We made a map of our community, which was fun because we went exploring down some of the roads that I might not otherwise have ventured down. I also did a family tree of my household, which was quite extensive considering the large size of family here. My mom has 9 other siblings, and my dad has I think around 17. So I fit in as many people as I could but there was not enough room on my poster to go back to far. I also had to do interviews with 3 people in the community which went alright, I sometimes got answers that were a little odd or lacked some depth but I think that’s how it is with people everyone. It reminded me of working at the survey lab and asking questions and getting responses that did not quite fit the question I had asked, but I still think I learned some things I can present for Tuesday. We also have to do the presentation in Spanish as we are also being evaluated on our Spanish at this point, but I am not to worried about this. I feel like my Spanish is doing pretty good. I can’t always think of the word I want to use or always use the right tense but I can usually get my point across at this point.



me with the neighborhood kids











I also started another project we have to do with my friend Sarah in making a compost pile at the conuco of one of the kids who lives next to me. We finished making the enclosed area we are gonna put the compost (it took a while with having to collect and chop the wood to length) and are going to collect everything to fill it up later this week hopefully on Wednesday.

compost pile with me and sarah, my host sister (on left) and another neigbor

On Thursday night our Spanish class met up our teachers house here to make an auyama pie. Auyama is like a type of squash so we basically were making pumpkin pie. It was a lot of fun and it turned out good, but it was kind of funny because all of Dominican women at the house at first were trying to tell us how to make it, even though they didn’t really even know what we were making. I think they had a hard time understanding the concept of a pie because they don’t really have pies here. We had to keep explaining that the crust was not supposed to rise, and that it wasn’t like a cake which is what I think they thought we were trying to make. But it all turned out well and I think everyone who tried it enjoyed it.
My spanish class, my spanish teacher (one on the far right bending down, with white shirt and green sweater), and other locals at Dona Nena's house (one in pink) with our finished auyama pie




On Friday we had a day of from class so I worked some on my part of the diagnostic project and in the afternoon some of us walked to one of the other communities about 3 kilometers away to hang out at one of our friends house there and drink tea. Overall it was a pretty low key day.


Yesterday me and two of my friends, Woodley and Andrea, went on a little hike down to look for a lagoon and a river that is somewhat close to my house. When we took a wrong turn in our search for the lagoon we stopped to ask some people who were outside eating lunch for directions. We ended up sitting down and talking with him for like a half hour, which has become a very common thing here. It is almost impossible to enter into someone’s house without them asking you to sit down and have some coffee, a soda or some juice even though they have never met us before. The people here are just super nice and friendly. After this we continued down to the river (we went to the lagoon after the river) and followed it down for a little bit. The river wasn’t that big, its more like a little stream. I don’t think there was much more than a foot of water in depth. Later that night all of us met up at the plaza where we had a few drinks and just sat around to chat. It is always nice when we can all get together as a group since we are all more spread out here. I think tonight we are going to go to the plaza because people want to go dance (last night the part upstairs where there is room to dance was closed). The people here will dance meringue and bachata for hours one end. I haven’t been able to escape it either, everytime I go out I have to dance with at least one or two people. The Dominicans think I’m crazy when I say that I don’t dance very much, so I guess I’m just gonna have to learn in order to fit in a little better here. But at least meringue is easy to dance, you don’t really have to move around all the much. But that’s all for now. Feliz Dia del Resurecion!

Saturday, April 4, 2009





La Cumbre

Saturday April 4, 2009

So first off, I have not had internet here in La Cumbre as much as I had originally thought. I actually haven’t been able to use internet at all since I’ve been here but am writing this in the morning at my house and am going to post when I am in Santiago later today along with the other post I wrote earlier this week but didn’t have internet to post it. So you guys will have lots to read!

But I have really enjoyed it here in La Cumbre. As I had mentioned it’s a smaller community so it is easier to just walk around and get to know everyone. My family here is really cool, I have a younger sister who is 11 years old who is usually around the house when I am and then 3 brothers who are 19, 21, and 23 (I think I’m not exactly sure about the middles age) but they are not usually around the house and I haven’t met one of them because I think he is away at the University. But my Dona and Don are really nice as well and there are always other people coming and going through my house. The town is super beautiful as it is on top of a hill and has a view of the valleys and mountains around it. La Cumbre actually means “the highest point on a hill” so is very fitting.

