Friday, November 7, 2008

I still volunteer at a little school on Thursday mornings. This past Thursday when I went, I had my favorite experience with my little first graders yet. When my friend Brittany and I got to the school, they told us that we´d be chaperoning my class´ trip to the zoo. I was confused, because I hadn´t heard that there was a zoo in Santiago. Oh, but there is!

The guagua ride to the zoo took about 15 minutes, with 6 little kids sharing the far backseat. The zoo is a large plot of land at the bottom of a mountain in Santiago. We pulled up and all´s we could see was a large field with some ostriches mingling with goats and cows. I dismissed it as a rural zoo and prepared to spend an hour observing their interaction. Oh, but there was so much more!

When we got to the entrance of the zoo, we were greeted by a cage full of small white rats. ¨Estuart Little!¨ exclaimed the niños. So cute. (The kids. NOT the rats.) We walked in a bit further, saw some birds, and then one of my favorite (?) exhibits. The dogs. There was a line of cages containing shih tzus, pomeranians, and other varieties of lap dogs. Sad life, but I suppose those little pooches wouldn´t make it on the streets, and at least this way they´re getting food? Not sure what I think about that. The same was true of a cat exhibit, but I don´t have as strongly of feelings for cats. These weren´t zoo cats (if there is such a thing). These were fluffy white cats that are only in commercials.

There was an extremely agitated monkey that was clearly having mental issues from the ridiculous amount of small children very close to its cage who were nonstop screaming at it. I would´ve had a similar reaction if I were the monkey, I think. The problem was that the monkey would jump at and attack the cage right in front of a child´s face. The child would scream, the other kids would want a similar experience, so they would scream at the monkey and hope it jumped at them. Basically, it was a sad cycle of monkey abuse. When the kids left, we watched it just sit there, and it was shaking like a leaf. Sad story.

Sadder story. There was an exhibit of birds of prey (i think?) and inside their cages were (sensitive stomach? maybe stop reading. Or at least decide right now to not visit this exhibit) bloody chicken heads. There were many bloody chicken heads. And it smelled... like that, too. Left that part in a fast hurry. That smell combined with the muddy crocodile water and croc smell a few feet away made for some quick nausea.

Those were the zoo highlights. The whole experience was pretty neat, and the kids really liked it. It was one of the few days I didn´t have my camera, and the whole morning I was regretting this decision. I´ll get pics of the kids eventually, though. They´re just great.

This weekend has been an even longer than usual weekend. There´s some holiday today that has to do with their constitution (NOTE: the Dominican Republic does not have a working constitution as of this writing. Ironic? HA). This is the last day of the four day weekend. I´m not sure what we´ll end up doing, but there was talk of making a chocolate cake. Yeah, there´ve been cravings for American foods. That might be one...

...aaaaand a whole new photo album! neat.
http://www.facebook.com/album.php?aid=2063239&l=bcd4f&id=15300570

Monday, November 3, 2008

Interestingly enough, this weekend went as I had expected. It was NOT worth the trip. I'm glad I went because now I can say I've been to the extreme southwest of the Dominican Republic, however if given the option to repeat the experience, I would answer with a loud NO.

We went to Lago Enriquillo, which is a saltwater lake in the southern interior of the DR close to the Haitian border. Let's just set the scene a minute. We pull up to the "parking lot," which is this ridiculously swelteringly hot, arid, desert-y dirt lot. Oh, and the critters. There were way too many iguanas, which here measured about 8 inches high and 2 and a half feet long. When the bus pulled up, 6 or 7 of them waddled up and surrounded the bus. Way too
Jurassic Park. We waited in IguanaLand for probably about an hour for a man who will drive us to an island where there's supposedly a museum and some red eyed iguanas. No one in my group really wanted to go to this island, but our director insisted that it'd be good for us to check it out for future years. When the boat man gets there, he duct tapes a motor onto this boat and has half of the group pile on. We cross the lake, which is pleasant enough, but the extremely noticeable scent of gasoline is disturbing. And the fact that the lake is known for its high population of crocodiles isn't something that helps either. Here we are on the boat, pretty much just nervous. We get to the other side, which smells overwhelmingly of sulfur. The scene below greets us. I can't even imagine how many crocodiles are hanging out in that murky water. We managed to get to the rickety ramp onto the island after the boat drivers had to get out and push us forward and ask some os us to get out, too. We get out and walk around the island. Of course, there are killer bees that we have to avoid. We walk around the desert in the blistering sun trying to avoid little cactus thickets that attack our feet. We finally get to the "museum" and realize that it consists of the 3 animal skulls (think cow, pig, goat. Not anything cool.) So we sit around waiting for the boat to bring back the other half of the group so we can get off that island. In the mean time, we talk about how to build fires and how we could catch a red eyed iguana for food. Basically, we were all ready to be stranded on that nightmare indefinitely. Fortunately, the boat did come back and take us back to shore. We rushed to the guagua and sat in the AC waiting for everyone else to come back. When they did, we unfortunatley had several stops yet in the day. We were all cranky. But the next day was much better. We went to Bahía de las Águilas, which is a gorgeous 27km long white sand beach that's super isolated from Dominican Republic. It's on the extreme southwest corner of the country almost in Haiti. We took a boat to get there, and while there were not bothered by any venders or anything of the sort. We only saw 3 or 4 other people there the entire time we were there. And some sand rays, crabs, and other critters. But this beach was by far the most gorgeous beach I've ever seen.

