It's been a week and a half since touchdown in Miami, and I'm having a hard time believeing I haven't been gone for a month. Our arrival in Belize was touch and go for a while there. We boarded the plane in Miami only to sit on the tarmac for two hours while mechanics worked on a vague problem involving one of the tires. Problem solved, they attempted to remove the jack they'd placed under the plane and found that it was stuck. So they had to bring in another jack in order to free the first one. It's never a good thing to hear your pilot proclaim that, "our mechanics have never seen anything like this before." We proceeded to deplane and waited at the gate for another hour before we were informed that our flight was canceled, there were no other flights to Belize City scheduled for the day, and that unless we were connecting from another city, the airline wouldn't be providing us with a hotel room. I don't think there was one among us who wasn't wondering if this was set up as a test of our flexibility (a characteristic much vaunted by the Peace Corps).
We did indeed get on a flight the following day, however, and touched down exactly 24 hours later than expected. As I write I'm sitting on the back porch of the house I'm staying at with two other trainees in the village of Armenia. It's a community of roughly 1200 people, mostly Spanish and Maya speakers. There's one main road through town and the big happenings of an evening are either at the soccer field where the kids pass the time by catching and throwing enormous beetles at each other, or at one of the 12 churches, where all the music is amplified and broadcast through town. All 38 members of our trainee class are staying here during the first 2 1/2 weeks of training. We flag down a bus or the local guy who runs a shuttle service to ride the 18 miles to Belmopan, where the Peace Corps office has recently relocated. And in the evenings you'll find us all out walking the main drag with children of various sizes hanging from every appendage.
Our host family has fed us admirably, taken us down to the river to wash our clothes with the village women, and even brought us along to a birthday praty where swarms of small children destroyed a Spongebob Squarepants pinata. We get fresh mangoes every day from one of our family's two trees (they have an avocado tree as well!), a few days ago I made my very first flour tortilla on the stovetop, and watched our host mother make watermelon juice. Yes, the bugs and critters are of a size I'm unaccustomed to, and I sweat pretty much all day long, but so far life in Belize is treatimg me pretty well. Can't wait to see what else is in store...
Thursday, June 28, 2007
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4 comments:
Passing and throwing enormous beetles?! Yeehaw! :) Mangoes EVERY day? Envy looms large! I'm sure you know who wrote this and who sends you non-sweaty virtual hugs. Love, M.
Wow. It appears this thing is for real. Rufus and I have been in denial, but I guess we should accept it. When I tell him about the beetles, I'm sure he'll change his mind about coming to find you. We'll just wait patiently while you perfect those tortillas.
It's great to hear from you. How big the beetles? sounds like you are settling in well.
Yikes! You're in Belize! When did that happen?
Glad to hear you arrived safely despite problems with the plane's tire -well how important is the tire really?
So...ummm...when can I book a ticket?
;)
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