So here's
what's happened since my last post: I finally landed in Quito, got picked up by
my hostel owners, had some cups of tea, took a shower, and promptly fell
asleep. The next day (Monday) I was supposed to meet the project coordinator,
Sarah, at the bus station across town at 8:20am, so the hostel owner offered to
wake me up at 7:00am, give me breakfast, and call a cab. He came knocking at my
door at 8:15am. Of course, I nearly shit myself. I grabbed everything, ran
downstairs, and asked to use the phone to call the coordinator. Apparently
Ecuadorians don't know the meaning of haste, because he sat me down, put out
breakfast, and only got a phone after I asked another two times.
Anyways, I
finally got to the bus station and managed to speak enough broken Spanish to
buy a bus ticket to Ibarra, 2.5 hrs by bus north of Quito. I say "by
bus" because the buses seem to stop every five minutes, bus stop or not,
to pick up people by the side of the road. Some people were actually getting
rides, but some were just popping on to sell snacks and drinks. It was a very
long ride. It was also interesting because lane lines don't seem to mean a
thing. People pass whenever the hell they want to, solid line or not, oncoming
traffic or not. And typically one marked lane actually ends up being two lanes
in practice.
When I got
to Ibarra, the bus dropped me off a couple blocks from the actual station
(apparently that's how some do it if they're continuing north). Fortunately I
got help finding the station, and then met up with Sarah and two other
volunteers (Stephanie and Savannah). We spent 30 minutes driving up to the
Hacienda Zuleta, our home for the next month.
| The researchers have their own house. |
This place
is absolutely beautiful. It's basically a farm, but with a luxury hotel on the
premises as well. There are...
| Everyone seems to have a dog here, and they all just go wherever the heck they want to! |
| Vegetable Garden |
| Pond! |
The only
work-related thing we did on Monday was to wash out the rabbit cages. The
rabbits, especially the little ones, were adorable! But man can they shit a
lot...
| Tarishka eating breakfast |
| Reina Pacha |
| Tarishka (left) and Coya sunbathing |
| Wild condor |
One of the interesting/difficult things about this research is the weather. We're on the equator, and it turns out the sun is really freaking hot on the equator! The good thing is that it's usually super windy up where the cages are, so that cools us down a bit and keeps the mosquitoes away. The bad thing is that the weather can change in an instant, so we've had days that go from blazing sun to freezing rain. But it's nice to change it up once in a while.
It's also fun because you never know what to expect. For instance, on Wednesday, a pack of llamas wandered into our roped off area and started grazing like 10 feet from us. We thought it was funny, but the condors... not so much. Especially when one of the llamas started screaming and chasing another one around.
Thursday was part Minga day for me. In Ecuador, or at least in Zuleta, Minga days are where people work together to get some project accomplished. For intance, if the water pipes burst, the whole town would go out to help fix them. Even those who aren't physically capable would do something like make orange juice or cheer from the sidelines. So each of us has one Minga day a week where we just go around and help get chores done. We'll collect firewood (we have a wood burning stove that is our only source of heat -- so quaint, and so necessary), feed the rabbits, help in the vegetable garden, prepare food to have as snacks later, and enter in the data we've collected on the condors into a database. So Thursday morning I stayed at the house and had a Minga morning, and then I went up to the condors around lunch. When we were almost done with the walk back to the house that afternoon, we saw this:
The guys in
the truck invited us to help milk the cows, but we turned them down until
another time. I have today and tomorrow off from work, so I might finally see
about learning to milk a cow! I also really want a tour of that cheese
factory...
That brings
us to today, my own personal Minga day! I hand washed my laundry, am finally updating this blog, gonna start learning parrot calls for when I'm in Peru, keep
re-learning Spanish, and just explore Zuleta a bit more. The people here are so
nice!
Also
important to point out: we get our dinners cooked by the hotel chef and HOT DOG
can he cook. Every meal seems to consist of soup and rice, and then usually
there will be salad and some main course, and sometimes dessert. So far we've
had green curry chicken, steak, spaghetti with a delicious vegetarian sauce, a
salty lemon chicken, and something else that I'm forgetting. And oh god are the
desserts fantastic. There was something with peaches and some South American
fruit that I've never heard of, but it was good! There was also flan, and last
night was raspberries in a super sweet sauce. I was in heaven. Also, they make
their own bread and it is so good! Sarah and I were walking through the kitchen
yesterday afternoon and saw a table covered in fresh loaves. I'm sad to say we
didn't steal one.
Along the
lines of food... Sarah is from Britain and the other two researchers are
Australian, so we have like 5 tea times a day. I've never had so much tea in my
life.
Oh, and I
have to throw this in: if you ever get blisters on your feet, thread a needle
and pull it through the blister, then cut the string so there is like a
centimeter of it hanging out from each end to wick the liquid out. It seems to
have worked so far!
Also, it
turns out the my (Chris') tablet can't detect the wifi here (I think the tablet
is too new, hah), so I'll be using one of the computers here for email and
things. It is super slow, and I have to share with 3 other people, so I might
take a little while to respond. Hopefully no more than a week, though. Time to explore some more!
Nice pictures.
ReplyDeleteThanks, Mom.
DeleteStephanieeeee! It sounds like you're having an awesome time! This was so much fun to read. I could totally just imagine you saying HOT DOG. I ruv you!
ReplyDeleteI ruv you, too! And yeah, I'm having a blast :)
DeleteHI Stephanie, We love your blog - like we're there except w/o the blisters. Thanks for the handy tip on wicking out foot blisters! You are a terrific travel writer. Thinking of you, Love Bob & Doreen
ReplyDeleteI wish I was here without the blisters.. hah! Love you both, and I'm sad we won't continue our annual lunch.
DeleteI WANT TO COME VISIT!!!! Miss you! Bring back some cheese and a llama for me :)
ReplyDeleteI'm sorry, but I think I will eat all the cheese before getting it back to you. And there's no way in hell I'd give up one of these llamas. I love that little white one!
DeleteThat sounds amazing Steph! The pictures are so beautiful!
ReplyDeleteThanks! The pictures don't even do this place justice... it's incredible here!
DeleteI RUV YOU AS WELL!!! My new favorite website. :D I will eagerly await any and all posts, y podemos hablar espanol cuando regresas! ~Jenni
ReplyDeleteI ruv you as well, too, y no puedo esperar!
DeleteTHIS IS SO AWESOME!!! Llamas and cows and condors...so cool! I'm so excited to keep reading about your adventures!
ReplyDeleteDefinitely thought of you when I saw all the llamas. I almost touched one today! The only thing stopping me was that I was concerned I would scare them, which would possibly scare the condors. Boo.
DeleteHi Stephanie!
ReplyDeleteYour blog is great. I am glad you are doing so well and experiencing beautiful nature in Ecuador. Have fun and stay safe!
xoxo
Margaux
Thanks, Margaux! Definitely loving all of the nature. Quito should be exciting in a couple weeks, but not nearly as nice as this countryside.
DeleteVery cool! Are you close to the volcano? Have you gone to the equator and had one foot on each side of earth's n/s hemisphere?
ReplyDeleteI forgot which volcano it was that erupted, but if I remember correctly it was south of Quito, and I'm a couple hours north. Going to straddle the equator in a couple weeks!
DeleteHey Stephanie I totally forgot about your blog until I remembered it right now... teehee it's awesome! I'll be slowly catching up to your present time frame.
ReplyDelete