Saturday, May 30, 2009
hiccups!
Thursday, May 28, 2009
We decided to make breakfast for lunch, as it was easiest to find the ingredients and easy to make. I made Heather´s ¨French Toast Bake¨. We went to Mega, the supermarket, to find the ingredients on Tuesday. We found everything but half and half and corn syrup. We bought some regular cream and decided to ask our sister where we could buy corn syrup. We didn´t see her until later that night, and she told us of a market that carries a lot of american products in the touristy area.
Well, we are about a 50 minute walk from the touristy area, and there happened to be a strike yesterday, and so no taxis were running. Well correction, some were running but with the chance of having rocks thrown at their windshields by the people in the strike including all the other taxi drivers, the teachers and the farmers in all of Cusco. So we walked. We got to the store, and they didn´t have it, which was fine cause it was a nice walk, but it was an even longer walk back, trying to decide how important corn syrup was in the recipe. I decided not very important, and was going to go along with making my dish anyways.
I had everything ready, and Pancha heated up the oven. I told her I needed it at 170 C or 350F, and she told me that their over didn´t have a temp gage, and I started getting nervous. I put the dish in anyways, just planning to watch it closely. Well as soon as i turned my back the oven started on FIRE: yes, on fire. We are lucky the oven is in the patio because there was smoke everywhere. Pancha rescued my dish from the oven and put out the fire but then the next delima was how to cook it. Well Cynthia and I ended up carrying this hot, smoky dish about three blocks to this place called hot oven. You pay and they cook the dish in a wood oven. Well, wood ovens are hotter than three fifty, so naturally my dish burned on the top and didn´t cook all the way through. We brought it back to the house and cooked it hte rest of the way in the microwave. It was a disaster. It ended up tasting fine, however, and Mikes omlettes and bacon were awesome, but wow what a day! And since we had to walk to school, we were gonna be late. Luckily, the strike had calmed down and so we found a taxi! Whew! Needless to say, we are going to bring our family in Ecuador out to eat instead of cooking! The strike is all done though and so we are off to Tipon for class today, a small town outside of Cusco! And guess what? They are famous for the guinea pig... (insert gag noise)....
see you in a month! marcy
Monday, May 25, 2009
The last week... or so!
Tuesday, May 19, 2009
update!
Wednesday, May 13, 2009
Saqsaywaman and beyond!
Monday, May 11, 2009
primer fin de semana
Thursday, May 7, 2009
La familia y mi escuela!
On Tuesday Mike and I went to four of the main cathedrals to tour. They were amazing. The alters were up to fifty feet high and made of wood, then plaster, and plated in gold. The cathedrals had alters to all their different patron saints that were just wonderful. We learned a lot about the mix of native and catholic culture, and our guide were point out where Pachamama, the mother earth in the incan religon, was present on the alters. Pictures were prohibited, but I snuck some from my pocket, and a lot of them have the no picture sign in them, so I will get those up later. They also had a painting of the last supper, done by cusquen artist Marcos Zapata, who repalced the bread at center of the table with cuy, or guinea pig and is the delicacy of the native culture. It was cool to see how the people have kept their tradtional believes and mixed christianity with it. For example, the apus, or mountains are sacred to the natives. Knowing this, the catholics put a bunch of crosses on the mountain tops, to symbolize the message and spirit of the catholic god was the spirit being recieved from these sites.
We got up early this morning to play ¨fronton¨. It is basically raquetball against a single wall. So at six thirty we got up, ran to the park with Evelia, and played for about an hour. The only issue was that there was a construction site behind the wall so if it went to the side or over we had to crawl through the side, looking for our ball. Their dog, Pituco, which means little gentlemen, was great and would retrieve the ball if it was within his sight. He is very cute and well behaved.
School so far has been just okay. Four hours a day of one class is a bit much, but I am starting to get used to it. Today we have a field trip to the incan mueseum instead of class, so that will be a nice change. Our class is Andean Culture and while some parts of it are great, at other times I can´t imagine why I care about comparing pottery that was created five thousand years before Christ.
