Not ready to be done!

Today marks the first day of the last week here. Wow! It has gone by so fast and I cannot believe that I will have to leave this amazing place or the amazing people I have met. There are so many places that I hope I will be able to visit again someday. One of my favorite places that I have been so far is Lady Elliot Island. I swam with sea turtles, manta rays and a lot of colorful fish. I also really enjoyed when we went whale watching for Humpbacks.

Swimming with turtles

Lighthouse at LEI. This is the original lighthouse and no longer used, but the story is that it’s haunted.

The first day at LEI was amazing! It was literally a tropical paradise. Although we were doing our main projects there, there was still time for free time and we still had a lot of fun. I snorkeled most of the time that I was there. Most of our group were sleeping in permanant tent like structures and had to walk to the bathroom, so that was always fun.  But all in all it was pretty cool because it was five days of no internet or cell phones. We were completely secluded and it was very nice. When I get back to the states it is going to be a shock when I remember I can use my phone and internet whenever I want. One of my favorite aspects was that the island was very small and could be walked in under an hour. The water was amazing. It was so warm and clear and stretched forever.

After we left LEI we went on a whale watching tour. We got up really early and walked to the harbor. We had to go through a bunch of safety talks because we would most likely come in contact with wild whales. At first I was skeptical about the trip and was worried it wound’t be fun. Let me tell you, I was wrong! Almost immediately we had whales come up to us and start playing. We were on the water from about 7:30am-4pm and 90% of that time was with whales. They were close enough to touch and on three different occasions they breached, meaning they jumped into the air and their entire bodies were out. It was very cool =)

Swimming with humpback whales. See how close they are?

Tomorrow morning we leave Hervey Bay which is where we have been for the last couple of days. We will arrive at Fraser Island which is the world’s largest natural sand island and we are told that it is also very tropical. Everyone here says that the water is so clear that it is unreal. I am looking forward to seeing it for myself and hopefully jumping in!

Katherine

Halfway point

Wow… Time has been flying over here. As of right now, I am halfway done with my program, and completely done with my first block of Spanish. Wow. This is going by WAY too fast!! Today is a little melancholy. A lot of the people here are only going to be here for 5 weeks (leaving next Friday). I’ve made so many friends and met such wonderful people here. I’m not ready for them to leave!! Luckily, there are about 7 people who will be here for the next 4 week block, so we won’t be totally alone!!

2 of my favorite people. They're leaving in a week :(

2 of my favorite people. They’re leaving in a week 🙁 Kelsey and I will be here for another four weeks

Our program will only been about 3 people next term, so this will be a completely different experience for me. Here’s to meeting new people and making new friends!!!

Megan

<3

Costa Rica Summary

Every single day has been work and adventure here in Costa Rica. My Spanish improves day by day from my classes and everyday use of the language. I am very grateful to have a host mom who sits down at every meal and talks with me (she only speaks Spanish). Even my conversations in English with other international students are mixed with lots of Spanish.

Every weekend I have had an excursion outside the city of San Jose. There are so many beautiful places to see in Costa Rica and I have been very lucky to see so many already. The excursions have all been really enjoyable. We’ve been to Tamarindo beach, 2 volcanoes, a waterfall, and hot springs. For a class I went to a self-sustaining community that grows organic products such as coffee and banana. That was one of my favorite trips even though it was farthest away, about 8 hours by bus. I was very interested in learning about the community and how organic farming worked. It is a lot harder than the conventional farming but it has its advantages to the environment and the community. Environmentally there is less poisoning of the land and degradation of wildlife, and for the community it less expensive because they do not need to buy pesticides and their product prices do not fluctuate as much as those that are grown conventionally.

Aside from learning Spanish and learning about the environment/social development, I have also been learning to dance! Mostly merengue and salsa, which are the most popular types of dancing here in Costa Rica. It is one of my favorite activities and melts away stress. Plus, it’s a great way to connect with Ticos (Costa Ricans) who are almost all professionals at dancing! Haha!