Monday, October 27, 2008

Karin came to visit me last weekend and it was great fun. I have some pictures up on my facebook account, but I don´t have the link to it at this second. I´ll put it down below. Here are two highlights.

We went to Haiti! It wasn´t really a big deal because it involved only walking over the bridge and standing by a building and being told that we were in a different country, but honestly that was enough for me! It was market day, which means that the Dominican government opens up the border for Haitians to cross into Dajabón and buy Dominican products. It was so interesting to see because the two countries are terribly un-fond-of each other, especially in the case of the DR disliking Haiti. The border is only open until 1:00, and at 1:00, any Haitian in the DR is in serious trouble. The border only opens for the Haitians into the DR so that the money from Haiti comes into the DR. On the highway on the way back to Santiago, we were stopped many times by military men making sure we weren´t taking Haitians into the DR.

The other favorite thing that happened while Karin was here happened on Sunday, on which way too many crazy things happened. Basically, we were taking a 3rd class bus from Puerto Plata to Sosúa, which is my favorite beach in the area. We got put in the front seat because we´re gringos, and we got ready to pay. The driver didn´t seem to want to tell me how much it cost to ride to Sosúa, but I heard someone say it was 30 pesos. So I had my 100 peso bill out ready to pay for our rides. We pull up to a gas station, and the driver reaches over and grabs my RD$100 out of my hand. I ask him for the change and he smirks at me. Later, I ask the money collector who rides in the back for change, and he tells me he doesn´t have any (note: since the gas station, several people have gotten on and paid in small change. LIAR.) A few minutes later, I get out my sunscreen to put it on my arm, which is sticking out of the window and burning. The driver reaches over to grab it. I´m of course shocked at his forwardness and pull it away. He makes a sad face and gestures to his arm and tells me it´s burning and grabs for it again. I tell him it´ll cost him RD$40 (what we need for change.) He laughs as if it´s a cute little joke and reaches for it yet again. I´m frustrated with him at this point, remind him of the RD$40, he shakes his head and I put the sunscreen away. He whines. We ignore him. Before you get upset that we were ripped off, understand that it was all for about US$1. And gas costs a lot and these drivers don´t actually make that much money after they have to pay for gas.

So. Today I´ve been sooo hot all day. In my dance class we started learning the Salsa the other day, and that involves a ton of movement, especially when you´re already super hot. And then I went to the cafeteria, bought an iced cream cone, and the iced cream fell off. Not good.

And tomorrow. The day I´ve been dreading for weeks. The bus will be by my house at 3:08 in the morning on the way to the Southwest region of the country. Apparently there are pretty beaches and some national parks. The definite down side: 8 hours each way in a very small, very cramped bus. This down side is enough to deter me from even going, but I was convinced that I should just suck it up and go. So we´ll see. Hopefully it´ll be less painful than I´m anticipating. =) I´ll let you know.

http://www.facebook.com/album.php?aid=2061429&l=6089f&id=15300570

again, you´ll have to wade through pictures you might have seen already. And there are only 13 or so new pictures. I´ll probably put up more soon. Like, after this weekend´s trip.

