Sunday, July 6, 2008

July 5th

I'm down to the final few days in El Salvador.  Jason and I have been doing a lot of traveling by bus/truck.  

A few days ago we were in La Playa Tunco where I took a couple more cracks at surfing.  The first day was challenging due to the stumps and wood debris to avoid in the waves.  It's always a bit intimidating to face a whole tree also "surging."  The next day the floating forest has washed on shore and it was just waves to contend with.  My arms are soar from so much paddling. 

Then it was on to the Sheraton in San Salvador for a 4th of July party (on the 5th).  There were tons of gringos here (100 or so Peace Corps volunteers) and the US Ambassador.  A few of us did chat up up the Ambassador until his punctual aid ushered him off to make his speech.  He's a Bush appointee - political appointment rather than career diplomat.  He came from investment banking so we chatted about the role private industry has in combating poverty in El Salvador.  

Now it's off to the mountains.  Ahh coolness. 



Wednesday, July 2, 2008

DAY SEVENTEEN – July 2 – Mi perro es su perro.

Almost all animals in the Barra are free range, particularly the dogs, chickens and roosters. The roosters kick in to their morning crooning around 4am. This morning I took a walk around 6am and noticed that at low tide pigs are tied to poles in the mud of the estuary so they can eat the crabs. Seafood ham anyone? I’ve noticed a few ducks, but they seem to run with the chickens, trying to blend in. A duck pretending to be a chicken is pretty comical. If only the ducks felt free to be ducks in world dominated by chickens.
Dogs have a tough life, most of them running free and fending for themselves. They’re not treated real well (kicking, rocks) because they’re pests trying to find the next meal. This makes them a bit mean and territorial. The Mayor has proposed an extermination program, but that caused an outcry from the town so the dogs stay.

DAY SIXTEEN – Premiero de Julio – Success!

Today abounded with technical successes. After 6 trips to the cyber café and one trip the San Salvador, but I finally got the office computer working properly. (needed a motherboard driver). The cyber café is open random hours, is always packed with 5-9 year olds playing Grand Theft Auto 4 (for free) and when the power goes out, which happens at least daily when it rains, the whole operation grinds to a halt for 10 minutes. These are challenging conditions, but determination won out in the end.
Two more days in Barra de Santiago. . . My leg is healing nicely so hopefully it will be in good shape for surfing on Friday.

Monday, June 30, 2008

DAY FIFTEEN –29 June - Regresamos a la playa.

We caught the 7am bus. It started blowing its horn at 5:45am so no one misses it’s departure. The bus brings us to San Julian where we had a decent breakfast of eggs, beans, rolls and a plantain. Jason and I continued on our next bus, which dropped us a small town half way to the coast. We asked a couple of times when the bus to the to coast came – 3 1/2 hours from now. I bought some bags of water and we decided to start walking and hope for a pick-up to pass. Of the 12km to the coastal highway we walked 7km, thankfully all down hill or flat. We arrived in Mizata at the home of John and Marlene, friends of Jason. They were the most gracious hosts possible. The last 4km Jason and I were fanaticizing about a pool to cool off in and considered springing for a room at the surf lodge. John and Marlene rented and shared a great house with Don Pedro who happened to turn 80 today. He doesn’t look a day over 70 and still works in the fields everyday. Don Pedro has a pool and we were happy and cool.

Hina, a catholic aid worker from a few houses down, joined us later that evening. We all talked about US and Salvadoran politics. I caught them up on the latest – Hillary’s out of the race and why Obama’s the right one for the job. Hina’s from the swing state of Ohio and was quiet on the matter. Conversation switched back and forth between English and Spanish. I understand most the Spanish. Now I just have to speak a little more.

Tomorrow we head back to the Barra and resume work there. It may be turtle nursery prep day!

DAY FOURTEEN – Basura Basura!

It’s community clean up day in El B. Henry and Javier from Gaia Salvador come up from San Salvador to run the day with Shannon. I’m assigned the river and forest with the young people. I’m eager to pluck trash from the river I’d enjoyed yesterday. I imagined coming there in a couple of years and finding it pristine. The downside of cleaning the river is all our trash is wet, heavy and juicy. The upside is that it doesn’t stink. I returned very dirty, the river a little cleaner, no new injuries, mounds of trash collected and 147 participants (in a town of 130 families). That’s amazing participation.

The rest of the day we relaxed and talked with the Gaia guys. I had emailed with Javier about working with Gaia earlier. He was happy I was able to see one of the towns they worked in. He invited me to come back sometime. Yes, a contact!

I broke put the slack line and taught Henry and Javier how to slack. Henry said you couldn’t get any of that stuff in El Sal. - hmmm business opportunity? Later we set up the slack line near the best concha (soccer field) in El Sal. It is grass, mowed and has lines. Curious kids soon came over and were doing tricks on the line.

DAY THIRTEEN 27 Junio – Vamos a las mountanias.

It’s been four days in the Barra and it’s time to take a break from this windless heat. We caught a ride in CAB of a pick-up all the way to Sonsonate, which saved us a pick-up bed/bus combo ride. A family was on their way to the doctor for their five-year-old son who had a brain infection. The looked tired and had an IV tube taped to his arm. He’s getting better.

From Sonsonate we buy our five gallons of drinking water for our two days in El Balsamar, the community of Shannon, another Peace Corps volunteer. Then we hop the bus to the bus to the pick-up to the bus. The final bus has a driver in training and he struggles with the double clutch up the tight corners up the dirt road into the mountains. We’re only 50 km or so from the Barra but the sights couldn’t be more different. Waterfalls (it’s the rainy season), Balsum trees shading coffee plants and moss-covered cliffs paint the valley and mountains.