Well this is a summary of what I’ve been doing here in Costa Rica. I will try to elaborate more soon. This has been amazing journey so far and can’t wait to find out what the next four weeks have in store for me. 🙂

Hasta pronto. Kelsey.

PS Photos below go in no particular order of events.

Image

Megan and I with our new friend Jasmine at La Fortuna waterfall.

Image

Volcano Arenal. This town sits below it but on the side that does not spew lava. Good choice.

Image

A recycled bridge at the AsoProLa organic coffee and banana plantation. It was slightly treacherous.

Image

Megan and Kevin (another new friend! 😀 ) having some delicious organic coffee.

Image

La Fortuna waterfall.

Image

BBQ at Veritas University

Image

Megan, Matt, and I chilling after the BBQ with the musicians that played that night.

 

Sunday Afternoon

I have met a wonderful friend named Fede

Last Sunday afternoon we went out driving

Listening to Keane

And drinking the sun

It was a wonderful experience to see Rosario

Going 35 miles an hour

through the speckled windshield

It was a completely different perspective

Than walking, which is the only other way I can travel in this city

Sunday afternoons are different in Rosario.

All of the shops are closed

People gather together in groups of friends and family to drink Mate

and take their kids to the park

No one is alone

And the downtown, which is usually hustling and bustling every which way

Is strangely silent

We drove everywhere

To the suburbs, down by the river, to the outskirts of the shopping center

The traffic was crazy, especially by the river

It felt like the whole city drove to spend the afternoon in the little piece of nature the city has

“On Sundays people don’t know what to do with themselves,”Fede said, as he patiently stopped for mobs of people to cross the street, “So they just get together and sit around.”

He was right

People in every which way sitting on the grass, playing with their dogs, playing soccer, watching street performers, smoking, playing guitar, selling jewelry.

Fede’s comments always stick with me

Because although they tend to be a little anti-social

They’re also very introspective and wise

He sees things a little differently

And together, we discuss people and culture in it’s different forms

As we drive and drive with no ending destination

I’m reading the visual text of the city

The architecture, the sporadic trees, the graffiti, the expressions on faces of people walking

I’m taking pictures of everything I see

Not just the impressive things

But the space in between

Pictures of the real Rosario

The interesting things

And the not interesting things

Capturing tiny moments of the stuff no one pays attention to

Streets and lights and broken beer bottles

And I start to realize that the “unimportant” things

are so beautiful

Not trying to be anything special

Just being

Whether any one sees or not

Tiny moments of reality that we usually just dismiss

But when we actually look, the beauty awaits

The small things really are the big things

The unimportant really is the most important

[slideshow]

Across the UK!!!!

This weekend we went to Edinburgh (ed in burr ah) really amazing place!!! The area was absolutely beautiful you could look to your left and see the cliffs and turn to your right and see the ocean. The most interesting thing I found about the Scottish was their camaraderie with anyone. In London if you are on the same train or going the same way I can spark up a conversation with people but it is obvious that they are not accustomed to that sort of behavior. It is really easy to glide through my time here in London and not make any friends and it takes a lot of courage to introduce myself and try and establish a report with someone. However, in Scotland you just have to be breathing before a complete stranger will introduce themselves and start talking about anything.

The first people we met were on the train headed there, they knew we all were Americans and they had been playing a trivia game and a question about one of the states came up so they stood up and hollered out to the entire train and asked all of us what we thought. The second person we met was at a book store. When I went in to buy the book it started raining heavily, the owner of the book store said I couldn’t possibly leave with the weather as it was so he just stood there and asked me questions about the US for about an hour. Until the weather cleared and I was able to excuse myself, he happily would have kept talking for a long while.

It is really interesting the difference in social behavior over such a short distance!!

Angela

Are You Ok?

