Blogs from Managua, Capital Region, Nicaragua, Central America Caribbean - page 5

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Matt and I woke up to the church bell at 7am to get up and go, the others were going to sleep in and leave later in the day. Hopping into a cab, we drove to the bus terminal to get a bus to Granada. After waiting for an hour we piled into a van and squished right to the back. We both had our large packs on our laps with my smaller backback at my feet. The next two hours were spent breathing into our bags as we zoomed passing every other vehicle until we reached Managua, the capital of Nicaragua. It seemed very crowded but not as bad as the other capitals. We took a quick stop in the market district for food and a vehicle change then finished the last half hour of ... read more


Leòn, Nicaragua, a 9 de septiembre del 2009. Saludos a todos. Les mando un saludo desde la "Tortuga Boluda" (asì se llama el hostel), pasando un calor de la "$%&/(*/&%, pero bien alimentado, hartándome con indio viejo, gallo pinto, titiles, plàtanos fritos, queso frito, pasteles de elote, tomando agua de pitahaya, màs lo que me falte por probar (cerveza local, claro).... Aquì seguimos en mes patrio, al igual que casi el resto de los paìses centroamericanos (ellos la celebran el 15 de septiembre). Antier arribamos a Nicaragua, atravesando territorio hondureño. Ambos paìses se pasan el famoso tratado C-4 por el arco del triunfo, dado que en ambos cruces fronterizos se exigiò el pago correspondiente por ingresar al paìs: 3 dòlares en Honduras y 8 en Nicaragua (sòlo el migra hondureño entregò recibo de pago); ni los ... read more
Catedral nueva.
Palacio Nacional.
Hermoso lago.


Today is the Feast of the Immaculate Conception - celebrating the Virgin Mary's birth without sin. It is a HUGE holiday in Nicaragua and it's been really great experiencing it here with a family (I am staying with my friend Ashley's host family). For the 9 days before the 7th, people partake in a novena (daily prayer) to the Virgin Mary. The 7th is called La Griteria (gritar is to shout or scream or cry out). Everyone goes out with their family and it's sort of like trick-or-treating. We began the night around 5 by going to a neighbor's house to pray and sing songs. During this, the hosts give out candy, fruits, plastic buckets, household items, jewelry, toys to the kids. After that, around 6:30, we began walking around to other houses. A few families ... read more
Altar for Mary
Singing!!


Hi everyone, I am starting my blog from home and will be leaving early Wednesday morning for Managua, Nicaragua. I plan to do some service work there. I am not exactly in what capacity I will work but it is possible that I will be doing some public health education, teaching English, teaching science or working with the animals in the refuge that is part of the EcoLodge I am visiting. If you are interested in the place I am going and the people I will be working with you can check out their website and blog to get a feel for the place. I hope to stay with a local family so that I can be immersed in Spanish. In the past I have found that in most lodges and hostels that everyone speaks English ... read more


So it feels like ages since I have written… and in fact it has been months. I have received many messages from you all wondering if perhaps you were doing something wrong because you have not been able to get blog updates… well rest assured it is me not you. I have been in Nicaragua for almost 4 months now. It is very crazy to think so many months have passed by and yet in many ways I still feel like I am adjusting to our new lives here in Nicaragua. There have been numerous changes since September though. For one I have more or less a set job…although it is in no way defined or consistent. As I had originally hoped, I joined the Rural team here with Cantera in the beginning of October and ... read more
Aparato A
La competencia
5am...


The project I have worked most closely with is ¨huertos familiares¨ or Family Vegetable Gardens. This project involves traveling to the rural communities outside of Managua and working with the families to grow their own fruits and vegetables. While each community is different, many of the families grow their own beans and corn (two of the staple Nica foods along with rice). Some families have 1 or 2 members who work outside of the community in various jobs, and some have members who travel to Managua to work. That being said, after the bills are paid and basic foods bought, these families have little money left over. Their diets therefore consist largely of beans, corn, and rice… and little vegetables. Vegetables are expensive and can mean travelling outside the community to buy them. With our vegetable ... read more
Planting with caution.
Doña Fidelia digs her first raised bed!
Dominga proudly shows off her harvest!


Am in Managua on my laptop at the super nice Best Western hotel directly across from the airport. We are at the All Volunteer Conference, which means all 200 or whatever volunteers in Peace Corps Nicaragua are together with nearly all of the staff. We've been in conferences all afternoon and will be all day tomorrow, and then several of us have signed up for Thanksgiving dinner with US Embassy host families. Am loving hot showers and rich food and air conditioning. Overwhelming to be with so many people; we tend to self segregate into our Agriculture group or, for me, also hanging with other volunteers that live in my department of Madriz. Photo blogs coming next... ... read more


If you were to get into your car right now, and start driving south, you would eventually hit the Mexican border. And if you were to keep going, and keep going some more, and then some more, you would eventually end up on the Panamerican Highway, passing through Guatemala, Honduras, and then Nicaragua. And then about an hour north of Managua, you would notice some brightly colored birds on the side of the road, and you might be shocked that such an exotic flock of pajaros is concentrated in one spot, on the side of the highway, of all places! But if you were to slow down, you would notice that all those birds are made of wood, carved by machete, and if you were to stop and take an ever closer look, you would be ... read more
my friend Harold
hanging out
pajaros


Yay! In Managua with Lenin! Went to the embassy this morning and his tourist visa was approved! Next step, get tickets and get home for Christmas! EEE!!! ... read more


Because today is a list day: Things I love: -free medical care, thank you taxpayers and the peace corps -the hotdog lady who has set up shop outside the office, since we are in a rich part of town and there is NOTHING to be eaten on a volunteer budget, except her hotdogs. Things I don't love: -cavities -chest exrays and "things" in my lungs -being away from my home in the mopo and my fiance longer than i planned -managua heat -having to defend my decision to get married to lenin and convince people that i fell in love to be continued I'm thinking too much here. Hot showers and free internet will make the best PCV overthink their service. It's freaking Thursday and I am so excited to get back to my site, after ... read more




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