Friday, July 1, 2011
Live Like a Peace Corps Volunteer: Honduras Rules
Saturday, June 18, 2011
A Good Start to Service
Thursday, June 16, 2011
Over the Mountains and Through the Woods to Your Little Pueblo We Go...
Friday, June 10, 2011
Healthy Cooking Classes
Monday, June 6, 2011
The time has come...
Our friends and family have been asking if there's anything we need, so we thought we'd just post a list of indulgences and sit at the post office and wait :) The word "need" is just so subjective...
We can get quite a bit in the state capital not far away (major priorities like peanut butter, nutella, etc...) but there are some things we are really craving, because we are that spoiled.
So, don't feel like you're obligated to send us stuff, but if you do we'll give you a shout out of how awesome you are on our blog :)
Food related:
- Raw nuts (walnuts, almonds, etc...) and roasted pumpkin seeds and/or pistachios. Trader Joe's sells these big bags of awesomeness cheaper than anyone else I know of...
- Dry-cured sausage/salami products (soppressata, etc...) and water crackers/Ritz
- Chocolate covered blueberries or acai berries... an unsatiated addiction thanks to Jacob's family :)
- Fruit/nut trail mix
- Granola mix
- Dried dates... nom, nom, nom! (check exp. date)
- TEA!!!!!!! Chai, english breakfast, green and/or black
- Chopsticks (I know, I know... but I really want to make sushi, and you just can't eat sushi with a fork and feel good about yourself)
- Bottle of Sesame oil
- Packs of dried seaweed sheets
- Sushi roller
- A tube of wasabi paste
- Bottle of Rice Vinegar
- Bottle of Mirin
- Jar of Shichimi Togarashi red pepper (the spicy stuff they put on Japanese noodle bowls!)
- Dashi (dry stock granules)
- Roasted wasabi peas
- POPCORN! You know who you are :)
- A fat block of Velveeta cheese for making macaroni
- Measuring spoons and cups, hardly anyone bakes here and I can't find these. If my neighbors even have an oven, it is only used to store pots and pans
- Baking Soda... right? We can only find baking powder, and Jacob makes a killer soda bread
- Pretzel or peanut m&ms...
- Spices: Cayenne Pepper, Steak/hamburger seasoning, Lemon Pepper, Curry powder- most everything else we can get
- Herb seed packets: rosemary, basil, oregano, thyme, sage, dill... anything but cilantro. Please God, no more cilantro.
- Chapstick, chapstick, chapstick
- Lent brush or roller, can't find either
- Any good books you've read and don't need anymore (And if anyone has "My Life in Paris" by Julia Child.... Please pass it this way!!)
- Markers (heavy duty kind, lots of colors!), glue sticks, crayons, construction paper, scissors, masking tape, etc... might start an art class!
- Oil paints (Daniel Smith, Windsor Newton, Rembrandt, etc...) Think I found a place where I can buy canvas, etc...
- Decorative hooks for hanging stuff
- Magazines! OK, People, Newsweek, Time, etc...
- Postcards from YOU! Something we can put up and be reminded of our awesome family and friends :)
- Clean and Clear sensitive skin face wash
- Bottle of Dr. Bronner's Magic Soaps (Peppermint scent)... an all in one, fair trade, pure-castile soap (probably found in places like Trader Joe's, found our last bottle in Drug Emporium, go figure)
- Socks! Calf/knee length good old white socks for Jacob... I steal his and he runs out quickly, oops
- Small toys for the kids in our town... dime store items or stuff like silly bands, pogs, chalk, free toys from Happy Meals, etc... they love this stuff! (We may be working on a school library in the Spring- will ask for books later!)
Miss you all!
Lauren and Jacob
Thursday, June 2, 2011
Health in Honduras
- There is both a public and private health system in Honduras
- At the local level, there is usually 1 public clinic with a doctor per municipality, and several smaller clinics with a nurse. If someone needs to go to the hospital, they must travel to one of the 18 state capitals or the national capital. I believe there are only 3 private hospitals in Honduras, but I could be wrong.
- There is no such thing as an epidural in a public hospital here… (eek!)
- It costs 20 Lempiras to give birth in a public hospital in Honduras (or $1.06 USD) or 40 Lempiras ($2.11 USD) if a cesarean is required. (70% of the population in our municipality lives on less than a $1 a day/18.95 Lempiras)
- Despite this low cost, 70% of women in some aldeas still give birth at home with the help of a mid-wife or family member. A few reasons why: Many roads leading out to villages in remote or mountainous areas are virtually impassable during the rainy season. Some locales are hours from the nearest road, and the path leading to it is sloped, rocky, etc… And of course there is the fear that they won’t make it to the hospital and will end up giving birth on the local bus (think school bus). Or, this is the 10th child and they don’t see the need to go (some will go to the hospital for their first child, then for none of the others).