I also like the technical training here more so in Santo Domingo as we are doing more hands on projects and what not. So for example we went on a tour of a coffee farm and learned some about how to grow coffee, what trees are good to provide shade for the coffee, and a little about pest control in coffee fields. We also have walked through a bunch of conucos, which are mixed tropical gardens. At first when looking at the conucos they look just like a random collection of trees and bushes but in actuality ever plant/tree provides something to the farmer. The plants on most the conucos I have seen here include bananas, platanoes, coffee, cacoa (chocolate), pineapple, yucca, tayota (a vegetable that grows on a vine, I think its called the Mexican pear in the states), citrus trees (orange, lemon, and grapefruit), avacodo, these pea like pods called juandules (sp?), sweet potato, other root vegetables, celery type plants, and others all of which I can’t think of now. But it is really cool because at any given time of year there is something to harvest to eat for food and helps to balance the eco-system it creates due to the variety of things that are growing.

Another day we learned how to make living and dead barriers on the slopes of hills in order to help prevent soil erosion, as this is a big environmental problem here in the DR. We learned how to find the contours of the slope and either plant things such as lemon grass to help retain the soil or even just use dead wood and rocks to create a barrier along the contour that helps retain the soil when it rains. We practiced these two techniques at the coffee farm as well as at a conuco of one of the people of the town.

Yesterday we learned how to make and manage a compost pile and made two of them at the coffee farm for practice as well as learning how to make some other types of organic fertilizer using manure and the leaves of certain trees that are rich in nitrogen. I have also been slowly learning about different types of trees, plants, and vegetables such as how to recognize them and what their names are in Spanish which is something I’ve always wanted to know (being able to identify more trees and plants).

Besides the technical we still have Spanish class every morning to continue helping us with our Spanish. We watched a movie earlier this week, listen to music, and just have conversations to help us all learn. Its still really nice because the classes are small (my class has 5 volunteers and our language facilitator) which I think really helps the learning process. But one of the mornings our class walked to the monument for the Mirabal sisters, Las Mariposas (the butterflies), who were three sisters who lived under the dictator Trujillo and are well known for their part in the revolution to overthrow the dictator. They were eventually killed by Trujillo’s henchman in 1960 along a mountain road as they were returning from visiting their husbands in jail. Even though they tried to make it look like an accident (the henchman, after killing the sisters and the driver, pushed the car over a cliff) everyone knew they were murdered which increased the anti-Trujillo sentiment throughout the country. The place where they were killed is about 4 kilometers from my house here, and this is where the monument to commemorate them lays. It was really cool to see this especially since I had just finished reading “In the time of the Butterflies”, which is a book by Julia Alvarez that is about the Mirabal sisters, before I arrived in the DR.

Yesterday was the birthday of one of the volunteers here so we all went to his house last night and his mom made a cake for everyone to share. There was also a guitar there so people were playing guitar and singing for a lot of the night. It is another one of the volunteers birthdays today, as well as another one tomorrow so I think we are gonna try to do something else tonight and tomorrow as well, but I’m not exactly sure what yet. I think the plan for tonight is to meet at the play (baseball field) and then maybe go to a colmado to hang out. But we’ll see. But this is about all I can think of to write now. There are still some things I haven’t gotten a chance to tell you all but I’ve done so much since being here it would be very hard to write it all down. But hopefully I will have some more internet next week where we have our classes in the evening but as of now it’s not looking to promising. If nothing else hopefully I’ll be able to make it to Santiago again next weekend to do so more updates and check my mail. To everyone, take it easy and I’ll talk to you all later.

Weekend with Brigada Verde

Tuesday March 31, 2009

So I have a lot to write about so we will see how far I get. This past Friday our two groups in training, the environmental group (I’m in this one) and the Information technology group split up. The information technology group went to the city where they are doing their technical training, I think its called el cebo but I’m not positive. Us environmentalists on Friday morning went to the Eastern regional conference of a group called Brigada Verde in the region of San Cristobal, a little to the west and south of Santo Domingo. Brigada Verde is one of the projects that the environmental development program here works with. Basically volunteers try to start and environmental awareness group in their communities (called Brigada Verde) that learn about the environmental issues here in the Dominican Republic as well as participate in community service activities such as trash cleanups at beaches, rivers, or along the roads. This conference had different Brigada Verde groups from the eastern region, and the focus of the conference was on how to run a summer camp in hopes that the groups would be able to start their own camps this upcoming summer.