Monday, October 13, 2008

As promised, here´s what happened on the family reunion to Ojo de Agua. Um, it was awesome. I wish I would have been able to speak more Spanish there, but I was focusing so hard on understanding everything that I didn´t have time to formulate my own thoughts most of the time. I guess that´ll come later, right? =) We left Santiago a little after 8 Sunday morning and drove the hour to Ojo de Agua. The actual event was a joint graduation party for two cousins who were both really nice. There was quite a bit of family there, and people trickled in and out all day.

One of my host sisters named the farm ´Animalandia´ with very very good reason. We´re talking love birds, cockateels, guinea hens, chickens, 17 turtles, 3 pigs and 13 piglets, a couple of goats, and hundreds of roosters. Why roosters? you might ask. Well that´s mostly due to the ´national sport´ (besides baseball) of cockfighting. So all over the property are single rooster wire cages, most of them with a rooster inside. The noise at that place! I´ll tell you what. More quiquiriquis (how you cock a doodle doo in Spanish) than I´ve ever heard in one place. My host sisters´ uncle is into cockfighting and from what I gathered has his own ring. This is something that repulses and fascinates me at the same time. Of course, it´s a huge waste of roosters that could be used for meat or eggs. But it´s possible that the roosters can sometimes be eaten after they die in the fight, in which case it wouldn´t be as terrible. I tried to figure this out, but no one I asked knew the answer to the question. I´m still not a fan. But I´m debating going to a cockfight, just to do what the locals do.

Anyway, the best part of the day was definitely the fact that Doña Dedé showed up, stayed for several hours, and talked almost exclusively to my host family and me. It was interesting to talk with her about things that weren´t directly connected to what everyone talks to her about, namely the killings of her sisters and what´s happened to her since then. But I got the picture to forever display in my future Spanish classrooms. She´s 83, but you´d never guess it by talking to her. I could write more, but I feel like it´s sort os a topic that either you care about or don´t, so if you are interested in this, we´ll talk later. =)
But yes. Overall it was a great experience. I´d do it again. Except my host sisters aren´t really what you´d call good drivers, and I had pretty decent stomach aches going both ways from their puslating of the go pedal and their frequent abrupt stops for pot holes. Oh, shoot, and while I´m going at it, they always put the radio on scan and leave it there for 10 to 15 minutes at a time. So I´m going crazy int he backseat listening to 10 second clips of music. Yeah, but if that was the worst part, I do suppose it does show that I am bad at predictions. Just like I predicted in Saturday´s post. =)

And since I realized I haven´t posted many pictures on here, and I haven´t shown anyone my host family at all , you get a bonus picture. Here I am yesterday in Ojo de Agua with my host sisters. Angelica is on the left and Carmen in the middle. They´re both going to New York on Saturday for 2 and a half weeks. Not so happy about this, haha. They´re fun.

Saturday, October 11, 2008

So I thought I´d try something new so that you could get an idea of how wrong (or right) I can be sometimes when predicting what something is going to be like. I´m going to give my prediction about what I¨m doing tomorrow, and then after I´ve gone, I´ll tell you what really happened.

So, there´s a big graduation party tomorrow in Ojo de Agua for my host family´s cousins. I am going along, and it should last all day. Plus side: there will be amazing food. But this is what I think it´ll be like: embarazoso. That means awkward. Now, let me explain. My host sisters are both in their 30´s. We get along great, we talk a ton, it´s fun. They´re both more social than I am, especially when I´m self conscious about not knowing the language perfectly. My family will know everyone. I know no one. So we´re going to throw all of these elements together and predict that I´m going to be by the punch bowl. It should be fun, I´m just a bit worried about initiating conversation with Dominicans who talk millions of miles a second and don´t pronounce all their letters. (Dominican Spanish tends to drop the endings of words or random syllabols within words. I´m getting used to it, but it´s definitely a part of rural Dominican Spanish that makes it much harder to understand than city Dominican Spanish.)

Another point that might make it embarazoso is that today at lunch I was told to bring my camera because Doña Dedé of the Mirabal sisters (see previous post or look here) will probably be there. She´s their neighbor and the boss of one of the cousin-graduates at a health clinic. So now we have an image of Kristin going, hanging out by a punch bowl, and paparazzi-style taking pictures of a surviving Dominican heroine. Qué bueno. If I were in the states, I would need at LEAST a venti iced americano in order to feel confident going into this experience. Probably two.