We felt really bad yesterday, as it was laundry day. They wash all the clothes by hand, and we had some stinky stuff from the Inca Trail. We are going to give Evette and Pancha, who did the laundry, a tip when it is all dry and done. That is customary but also it was not a pretty sight.(mom think ty´s soccer socks, after being in his bag a week... eww). School plans activiites for us during the night.
Tomorrow night is a class on making chocolate, and of course i´m psyched! I haven´t had many sweets in the past two weeks, im talking one ice cream cone, three cookies and some jello, so i am ready for some chocolate! We live quite a ways from school, almost forty five minutes of walking, so we take a taxi most of the time. We have noticed the taxi drivers try to rip us off, saying that the price is almost double of what it should be if we dont correct them. I guess that is part of being a tourist. Peru does not have much racial diversity, almost all of the people are either strictly natives or a mix, but is almost impossible to tell the difference. I get a lot of stares when I talk in spanish, as they assume that most white people are one toursits, and two, english speaking. The truth is, the kids from Alma are the only people from the US at our school. There are a bunch of English, French and Germans too and they all speak spanish!
Mike and I are planning on making dinner for our family, a traditional USA dinner, but we are having trouble thinking of anything besides steak or hamburgers, and were hoping to be a little more creative, so let me know if you have any good ideas.
Well that is all for now, their big family meal of the day is lunch, so we must get back to our house.
Sunday, May 3, 2009
El Camino Inka (The Inca Trail)
The pictures are really slow to upload on here, so check them out by copying and pasting the links from the last post into the URL bar. :)
Our first day on the Inca trail was an interesting one. Mike and I woke up at 530 to be ready for our guide to come around six ten. We got very anxious as he didn’t show up to pick us up until 7am. From there we were the last ones to get on the bus, everyone was anxious and staring at us, and as a precursor I will say the bus smelled awful. Like BO and old food. Needless to say as we got higher into the mountains, I didn’t feel good. I ended up puking, five times, all over the bus. That was a good way to make friends off the bat, NOT. We stopped and I got cleaned up and they mopped the bus, and were on our way.
Our last stop before the trail was in Ollyantumbo where we picked up some last minute snacks and a walking stick. Mike was looking for a nalgene but it was a remote mountain village, without nalgenes. He ended up using a gallon water bottle for the whole four days, it was looking a little funky by day four but it held out.
The first thing we did was go to a checkpoint and show our International Student ID cards and passports. The guide told me right away that my cool walking stick, which I paid almost fifteen dollars for, was crap. More to come on that later. The first bridge was just some sticks and it went over a pretty big river and all I could think was, what I am getting myself into, but I kept going.
The scenery was great. There were wild cows everywhere and we called them vacas locas. They had been lost or abandoned at some point. There were many bridges over the water, which was loud and looked very cold. We passed some small villages and ladies would sell Gatorade and “chicha” a corn based drink that is popular for energy. It sort of tasted like pepto bismol, and well I wasn’t a fan, but all the same I tried it. The first day was pretty easy, we just went up and down and got used to the Andes. Took some pictures and interacted with our guide, Roger. He was twenty five and studying to be a teacher. He knew English and Spanish and Quechea (spelling?) very well.
The food was great. The porters had a dinner tent they carried and little benches. There were 12 people in our group, ten Europeans and mike and I. Michelle, Esteban, Dennis, Cecil were from France and seemed to be big adventure vacationers in their late 30’s. Lydia, Pau and Borge were in their early twenties and from Spain, they were vacationing on their unemployment money, it became a joke. Ida, Tonya and Corina were high school grads traveling for a few months from Norway. They didn’t know any Spanish which made them outsiders a little bit, as everyone else was fairly competent. The food was great, we got a protein and some rich or potatoes with every meal.
