Saturday, September 8, 2007

Made it to Nicaragua!!!

So I have now lived in Nicaragua for 10 days and a quite exciting 10 days if I may say so. First off there is no way for me to explain this experience in words or pictures but I will try my best. I apologize for any wandering thoughts, haha.

Im sure most of you are worried about the hurricane so I will start off with that. I am totally fine and the city that I live in barely even noticed a hurricane was anywhere near us. We had a good rain for one night but that was it, and since we are in the rainy season it was not that out of the ordinary. I only have one channel on TV down here and it is mostly in spanish so I am pretty unaware of how bad (how many people died?) the hurricane was. I know it wreaked havoc on the east coast but that coast is pretty scarcely populated so that is a small blessing. But anyway all is fine here and we were not affected. PC did consolidate the volunteers across Nicaragua but the trainees are all together in one city so all was fine.

The first three days were in probably the nicest or one of the nicest hotels in Nicaragua. It was a guarded compound in the heart of Nicaragua and was absolutely beautiful. We got to meet all the volunteers and have 3 days of meetings in Nicaragua.

We then moved to our training site, I moved in with a family of 5. I have one brother that is 20, one sister that is 14, and one sister that is 19 days old today. It has been absolutely great. The dad and brother work ALL the time and I almost never see them. I have learned much of my spanish from my sister who eats lunch and dinner with me and sometimes my mom. My mom owns a pulperia which is kind of like a corner store that has the basic necessities. They are quite popular around here as the city that I live in has about 200 people and we have like 4 pulperias. Anyways from what I see our family is pretty well off as we have a fridge, microwave and 12 inch tv. We also have a seperate house which has bedrooms for my brother and myself and a large living room. The tough parts are the outdoor latrine and bucket showers (which I will talk more about below). For security we have two LARGE dogs, one german shepard and one doberman. As I am the new guy they havent taken a liking to me yet but are starting to not bark as much or as often as at first. They are both caged in a small pen that is between my house and my parents house, and because the food, brushing my teeth, bathroom and exit to the community are all in my parents house i have to pass them quite often.

Through the first eight days of living at my sight I have learned quite a few things, this list is quite negative but is more hilarious then anything else. I truly am enjoying my time here and have adjusted quite well, and sometimes it takes humor to get through some of this stuff. So here is a little list...

1. If it is raining and you have to pee you are shit out of luck. Bathrooms are latrines here and you must walk out side to them. Rains here are not sprinkles they are downpours.

2. The warm refreshing shower in the morning comes from cold buckets of water. The showers here are not warm and not refreshing, haha. Instead what we do is take a 10 gallon bucket of water and do the old fashion take a bowl and rinse off and then soap up and rinse off. One interesting thing about the Nica culture is that they believe that night time showers are colder then morning showers and thus strongly encourage you to take a shower in the morning. We are living near Esteli in the North, mountainous part of the country. I can literally see the heat coming off my body when I am taking a shower.

3. Drinks down here are extremely thick. I have had many drink they use blenders for and throw in either rice or cereal. The taste good but are not much for the traditional USA refreshing drink. Not to mention I havent even seen a beer here since I have moved to my training site.

Overall it is quite interesting and has been a lot of fun meeting everyone. Hope all is well wherever you are...

6 comments:

The Freebern's said...

James,
It sound like you have a wonderful host family. Kayla is glad to know that you have another little girl to take care of!! Let us know your address so we can ship some things to you. Take care and enjoy this journey of a lifetime!!
Love Always,
Aunt Jacque

JD318L said...

Yay I'm glad to hear that you have had an exciting first few days and that you survived the hurricane. After reading the comments about the latrines, I am rethinking my visit..haha..j/k. I can hardly wait. Once you get settled, in a couple of months I want to start planning! I thought I'd give you an update as to some cardinals news. We are still in the middle of the pennant race, rick ankiel continues to be a stud, and the Florida pharmacy that was shut down for the steriods distribution has Ankiel on their list of clients for HGH. It has kind of already blown over though, because it was in 2006 (HGH was banned in 2005), it was dr. prescribed, and it was after his tommy john's surgery. Anyway, that is about all that is going on. If you get a chance let me know your address I can send you a goody box!

Unknown said...

Hi James,
I'm so happy that you have a wonderful, kind, and thoughtful host family. You and your host family will share a journey that all of you will cherish for a lifetime. Their life will change with your kindness, thougtfullness, and caring. You will change all the peoople you meet, and you will experience life lessons that you can not describe in words. Jacob and I are so excited to be your first family members to visit you, and we are anxious to hear about the life, food, and people of Nicaragua. Live this experience to the fullest and know I'm the proudest mom you could ever have in your life. I miss you more than I can write in words. I love you all the way to the moon. Love, Mom

Unknown said...

James,
Yes, Kayla, your little girl, is missing you alot!! She misses making your phone calls, eating breakfast with you, cuddling with you, laughing with you, etc. You are an awesome cousin. Jacob, Jacque, Jan, Joy, Grandma, Rylee, Jordan, Kyle, Jenna, Kayle, Carl, Lynne, Aunt Marilyn, Uncle Bill, etc. miss you very much and so proud of you. Wow, you have a very large family that cares and loves you so much!!! Have a wonderful day!!! I love you all the way to the moon. Love, Mom

Sondra said...

James -

Well hello James! Dad and I were relieved to hear Felix went easy on you.

Sounds like you have settled into a life quite different. Buckets of water to wash off with, outside "latrines", 1 TV, no less a 12" TV! Gosh shows how spoiled we are! Or better yet not so much spoiled as what we like to call "progress into the 21st century"! Wow! I'm guessing things will be more different for you once you live in your own hacienda.

What's a normal day like for you? Next blog share your daily life. We are so excited to hear what you do on a daily basis.

BTW, Coach Williams is getting inducted into the Hall of Fame. May and Felton will be in attendance. Now, how cool is that! Knew you'd be happy to hear this!

We miss you and love you James!
Sonn & Dad

The Freebern's said...
This comment has been removed by the author.