Stay tuned for what actually goes down. =)

Tuesday, October 7, 2008

Hello again. I feel like the only thing I write about is what I did recently, but I guess that´s to be expected? If you have any questions, please post them in the comments part and I´ll use that to write about instead. =) If not, I´ll just keep writing about what I know. Right now, for example, I´ll write about my very fun weekend.

On Friday we went to Salcedo and Ojo de Agua which are the two cities associated with the Mirabel sisters. ´In the Time of the Butterflies´ by Julia Álvarez is a popular book that I read in high school that tells a mostly true version of their stories. They´re heroines who basically were the last straw in the beginning of Trujillo´s downfall. Three of the four sisters were killed in November of 1960 (Trujillo was killed in May, 1961), and the fourth sister still lives in Ojo de Agua. Unfortunately she wasn´t in town when we went to visit or apparently she would´ve talked to us. A few friends and I decided to go back to talk with Dedé because we´re so interested in meeting with her, and we know someone who knows her. There was a museum dedicated to them in Salcedo which is the house they lived in when they were killed. Their clothes were in the closets, the table was set, their books were out on their desks, and it was sort of like they would come back at any moment. It was really neat to see, but it was fairly eerie also. If you ever come to the Dominican Republic, you should read the book I mentioned above. Or there´s a movie if you´re not into reading. =)

On Saturday night I went out with my host sisters and I had an incredible time. They took me to a Mexican restaurant which was DELICIOUS for a change. To compare the two food styles, picture Dominican food often as almost Mexican food, but rather than salsa, ALWAYS substitute it for ketchup. Yeah. Gross. But there is other Dominican food that is good that isn´t full of ketchup or mayonnaise. =) After the food we rode around town in their car and they showed me more places that I hadn´t seen yet. I´m looking forward to going out with them more as it´s a great change from doing things with other Americans. I´m moderately angry, though, because they told me that they´re both going to New York for a two week vacation in the middle of October. Which leaves me with the at times (and usually) awkward host mom. But we´ll deal with that when it happens. Next Sunday I´m going to the campo (rural village) with the family. Their relatives (the mom´s family) live in Ojo de Agua apparently right next door to Dedé of the Mirabel sisters, which is where both families grew up. Small world, eh?

In a few weeks Karin is coming to visit me, which I probably couldn´t be more excited about if I tried. So we´re all busy planning things to do and what not. So if you want to send me thousands of dollars, for example, you could always try to send it to her before she left. But she might spend it. Umm.

Speaking of thousands of dollars, I was awesome this past weekend and left y ATM card somewhere, probably in the ATM after I grabbed my money. At least I didn´t leave the money in there... no, but I´m happy for modern technologies that suck the card in and eat it up.

So I´m already in the middle of another week here. I think we´re getting close to midterms because the workload is growing a little. I´m trying to upload pictures to facebook but I´m not being successful. I´ll add the link when and if I win the battle with the computer. =)

yep, here it is: http://www.facebook.com/album.php?aid=2061429&l=6089f&id=15300570

Monday, September 29, 2008

So we're back from our trip to Samaná, which is the peninsula on the Northeast coast of the island. It was gorgeous. We actually stayed in Las Terrenas, which involved crossing an hour and half's worth of windy mountain roads each time we had to go into town.

On Saturday we went to Parque Nacional Los Haitises, which required a 45 minute catamaran ride. When we were there we went to Cueva San Gabriel which was a cave with a lot of Taíno (indigenous) writings on the wall. Apparently foreign seasons (from Italian, British, etc. networks) of the TV show Survivior come and shoot scenes in the cave in order to pass it off as whatever exotic location they're actually filming in. The US probably does that too, but I didn't ask. =) Gorgeous cave, though. I'll probably put up pictures. Later. We also went kayaking through a mangrove forest in that park. It was surreal-ly gorgeous. I dont have pictures of that for fear of my kayak tipping and losing the camera.

Then Saturday night we went out after dinner into the town of Las Terrenas, which involved a 15 minute walk from our hotel. On the way back I had my first ever moto concho experience, which I iwll be repeating because it was sweet. It involves riding on the back of a motorcycle used as a taxi. The driver generally smells bad, and sometimes you can convince the driver to take more than 1 person, which maybe isn't the safest choice. But for the first ride, we didn't ahve to go very far and so we squeezed 3 of us on one moto concho. Maybe shouldn't do that again. =) But in this town it was the only option for public transportation, and it's all about saving those pesos!