Us new volunteers showed up at the ranch where the camp was being held, it was like a summer camp type place. When we got there we split up into different groups based upon our Spanish class and set up our “stations”. Half of us were going to set up an “obstacle course” the groups would have to go through before entering the camp that where supposed to encourage group strengthening, and the other half were going to do activities at night with the kids. My group was with the obstacle course so we had to set up quickly when we got there so we would be prepared when the kids arrived. There were I think 8 different stations/activities and each had a volunteer overseeing that station. The first station was to make nametags, the next the group had to use objects to cross a “river of fire” (they couldn’t touch the ground but had a chair, a board and some other objects to stand on to go from one side to the other), the next was a activity where everyone got in a circle and grabbed the hands of someone else in the circle (not next to them) and then had to untangle themselves without letting go so the persons whose hands each one was grapping was on either side of them. The fourth station, which I was at, we divided the group in two teams and one person on each team had a blindfold on, and their teammates had to take turns giving the blind folded person directions to find an object I had put on the ground. Next they did a jigsaw puzzle of the different regions of the Dominican Republic, after that they had to do a relay race where they ran to a stick, had to spin around it 8 times, and then try to run back to tag their teammate and they repeated until everyone had finished. The last activity was a drawing game where someone drew a picture then covered most of it, then someone else had to expand on the part that was uncovered then cover their drawing except for a little part, and so on until at the end there was a non-sensical drawing made up of 4 or 5 different little drawings. All of the games we tried to teach a lesson or have elements of group strengthening. So for example, in my activity, when it was over, I would talk about how sometimes we have to rely on others, our teammates, in order to obtain a goal. The person who was blindfolded had to have confianza (trust) in his/her teammates to not run him into a tree or other obstacles along the way, and the people giving directions had to be clear and concise or else their teammate would end up moving farther away from the ultimate goal: the object. But we had to do all of these activities in Spanish so this also helped with our language and was just a lot of fun because we would do these activities along with the kids. It was also a way to give examples of activities they could implement themselves if they were to start their own summer camp, as this was the overall theme of the conference.

After everyone had gone through the obstacle course we all ate lunch and afterwords everyone went to one of the pavilions where we had a couple presentations from volunteers and our technical trainer about how to funding for summer camps, issues that can be addressed, group strengthening techniques, how to recruit members for a Brigada Verde group and so on. By the time we had gone through all of the presentations it was time for dinner so we all ate and after dinner the other groups who hadn’t done the activities earlier split up the kids and did their activities with them.


The next day we had more presentations throughout the day, but also had a little bit of time to hang out and play with the kids. In the afternoon some of the volunteers and some of the kids got a game of ultimate Frisbee going which was a lot of fun. I also gave a presentation to the volunteers (we all have to do one about one subject or another and present it to each other) about interpretation. Basically it was supposed to teach techniques on how to interpret trails and other things for such activities as eco-tourism and I was able to used examples of when I volunteered at the museum of natural history at UF to explain how I interpreted exhibits and tried to keep the kids interested. Later that night there was a bonfire that everyone went to and where we made smores. We also were playing music together and singing as some of the kids from the youth group had brought some drums and other instruments and had a little meringue/borchata band going on and I had brought my guitar along. It was a lot of fun and another great way to interact with all of the kids who had come to the camp.

The next day we left before noon to head back to Santo Domingo but stopped by the beach for a little bit before returning back home. I was really excited to see the beach since I hadn’t been there since I arrived. It was super pretty and a relaxing activity to do before returning to the big city. On returning to the city I ate lunch at my house and hung out a little bit with my friends before I had to go back home to back because on Monday we left Santo Domingo to go a little town called La Cumbre where we are going to be living for 4 weeks for our technical training. I left early Monday morning and arrived here in La Cumbre for lunch with my new host family. They are super nice and I think I’ll like it here better than Santo Domingo because it is a super pretty town up in the mountains and is much smaller with much less noise and hustle and bustle. But I will write more later this week. Oh and I got a camara last week so hopefully I’ll be able to put up some pictures soon. Hasta luego.