So far, Britain has not been a hugely foreign experience.  I mean, obviously I am in a foreign country, but it hasn’t been what I expected.  I had expected there to be more barriers, making it a much more difficult experience.  But it hasn’t been nearly as hard as I had imagined which is, I suppose, a good thing.  It has been almost easy.  Culturally, there are obvious differences, but also many similarities.  It is obviously different because it is an entirely different country, but similar in that most of the differences don’t really require much more than a second glance to figure out. . .if that makes any sense.  Or maybe I just have a different way of seeing things.  I think I’m just soaking everything in and gawking around in a tourist-y fashion.  (I try not to be too obvious about it, but there are some things you just can’t help staring at with that signature tourist stare – eyes wide open, mouth slightly agape, general expression of awe.)

I really couldn’t help doing the tourist look when I saw this. It’s a castle! With a moat! And I got to go inside it!

I just absorb all the wonderfulness that is London or whatever other place I happen to be in, and I don’t question it.  I just experience it.  That’s not to say that I don’t inquire (I am doing a horrible job of trying to explain this), but I feel as if my method of experience is much more observation-based than investigation-based.

That being said, I have been keeping a running list of things that I found to be interesting or different or that I deemed to be somewhat important.

1)      “Are you ok?” – The first time someone asked me this, I was shopping.  I was looking at a shirt, and this employee asked me if I was ok.  I stuttered something to the effect of “yes, I’m fine, thanks.”   She gave me a slightly weird look and walked away.  As she was leaving, I was frantically wondering if I didn’t look ok, if I looked ill or exceptionally confused.  After being posed the same question several times in the same day in different stores, I finally figured out that asking if someone is ok is roughly the equivalent of asking how they’re doing and provides a wonderful opening if you need help finding something.

2)      “Cheers” – This word is probably the most commonly used word in the UK.  I have heard it so much in the last few weeks.  The great thing about it is that it can be used in almost any situation.  If you’re in a situation and you don’t know what to say, just say cheers because it’s probably an acceptable response.  But on a more serious note, I really had no idea how much it was used until I got here, and it took me a while to get used to because I had no idea what the proper response was.  It’s cheers. . .one possible appropriate response to cheers is cheers.

3)      Solar panels – This was one of those things that struck me as a bit strange in an ironic way.  It appealed to my strange sense of humor.  I noticed as we were driving along (well, I was riding, but the bus driver was driving) that several houses we drove past had solar panels on the roofs.  This just seemed a bit strange to me because putting solar panels on a house in London seems like putting solar panels on a house in Monmouth or Forks. . .kind of pointless for most of the year.

Moving on to something I find very interesting:

4)       Food! – The food here is very interesting.  I believe I have mentioned scones with clotted cream and jam in one of my previous posts.  They are still my favorite food that I have discovered here; I don’t know what I’m going to do without them when I get back home.  Do you think there’s a store in Monmouth that sells clotted cream?  Probably not. . .maybe Independence?  I doubt it.  I’m thinking of buying a British cookbook that has recipes for scones and clotted cream (I’m pretty sure I could make do with jam from the US).  But I have again gotten stuck ranting on about the many virtues of scones with clotted cream and jam.  The other food here is also worth mentioning.  Jaffa Cakes and Jammie Dodgers are a must-try, as they are the “stereotypical British foods” – that is to say, they are fairly well-known British foods.  (Also, Jammie Dodgers are worth trying just because of the description on the package:  “stretchy raspberry flavour jam splodged at the heart of two yummy shortcake biscuits.”)  I had a lovely cereal bar that was “Belgian Chocolate Flapjack.”  It was amazing.  The description:  “soft chewy all butter flapjack packed with Belgian chocolate chunks.”  The description does not do it justice.  The main ingredients are oat flakes, unsalted butter, golden syrup, and Belgian dark chocolate.  Oh, it was delicious.  I am not really a fan of trying new foods, but just over the last week I’ve started trying more.  I saw a package of hot cross buns at the store, and I plan on getting some before I leave.

5)      “Mind the gap” – a commonly used phrase which means “watch out for that gaping hole between the train and the platform.”  I don’t think I’ve ever heard someone say “watch out for” or “be careful of” whatever needs extra caution.  It’s always “mind” this and “mind” that.  It’s quite a useful little phrase and it’s very concise.