The second day was by far the hardest. We had to go straight up the highest pass, dead woman’s pass. It was about 4 hours of walking big stairs made of stone pieces. Of course we stopped and took rests and had snacks and all, but I couldn’t wait for that day to be done. It was 8km up, and people were struggling. One lady forgot her puffer (inhaler) and about 300m from the top she had to be carried by the porters. They were making jokes that is called dead woman’s pass because the last woman to reach the top gets sacrificed.
We started our descent down the pass, which turned out to be just as long and very hot. Mike got sunburned pretty bad. It was amazing to watch the porters who would carry up to 20 kilos on their backs, run down the steps. They didn’t have very good shoes either, but it was a lot easier on their knees to just barley touch each step rather than pounding on each one, which hurt my knees after an hour and they do the trail each week. As we got to the bottom, we crossed another river and my walking stick, whose light was already cracked, got stock in the wooden pieces of a bridge. The bottom half dropped into the river and was a goner. At that point I knew that our guide, Rojer, really knew what he was talking about. I cursed at my stick but was thankful it lasted through the toughest upward pass. Sometimes, simplicity is better I guess. The night was very cold. We got done around 2PM since it was such a rough day and we took a nap. We than had our merienda (snack) at five and dinner at seven.
At dinner, Rojer started telling ghost stories. He told us about one where a couple got into a fight at the pass and the man pushed the woman off the mountain, to her death. It is said that her ghost, a blonde woman dressed in white, still wanders around taunting the men and the porters, bringing to them the same end she faced. The other was of the “pistacos” who were organ hunters. Supposedly they would drug the hikers and either steal their blood or kidneys. Some of the hikers were getting pretty scared at this point, so he stopped talking but I think I will look into it…. We really started to interact with the other hikers this night so that was fun. I will give a prelude that at this time I started to get annoyed with Dennis. He has been traveling the world for four months with his wife and that is all he wanted to talk about it. When the Peruvians commented on how much that most cost and how fortunate he was, he went off on some rant about how the euro is doing so well and how they weren’t that rich. I’m sorry but anyone who can leave their job and travel the world for four months is a lot more rich than the our guides and he was being a snobby tourist by not acknowledging his good fortune. I could see the Spaniards giving each other looks while all of this was happening.
The third day was amazing. It was very easy, just up and down with flat and easy going hills. At one point we did go down 3000 stairs, but it only took an hour or two and it was a ten hour hike day, so in comparison to the day before, it felt like heaven. We saw black and red bumble bees, and Rojer said that if they stung you it would hurt worse than any other sting and that your whole arm would swell, so I stayed away. (I was thinking about you the whole time, mom.) We also saw some small lizards and other minor wildlife as we got into the jungle climate. At one point I was trying to ask him if there were any bears (asos) and instead I was so tired I said ojos (eyes). It became a good joke the rest of the trip because he just looked and me and laughed, of course there are eyes in the jungle. Mike also fell on the way down all of those steps, but he wasn’t injured so I could tease him a little. We practiced our running like the porters, but some of steps were just to steep so that didn’t last long.
The third night we got to take a shower. It was glorious. I paid 5 soles (a dollar and a half) for admission to the bathroom that has the shower. We than had five minutes. I tried to rent a towel but they were all dirty so I had to use a dirty sheet, needless to say, it wasn’t the best shower of my life, but I savored every second of it. The bathroom, even in the middle of nowhere, had a similar feel to ours. Woman from all over were gossiping about men and fussing with their hair. I guess it must be a universal past time, that bathroom culture. I got lucky because Ida, who took a shower after dinner, and did have a towel, got out of the shower to find a BIG old TRANTULA on her towel! I think she said she screamed for help from the attendant, but I don’t even think I would have stayed that calm. It also rained the third day, but we go lucky because it was during our lunch break! Rojer said the climate has changed a lot since el niƱo and that the snow capped mountains are getting fewer and fewer every decade.