And on the way back to our hotel on Saturday, one of the guaguas (small busses--maybe 25 passengers?) broke down. So in order to return to Santiago, we had to cram ourselves into the other guagua and only had the additional help of a 15 passenger van. It was a tad too crowded. And for a 4.5 hour ordeal, it was unpleasant to say the least.

Monday, September 22, 2008

Last weekend we went to Santo Domingo. The city is really big and it´s fun to walk around in. We spent a lot of time in La Zona Colonial, which is where there a lot of firsts for the New World and extremely old buildings. There´s the first hospital constructed (around 1500), the first university, the homes of some Columbusses, and the list goes on. It´s very historical and old looking, and it was fun to be there. We went to the beach at Guayacanes on Sunday, which is about 45 minutes East of Santo Domingo. The beach was very pretty, but it rained pretty much the entire time we were there.

This weekend we went to a very small town on the outskirts of Jamao, which is also, interestingly enough, a very small town. Paulina, a French Canadian, has over the years adopted some 20 kids and built a school to educate them and other kids from the community. We went there with a group of 15 of us from the program, which is almost all of us. We got there on Friday night and played with the kids. It gets dark fairly early here, which is a bummer. It got dark around 7 and we enjoyed the rusticness of a home that runs most of the time without electricity. We carried around flashlights and candles and tried to avoid the wildlife.

On Saturday we got to work. Paulina wanted us to help build the foundation for benches for her students to be able to wait on. Our job then was to go around the premesis collecting rocks and sand. In order to get sand, we had to walk about .5 miles to the river, fill up a burlap sack with about 4 shovel-fuls of sand, throw it over our shoulder, and traipse back up a very steep and rocky hill to the place where they were mixing cement. In case you were wondering, it was indeed uphill both ways. To say we sweat a little would be the biggest understatement ever uttered. We were all drenched with sweat, and dirty from walking around in the dirt. We went swimming in the river there, but it was pretty dirty from the rain, and the current was ferocious. Yet it was much more comfortable than being so sweaty, and so we enjoyed the break. I feel very bad for the pile of obscenely dirty laundry that my host mom is about to wash.

Saturday night we encountered WAYYYY too much wildlife. I had laughed early Saturday when some people from my group found out that there were tarantulas here and were contemplating flying back to the US immediately. However, I reevaluated my stay as well when I saw what happened when it rains and spiders don´t want to be wet—they come inside. The paranoia in my cabin Saturday night was remarkable, but with good reason. Those spiders were LARGE. We killed more innocent spiders than I care to admit, as I usually let spiders live. However, when it comes down to having to sleep in the same room as thousands of large, hairy crawly beasts, I choose to try to not let them outnumber me. I sort of wish we had taken pictures to post of this, but we frankly didn´t want to remember how gross the whole event was.

The highlight of Sunday in the Campo was that I helped wash a 500 pound pig. I got in its cage and, well, didn´t do much to wash it. Really, I did this mostly for the photo-op. But I did dump some water on the big guy. This picture was supposed to be me posing nicely with the clean pig, but it suddenly jolted very close to my face, and the picture was taken in the middle of my panicked reaction.

This week, we have a holiday from school on Wednesday due to the holiday of a patron saint for the Dominican Republic. So I´m looking at a rough little 3 day school week. =) Studying in the Caribbean is rough; let me tell ya. =)

I put up some more pictures and decided to share them the lazy way. So rather than uploading them onto here, they´re here:  http://www.new.facebook.com/album.php?aid=2059129&l=a4f2b&id=15300570  i just added them to the old album so you´ll have to check out the old ones first.

Thursday, September 11, 2008

I just got back from my first morning volunteering at Caminito de Jesus, which is a little private school nestled in the upstairs of a church here. I absolutely LOVED it. But first the part I disliked.