- Midwifery here is a bit of a touchy issue in Honduras. The Ministry of Health is trying really hard to have all babies born in hospitals to bring down infant and maternal mortality rates. I think one issue is that some midwifes have been properly certified, whereas the knowledge has just been passed down generation to generation in some situations. We visited a hospital in La Paz where 3 newborns had just arrived with sepsis (their umbilical cords had been cut with dirty knives). To make hospital births more inviting, they've started a program to utilize midwifes as promotors for institutional births. If a midwife can get a pregnant woman to all of her checkups (there are usually 3-5) and to the hospital (arranging a ride, etc…) they get a stipend, which offsets the price they would have requested for delivering the baby.
Anyway, that's a little summary... I'm really looking forward to these classes the next few months and meeting so many people. The more friends we can make, the more opportunities we will have to help. Sounds a bit cheesy, but that's the way it works here. Plus, getting to go into the mountains each day is amazing!
Have a good one!
Lauren
Wednesday, May 25, 2011
Recap and Our New Home
Jacob and I returned from our respective Field Based Training sites (thank god), found out our site placement, and we swore in as Peace Corps Volunteers on Friday the 13th! We celebrated by gorging ourselves with the last sushi we'll be able to find for a while.
We have since moved to site and for the next two years we will be hanging out (a mile up) with the Lencans in a tiny town surrounded by pine forests and mountains. We ended up with the coldest available Peace Corps site, yay! I had to wear a fleece top to bed last night J Also, the buses to the Western half of Honduras pass right through the middle of our town or the larger city nearby, so we can be in Gracias, Santa Rosa or the Copan Ruins in a matter of hours.
Home: We are required to live with a host family for the first two months (integration… yada, yada), Our family is great… but, it’s a bit “rustic” here. Regardless, PC doesn’t really leave room for complaints, so I’ll move on to the waterfall 5 minutes from our house:
This is only the beginning of the rainy season, by September it will be roaring.
We’ve already found the house we want to rent. The ceilings in homes here are only seven to eight feet high (a form of insulation), which will take some getting used to, but other than that the house has a great view of the mountains and a traditional fogon (stove) inside the house. Also, it has a large back yard so I’m scouting for seeds and places to buy plants for the future garden. One of my projects will be working with communities on organic home and community gardens (or diversifying the ones they have), and I figured I should start with my own home. Some previous occupant made a decent start; there are currently 2 peach trees and leftover spinach, turnip greens and summer squash currently growing. Someone even planted several rose bushes and lilies, which I hope to add to.
Jacob’s only concern is where to put the hammock. That and how the hell we are going to get a full size fridge from a larger city to our site via a very rocky (and sometimes impassable) dirt road with a vehicle we do not have. Welcome to the 3rd world, baby. We will have a fridge… I demand it J
Our little town does not have the following: a post office, a grocery store, a bank, an ATM machine, a mid-wife (she was ninety and died last week) or paved roads. Not exactly New York City, but for two years, we can handle it.
But, it does have: Strawberries and apples- one of the only areas in Honduras where these are grown, a ton of pulperias (convenient stores), a hardware store, 1 Catholic church currently out of commission due to an earthquake a few years ago, 8 evangelical churches (not sure why you need 8, but…) and LOTS of pine trees with a waterfall and lagoon thrown in for good measure. Oh, and a butcher whom Jacob has already met. We’ve been here one week and we already have a butcher J.
(We are about 30 minutes from a city where we can get almost whatever our hearts desire, even raw nuts, organic seafood and peanut butter)
Jobs: Jacob’s working with a local forestry cooperative, and I’m sure by winter he will be Head Gringo Lumberjack, beard and all. Going to try and find him a red and black flannel shirt to wear to work. We also found a hardware store in the nearest city for all your Lumberjack needs (and the owner used to host Peace Corps volunteers… small world). In reality, he’s going to be working with their investments and exporting capabilities, drawing up business plans, etc… He’s also been paired with a Lencan artisan cooperative who make everything from pottery to pine needle baskets. I know what the family’s getting for the next two years!
I’m working with an international NGO, World Vision, and spent last Wednesday on the top of a mountain hanging out with a group of community volunteers who have just been trained by WV to teach a two year course to families with children (nutrition, hygiene, how to identify and prevent diarrhea and resp. infections, etc...) in the community. This week I gave two charlas (classes)on ways to prevent diarrhea and upper respiratory infections, and the second on the nutritional needs of children, both of which included a cooking class. Today I made soy milk from scratch with 9 Lencan women, and they got a great kick out of me trying to hand form tortillas (we didn't eat mine, lol).
I’ve also made a local contact who is also working on latrine and improved stove projects, so hopefully I can get some support when the time comes. I’ve also been placed with the local health clinic which has to 2 female doctors, a rare but exciting sight here. I’ve been invited to visit the next meeting for pregnant women, and they want me to start providing nutrition and healthy lifestyle classes at the health center. (The malnutrition and chronic sickness rates are unbelievable here, and so many live with so little.) Also, in time I hope to get to know the midwife groups that come to the health center, but it will take several months to gain their confidence… little by little. Needless to say, I hope to be busy.
Think that’s about it for now… we’re going to try and have a post office box in the next few weeks (for care packages, postcards and such J )
All the best guys,
Lauren