The third night traditionally is a party. We had a fest for dinner. We had stuffed peppers and chicken legs and vegetables and Jell-O and friend potatoes and the list goes on. I was hungry so it was amazing. Dennis made another move snack though, and I must share. We were supposed to elect a group leader to collect tips for the porters and so naturally he took charge. He was like “I think we should chose the oldest person” which was clearly him or his friend Esteban, who didn’t know much Spanish and was very shy. So Mike comments that they are clearly the oldest and he says that it is Esteban. Well as Dennis planned, Esteban is not interested so he elects Dennis. Dennis just starts gloating and says, in English, “ just call the me the president”. I couldn’t help myself I looked at Mike and my Spanish friends and just started busting out laughing. It was great, and from that point on we mocked him a little, calling him “la presidente”, which is the feminine form. He had a translation error that led to a dirty joke later one, I won’t share it on here but ask me later if you are interested.
The fourth day is only a two hour hike and everyone is feeling accomplished and usually stays up late to celebrate. I was too tired to do any sort of partying, but it went on without me. Unfortunately my tent was twenty feet from the party, so I was basically there. It was loud all night and drunk people were laughing until the wee hours of the morning, when were expected to get up. My tent smelled bad again as we had the same one, but I was exhausted and slept like a baby, until three forty five that is. We woke up and ate breakfast, pancakes with a caramel in the shape of flowers on them for a syrup. It was awesome. We then walked ten minutes to a check point, where we had to show our ID’s one last time for entrance to the park. We were at the front of the line, which made it go quickly but also meant we were in the intense group. The 1.5 hour hike to the “sun gate” only lasted an hour and I feel like I flew up the “fifty steps to a gringo death”, fifty really steep steps, just to keep up. I needed a break after that, but people ahead of us were still running because they wanted to see the sunrise and get in line to climb Wayabamba, the big mountain near Machu Picchu, but we slowed down a little. We go to the sun gate, at six thirty and took a few pictures ( I look exhausted in those lol) and continued, with Machu Picchu in view.
It was another forty five minutes down to Machu Picchu, but we made a few stops along the way. One was a burial site where four men, a dog and a witch has been found. Rojer commented on how it was weird that a dog was buried with them as they didn’t keep them as pets, but it was pretty cool. We stacked up some rocks as others had down to show respect, called patapata, when little rocks are stacked up on top of each other.
We got to Machu Picchu and checked our big backpacks with a luggage attendant, it was liberating to not log it around anymore, I could have almost ran around the whole place! I got a drink and we took a rest, than I called Mom and Casey to let them know I was finally there!
We started our tour with Rojer, who told us the history of the site, how it was discovered by Hiram Bingham, who was in search of El Dorado (the city of gold) on the path that the liberator Simon Bolivar had taken. He talked about the puma, the llama and the serpent were the animals that represent the underworld, the earth and the sky. We saw the guard houses, the storage, the temples, the houses and the schools. He talked about the three different phases of construction and showed us where the changes had taken place. The Incas actually brought soil from Cuzco or other places that was more fertile to fill their terraces with. That means they walked the Inca Trial carrying dirt. I can’t even imagine. We saw a sun dial and a window that lined up with the sun gate to indicate when it was Inti Raymi, or their winter solstice, as it was a very important religious holiday because they worshiped, Inti, or the sun. We saw a chinchilla, an eagle and a lot of llamas around the ancient city. Rojer told us how they used conch shells and mirrors to communicate, making sounds with the shells and reflecting light signals with their mirrors of sliver and gold. We also saw a lot of people complaining about the steps, and knew they had no idea what they were talking about.
After exploring, we headed down to Aguas Calientes, or the Hot Springs Town. We walked around and got some lunch, with I think made Mike a little sick, and found our guide. I used the internet there, after four days of deprivation, and just relaxed. We then took a train back to the beginning of the path and a bus/van back to Cuzco, where I slept like a baby for over twelve hours. And now I am here, ready for the next adventure….