6)      Royal Mail – I also saw this while riding a bus through the city.  The bus pulled up to this lovely red truck with an insignia and the words “Royal Mail” on its side.  I got really excited at the possibility that I was less than ten feet away from the Queen’s correspondence.  There was also a url on the back, so I looked it up when I got back to the campus.  Sadly, it was just a normal mail service and not the Queen’s personal mailman.

7)      Showers – This may seem like a weird topic, but it was very important to me.  Before my arrival, I was very concerned that the showers would be difficult and confusing, but I needn’t have worried.  There’s just a start/stop button and a knob to adjust temperature.  (Also, I felt really weird going into the bathroom to get a picture of the shower.)

The shower – very unconfusing and easy to use.

I have still been extremely busy running around doing stuff.  I went on a field trip to the Town of Bath and visited the Roman Baths there, as well as the Jane Austen Centre and the Fashion Museum.  The Fashion Museum had a special exhibit on “Dressing Royalty” and I was able to see many of the costumes that have been used in various historical movies, plays, and tv show, including some that were used in the show “Tudors.”

Costumes from “Tudors”

I went on a day trip to Stonehenge and the nearby town of Salisbury, in which there was a lovely cathedral.  I went to Cardiff and the Doctor Who Experience, and I went to Caerffilli Castle.  I went shopping at Portobello Road, although I did not get to the travel bookstore that was featured in Notting Hill.  I also went to Topshop, which was an amazing shopping experience.  I went on another field trip to Glastonbury, where I toured the Abbey, listened to Geoffrey Ashe (an eminent historian), and climbed Glastonbury Tor (a very steep, although not very high, hill with an excellent view from the top).

The Tor (and I should mention that I really don’t like hiking, but I made myself climb it).

I took a day trip to Liverpool to visit The Beatle’s Museum and The Cavern.  I went on a weekend trip to Edinburgh.  I went to see Les Miserables last night.  I have been going and going, but I haven’t crashed yet.  Hopefully I can make it for one more week.

Cheers!

Emily

Butterflies on my Finger, Heaviness in my Heart

Agentina.

Rosario Argentina, to be exact.

When I flew into the country last week, this is what I knew:

It is the third largest city in Argentina and the largest city in The Provence of Santa Fe. Its population is roughly 1,800,000. It is situated on the Parana river, which looked pretty big in the pictures I found on Google.

That was about it. Everything I knew could be found on informative sites on the Internet. I could write a fantastic research paper on the city. In some circles that might be considered important information. I would possibly make a great tourist, armed with a map and an agenda. In groups of friends, I was the one to go to for information Rosario’s facts and figures. But in reality I knew nothing about Rosario.

It has been through walks and talks with my host mom, Denise, that I have truly begun to understand the heart of what Argentina is. For instance, Argentina is known for the tango. But did you know that Argentina also deserves credit for ball point pens? Oh yes, and dulce de leche. If you’re not familiar with this fabulous stuff, it’s an amazing caramel-like and milk-based substance that is EVERYWHERE and in EVERYTHING down here: cookies, ice cream, candy… When my host mom discovered I had never tried it, she promptly bought some (the actual, gooey original stuff, that practically has its own entire aisle in every supermercado). It has become a part of our routine down here, this shared appreciation for dulce de leche. We spend time each morning talking and eating our bread smeared with dulce de leche and sharing a mate (the herb drink I mentioned in my first post). The sharing of mate in itself is a social experience here, and I am slowly learning its intricacies. It is during these precious morning moments that I learn so very much.

Anyone can visit Argentina, but to experience it through the perspective of a resident is to learn and live Argentina. And it’s all the little things that add up to compose the heart of an area.

