Saturday, November 6, 2010

From Mountains to a Nifty City!

BRAMADERO

This was the view from the window as we drove through a VERY windy, muddy, and rocky road to the community of Bramadero for a day visit, checking on the status of the 4 biogas digesters that Asofenix and Green Empowerment have installed. It turns out that none of them are really up and running for lack of either materials, leaking, or the owners of the digesters not wanting to keep up the work. Nevertheless, Asofenix will continue to work with them since the community is still interested in making the systems work. Let's hope so!!!


It took us about three hours each way to get there and back, using bus and two small little taxis for transport. However, it seems that walking or horse are also a valid mode of transport, as you can see above! Note the ladies balancing buckets of water on their heads...that's the kind of thing that is character building for sure, however what we hope to render not necessary by building water delivery s
ystems when possible :)

To the left you can see bits of clothes on barbed wire in a river. This is the laundry station. Women come down here to clean all the dirties, and everyone comes down here to bathe...or some people just use a bucket of w
ater and keep their clothes on (I am supposed to bring a "bathing outfit" with me to the campo!).
We all had to take refuge on the porch of the school from a downpour of rain as the rainy season is still working out its last fits. All of those kids live in Bramadero, and in the forefront are Yauzka (left) who works f
or Asofenix, and the profile of Caitlyn (right) who works for Green Empowerment.


GRANADA

Yes, above is a picture of the colonial city of Granada, a beautiful place with almost all of its original structures. All of them make you feel like you are in Spain...because that is who built them- the Spanish! The house of interns and our guide Caitlyn went to Granada for an
overnight. It was rather relaxing and we spent the day today (Sunday) at the pool of one of the hotels after spending the night in a hostel.

As we sat and had ourselves some piƱa colada and dinner, a very rare couple of wel
l groomed, plump, and fancy horse trotted by us. The riders seemed very proud- for good reason! I've decided that one good way to tell the general economic status of neighborhoods here is by how plump or shiny coated the horses are. THIS horse belongs to someone who can care for him/her!

Everything was "ducky" at the pool- literally! These were our three little duck friends who live by the pool and swim in it, too!
Tomorrow I will go on my first solo journey into a community- the community of El Corozo. I look forward to the bus ride for one reason- each and every bus has an awesome blasting radio system that seems to go with the jolty lugging nature of the beastly vehicles. There is usually a mixture of heavy base beets with "raggaeton," then it might switch to Celine Dion or the Cranberries even (a lot of 80's and 90's music here), then to a Spanish love song, and back to more "boom boom" music. I guess they have the right idea- you gotta get to work and back, and the roads are crazy, so might as well have some good tunes!

In fact, there is a sort of an intermittent, but continuos soundtrack to Nicaragua. I woke up yesterday morning to a surreal "White Christmas" being sung by Nat King Cole, blasting from the neighbor's house. Afterward, of course, it went to reggaeton...and in between were the dogs barking and birds chirping, or kids playing in the street. Not to mention that at night I've been hearing some sort of Nicaraguan coyotes I am pretty sure...very eery sounding!!! The diversity of all these sounds adequately reflects the colorful character of this country. I dig it!

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