El Balsamar is a community of 130 families that are all under the local coop. All land and crops are controlled by the coop. After the end of the war the Duenos (landlords) were overthrown an cooperatives were started in many areas of El Salvador. I keep asking about the relationship between the federal, district, municipal and community government. Municipalities, administered by a mayor, are the equivalent of counties in the US and communities could be any type of organization the people want – ultra democracy. So every mayor has to deal with however many different forms of community organization the people choose, often several for each community, placing organizations in competition with each other. In Barra de Santiago the ADESCO (development association) has a national charter, but there are other groups in town with a charter from the mayor who compete for funds and leadership. On our walk to the first truck ride today the woman who poses the greatest competition to the Barra’s ADESCO stopped us and said, “Want to work together.” This was a major breakthrough.

So El Balsamar retained their coop while many of their neighbors disbanded and divided up the property. El B. produces Balsum oil, used in fragrances and natural body products. The oil is extracted from the tree by burning the bark a bit, then cutting away vertical stripe of bark and collecting the oil that comes out. This is then further processed in the coop refinery, making the whole town smell good. Unfortunately, the final process is done off-site so the rough-refined Baslum is sold to a middle-dealer. Most of the profits are extracted down stream.

In November and December the coop also harvests coffee growing under the shade of the Balsum trees. This is an intense surge of work so whole families collect the coffee pods to the coop “de-podding” machine. They just got a new machine, which pollutes the river less and requires electricity. Electrical service came to El B three months ago for the first time.

The cooperative has many benefits. El B has a new “protected wilderness area” just on the edge of a pasture. Surrounding communities have been cutting their forests for firewood and have very little wooded area left. This makes protecting this new area more difficult, because everyone in El B knows everyone else so no one is getting away with cutting their protected area, but surrounding communities do wonder in and cut. El B has vigilantes or volunteer rangers who patrol the forest several times a week to collect information and keep on eye on cutting.

This afternoon it looks like rain, but we shed our electronics and head out for a hike in the woods. A mile in we come to a waterfall and great vista of the valley. Jason and I swim a bit. It’s hard not to forget that the whole town bathes in this river upstream. El B also has 32 new composting latrines, but that leaves 75% of the town without latrines, so there’s that to consider or try not to consider.

The entire mountain range is volcanoes, some still technically active. The river at places is carved out of massive chunks of cooled lava. I found a water slide of sorts, but it needed a bit more water volume to be more fun than work. Bounding from on rock to another, the toe of my big Chaco sandal catches a rock tripping me up an smacking my middle toe. It feels broken, but I can wiggle is so I decide to wait on the verdict. It’s not bleeding and I notice I didn’t break the skin, which I’m relieved about considering, the upstream activities. In the next half hour my toe hurts less and turns bright purple so I figure I got off easy.

Shannon shows us the way down a muddy trail to the bottom of the waterfall. The trail looks completely different than a week or so ago because the rainy season has caused an explosion of flora. When we rejoin the river we found four smaller falls below the big 200’ falls. In a quest for the “mist on the face” experience we scramble up the rocks to the big falls.

We nearly arrived when I went for a big step and my left sandal landed and slipped. Smack, an overhanging rock stopped my sliding leg, but gouging my shin. This did break the skin. With blood trickling down my leg I had two thoughts: 1) at least where not in the Barra where my blood might attract a crocodile (I’m not sure they actually are attracted by blood, but that was my in-pain logic.) 2) I’m glad I didn’t hit directly on the bone.

On the hike out I was glad to be hiking myself out. Back at the Hacienda I cleaned up the wound - a couple of good scrapes and one good gouge. I’ll be fine.

The Hacienda where Shannon lives is part of the remodeled coop building. It’s amazingly charming and rustic. Take a look at the photos on Flickr. I just looked around and imagined the doors, old planks and 100-year-old tiles adoring a display or catalog of Anthropologie priced at thousands of dollars. This rustic loft comes with 24 vigilante protection. Three men from the coop stroll by quite frequently, shot guns slung across their bare backs, to use the only bano. This bano hasn’t been remodeled. is even more rustic, barely functions and is quite disgusting (see Flickr photos).

DAY TWELVE (Dia Doce) 26 Junio

OK, some filming today. We went to the school in Barra de Santiago down the street to film the Sagundo Ano (2nd year high school) students talking about the Literacy program they are involved with through Asociasion Barra de Santiago. The program promotes literacy in the home be having students teach their parents to read. The students were briefly interviewed on camera in the computer room. Now, the computer room has AC! However, I had to ask them to turn it off because it was way too loud to record the student interviews. Salvadorans all have these little hankies or cloths to deal with such sweaty situations, but I was not so prepared. My high-wick clothing absorbed nothing so I watched as drops of sweat accumulated below the tripod.

Next week we’ll go into a few homes and video the Literacy Circles in action.

Later in the afternoon we were invited to a farewell to the doctor at the clinic. This is a full service clinic and charged with caring for the sick and promoting public health. Dr Harry was trained in Canada and is returning for advanced studies. It was a long, hot presentation. Dr. Harry charged the community to keep their clinic at the heart of the community and that health care was not political. A local pastor got up and added his tribute, noting that you’re not a local until you’ve had “the parasites.” So maybe my intestinal tribulation was a baptism to the Barra.

We excused ourselves after the orange drink refreshments and cake.

I went surfing for the second time today – the first time solo. I did a lot of swimming only to thrown back toward the beach. The waves were a little beyond my skill today so I headed in and rode a nice wave all the way to the beach. No, not standing yet.