Allow me to share an example. Argentineans love ham and cheese. It’s used for sandwiches, fillings in empanadas, cracker favors, and frozen meals. This is easily deduced while walking through any food store or glancing at any restaurant. But in many restaurants there exists a sandwich called The Carlito. Rumor has it (or “they” say) that singer Carlos Gandel visited Rosario once (specifically the Pichinche barrio I am staying in, Denise told me proudly) and asked for one of their grilled ham and cheese sandwiches (tostado con jamon y queso). BUT, he additionally asked them to add ketchup to it. And voila, The Carlito was born. And resident of Rosario will be glad to tell you this story with great pride.

I have been down here for almost one week, and it feels more like one month. The days have been a constant roller coaster of emotions and experiences, and none more so for me than the blatant dual existence of extreme poverty and tourism. This weekend I traveled to Iguazu Falls with a peer and one of my instructors. It was one of my greatest desires when planning this trip to see this amazing wonder of the world, and I excitedly embraced the 18 hour bus ride to the border of Brazil and Argentina with glee.

As we pulled into Puerto Iguazu tired and ragged, I glanced out the window of my plush, air conditioned bus to see 3 children at the roadside, not 5 feet from me. The oldest couldn’t have been more than 10 or 11, and they were all barefoot. Selling handmade wares with forelorne and exhausted faces at the stoplight, children such as these work any daylight hour they are not in school. Entire families contribute as they struggle to put food on the table. While the children were wearing clothing that looked as though it had seen a year of constant wear, the outlet mall behind them bustled with tourists purchasing name brands, jewelry, and souveniers. I burst into tears as their beautiful faces receded into the background, unprepared for being presented with such injustice.

The trip to the falls the following day was nothing short of unforgettable and exhilarating. The views and experiences were simply indescribable. Eleanor Rosevelt once said, upon viewing Iguazu for the first time, “poor Niagra”. Standing at the apex of Gargante del Diablo (Devil’s Throat) I concurred. The air was saturated with a hearty and thick mist, thrown from the falls and intermingling with the humidity and earthy smells of the jungle. I watched as a seemingly lazy and still river toppled and exploded like fireworks in various shades of sage green and white. There is a Latin proverb which reads

Altissima quaeque flumina minimo sono labi

-or-

The deepest rivers flow with the least sound (still waters run deep).

What a fitting metaphor and description, both of the river and my experience thus far. It is just when I am quietly settling into a familiar and steady routine down here that I discover another layer of depth to my host country.

I spent the entire day at Iguazu spying monkeys in trees, sneaky coaties, tropical birds, and some of the most beautiful butterflies I have ever had the pleasure of experiencing. One actually came along for a walk with me for several minutes, perched on the tip of my finger. I saw more waterfalls than I could count. The highlight of my day was standing at the base of a tremendous one that took my breath away, both figuratively and literally. As water deafeningly thundered not 20 feet away from a height of several hundred feet above, I was washed with a constant and powerful spray of water. The power created a circulation of air that sucked and swept at my lungs, and I threw my arms up in complete release. When I begrudgingly returned to my traveling companions, who chose to wait a considerable distance back, I was drenched and laughing with glee. It was a beautiful day filled with the wonder and awe-inspiring power of nature.

As we were leaving the park that evening, we came upon a group of children singing and dancing. They were Guarani, the indigenous people of Argentina and Paraguay. As the sweet “nenes” sang a traditional prayer to their lord I was mesmerized by their young faces. Dirty and tired, they continued to move and sing while wiping at their eyes with fatigue. When each song ended I whooped and hollered with applause. Several of them would break into tentative grins while others giggled and repeated to one another my “woo hoos”. During a break, I went up and conversed with them, speaking solely through gestures and expression as we had no shared language. They excitedly showed off for me, and looked with great excitement at the led screen on my camera as I displayed their own performing faces. Before long, I had a group of posers on my hands, eager to see their creativity captured in digital form. We giggled and interacted with one another, and I could have stayed there for hours. Even with a visit to one of the natural wonders of the world fresh in my memory, it was these children who brought the greatest beauty to my day.