Trying to get there, I decided to use a concho, which is a midsized car into which 6 passengers are very uncomfortably squeezed. So I figured out which one I thought I needed, and went ahead and took it. Unfortunately, it wasn't the one I needed, and 20 minutes of circling the city later, I realized this. It didn't go far enough down the road I needed to go further down. SO. I was double charged by the driver, for no other reason than there were several guys in the backseat that said "you should double charge her," thinking I didn't understand. Reluctantly, I paid to avoid a brawl. So I ended up paying 30 pesos to end up where I started. Believe it or not, I was less than thrilled. (Don't worry too much; 30 pesos is still [barely] less than a dollar... Exchange rate is about 34:1). So then, when dropped off roughly where I'd started, I decided to take a taxi, as I no longer had time to kill. Taxis cost more than the sardine-cars, which of course makes sense. They cost RD$100, which is about US$3. [Note: It's good that they're fixed rate most of the time because it's not uncommon for a traffic light to last 90 seconds or more.] Anyway, it's also a good idea to agree on an amount before taking off, even though they know that it's RD$100--it's just a case of whether they think you know or not. I forgot to clear this, as I was still reeling from being double charged by the concho. So when I got there, I handed him my RD$100 bill and was told that the charge was $150. Even less-than-less-than thrilled this time. It was further away, though, and it did cost him some gas to get me there. And gas here is equivalent to US$6/gallon. So I'm only a little angry about today's escapades. =)

BUT then I got to Caminito de Jesus. I absolutely love it. Like, LOVE it. =D The people are so nice, and the kids are sooo adorable. Today they had me work with a little first grader from the United States who just moved here and is having a hard time in school, but his mom doesn't have enough money to put him in a bilingual school. So I tested him by having him tell me letters, shapes, colors, and other things in Spanish, and I kept track of how much he knew, and then I also found out how much more he knew in English. If he knows the English concepts, he'd be better off becuase he could just learn the Spanish words for what he already knows. But the question is if he is on grade level in English, because if he isn't he has a long way to go. I had such a good time doing this; it's just what I want to do when I grow up. =) And thank goodness for my Special Ed assessment class, becuase I felt like a pro in there, being all professional and everything, haha. So the plan with my little friend is for the school to talk to his mom and for them to decide if he should stay there, and if he does, I'll be working with him on Thursdays when I go to help out. I hope he's there next week! =D

I have class yet today; my dance class is at 2 and my film class that I just picked up is at 5. I decided to take a Latin American Film class rather than Teaching ESL, because I just don't think that that class would have helped me. Plus, it was taught in English.

The plan for the weekend is to head to Santo Domingo tomorrow or Saturday for a night. I'm very excited. It's time to get out of Santiago for a day or two. There's so much to see in Santo Domingo, too. Plus, then I'll finally have some of my own pictures to post [sorry emily!] =)

Tuesday, September 9, 2008

I'm sitting in class right now and it seems like a logical time to update my blog. =)

We had quite the rain and "chilly" temperatures the past few days because of Ike. The cooler temperatures have been super. We had to stay in Santiago this past weekend, which was okay for the most part, but got a little boring after awhile. It was good that we stayed, though, because much of the North coast of the DR was evacuated due to Ike. This coming weekend, 4 of us are hoping to go to Santo Domingo, which is in the south of the island. We're going to try to do it as cheaply as we can. =)


I definitely didn't take this picture, so I won't even pretend I did. But one of my friends here did, and I like it a lot. It's the monument in the middle of Santiago. I should probably ask her before I post it. I'll do that later.


And we found a donkey just chilling on the ground by the theatre. In the background you can see black and white photographs that are displayed to show some of the work that Dominicans did to rebel against Trujillo.


Last Friday we went to a Fiesta de Palos which is a party held monthly by people of Taino (indigenous people) ancestry. They held a party at which people drummed and then other people danced. it was fun.

Thursday, September 4, 2008

Time is starting to fly! The short of it is: I'm still loving it and everything is still great. Classes started last week, and those are good for the most part. There's a lot of emphasis on collaborative learning in the Dominican higher education system, and as a result most of my “tests” are not tests but group presentations. My favorite class is a dance class where I am learning Bachata, Merengue, and Salsa dancing, which are the three big dances here.

I hope to start volunteering next week, as I would prefer to be much busier than I am now. I have quite a few options, and I am hoping to work in either a regular school, or what would be thought of as an “institution” for kids with special needs. I visited the school this morning, and I absolutely LOVE it. I will be working there for sure. There weren't any kids, as the government cancelled school for all kids yesterday, today, and tomorrow due to the storm. (Note: this is somewhat humorous as it hasn't rained since Tuesday. But better to be extra safe about it.) I love the school and the lady who is in charge. It's in a little Christian Church run by CRC missionaries. What a small world, haha. I'll be helping and doing odd jobs for classes that range from preschool to second grade. I can't wait to get started! I was going to visit the "institution" today, too, but it would be super hard to gauge something like that without any students there. So I'll visit there next week.

