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Tuesday, August 6, 2013

Donkey Camping > Car Camping?

I apologize for doing 2 posts in 1 week. A lot has been happening lately and a lot more is coming up. My site neighbor is leaving, two new volunteers are coming in, I'm helping Mike fix a solar installation in the bosque, I'm trying to organize a wind turbine installation, and I will be constructing my mini-tree nursery next week. Thus, I'm trying to get caught up on everything that has happened recently.

Last week, during Fiestas Patrias (Peruvian Independence Day), Mike and I hiked 56 km in 4 days. We were originally supposed to hike 56 km over 5 days but we were "peru'd" when our guide ditched us in the mountains. We started off our trip "acclimatizing" to 3600m or ~12,000 feet with an "easy" trek known as Laguna Seisenta y Nueve. The agency lied to us and the trek is actually rated at medium to hard. We ended up being very sore for the beginning of our 4 day trek (the Santa Cruz trek.) The hike was beautiful and I do not regret doing it but the first day of Santa Cruz probably would've been a little more enjoyable if I had not been so sore. Santa Cruz was beautiful. The nice thing about Santa Cruz is that you only have to hike with your water. The rest of your gear (clothes, tent, cooking supplies etc.) is carried by donkeys to your campsite. Also, you don't have to cook for yourself because you have an awesome cook. (Our cook cooked us delicious soups, stirfrys, pancakes, and more.) You also travel with a guide, and a donkey driver. Everything was great for the first two days. On the second day of the trek we hiked up to 4750m  or ~15584 feet to go over the mountain pass. It was a hard hike but incredibly beautiful. After our hike, our guide asked us if we wouldn't mind hiking an extra hour the next day so we could finish our trek 1 day early and so the donkey driver could go home. We confirmed it was only an extra hour, and agreed. We were told we would only be hiking about 16km. At 4AM the guide ditched our campsite to go home. We were without a guide for the 3rd and 4th day of our trek. We ended having to hike an extra 4 hours (1 being in the dark while we hiked down a cliff with no guide) and we hiked 27km, NOT 16! The trek in the dark was SO dangerous and we definitely could've been seriously hurt or died.  Fortunately, we did not and we were able to get back half of our money because the other people in our group were also furious with the agency. While this definitely ruined the end of Santa Cruz for me, the overall experience was a beautiful adventure. I apologize for the number of photos but there is just so much to see from those few days.

Before our trek in, we got to enjoy amazing American food in Huaraz! I got to eat french toast!!!!

Hiking to the Laguna

The incredibly beautiful Laguna

Us in front of the Laguna

Mike loves this picture so I thought I'd post it

Leaving the Laguna


Ending the Laguna Hike

Before beginning the Santa Cruz Trek, we drove up to this beautiful look out point.

Some sheep, goats, lambs running past us on the trail

Day 1 was spectacularly beautiful


We did some extra hikes to some lagoons

The heart shaped lagoon!

This flower only grows above 4500m!

Just absolutely stunning

More lagoons

The pass!

Our look down to where we had to hike

Taking a pause

Tequeños! One of my favorite unhealthy foods here. Cannot believe our cook made them for us

He made some crazy food for camping

Our views while  camping were amazing

We had REAL pancakes!!! Normally the pancakes we get are tortilla/crepe/pancakes and not good. These were delicious!

Eating lunch by a lagoon on day 3

Our "cars" for the Santa Cruz hike

Some more beauty

Just truly spectacular

This reminds me of Sound of Music!

La Hora Gringa AKA The Foreigner Hour

La Hora Gringa is the educational radio program I started with Sue (my site neighbor.) People often refer to me as gringa (foreigner/American) and so it made sense to title our program "la hora gringa" or the foreigner hour. During my first month in site, I decided that I wanted to start a radio program. I asked Sue if she would help me start a radio program about youth development, and the environment (our specialties.) Thankfully, she replied YES! (I would not have survived this process without her.) There was a station interested in airing our program right away and things seemed to be going swimmingly. Then we got stood up for 2 months straight, and switched to another station where we completed 3 programs before repeatedly being stood up. We decided to switch stations yet again. Third time is the charm, right? Right! Our new station is absolutely fantastic. We have been successfully doing our program for about 4.5 months now with Radio Bahia Mix FM (Wow I did not even realize it had been this long!) Our socio, Señor Becerra is absolutely wonderful. He tells us how much he loves our programs and even offers us suggestions for other programs. It has been an absolute pleasure working with him. Our program airs every Sunday at 9AM because this is considered a "family time" where families will listen to the program together. However, after a short while, we realized that some of our students aren't able to listen at 9 on Sundays and so we began a blog/facebook page where our students can listen to the program. While the students mainly listen for the "cool" songs we play along with our program, it has been a great way to mass educate our students and our towns about our specialties. While this was an incredibly frustrating, stressful and hard project to start, it is now one of my favorite projects. Here are a few photos of Sue and I recording our last program together. I am hoping that the new volunteers will help me keep the program alive. If you'd like to check out our radio program's blog here is the link...

https://lahoragringapacasmayo.blogspot.com/

Sue and I recording
A lovely photo of us talking

Our DJ Jaqueline