I have not yet come to terms with how to handle such injustice and poverty at at expense of beautiful and innocent little babies. Returning from the falls, all I could think about was the Guarani children. As we entered the grocery store across the street from our hostel to purchase some food for dinner I came upon another family selling their wares on the street. I watched as the children came into the store to refill their water bottle and my heart just broke. As I spoke and played with them a part of me wanted to scoop them up and take them home with me, away from such a harsh life. I felt utterly powerless. Other than buying their wares, which I already had, I couldn’t make any difference in their lives. Suddenly I remembered the individual-sized boxes of chocolate milk I had purchased for myself in a moment of craving. I ran the milk back across the street and gave each child their own after gaining permission from their mother. It felt like trying to stop Iguazu Falls with a bandaid, but the mother in me couldn’t help but mentally envision the calcium building up their starving bones. I was able to watch them enjoy the treat from my room, and my emotions churned with sadness, powerlessness, and awe at the sheer beauty of their innocence.

Life in Argentina is beautiful and full of great stories. But it can also be incredibly heart wrenching and harsh. Although I know these injustices exist on the United States, they are much more vivid here. Those in extreme poverty exist right alongside those with money to burn, moving as if completely unaware of one another. The experience has left me raw and desperate for answers I know don’t exist. And as I tumble from highs to lows daily, I realize that Argentina has already taught me so much more than I could have ever planned for.

Jessie

20120730-194159.jpg

20120730-194222.jpg

20120730-194258.jpg

20120730-194336.jpg

20120730-194356.jpg

20120730-194411.jpg

20120730-194437.jpg

20120730-194450.jpg

20120730-194506.jpg

20120730-194530.jpg

20120730-194608.jpg

20120730-194652.jpg

20120730-194728.jpg

20120730-194754.jpg

20120730-194825.jpg

20120730-194904.jpg

20120730-194931.jpg

20120730-194953.jpg

20120730-195011.jpg

20120730-195032.jpg

20120730-195049.jpg

20120730-195111.jpg

20120730-195128.jpg

20120730-195206.jpg

20120730-195218.jpg

20120730-195239.jpg

20120730-195252.jpg

20120730-195307.jpg

20120730-195342.jpg

20120730-195353.jpg

20120730-195410.jpg

20120730-195422.jpg

20120730-195434.jpg

20120730-195450.jpg

20120730-195511.jpg

20120730-195553.jpg

20120730-195620.jpg

20120730-195645.jpg

20120730-195751.jpg

20120730-195814.jpg

20120730-195831.jpg

20120730-195844.jpg

20120730-195857.jpg

20120730-195911.jpg

20120730-195938.jpg

20120730-195956.jpg

20120730-200447.jpg

A Day to Relax!

My time in Argentina has been so busy. I feel as though I have no time to stop and think. We have had so many excursions and wonderful outings to learn new things. My brain feels like it may explode at any moment. Might I add that I am learning all this new information in another language as well. So it adds on to my tiredness.

I finally had a whole day to relax and practically do nothing. Of course there was still learning involved but it was not as intensive as the previous outings. We got to attend a Gaucho Party. We rode a bus to an Estancia, in the middle of nowhere and had a relaxing day. The folks who lived their prepared lunch for us. We had carne asada, which is a type of cooked meat. It was delicious. We also had green salad and potato salad. They served us wine and soda to drink.

Image

After lunch we got to ride horses. I love horses and haven’t rode one since I was little. So this was treat for me. This house is surrounded by fields, but for some reason we could only ride around the yard. So there wasn’t very much room to explore. I think it’s because we had such a big group and they didn’t have enough horses for everyone plus the guides. But it was still fun anyways. My horse was ready to run once I got on him. So we made due with the small space that we had.

Image

Later we got to watch a Gaucho dance. It was very interesting. The movements that they do and the passion that is involved was great to watch. The guys were very protective of their girls and one guy even stabbed a knife into the ground to scare some other guys off. It was an eventful day and we even got to see the city from the outside on our way back. All the other times that we had left the city I was sleeping. So this was the first time in 4 weeks that I had actually seen the city from outside city limits!

Melissa

Image

Image