This weekend it turns out I was supposed to go on a work retreat in a campo, or rural village, about 2 hours from Santiago. We were planning on building a new floor for a school building that a woman is using to teach 20 children that she has adopted. Unfortunately, we just got an email prohibiting any travel this coming weekend. So that, as well as any beach plans, have rapidly dissolved. But I feel safe here; don't worry about me. =) The house I'm staying in is made of concrete and is very safe from lots of wind and rain. There are other places I could theoretically go also if I had the need to escape the storm somewhere else.

I realize that my area of the Dominican Republic has been fortunate with the past few storms, and I hope that this continues with the rest. A great perk of the hurricanes and tropical storms is that they bring rain as well as temperatures probably about 20 degrees cooler. Last night, I was super excited to be able to comfortably wear a sweatshirt for the first time since Michigan! Even though it was probably still in the 70's, it felt amazing.

I was trying to upload pictures, but it's being difficult. I'll post pictures next time! =)

Wednesday, August 27, 2008

I've been here in the Dominican Republic for over a week now, and I like it a lot. There's a bit to get used to, of course, but for the most part, it's great.

I met my host family the second day we were here, and I love them. There is an older lady, Dona Carmen, and her two daughters, Carmen and Angelica who are both in their late twenties/early thirties. The house is very nice, and I'm very comfortable here. I've been trying to take a few pictures to show people back home what it's like, but I feel like a creeper taking pictures of their house when they're home, and, well, they're always home. I have a couple pics already, and I'll try to get a few more.


We had to do a scavenger hunt through Santiago using the conchos, which are the fixed-route taxis. Our group decided that slow and steady wins the race and decided to eat popsicles rather than sprint through the city on a 95 degree day. =)


Here's a part of my path to school. Although now that it's raining all the time, we've had to take public transportation to school to avoid sliding down the muddy hill. A lot of Santiago looks like this; there are a lot of green areas.


Here's a view of Santiago from a monument in the center of town. I live down in those houses somewhere. =)

Santiago has been a great city so far. It's fairly safe, and fairly navigable thanks to a large monument downtown that is also very close to my house. Public transportation is somewhat convenient, with small cars dedicated to certain fixed routes. These cars can fit up to seven people, so there's a fair amount of squeezing people in that goes on. =) The heat is remarkable and unrelenting, although within the past few days of Hurricane (?) Gustavo, it's much cooler with all of the rain. Apparently there's another hurricane creeping on up through Puerto Rico. We've been told that since Santiago is in a valley between mountains, more often the severe weather is in the form of tornados caused by air pressure changes, and Haiti generally receives the brunt of hurricanes on this island.

Classes start today, and I'm ready for a predictable schedule to my days. I'm hoping to stay busy, and that shouldn't be much of a problem. There are a lot of volunteer activities, and I think I'll do what I can to see what I can. I'm taking a class about teaching ESL, which will let me teach English at the college, which I'm very excited about. There are volunteer/internship opportunities around the city as well, and I'm interested in a few that involve either Special Education or general Education. There are also language partner opportunities that involve partnering with a Dominican or Haitian student. Oh, and there's always the ever-terrible beach-going. We went to a beach about an hour and a half away on Saturday, and it was probably the prettiest beach I've been to, and that's not even the best of the beaches. =) The pictures don't do it justice, but here's a beach in Sosua. The water was ridiculously clear, and I saw a ton of sweet blue fish:

So that's about it for now. My only complaint is a difficulty getting internet access, but that's maybe a good thing, after all. =) Facebook is blocked by my college, which is a pain, because that's the only place I get internet as of now. But I'll try to bring my computer with me to school at least a couple of days a week. Ok, hasta luego!

Saturday, August 16, 2008

Tomorrow!

Tomorrow I leave for the Dominican Republic. I'm so excited, but a bit nervous too. I'm all packed, but the more time I spend thinking about what I have and what I could bring, the more stuff I convince myself to buy. I'm ready to go! =)

I think that as soon as I get there and meet my host family and start going to classes, I'll feel better. It's the anticipation that's killing me! When we get there tomorrow, we start orientation and then eventually classes. I won' t have classes on Fridays, so you should come visit me!

Tomorrow I fly out of Grand Rapids around 9, then to Chicago, Miami, and finally to Santiago. I should get there around 7:30 tomorrow night. There's a time difference which will make me 1 hour ahead of the Eastern time zone over in the Atlantic time zone.